8,743 research outputs found
Cooperative Symbol-Based Signaling for Networks with Multiple Relays
Wireless channels suffer from severe inherent impairments and hence
reliable and high data rate wireless transmission is particularly challenging to
achieve. Fortunately, using multiple antennae improves performance in wireless
transmission by providing space diversity, spatial multiplexing, and power gains.
However, in wireless ad-hoc networks multiple antennae may not be acceptable
due to limitations in size, cost, and hardware complexity. As a result, cooperative
relaying strategies have attracted considerable attention because of their abilities
to take advantage of multi-antenna by using multiple single-antenna relays.
This study is to explore cooperative signaling for different relay networks,
such as multi-hop relay networks formed by multiple single-antenna relays and
multi-stage relay networks formed by multiple relaying stages with each stage
holding several single-antenna relays. The main contribution of this study is the
development of a new relaying scheme for networks using symbol-level
modulation, such as binary phase shift keying (BPSK) and quadrature phase shift
keying (QPSK). We also analyze effects of this newly developed scheme when it
is used with space-time coding in a multi-stage relay network. Simulation results
demonstrate that the new scheme outperforms previously proposed schemes:
amplify-and-forward (AF) scheme and decode-and-forward (DF) scheme
Distributed space-time coding including the golden code with application in cooperative networks
This thesis presents new methodologies to improve performance of wireless cooperative networks using the Golden Code. As a form of space-time coding, the Golden Code can achieve diversity-multiplexing tradeoff and the data rate can be twice that of the Alamouti code. In practice, however, asynchronism between relay nodes may reduce performance and channel quality can be degraded from certain antennas.
Firstly, a simple offset transmission scheme, which employs full interference cancellation (FIC) and orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), is enhanced through the use of four relay nodes and receiver processing to mitigate asynchronism. Then, the potential reduction in diversity gain due to the dependent channel matrix elements in the distributed Golden Code transmission, and the rate penalty of multihop transmission, are mitigated by relay selection based on two-way transmission. The Golden Code is also implemented in an asynchronous one-way relay network over frequency flat and selective channels, and a simple approach to overcome asynchronism is proposed. In one-way communication with computationally efficient sphere decoding, the maximum of the channel parameter means is shown to achieve the best performance for the relay selection through bit error rate simulations.
Secondly, to reduce the cost of hardware when multiple antennas are available in a cooperative network, multi-antenna selection is exploited. In this context, maximum-sum transmit antenna selection is proposed. End-to-end signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is calculated and outage probability analysis is performed when the links are modelled as Rayleigh fading frequency flat channels. The numerical results support the analysis and for a MIMO system
maximum-sum selection is shown to outperform maximum-minimum selection. Additionally, pairwise error probability (PEP) analysis is performed for maximum-sum transmit antenna selection with the Golden Code and the diversity order is obtained.
Finally, with the assumption of fibre-connected multiple antennas with finite buffers, multiple-antenna selection is implemented on the basis of maximum-sum antenna selection. Frequency flat Rayleigh fading channels are assumed together with a decode and forward transmission scheme. Outage probability analysis is performed by exploiting the steady-state stationarity of a Markov Chain model
An Algebraic Coding Scheme for Wireless Relay Networks With Multiple-Antenna Nodes
We consider the problem of coding over a half-duplex wireless relay network where both the transmitter and the receiver have respectively several transmit and receive antennas, whereas each relay is a small device with only a single antenna. Since, in this scenario, requiring the relays to decode results in severe rate hits, we propose a full rate strategy where the relays do a simple operation before forwarding the signal, based on the idea of distributed space-time coding. Our scheme relies on division algebras, an algebraic object which allows the design of fully diverse matrices. The code construction is applicable to systems with any number of transmit/receive antennas and relays, and has better performance than random code constructions, with much less encoding complexity. Finally, the robustness of the proposed distributed space-time codes to node failures is considered
Interference Cancellation at the Relay for Multi-User Wireless Cooperative Networks
We study multi-user transmission and detection schemes for a multi-access
relay network (MARN) with linear constraints at all nodes. In a MARN, sources, each equipped with antennas, communicate to one
-antenna destination through one -antenna relay. A new protocol called
IC-Relay-TDMA is proposed which takes two phases. During the first phase,
symbols of different sources are transmitted concurrently to the relay. At the
relay, interference cancellation (IC) techniques, previously proposed for
systems with direct transmission, are applied to decouple the information of
different sources without decoding. During the second phase, symbols of
different sources are forwarded to the destination in a time division
multi-access (TDMA) fashion. At the destination, the maximum-likelihood (ML)
decoding is performed source-by-source. The protocol of IC-Relay-TDMA requires
the number of relay antennas no less than the number of sources, i.e., . Through outage analysis, the achievable diversity gain of the proposed
scheme is shown to be . When {\small}, the proposed scheme achieves the maximum
interference-free (int-free) diversity gain . Since concurrent
transmission is allowed during the first phase, compared to full TDMA
transmission, the proposed scheme achieves the same diversity, but with a
higher symbol rate.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transaction on Wireless Communicatio
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