Channel Tracking and Prediction for IRS Aided Wireless Communications

Channel Tracking and Prediction for IRS Aided Wireless Communications

Abstract:

For intelligent reflecting surface (IRS)-aided wireless communications, channel estimation is essential and usually requires excessive channel training overhead when the number of IRS reflecting elements is large. The acquisition of accurate channel state information (CSI) becomes more challenging when the channel is not quasi-static due to the mobility of the transmitter and/or receiver. In this work, we study an IRS-aided wireless communication system with a practical channel model that characterizes the time-varying propagation property and propose an innovative two-stage transmission protocol. In the first stage, we send pilot symbols and track the direct/reflected channels based on the received signal, and then data signals are transmitted. In the second stage, instead of sending pilot symbols first, we directly predict the direct/reflected channels and all the time slots are used for data transmission. Based on the proposed transmission protocol, we propose a two-stage channel tracking and prediction (2SCTP) scheme to obtain the direct and reflected channels with low channel training overhead, which is achieved by exploiting the temporal correlation of the time-varying channels. Specifically, we first consider a special case where the IRS-access point (AP) channel is assumed to be static, for which a Kalman filter (KF)-based algorithm and a long short-term memory (LSTM)-based neural network are proposed for channel tracking and prediction, respectively. Then, for the more general case where the IRS-AP, user-IRS and user-AP channels are all assumed to be time-varying, we present a generalized KF (GKF)-based channel tracking algorithm, where proper approximations are employed to handle the underlying non-Gaussian random variables. Numerical simulations are provided to verify the effectiveness of our proposed transmission protocol and channel tracking/prediction algorithms as compared to existing ones.