Joint Antenna and User Scheduling in the Massive MIMO System Over Time-Varying Fading Channels

Massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) technology, mainly equipped with dozens or even hundreds of antennas at transmitter and/or receiver, is one of the most important technologies in 5G/6G era due to its capability of achieving high transmission rate. However, since each transmit antenna typically needs a complete radio frequency (RF) chain, a large number of RF chains need to be installed accordingly, resulting in high economic cost, high hardware complexity, and high power consumption. To resolve these problems, architectures where a small number of RF chains are installed have been proposed in recent years, and an antenna selection technique that activates antennas only as many as the number of RF chains has been envisioned as one of solutions. In this paper, we study the joint antenna and user scheduling problem for the downlink massive MIMO system over time-varying fading channels to maximize the weighted average sum rate while ensuring users’ minimum average data rate requirements. To solve the problem, we first develop an opportunistic joint antenna and user scheduling algorithm (OJAUS) using the dual and stochastic subgradient methods, which makes it possible to schedule antennas and users without any underlying distributions of the fading channels. However, it requires solving a joint antenna and user selection (JAUS) problem to maximize the instantaneous weighted sum rate in every time slot. Thus, we additionally develop a simple heuristic JAUS algorithm with low computational complexity, called JAUS-LCC, which is executed in every time slot within OJAUS. Finally, through simulation results, we first show that our JAUS-LCC provides near-optimal performance despite requiring very low computational complexity, and then show that our OJAUS with JAUS-LCC well guarantees given minimum average data rate requirements.