Near-Far Field Boundary Analysis and Transmit Covariance Optimization for Dual-Polarized XL-MIMO Communications
Article 2025 en
Authors
SZ
Shuhao Zeng
BD
Boya Di
HZ
Hongliang Zhang
Abstract
1 min read
Extremely large-scale multiple-input multiple-output (XL-MIMO) is expected to play an important role in future sixth generation (6G) networks. Most existing works in this area focus on single-polarized XL-MIMO, where transceivers transmit and receive signals in only one polarization direction, leading to degraded data rates. To improve multiplexing performance, in this paper, we investigate downlink XL-MIMO networks with dual-polarized antennas. However, unlike conventional dual-polarized massive MIMO, the cross-polarization discrimination (XPD) of channels vary across base station antennas in dual-polarized XL-MIMO due to the enlarged antenna aperture, leading to following two challenges. First, conventional near-far field boundary is insufficient as it only accounts for phase differences across array elements while irrespective of XPD differences. Second, existing transmit covariance optimization methods developed for dual-polarized massive MIMO cannot be directly utilized, since they are developed based on uniform XPD and pathloss assumptions. To address these challenges, we model the variations of XPD across antennas, based on which a non-uniform XPD distance is introduced to complement existing near-far field boundary. Based on the new distance criterion, we propose an efficient scheme for optimizing the transmit covariance, which considers the non-uniform XPD and pathloss. Numerical results validate our analysis and demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm.
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