High-Bandwidth Spatial Equalization for mmWave Massive MU-MIMO With Processing-in-MemoryDownload PDFOpen Website

2020 (modified: 30 Sept 2024)IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. II Express Briefs 2020Readers: Everyone
Abstract: All-digital basestation (BS) architectures enable superior spectral efficiency compared to hybrid solutions in massive multi-user MIMO systems. However, supporting large bandwidths with all-digital architectures at mmWave frequencies is challenging as traditional baseband processing would result in excessively high power consumption and large silicon area. The recently-proposed concept of finite-alphabet equalization is able to address both of these issues by using equalization matrices that contain low-resolution entries to lower the power and complexity of high-throughput matrix-vector products in hardware. In this brief, we explore two different finite-alphabet equalization hardware implementations that tightly integrate the memory and processing elements: (i) a parallel array of multiply-accumulate (MAC) units and (ii) a bit-serial processing-in-memory (PIM) architecture. Our all-digital VLSI implementation results in 28nm CMOS show that the bit-serial PIM architecture reduces the area and power consumption up to a factor of 2× and 3×, respectively, when compared to a parallel MAC array that operates at the same throughput.
0 Replies

Loading