Abstract
In this contribution, the spatial cross-correlation of composite channels in a distributed antenna system (DAS) is studied for the case that a nine-antenna DAS is deployed in an indoor environment. As few measurement data of DAS propagation channels are available, the propagation graph modeling based on the electromagnetic wave reverberation theory is used to generate the synthetic impulse responses (IRs) for the composite channels induced by the different groups of antennas in the DAS. The simulations take into account the geographic parameters of the environment, the cluttering scatterers, the realistic visibility conditions, as well as the flexible locations for the antennas, and the user equipment. The uncorrelated scattering assumption is proved to be valid by using the real measurement data from the indoor environments. Based on this assumption, narrowband channel cross-correlation is computed by integrating the small-scale fading cross-correlation within the same delay bins in two channel IRs. The characteristics of the cross-correlation in four cases with different antenna grouping are investigated for the nine-antenna DAS. Part of the modeling results are shown to be consistent with the empirical counterparts for specific DAS constellations calculated using the real measurement data. © 2013 Tian et al.; licensee Springer.
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CITATION STYLE
Tian, L., Yin, X., Zhou, X., & Zuo, Q. (2013). Spatial cross-correlation modeling for propagation channels in indoor distributed antenna systems. Eurasip Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking, 2013(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1499-2013-183
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