Abstract:
The increasing demand of download data and the Internet of Things (IoT)
poses challenging requirements for 5G mobile communication, such as high
spectral and energy efficiency, massive connectivity and reliability. A promising
technology, non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), is discussed, which
can address some of these challenges for 5G. An advance of the Internet
of Things is that some users in the system need to be served quickly for
small packet transmission. However, supporting the IoT functionality in 5G
networks is challenging since connecting billions of smart IoT devices with
diversified quality of service (QoS) requirements is not a trivial task, given
the constraint of scarce bandwidth. Non-orthogonal multiple access provides
a promising solution to provide massive connectivity by efficiently using the
available bandwidth resources. In this thesis, a new multiple-input multipleoutput
non-orthogonal multiple access (MIMO-NOMA) scheme is designed,
where one user is served with its quality of service requirement strictly met,
and the other user is served opportunistically by using the NOMA concept.
The novelty of this new scheme is that, it confronts the challenge that the
existing MIMO-NOMA schemes rely on the assumption that the users channel
conditions are different, which is a strong assumption that may not be
valid in practice. In this thesis, the developed precoding and detection strategies
can effectively create a significant difference between the users’ effective
channel gains, and therefore, the potential of NOMA can be realized even if
the users original channel conditions are similar. Throughout the thesis, analytical
and numerical results are provided to demonstrate the performance
of the proposed MIMO-NOMA scheme