561 research outputs found
Spectrally Modulated Spectrally Encoded Framework Based Cognitive Radio in Mobile Environment
Radio spectrum has become a precious resource, and it has long been the dream of wireless communication engineers to maximize the utilization of the radio spectrum. Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA) and Cognitive Radio (CR) have been considered promising to enhance the efficiency and utilization of the spectrum. Since some of the spectrum bands are occupied by primary users (PUs), the available spectrum for secondary users (SUs) are non-contiguous, and multi-carrier transmission technologies become the natural solution to occupy those non-contiguous bands. Non-contiguous multi-carrier based modulations, such as NC-OFDM (non-contiguous Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing), NC-MC-CDMA (non-contiguous multi-carrier code division multiple access) and NC-SC-OFDM (non-contiguous single carrier OFDM), allow the SUs to utilize the available spectrum. Spectrally Modulated Spectrally Encoded (SMSE) framework offers a general framework to generate multi-carrier based waveform for CR. However, it is well known that all multi-carrier transmission technologies suffer significant performance degradation resulting from inter-carrier interference (ICI) in high mobility environments. Current research work in cognitive radio has not sufficiently considered and addressed this issue yet. Hence, it is highly desired to study the effect of mobility on CR communication systems and how to improve the performance through affordable low-complexity signal processing techniques. In this dissertation, we analyze the inter-carrier interference for SMSE based multi-carrier transmissions in CR, and propose multiple ICI mitigation techniques and carrier frequency offset (CFO) estimator. Specifically, (1) an ICI self-cancellation algorithm is adapted to the MC-CDMA system by designing new spreading codes to enable the system with the capability to reduce the ICI; (2) a blind ICI cancellation technique named Total ICI Cancellation is proposed to perfectly remove the ICI effect for OFDM and MC-CDMA systems and provide the performance approximately identical to that of the systems without ICI; (3) a novel modulation scheme, called Magnitude Keyed Modulation (MKM), is proposed to combine with SC-OFDM system and provide ICI immunity feature so that the system performance is not affected by the mobility or carrier frequency offset; (4) a blind carrier frequency offset estimation algorithm is proposed to accurately estimate the CFO; (5) finally, compared to traditional ICI analysis and cancellation techniques with assumption of constant carrier frequency offset among all the subcarriers, subcarrier varying CFO scenario is considered for the wideband multi-carrier transmission and non-contiguous multi-carrier transmission for CR, and an ICI total cancellation algorithm is proposed for the multi-carrier system with subcarrier varying CFOs to entirely remove the ICI
Self-Interference Cancellation Using Time-Domain Phase Noise Estimation in OFDM Full-Duplex Systems
In full-duplex systems, oscillator phase noise (PN) problem is considered the
bottleneck challenge that may face the self-interference cancellation (SIC)
stage especially when orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)
transmission scheme is deployed. Phase noise degrades the SIC performance
significantly, if not mitigated before or during the SIC technique. The
presence of the oscillator phase noise has different impacts on the transmitted
data symbol like common phase error (CPE) and inter-carrier interference (ICI).
However, phase noise can be estimated and mitigated digitally in either time or
frequency domain. Through this work, we propose a novel and simple time domain
self-interference (SI) phase noise estimation and mitigation technique. The
proposed algorithm is inspired from Wiener filtering in time domain. Simulation
results show that the proposed algorithm has a superior performance than the
already-existing time-domain or frequency domain PN mitigation solutions with a
noticeable reduction in the computational complexity
Spectrally Modulated Spectrally Encoded Framework Based Cognitive Radio in Mobile Environment
Radio spectrum has become a precious resource, and it has long been the dream of wireless communication engineers to maximize the utilization of the radio spectrum. Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA) and Cognitive Radio (CR) have been considered promising to enhance the efficiency and utilization of the spectrum. Since some of the spectrum bands are occupied by primary users (PUs), the available spectrum for secondary users (SUs) are non-contiguous, and multi-carrier transmission technologies become the natural solution to occupy those non-contiguous bands. Non-contiguous multi-carrier based modulations, such as NC-OFDM (non-contiguous Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing), NC-MC-CDMA (non-contiguous multi-carrier code division multiple access) and NC-SC-OFDM (non-contiguous single carrier OFDM), allow the SUs to utilize the available spectrum. Spectrally Modulated Spectrally Encoded (SMSE) framework offers a general framework to generate multi-carrier based waveform for CR. However, it is well known that all multi-carrier transmission technologies suffer significant performance degradation resulting from inter-carrier interference (ICI) in high mobility environments. Current research work in cognitive radio has not sufficiently considered and addressed this issue yet. Hence, it is highly desired to study the effect of mobility on CR communication systems and how to improve the performance through affordable low-complexity signal processing techniques. In this dissertation, we analyze the inter-carrier interference for SMSE based multi-carrier transmissions in CR, and propose multiple ICI mitigation techniques and carrier frequency offset (CFO) estimator. Specifically, (1) an ICI self-cancellation algorithm is adapted to the MC-CDMA system by designing new spreading codes to enable the system with the capability to reduce the ICI; (2) a blind ICI cancellation technique named Total ICI Cancellation is proposed to perfectly remove the ICI effect for OFDM and MC-CDMA systems and provide the performance approximately identical to that of the systems without ICI; (3) a novel modulation scheme, called Magnitude Keyed Modulation (MKM), is proposed to combine with SC-OFDM system and provide ICI immunity feature so that the system performance is not affected by the mobility or carrier frequency offset; (4) a blind carrier frequency offset estimation algorithm is proposed to accurately estimate the CFO; (5) finally, compared to traditional ICI analysis and cancellation techniques with assumption of constant carrier frequency offset among all the subcarriers, subcarrier varying CFO scenario is considered for the wideband multi-carrier transmission and non-contiguous multi-carrier transmission for CR, and an ICI total cancellation algorithm is proposed for the multi-carrier system with subcarrier varying CFOs to entirely remove the ICI
Interference Localization for Uplink OFDMA Systems in Presence of CFOs
Multiple carrier frequency offsets (CFOs) present in the uplink of orthogonal
frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) systems adversely affect subcarrier
orthogonality and impose a serious performance loss. In this paper, we propose
the application of time domain receiver windowing to concentrate the leakage
caused by CFOs to a few adjacent subcarriers with almost no additional
computational complexity. This allows us to approximate the interference matrix
with a quasi-banded matrix by neglecting small elements outside a certain band
which enables robust and computationally efficient signal detection. The
proposed CFO compensation technique is applicable to all types of subcarrier
assignment techniques. Simulation results show that the quasi-banded
approximation of the interference matrix is accurate enough to provide almost
the same bit error rate performance as that of the optimal solution. The
excellent performance of our proposed method is also proven through running an
experiment using our FPGA-based system setup.Comment: Accepted in IEEE WCNC 201
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