24 research outputs found
Design and Implementation of Novel FPGA Based Time-Interleaved Variable Centre-Frequency Digital Sigma-Delta Modulators
Novel, multi-path, time-interleaved digital sigma-delta modulators that can operate at any arbitrary frequency from DC to Nyquist are designed, analysed and synthesized in this study. Dual- and quadruple-path fourth-order Butterworth, Chebyshev, Inverse Chebyshev and Elliptical based digital sigma-delta modulators, which offer designers the flexibility of specifying the centre-frequency, pass-band/stop-band attenuation as well as the signal bandwidth are presented. These topologies are compared in terms of their signal-to-noise ratios, hardware complexity, stability, tonality and sensitivity to non-idealities. Detailed simulations performed at the behavioural-level in MATLAB are compared with the experimental results of the FPGA implementation of the designed modulators. The signal-to-noise ratios between the simulated and empirical results are shown to be different by not more than 3-5 dBs. Furthermore, this paper presents the mathematical modelling and evaluation of the tones caused by the finite wordlengths of these digital multi-path sigma-delta modulators when excited by sinusoidal input signals
Error Correction For Automotive Telematics Systems
One benefit of data communication over the voice channel of the cellular network is to reliably transmit real-time high priority data in case of life critical situations. An important implementation of this use-case is the pan-European eCall automotive standard, which has already been deployed since 2018. This is the first international standard for mobile emergency call that was adopted by multiple regions in Europe and the world. Other countries in the world are currently working on deploying a similar emergency communication system, such as in Russia and China. Moreover, many experiments and road tests are conducted yearly to validate and improve the requirements of the system. The results have proven that the requirements are unachievable thus far, with a success rate of emergency data delivery of only 70%.
The eCall in-band modem transmits emergency information from the in-vehicle system (IVS) over the voice channel of the circuit switch real time communication system to the public safety answering point (PSAP) in case of a collision. The voice channel is characterized by the non-linear vocoder which is designed to compress speech waveforms. In addition, multipath fading, caused by the surrounding buildings and hills, results in severe signal distortion and causes delays in the transmission of the emergency information. Therefore, to reliably transmit data over the voice channels, the in-band modem modulates the data into speech-like (SL) waveforms, and employs a powerful forward error correcting (FEC) code to secure the real-time transmission.
In this dissertation, the Turbo coded performance of the eCall in-band modem is first evaluated through the adaptive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel and the adaptive multi-rate (AMR) voice channel. The modulation used is biorthogonal pulse position modulation (BPPM). Simulations are conducted for both the fast and robust eCall modem. The results show that the distortion added by the vocoder is significantly large and degrades the system performance. In addition, the robust modem performs better than the fast modem. For instance, to achieve a bit error rate (BER) of 10^{-6} using the AMR compression rate of 7.4 kbps, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) required is 5.5 dB for the robust modem while a SNR of 7.5 dB is required for the fast modem.
On the other hand, the fading effect is studied in the eCall channel. It was shown that the fading distribution does not follow a Rayleigh distribution. The performance of the in-band modem is evaluated through the AWGN, AMR and fading channel. The results are compared with a Rayleigh fading channel. The analysis shows that strong fading still exists in the voice channel after power control. The results explain the large delays and failure of the emergency data transmission to the PSAP. Thus, the eCall standard needs to re-evaluate their requirements in order to consider the impact of fading on the transmission of the modulated signals. The results can be directly applied to design real-time emergency communication systems, including modulation and coding
Error Correction For Automotive Telematics Systems
One benefit of data communication over the voice channel of the cellular network is to reliably transmit real-time high priority data in case of life critical situations. An important implementation of this use-case is the pan-European eCall automotive standard, which has already been deployed since 2018. This is the first international standard for mobile emergency call that was adopted by multiple regions in Europe and the world. Other countries in the world are currently working on deploying a similar emergency communication system, such as in Russia and China. Moreover, many experiments and road tests are conducted yearly to validate and improve the requirements of the system. The results have proven that the requirements are unachievable thus far, with a success rate of emergency data delivery of only 70%.
The eCall in-band modem transmits emergency information from the in-vehicle system (IVS) over the voice channel of the circuit switch real time communication system to the public safety answering point (PSAP) in case of a collision. The voice channel is characterized by the non-linear vocoder which is designed to compress speech waveforms. In addition, multipath fading, caused by the surrounding buildings and hills, results in severe signal distortion and causes delays in the transmission of the emergency information. Therefore, to reliably transmit data over the voice channels, the in-band modem modulates the data into speech-like (SL) waveforms, and employs a powerful forward error correcting (FEC) code to secure the real-time transmission.
In this dissertation, the Turbo coded performance of the eCall in-band modem is first evaluated through the adaptive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel and the adaptive multi-rate (AMR) voice channel. The modulation used is biorthogonal pulse position modulation (BPPM). Simulations are conducted for both the fast and robust eCall modem. The results show that the distortion added by the vocoder is significantly large and degrades the system performance. In addition, the robust modem performs better than the fast modem. For instance, to achieve a bit error rate (BER) of 10^{-6} using the AMR compression rate of 7.4 kbps, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) required is 5.5 dB for the robust modem while a SNR of 7.5 dB is required for the fast modem.
On the other hand, the fading effect is studied in the eCall channel. It was shown that the fading distribution does not follow a Rayleigh distribution. The performance of the in-band modem is evaluated through the AWGN, AMR and fading channel. The results are compared with a Rayleigh fading channel. The analysis shows that strong fading still exists in the voice channel after power control. The results explain the large delays and failure of the emergency data transmission to the PSAP. Thus, the eCall standard needs to re-evaluate their requirements in order to consider the impact of fading on the transmission of the modulated signals. The results can be directly applied to design real-time emergency communication systems, including modulation and coding
Design and implementation of generalized topologies of time-interleaved variable bandpass ÎŁâÎ modulators
In this thesis, novel analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog generalized time-interleaved variable bandpass sigma-delta modulators are designed, analysed, evaluated and implemented that are suitable for high performance data conversion for a broad-spectrum of applications. These generalized time-interleaved variable bandpass sigma-delta modulators can perform noise-shaping for any centre frequency from DC to Nyquist. The proposed topologies are well-suited for Butterworth, Chebyshev, inverse-Chebyshev and elliptical filters, where designers have the flexibility of specifying the centre frequency, bandwidth as well as the passband and stopband attenuation parameters. The application of the time-interleaving approach, in combination with these bandpass loop-filters, not only overcomes the limitations that are associated with conventional and mid-band resonator-based bandpass sigma-delta modulators, but also offers an elegant means to increase the conversion bandwidth, thereby relaxing the need to use faster or higher-order sigma-delta modulators.
A step-by-step design technique has been developed for the design of time-interleaved variable bandpass sigma-delta modulators. Using this technique, an assortment of lower- and higher-order single- and multi-path generalized A/D variable bandpass sigma-delta modulators were designed, evaluated and compared in terms of their signal-to-noise ratios, hardware complexity, stability, tonality and sensitivity for ideal and non-ideal topologies. Extensive behavioural-level simulations verified that one of the proposed topologies not only used fewer
coefficients but also exhibited greater robustness to non-idealties.
Furthermore, second-, fourth- and sixth-order single- and multi-path digital variable bandpass digital sigma-delta modulators are designed using this technique. The mathematical modelling and evaluation of tones caused by the finite wordlengths of these digital multi-path sigmadelta modulators, when excited by sinusoidal input signals, are also derived from first principles and verified using simulation and experimental results. The fourth-order digital variable-band sigma-delta modulator topologies are implemented in VHDL and synthesized on XilinxÂź SpartanTM-3 Development Kit using fixed-point arithmetic. Circuit outputs were taken via RS232 connection provided on the FPGA board and evaluated using MATLAB routines developed by the author. These routines included the decimation process as well. The experiments undertaken by the author further validated the design methodology presented in the work.
In addition, a novel tunable and reconfigurable second-order variable bandpass sigma-delta modulator has been designed and evaluated at the behavioural-level. This topology offers a flexible set of choices for designers and can operate either in single- or dual-mode enabling multi-band implementations on a single digital variable bandpass sigma-delta modulator.
This work is also supported by a novel user-friendly design and evaluation tool that has been developed in MATLAB/Simulink that can speed-up the design, evaluation and comparison of analog and digital single-stage and time-interleaved variable bandpass sigma-delta modulators. This tool enables the user to specify the conversion type, topology, loop-filter type, path number and oversampling ratio
Survey of FPGA applications in the period 2000 â 2015 (Technical Report)
Romoth J, Porrmann M, RĂŒckert U. Survey of FPGA applications in the period 2000 â 2015 (Technical Report).; 2017.Since their introduction, FPGAs can be seen in more and more different fields of applications. The key advantage is the combination of software-like flexibility with the performance otherwise common to hardware. Nevertheless, every application field introduces special requirements to the used computational architecture. This paper provides an overview of the different topics FPGAs have been used for in the last 15 years of research and why they have been chosen over other processing units like e.g. CPUs
Low Noise, Jitter Tolerant Continuous-Time Sigma-Delta Modulator
The demand for higher data rates in receivers with carrier aggregation (CA) such as LTE, increases the efforts to integrate large number of wireless services into single receiving path, so it needs to digitize the signal in intermediate or high frequencies. It relaxes most of the front-end blocks but makes the design of ADC very challenging. Solving the bottleneck associated with ADC in receiver architecture is a major focus of many ongoing researches. Recently, continuous time Sigma-Delta analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are getting more attention due to their inherent filtering properties, lower power consumption and wider input bandwidth. But, it suffers from several non-idealities such as clock jitter and ELD which decrease the ADC performance.
This dissertation presents two projects that address CT-ÎŁÎ modulator non-idealities. One of the projects is a CT- ÎŁÎ modulator with 10.9 Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) with Gradient Descent (GD) based calibration technique. The GD algorithm is used to extract loop gain transfer function coefficients. A quantization noise reduction technique is then employed to improve the Signal to Quantization Noise Ratio (SQNR) of the modulator using a 7-bit embedded quantizer. An analog fast path feedback topology is proposed which uses an analog differentiator in order to compensate excess loop delay. This approach relaxes the requirements of the amplifier placed in front of the quantizer. The modulator is implemented using a third order loop filter with a feed-forward compensation paths and a 3-bit quantizer in the feedback loop. In order to save power and improve loop linearity a two-stage class-AB amplifier is developed. The prototype modulator is implemented in 0.13ÎŒm CMOS technology, which achieves peak Signal to Noise and Distortion Ratio (SNDR) of 67.5dB while consuming total power of 8.5-mW under a 1.2V supply with an over sampling ratio of 10 at 300MHz sampling frequency. The prototype achieves Walden's Figure of Merit (FoM) of 146fJ/step.
The second project addresses clock jitter non-ideality in Continuous Time Sigma Delta modulators (CT- ÎŁÎM), the modulator suffer from performance degradation due to uncertainty in timing of clock at digital-to-analog converter (DAC). This thesis proposes to split the loop filter into two parts, analog and digital part to reduce the sensitivity of feedback DAC to clock jitter. By using the digital first-order filter after the quantizer, the effect of clock jitter is reduced without changing signal transfer function (STF). On the other hand, as one pole of the loop filter is implemented digitally, the power and area are reduced by minimizing active analog elements. Moreover, having more digital blocks in the loop of CT- ÎŁÎM makes it less sensitive to process, voltage, and temperature variations. We also propose the use of a single DAC with a current divider to implement feedback coefficients instead of two DACs to decrease area and clock routing. The prototype is implemented in TSMC 40 nm technology and occupies 0.06 mm^2 area; the proposed solution consumes 6.9 mW, and operates at 500 MS/s. In a 10 MHz bandwidth, the measured dynamic range (DR), peak signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR), and peak signal-to-noise and distortion (SNDR) ratios in presence of 4.5 ps RMS clock jitter (0.22% clock period) are 75 dB, 68 dB, and 67 dB, respectively. The proposed structure is 10 dB more tolerant to clock jitter when compared to the conventional ÎŁÎM design for similar loop filter
Proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC 1990)
Presented here are the proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC), held June 17-20, 1990 in Ottawa, Canada. Topics covered include future mobile satellite communications concepts, aeronautical applications, modulation and coding, propagation and experimental systems, mobile terminal equipment, network architecture and control, regulatory and policy considerations, vehicle antennas, and speech compression
Transmitter architectures with digital modulators, D/A converters and switching-mode power amplifiers
This thesis is composed of nine publications and an overview of the research topic, which also summarises the work. The research described in this thesis focuses on research into the digitalisation of wireless communication base station transmitters. In particular it has three foci: digital modulation, D/A conversion and switching-mode power amplification. The main interest in the implementation of these circuits is in CMOS.
The work summarizes the designs of several circuit blocks of a wireless transmitter base station. In the baseband stage, a multicarrier digital modulator that combines multiple modulated signals at different carrier frequencies digitally at baseband, and a multimode digital modulator that can be operated for three different communications standards, are implemented as integrated circuits. The digital modulators include digital power ramping and power level control units for transmission bursts. The upconversion of the baseband signal is implemented using an integrated digital quadrature modulator.
The work presented provides insight into the digital-to-analogue interface in the transmitters. This interface is studied both by implementing an intermediate frequency D/A converter in BiCMOS technology and bandpass Delta-Sigma modulator-based D/A conversion in CMOS technology.
Finally, the last part of the work discusses switching-mode power amplifiers which are experimented with both as discrete and integrated implementations in conjunction with 1-bit Delta-Sigma modulation and pulse-width modulation as input signal generation methods.TÀmÀ vÀitöskirja koostuu yhdeksÀstÀ julkaisusta ja tutkimusaiheen yhteenvedosta. VÀitöskirjassa esitetty tutkimus keskittyy langattaman viestinnÀn tukiasemien lÀhettimien digitalisoinnin tutkimukseen. Yksityiskohtaisemmin tutkimusalueet ovat: digitaalinen modulaatio, D/A muunnos ja kytkinmuotoiset tehovahvistimet. NÀiden elektronisten piirien toteutuksessa keskitytÀÀn CMOS teknologiaan.
Työ vetÀÀ yhteen useiden langattoman viestinnÀn tukiasemien lÀhettimien piirilohkojen suunnittelun. Kantataajuusasteella toteutetaan integroituna piirinÀ monikantoaaltoinen digitaalinen modulaattori, joka yhdistÀÀ useita moduloituja signaaleja eri kantoaalloilla digitaalisesti ja monistandardi digitaalinen modulaatori, joka tukee kolmea eri viestintÀstandardia. Digitaaliset modulaattoripiirit sisÀltÀvÀt digitaalisen tehoramping ja tehotason sÀÀtöyksikön lÀhetyspurskeita varten. Kantataajuussignaalin ylössekoitus toteutetaan integroitua digitaalista kvadratuurimodulaattoria kÀyttÀen.
Esitetty työ antaa nÀkemystÀ lÀhettimien digitalia-analogia rajapintaan, jota tutkitaan toteuttamalla vÀlitaajuinen D/A muunnin BiCMOS teknologialla ja pÀÀstökaistainen Delta-Sigma-modulaattoripohjainen D/A muunnin CMOS teknologialla.
Lopuksi työn viimeinen osa kÀsittelee kytkinmuotoisia tehovahvistimia, joita tutkitaan kokeellisesti sekÀ erilliskompontein toteutettuina piirein ettÀ integroiduin piirein toteutettuina kÀyttÀen sisÀÀntulosignaalin muodostamismenetemÀnÀ yksibittistÀ Delta-Sigma-modulaatiota ja pulssin leveys modulaatiota.reviewe
Ultra Wideband Communications: from Analog to Digital
ï»żUltrabreitband-Signale (Ultra Wideband [UWB]) können einen
signifikanten Nutzen im Bereich drahtloser Kommunikationssysteme haben. Es
sind jedoch noch einige Probleme offen, die durch Systemdesigner und
Wissenschaftler gelöst werden mĂŒssen. Ein Funknetzsystem mit einer derart
groĂen Bandbreite ist normalerweise auch durch eine groĂe Anzahl an
Mehrwegekomponenten mit jeweils verschiedenen Pfadamplituden
gekennzeichnet. Daher ist es schwierig, die zeitlich verteilte Energie
effektiv zu erfassen. AuĂerdem ist in vielen FĂ€llen der naheliegende
Ansatz, ein kohÀrenter EmpfÀnger im Sinne eines signalangepassten Filters
oder eines Korrelators, nicht unbedingt die beste Wahl. In der vorliegenden
Arbeit wird dabei auf die bestehende Problematik und weitere
Lösungsmöglichkeiten eingegangen.
Im ersten Abschnitt geht es um âImpulse Radio UWBâ-Systeme mit
niedriger Datenrate. Bei diesen Systemen kommt ein inkohÀrenter EmpfÀnger
zum Einsatz. InkohÀrente Signaldetektion stellt insofern einen
vielversprechenden Ansatz dar, als das damit aufwandsgĂŒnstige und robuste
Implementierungen möglich sind. Dies trifft vor allem in AnwendungsfÀllen
wie den von drahtlosen Sensornetzen zu, wo preiswerte GerÀte mit langer
Batterielaufzeit nötigsind. Dies verringert den fĂŒr die KanalschĂ€tzung
und die Synchronisation nötigen Aufwand, was jedoch auf Kosten der
Leistungseffizienz geht und eine erhöhte Störempfindlichkeit gegenĂŒber
Interferenz (z.B. Interferenz durch mehrere Nutzer oder schmalbandige
Interferenz) zur Folge hat.
Um die Bitfehlerrate der oben genannten Verfahren zu bestimmen, wurde
zunÀchst ein inkohÀrenter Combining-Verlust spezifiziert, welcher
auftritt im Gegensatz zu kohÀrenter Detektion mit Maximum Ratio Multipath
Combining. Dieser Verlust hÀngt von dem Produkt aus der LÀnge des
Integrationsfensters und der Signalbandbreite ab.
Um den Verlust durch inkohÀrentes Combining zu reduzieren und somit die
Leistungseffizienz des EmpfÀngers zu steigern, werden verbesserte
Combining-Methoden fĂŒr Mehrwegeempfang vorgeschlagen. Ein analoger
EmpfÀnger, bei dem der Hauptteil des Mehrwege-Combinings durch einen
âIntegrate and Dumpâ-Filter implementiert ist, wird fĂŒr UWB-Systeme
mit Zeit-Hopping gezeigt. Dabei wurde die Einsatzmöglichkeit von dĂŒnn
besetzten Codes in solchen System diskutiert und bewertet. Des Weiteren
wird eine Regel fĂŒr die Code-Auswahl vorgestellt, welche die StabilitĂ€t
des Systems gegen Mehrnutzer-Störungen sicherstellt und gleichzeitig den
Verlust durch inkohÀrentes Combining verringert.
Danach liegt der Fokus auf digitalen Lösungen bei inkohÀrenter
Demodulation. Im Vergleich zum AnalogempfÀnger besitzt ein
DigitalempfÀnger einen Analog-Digital-Wandler im Zeitbereich gefolgt von
einem digitalen Optimalfilter. Der digitale Optimalfilter dekodiert den
Mehrfachzugriffscode kohÀrent und beschrÀnkt das inkohÀrente Combining
auf die empfangenen Mehrwegekomponenten im Digitalbereich. Es kommt ein
schneller Analog-Digital-Wandler mit geringer Auflösung zum Einsatz, um
einen vertretbaren Energieverbrauch zu gewÀhrleisten. Diese Digitaltechnik
macht den Einsatz langer Analogverzögerungen bei differentieller
Demodulation unnötig und ermöglicht viele Arten der digitalen
Signalverarbeitung. Im Vergleich zur Analogtechnik reduziert sie nicht nur
den inkohÀrenten Combining-Verlust, sonder zeigt auch eine stÀrkere
Resistenz gegenĂŒber Störungen. Dabei werden die Auswirkungen der
Auflösung und der Abtastrate der Analog-Digital-Umsetzung analysiert. Die
Resultate zeigen, dass die verminderte Effizienz solcher
Analog-Digital-Wandler gering ausfÀllt. Weiterhin zeigt sich, dass im
Falle starker Mehrnutzerinterferenz sogar eine Verbesserung der Ergebnisse
zu beobachten ist. Die vorgeschlagenen Design-Regeln spezifizieren die
Anwendung der Analog-Digital-Wandler und die Auswahl der Systemparameter in
AbhÀngigkeit der verwendeten Mehrfachzugriffscodes und der Modulationsart.
Wir zeigen, wie unter Anwendung erweiterter Modulationsverfahren die
Leistungseffizienz verbessert werden kann und schlagen ein Verfahren zur
UnterdrĂŒckung schmalbandiger Störer vor, welches auf Soft Limiting
aufbaut. Durch die Untersuchungen und Ergebnissen zeigt sich, dass
inkohÀrente EmpfÀnger in UWB-Kommunikationssystemen mit niedriger
Datenrate ein groĂes Potential aufweisen.
AuĂerdem wird die Auswahl der benutzbaren Bandbreite untersucht, um einen
Kompromiss zwischen inkohÀrentem Combining-Verlust und StabilitÀt
gegenĂŒber langsamen Schwund zu erreichen. Dadurch wurde ein neues Konzept
fĂŒr UWB-Systeme erarbeitet: wahlweise kohĂ€rente oder inkohĂ€rente
EmpfÀnger, welche als UWB-Systeme Frequenz-Hopping nutzen. Der wesentliche
Vorteil hiervon liegt darin, dass die Bandbreite im Basisband sich deutlich
verringert. Mithin ermöglicht dies einfach zu realisierende digitale
Signalverarbeitungstechnik mit kostengĂŒnstigen Analog-Digital-Wandlern.
Dies stellt eine neue Epoche in der Forschung im Bereich drahtloser
Sensorfunknetze dar.
Der Schwerpunkt des zweiten Abschnitts stellt adaptiven Signalverarbeitung
fĂŒr hohe Datenraten mit âDirect Sequenceâ-UWB-Systemen in den
Vordergrund. In solchen Systemen entstehen, wegen der groĂen Anzahl der
empfangenen Mehrwegekomponenten, starke Inter- bzw.
Intrasymbolinterferenzen. AuĂerdem kann die FunktionalitĂ€t des Systems
durch Mehrnutzerinterferenz und Schmalbandstörungen deutlich beeinflusst
werden. Um sie zu eliminieren, wird die âWidely Linearâ-Rangreduzierung
benutzt. Dabei verbessert die Rangreduzierungsmethode das
Konvergenzverhalten, besonders wenn der gegebene Vektor eine sehr groĂe
Anzahl an Abtastwerten beinhaltet (in Folge hoher einer Abtastrate).
ZusÀtzlich kann das System durch die Anwendung der R-linearen Verarbeitung
die Statistik zweiter Ordnung des nicht-zirkularen Signals vollstÀndig
ausnutzen, was sich in verbesserten SchÀtzergebnissen widerspiegelt.
Allgemeine kann die Methode der âWidely Linearâ-Rangreduzierung auch in
andern Bereichen angewendet werden, z.B. in âDirect
Sequenceâ-Codemultiplexverfahren (DS-CDMA), im MIMO-Bereich, im Global
System for Mobile Communications (GSM) und beim Beamforming.The aim of this thesis is to investigate key issues encountered in the
design of transmission schemes and receiving techniques for Ultra Wideband
(UWB) communication systems. Based on different data rate applications,
this work is divided into two parts, where energy efficient and robust
physical layer solutions are proposed, respectively.
Due to a huge bandwidth of UWB signals, a considerable amount of multipath
arrivals with various path gains is resolvable at the receiver. For low
data rate impulse radio UWB systems, suboptimal non-coherent detection is a
simple way to effectively capture the multipath energy. Feasible techniques
that increase the power efficiency and the interference robustness of
non-coherent detection need to be investigated. For high data rate direct
sequence UWB systems, a large number of multipath arrivals results in
severe inter-/intra-symbol interference. Additionally, the system
performance may also be deteriorated by multi-user interference and
narrowband interference. It is necessary to develop advanced signal
processing techniques at the receiver to suppress these interferences.
Part I of this thesis deals with the co-design of signaling schemes and
receiver architectures in low data rate impulse radio UWB systems based on
non-coherent detection.â We analyze the bit error rate performance of
non-coherent detection and characterize a non-coherent combining loss,
i.e., a performance penalty with respect to coherent detection with maximum
ratio multipath combining. The thorough analysis of this loss is very
helpful for the design of transmission schemes and receive techniques
innon-coherent UWB communication systems.â We propose to use optical
orthogonal codes in a time hopping impulse radio UWB system based on an
analog non-coherent receiver. The âanalogâ means that the major part of
the multipath combining is implemented by an integrate and dump filter. The
introduced semi-analytical method can help us to easily select the time
hopping codes to ensure the robustness against the multi-user interference
and meanwhile to alleviate the non-coherent combining loss.â The main
contribution of Part I is the proposal of applying fully digital solutions
in non-coherent detection. The proposed digital non-coherent receiver is
based on a time domain analog-to-digital converter, which has a high speed
but a very low resolution to maintain a reasonable power consumption.
Compared to its analog counterpart, itnot only significantly reduces the
non-coherent combining loss but also offers a higher interference
robustness. In particular, the one-bit receiver can effectively suppress
strong multi-user interference and is thus advantageous in separating
simultaneously operating piconets.The fully digital solutions overcome the
difficulty of implementing long analog delay lines and make differential
UWB detection possible. They also facilitate the development of various
digital signal processing techniques such as multi-user detection and
non-coherent multipath combining methods as well as the use of advanced
modulationschemes (e.g., M-ary Walsh modulation).â Furthermore, we
present a novel impulse radio UWB system based on frequency hopping, where
both coherent and non-coherent receivers can be adopted. The key advantage
is that the baseband bandwidth can be considerably reduced (e.g., lower
than 500 MHz), which enables low-complexity implementation of the fully
digital solutions. It opens up various research activities in the
application field of wireless sensor networks.
Part II of this thesis proposes adaptive widely linear reduced-rank
techniques to suppress interferences for high data rate direct sequence UWB
systems, where second-order non-circular signals are used. The reduced-rank
techniques are designed to improve the convergence performance and the
interference robustness especially when the received vector contains a
large number of samples (due to a high sampling rate in UWB systems). The
widely linear processing takes full advantage of the second-order
statistics of the non-circular signals and enhances the estimation
performance. The generic widely linear reduced-rank concept also has a
great potential in the applications of other systems such as Direct
Sequence Code Division Multiple Access (DS-CDMA), Multiple Input Multiple
Output (MIMO) system, and Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM), or
in other areas such as beamforming