52 research outputs found

    A General Framework for Analyzing, Characterizing, and Implementing Spectrally Modulated, Spectrally Encoded Signals

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    Fourth generation (4G) communications will support many capabilities while providing universal, high speed access. One potential enabler for these capabilities is software defined radio (SDR). When controlled by cognitive radio (CR) principles, the required waveform diversity is achieved via a synergistic union called CR-based SDR. Research is rapidly progressing in SDR hardware and software venues, but current CR-based SDR research lacks the theoretical foundation and analytic framework to permit efficient implementation. This limitation is addressed here by introducing a general framework for analyzing, characterizing, and implementing spectrally modulated, spectrally encoded (SMSE) signals within CR-based SDR architectures. Given orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) is a 4G candidate signal, OFDM-based signals are collectively classified as SMSE since modulation and encoding are spectrally applied. The proposed framework provides analytic commonality and unification of SMSE signals. Applicability is first shown for candidate 4G signals, and resultant analytic expressions agree with published results. Implementability is then demonstrated in multiple coexistence scenarios via modeling and simulation to reinforce practical utility

    Multilevel Coding and Unequal Error Protection for Multiple-Access Communications and Ultra-Wideband Communications in the Presence of Interference.

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    Interference is one of the major factors that degrade the performance of a communication system. Various types of interference cause di Kerent impact on the system performance. In this thesis, we consider interference management at the physical layer. In order to enhance the performance, the receiver needs to have the knowledge about the interference. By exploiting the knowledge about interference, such as statistical properties, it can be suppressed to enhance the link quality. This thesis contains two main topics: multilevel coding (MLC) for unequal error protection (UEP) and receiver design for ultra-wideband (UWB) communications to suppress interference. Both topics deal with interference in di Kerent ways, and face di Kerent design challenges. MLC is a way to provide UEP for different streams of information with different levels of importance in a communication system. It combines coding and modulation schemes to optimize the system performance. The idea is to protect each bit in the modulation constellation point by an individual binary code. We designed and analyzed a DS-CDMA system with asymmetric PSK modulation and MLC using BCH codes in an AWGN channel. The analysis includes probability of bit error of the system, and the capacity and throughput of the MLC scheme combined with 8-PSK modulation. The results show that the MLC scheme can have a higher throughput than the regular coding scheme in the low SNR region in the AWGN channel. We also analyzed the performance of UWB communications in the presence of MAI and jamming interference. We considered a nonlinear interference suppression technique for impulse radio based UWB systems in the AWGN channel. The technique is based on the locally optimum Bayes detection (LOBD) algorithm, which utilizes the interference probability density function (PDF) for receiver design. This type of receiver has low complexity, and numerical results show that its performance asymptotically approaches that of the optimum receiver. Lastly, we discussed the implementation of the proposed receiver by adaptively monitor and update the interference PDF. The adaptive LOBD algorithm makes the proposed receiver implementation practical to deal with different types of interference.Ph.D.Electrical Engineering: SystemsUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75955/1/wangcw_1.pd

    Channel modeling and resource allocation in OFDM systems

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    The increasing demand for high data rate in wireless communication systems gives rise to broadband communication systems. The radio channel is plagued by multipath propagation, which causes frequency-selective fading in broadband signals. Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a modulation scheme specifically designed to facilitate high-speed data transmission over frequency-selective fading channels. The problem of channel modeling in the frequency domain is first investigated for the wideband and ultra wideband wireless channels. The channel is converted into an equivalent discrete channel by uniformly sampling the continuous channel frequency response (CFR), which results in a discrete CFR. A necessary and sufficient condition is established for the existence of parametric models for the discrete CFR. Based on this condition, we provide a justification for the effectiveness of previously reported autoregressive (AR) models in the frequency domain of wideband and ultra wideband channels. Resource allocation based on channel state information (CSI) is known to be a very powerful method for improving the spectral efficiency of OFDM systems. Bit and power allocation algorithms have been discussed for both static channels, where perfect knowledge of CSI is assumed, and time-varying channels, where the knowledge of CSI is imperfect. In case of static channels, the optimal resource allocation for multiuser OFDM systems has been investigated. Novel algorithms are proposed for subcarrier allocation and bit-power allocation with considerably lower complexity than other schemes in the literature. For time-varying channel, the error in CSI due to channel variation is recognized as the main obstacle for achieving the full potential of resource allocation. Channel prediction is proposed to suppress errors in the CSI and new bit and power allocation schemes incorporating imperfect CSI are presented and their performance is evaluated through simulations. Finally, a maximum likelihood (ML) receiver for Multiband Keying (MBK) signals is discussed, where MBK is a modulation scheme proposed for ultra wideband systems (UWB). The receiver structure and the associated ML decision rule is derived through analysis. A suboptimal algorithm based on a depth-first tree search is introduced to significantly reduce the computational complexity of the receiver

    High-performance signal acquisition algorithms for wireless communications receivers

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    Due to the uncertainties introduced by the propagation channel, and RF and mixed signal circuits imperfections, digital communication receivers require efficient and robust signal acquisition algorithms for timing and carrier recovery, and interfer- ence rejection. The main theme of this work is the development of efficient and robust signal synchronization and interference rejection schemes for narrowband, wideband and ultra wideband communications systems. A series of novel signal acquisition schemes together with their performance analysis and comparisons with existing state-of-the- art results are introduced. The design effort is first focused on narrowband systems, and then on wideband and ultra wideband systems. For single carrier modulated narrowband systems, it is found that conventional timing recovery schemes present low efficiency, e.g., certain feedback timing recov- ery schemes exhibit the so-called hang-up phenomenon, while another class of blind feedforward timing recovery schemes presents large self-noise. Based on a general re- search framework, we propose new anti-hangup algorithms and prefiltering techniques to speed up the feedback timing recovery and reduce the self-noise of feedforward tim- ing estimators, respectively. Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) technique is well suited for wideband wireless systems. However, OFDM receivers require high performance car-rier and timing synchronization. A new coarse synchronization scheme is proposed for efficient carrier frequency offset and timing acquisition. Also, a novel highly accurate decision-directed algorithm is proposed to track and compensate the residual phase and timing errors after the coarse synchronization step. Both theoretical analysis and computer simulations indicate that the proposed algorithms greatly improve the performance of OFDM receivers. The results of an in-depth study show that a narrowband interference (NBI) could cause serious performance loss in multiband OFDMbased ultra-wideband (UWB) sys- tems. A novel NBI mitigation scheme, based on a digital NBI detector and adaptive analog notch filter bank, is proposed to reduce the effects of NBI in UWB systems. Simulation results show that the proposed NBI mitigation scheme improves signifi- cantly the performance of a standard UWB receiver (this improvement manifests as a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) gain of 9 dB)

    An analog approach to interference suppression in ultra-wideband receivers

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    Because of the huge bandwidth of Ultra-Wideband (UWB) systems, in-band narrowband interference may hinder receiver performance. In this dissertation, sources of potential narrowband interference that lie within the IEEE 802.15.3a UWB bandwidth are presented, and a solution is proposed. To combat interference in Multi-Band OFDM (MB-OFDM) UWB systems, an analog notch filter is designed to be included in the UWB receive chain. The architecture of the filter is based on feed-forward subtraction of the interference, and includes a Least Means Squared (LMS) tuning scheme to maximize attenuation. The filter uses the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) result for interference detection and discrete center frequency tuning of the filter. It was fabricated in a 0.18 ĂƒĂ‚Â”m process, and experimental results are provided. This is the first study of potential in-band interference sources for UWB. The proposed filter offers a practical means for ensuring reliable UWB communication in the presense of such interference. The Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA) is the predominant building block in the design of the notch filter. In many cases, OTAs must handle input signals with large common mode swings. A new scheme for achieving rail-to-rail input to an OTA is introduced. Constant gm is obtained by using tunable level shifters and a single differential pair. Feedback circuitry controls the level shifters in a manner that fixes the common mode input of the differential pair, resulting in consistent and stable operation for rail-to-rail inputs. As the new technique avoids using complimentary input differential pairs, this method overcomes problems such as Common Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR) and Gain Bandwidth (GBW) product degradation that exist in many other designs. The circuit was fabricated in a 0.5ĂƒĂ‚Â”m process. The resulting differential pair had a constant transconductance that varied by only ĂƒĂ‚Â±0.35% for rail-to-rail input common mode levels. The input common mode range extended well past the supply levels of ĂƒĂ‚Â±1.5V, resulting in only ĂƒĂ‚Â±1% fluctuation in gm for input common modes from -2V to 2V

    Superregeneration revisited: from principles to current applications

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    © 2020 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Wireless communications play a central role in our modern connected lives; at the same time, they constitute a very broad and deep area of research. The elements that make wireless communications possible are a transmitter, which sends information through electromagnetic waves; a medium that is able to transport these waves; and, finally, a receiver, which extracts the information from the-usually very small-amount of energy it is able to collect from the medium.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Advanced Coding And Modulation For Ultra-wideband And Impulsive Noises

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    The ever-growing demand for higher quality and faster multimedia content delivery over short distances in home environments drives the quest for higher data rates in wireless personal area networks (WPANs). One of the candidate IEEE 802.15.3a WPAN proposals support data rates up to 480 Mbps by using punctured convolutional codes with quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) modulation for a multi-band orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) system over ultra wideband (UWB) channels. In the first part of this dissertation, we combine more powerful near-Shannon-limit turbo codes with bandwidth efficient trellis coded modulation, i.e., turbo trellis coded modulation (TTCM), to further improve the data rates up to 1.2 Gbps. A modified iterative decoder for this TTCM coded MB-OFDM system is proposed and its bit error rate performance under various impulsive noises over both Gaussian and UWB channel is extensively investigated, especially in mismatched scenarios. A robust decoder which is immune to noise mismatch is provided based on comparison of impulsive noises in time domain and frequency domain. The accurate estimation of the dynamic noise model could be very difficult or impossible at the receiver, thus a significant performance degradation may occur due to noise mismatch. In the second part of this dissertation, we prove that the minimax decoder in \cite, which instead of minimizing the average bit error probability aims at minimizing the worst bit error probability, is optimal and robust to certain noise model with unknown prior probabilities in two and higher dimensions. Besides turbo codes, another kind of error correcting codes which approach the Shannon capacity is low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes. In the last part of this dissertation, we extend the density evolution method for sum-product decoding using mismatched noises. We will prove that as long as the true noise type and the estimated noise type used in the decoder are both binary-input memoryless output symmetric channels, the output from mismatched log-likelihood ratio (LLR) computation is also symmetric. We will show the Shannon capacity can be evaluated for mismatched LLR computation and it can be reduced if the mismatched LLR computation is not an one-to-one mapping function. We will derive the Shannon capacity, threshold and stable condition of LDPC codes for mismatched BIAWGN and BIL noise types. The results show that the noise variance estimation errors will not affect the Shannon capacity and stable condition, but the errors do reduce the threshold. The mismatch in noise type will only reduce Shannon capacity when LLR computation is based on BIL

    Non-Cooperative Detection of Ultra Wideband Signals

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    Techniques for the non-cooperative (non-matched filter) detection of impulse-like ultra wideband signals using channelized receiver architectures are developed and evaluated. Each technique considered is modeled and simulations conducted to characterize detection performance, the results of which are compared with the detection performance of three receivers: the matched filter receiver, which provides optimum detection performance in AWGN; the radiometer, or energy detector; and the multi-aperture cross correlation receiver. It is shown that a channelized receiver (with no downconversion) can provide approximately 2.5 dB improvement over the radiometer when performing detection using the temporal-temporal matrix (TTM). The TTM processing technique provides the best performance of all the proposed channelized receiver techniques. Detection with a downconverting channelized receiver is shown dependent on mixer phase value with performance variation generally minimized as the number of channels increases (channel bandwidth decreases)
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