A Comparison Between Co-Located and Distributed MIMO Deployments in OFDM-ISAC Networks

📅 2026-05-06
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📝 Abstract
This paper investigates network-level integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) under two fundamentally different topology configurations: cell-free massive MIMO (CF-mMIMO) and multi-cell massive MIMO (MC-mMIMO). A unified OFDM-based waveform is adopted for both architectures as the key enabler for ISAC functionalities. The CF system exploits distributed access points (APs) and a scalable user-target-centric operation, whereas the MC system relies on co-located transmit-receive arrays with conventional cell-centric deployment. For both architectures, we derive a GLRT-based sensing detector and the corresponding sensing SNR expressions. We then examine a series of case studies investigating how the number of OFDM subcarriers, the transceiver allocation strategy, and the antenna/node distribution across the network affect the sensing performance. The results consistently demonstrate that CF-mMIMO provides more robust and higher sensing performance across most tested scenarios, particularly when transmit resources or antenna elements are spatially distributed. These findings highlight the inherent advantages of CF deployments for next-generation ISAC networks.
Problem

Research questions and friction points this paper is trying to address.

MIMO deployment
ISAC
OFDM
sensing performance
cell-free massive MIMO
Innovation

Methods, ideas, or system contributions that make the work stand out.

cell-free massive MIMO
OFDM-ISAC
distributed sensing
GLRT detector
network-level ISAC
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