4 research outputs found
Advanced receiver structures for mobile MIMO multicarrier communication systems
Beyond third generation (3G) and fourth generation (4G) wireless communication systems are targeting far higher data rates, spectral efficiency and mobility requirements than existing 3G networks. By using multiple antennas at the transmitter and the receiver, multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) technology allows improving both the spectral efficiency (bits/s/Hz), the coverage, and link reliability of the system. Multicarrier modulation such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) is a powerful technique to handle impairments specific to the wireless radio channel. The combination of multicarrier modulation together with MIMO signaling provides a feasible physical layer technology for future beyond 3G and fourth generation communication systems.
The theoretical benefits of MIMO and multicarrier modulation may not be fully achieved because the wireless transmission channels are time and frequency selective. Also, high data rates call for a large bandwidth and high carrier frequencies. As a result, an important Doppler spread is likely to be experienced, leading to variations of the channel over very short period of time. At the same time, transceiver front-end imperfections, mobility and rich scattering environments cause frequency synchronization errors. Unlike their single-carrier counterparts, multi-carrier transmissions are extremely sensitive to carrier frequency offsets (CFO). Therefore, reliable channel estimation and frequency synchronization are necessary to obtain the benefits of MIMO OFDM in mobile systems. These two topics are the main research problems in this thesis.
An algorithm for the joint estimation and tracking of channel and CFO parameters in MIMO OFDM is developed in this thesis. A specific state-space model is introduced for MIMO OFDM systems impaired by multiple carrier frequency offsets under time-frequency selective fading. In MIMO systems, multiple frequency offsets are justified by mobility, rich scattering environment and large angle spread, as well as potentially separate radio frequency - intermediate frequency chains. An extended Kalman filter stage tracks channel and CFO parameters. Tracking takes place in time domain, which ensures reduced computational complexity, robustness to estimation errors as well as low estimation variance in comparison to frequency domain processing.
The thesis also addresses the problem of blind carrier frequency synchronization in OFDM. Blind techniques exploit statistical or structural properties of the OFDM modulation. Two novel approaches are proposed for blind fine CFO estimation. The first one aims at restoring the orthogonality of the OFDM transmission by exploiting the properties of the received signal covariance matrix. The second approach is a subspace algorithm exploiting the correlation of the channel frequency response among the subcarriers. Both methods achieve reliable estimation of the CFO regardless of multipath fading. The subspace algorithm needs extremely small sample support, which is a key feature in the face of time-selective channels. Finally, the Cramér-Rao (CRB) bound is established for the problem in order to assess the large sample performance of the proposed algorithms.reviewe
Channel and frequency offset estimation schemes for multicarrier systems
Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotécnicaO presente trabalho aborda o problema da estimação de canal e da estimação de desvio de frequência em sistemas OFDM com múltiplas configurações de antenas no transmissor e no receptor.
Nesta tese é apresentado o estudo teórico sobre o impacto da densidade de pilotos no desempenho da estimação de canal em sistemas OFDM e são
propostos diversos algoritmos para estimação de canal e estimação de desvio de frequência em sistemas OFDM com antenas únicas no transmissor e receptor, com diversidade de transmissão e MIMO.
O estudo teórico culmina com a formulação analítica do erro quadrático médio de um estimador de canal genérico num sistema OFDM que utilize pilotos dedicados, distribuidos no quadro transmitido em padrões bi-dimensionais. A
formulação genérica é concretizada para o estimador bi-dimensional LS-DFT, permitindo aferir da exactidão da formulação analítica quando comparada com os valores obtidos por simulação do sistema abordado.
Os algoritmos de estimação investigados tiram partido da presença de pilotos dedicados presentes nos quadros transmitidos para estimar com precisão os parâmetros pretendidos. Pela sua baixa complexidade, estes algoritmos revelam-se especialmente adequados para implementação em terminais móveis com capacidade computacional e consumo limitados.
O desempenho dos algoritmos propostos foi avaliado por meio de simulação do sistema utilizado, recorrendo a modelos aceites de caracterização do canal móvel multipercurso. A comparação do seu desempenho com algoritmos de referência permitir aferir da sua validade.
ABSTRACT: The present work focus on the problem of channel estimation and frequency offset estimation in OFDM systems, with different antenna configurations at
both the transmitter and the receiver.
This thesis presents the theoretical study of the impact of the pilot density in the performance of the channel estimation in OFDM systems and proposes several channel and frequency offset algorithms for OFDM systems with single antenna at both transmitter and receiver, with transmitter diversity and MIMO.
The theoretical study results in the analytical formulation of the mean square error of a generic channel estimator for an OFDM system using dedicated pilots, distributed in the transmitted frame in two-dimensional patterns. The generic formulation is implemented for the two-dimensional LS-DFT estimator to verify the accuracy of the analytical formulation when compared with the
values obtained by simulation of the discussed system.
The investigated estimation algorithms take advantage of the presence of dedicated pilots present in the transmitted frames to accurately estimate the required parameters. Due to its low complexity, these algorithms are especially
suited for implementation in mobile terminals with limited processing power and consumption.
The performance of the proposed algorithms was evaluated by simulation of the used system, using accepted multipath mobile channel models. The
comparison of its performance with the one of reference algorithms measures its validity
Advanced Algebraic Concepts for Efficient Multi-Channel Signal Processing
Unsere moderne Gesellschaft ist Zeuge eines fundamentalen Wandels in der Art und Weise
wie wir mit Technologie interagieren. Geräte werden zunehmend intelligenter - sie verfügen
über mehr und mehr Rechenleistung und häufiger über eigene Kommunikationsschnittstellen.
Das beginnt bei einfachen Haushaltsgeräten und reicht über Transportmittel bis zu großen
überregionalen Systemen wie etwa dem Stromnetz. Die Erfassung, die Verarbeitung und der
Austausch digitaler Informationen gewinnt daher immer mehr an Bedeutung. Die Tatsache,
dass ein wachsender Anteil der Geräte heutzutage mobil und deshalb batteriebetrieben ist,
begründet den Anspruch, digitale Signalverarbeitungsalgorithmen besonders effizient zu gestalten.
Dies kommt auch dem Wunsch nach einer Echtzeitverarbeitung der großen anfallenden
Datenmengen zugute.
Die vorliegende Arbeit demonstriert Methoden zum Finden effizienter algebraischer Lösungen
für eine Vielzahl von Anwendungen mehrkanaliger digitaler Signalverarbeitung. Solche Ansätze
liefern nicht immer unbedingt die bestmögliche Lösung, kommen dieser jedoch häufig recht
nahe und sind gleichzeitig bedeutend einfacher zu beschreiben und umzusetzen. Die einfache
Beschreibungsform ermöglicht eine tiefgehende Analyse ihrer Leistungsfähigkeit, was für den
Entwurf eines robusten und zuverlässigen Systems unabdingbar ist. Die Tatsache, dass sie nur
gebräuchliche algebraische Hilfsmittel benötigen, erlaubt ihre direkte und zügige Umsetzung
und den Test unter realen Bedingungen.
Diese Grundidee wird anhand von drei verschiedenen Anwendungsgebieten demonstriert.
Zunächst wird ein semi-algebraisches Framework zur Berechnung der kanonisch polyadischen
(CP) Zerlegung mehrdimensionaler Signale vorgestellt. Dabei handelt es sich um ein sehr
grundlegendes Werkzeug der multilinearen Algebra mit einem breiten Anwendungsspektrum
von Mobilkommunikation über Chemie bis zur Bildverarbeitung. Verglichen mit existierenden
iterativen Lösungsverfahren bietet das neue Framework die Möglichkeit, den Rechenaufwand
und damit die Güte der erzielten Lösung zu steuern. Es ist außerdem weniger anfällig gegen eine
schlechte Konditionierung der Ausgangsdaten. Das zweite Gebiet, das in der Arbeit besprochen
wird, ist die unterraumbasierte hochauflösende Parameterschätzung für mehrdimensionale Signale,
mit Anwendungsgebieten im RADAR, der Modellierung von Wellenausbreitung, oder
bildgebenden Verfahren in der Medizin. Es wird gezeigt, dass sich derartige mehrdimensionale
Signale mit Tensoren darstellen lassen. Dies erlaubt eine natürlichere Beschreibung und eine
bessere Ausnutzung ihrer Struktur als das mit Matrizen möglich ist. Basierend auf dieser Idee
entwickeln wir eine tensor-basierte Schätzung des Signalraums, welche genutzt werden kann
um beliebige existierende Matrix-basierte Verfahren zu verbessern. Dies wird im Anschluss
exemplarisch am Beispiel der ESPRIT-artigen Verfahren gezeigt, für die verbesserte Versionen
vorgeschlagen werden, die die mehrdimensionale Struktur der Daten (Tensor-ESPRIT),
nichzirkuläre Quellsymbole (NC ESPRIT), sowie beides gleichzeitig (NC Tensor-ESPRIT) ausnutzen.
Um die endgültige Schätzgenauigkeit objektiv einschätzen zu können wird dann ein
Framework für die analytische Beschreibung der Leistungsfähigkeit beliebiger ESPRIT-artiger
Algorithmen diskutiert. Verglichen mit existierenden analytischen Ausdrücken ist unser Ansatz
allgemeiner, da keine Annahmen über die statistische Verteilung von Nutzsignal und
Rauschen benötigt werden und die Anzahl der zur Verfügung stehenden Schnappschüsse beliebig
klein sein kann. Dies führt auf vereinfachte Ausdrücke für den mittleren quadratischen
Schätzfehler, die Schlussfolgerungen über die Effizienz der Verfahren unter verschiedenen Bedingungen
zulassen. Das dritte Anwendungsgebiet ist der bidirektionale Datenaustausch mit
Hilfe von Relay-Stationen. Insbesondere liegt hier der Fokus auf Zwei-Wege-Relaying mit Hilfe
von Amplify-and-Forward-Relays mit mehreren Antennen, da dieser Ansatz ein besonders gutes
Kosten-Nutzen-Verhältnis verspricht. Es wird gezeigt, dass sich die nötige Kanalkenntnis
mit einem einfachen algebraischen Tensor-basierten Schätzverfahren gewinnen lässt. Außerdem
werden Verfahren zum Finden einer günstigen Relay-Verstärkungs-Strategie diskutiert. Bestehende
Ansätze basieren entweder auf komplexen numerischen Optimierungsverfahren oder auf
Ad-Hoc-Ansätzen die keine zufriedenstellende Bitfehlerrate oder Summenrate liefern. Deshalb
schlagen wir algebraische Ansätze zum Finden der Relayverstärkungsmatrix vor, die von relevanten
Systemmetriken inspiriert sind und doch einfach zu berechnen sind. Wir zeigen das
algebraische ANOMAX-Verfahren zum Erreichen einer niedrigen Bitfehlerrate und seine Modifikation
RR-ANOMAX zum Erreichen einer hohen Summenrate. Für den Spezialfall, in dem
die Endgeräte nur eine Antenne verwenden, leiten wir eine semi-algebraische Lösung zum
Finden der Summenraten-optimalen Strategie (RAGES) her. Anhand von numerischen Simulationen
wird die Leistungsfähigkeit dieser Verfahren bezüglich Bitfehlerrate und erreichbarer
Datenrate bewertet und ihre Effektivität gezeigt.Modern society is undergoing a fundamental change in the way we interact with technology.
More and more devices are becoming "smart" by gaining advanced computation capabilities
and communication interfaces, from household appliances over transportation systems to large-scale
networks like the power grid. Recording, processing, and exchanging digital information
is thus becoming increasingly important. As a growing share of devices is nowadays mobile
and hence battery-powered, a particular interest in efficient digital signal processing techniques
emerges.
This thesis contributes to this goal by demonstrating methods for finding efficient algebraic
solutions to various applications of multi-channel digital signal processing. These may not
always result in the best possible system performance. However, they often come close while
being significantly simpler to describe and to implement. The simpler description facilitates a
thorough analysis of their performance which is crucial to design robust and reliable systems.
The fact that they rely on standard algebraic methods only allows their rapid implementation
and test under real-world conditions.
We demonstrate this concept in three different application areas. First, we present a semi-algebraic
framework to compute the Canonical Polyadic (CP) decompositions of multidimensional
signals, a very fundamental tool in multilinear algebra with applications ranging from
chemistry over communications to image compression. Compared to state-of-the art iterative
solutions, our framework offers a flexible control of the complexity-accuracy trade-off and
is less sensitive to badly conditioned data. The second application area is multidimensional
subspace-based high-resolution parameter estimation with applications in RADAR, wave propagation
modeling, or biomedical imaging. We demonstrate that multidimensional signals can
be represented by tensors, providing a convenient description and allowing to exploit the
multidimensional structure in a better way than using matrices only. Based on this idea,
we introduce the tensor-based subspace estimate which can be applied to enhance existing
matrix-based parameter estimation schemes significantly. We demonstrate the enhancements
by choosing the family of ESPRIT-type algorithms as an example and introducing enhanced
versions that exploit the multidimensional structure (Tensor-ESPRIT), non-circular source
amplitudes (NC ESPRIT), and both jointly (NC Tensor-ESPRIT). To objectively judge the
resulting estimation accuracy, we derive a framework for the analytical performance assessment
of arbitrary ESPRIT-type algorithms by virtue of an asymptotical first order perturbation
expansion. Our results are more general than existing analytical results since we do not need
any assumptions about the distribution of the desired signal and the noise and we do not
require the number of samples to be large. At the end, we obtain simplified expressions for the
mean square estimation error that provide insights into efficiency of the methods under various
conditions. The third application area is bidirectional relay-assisted communications. Due to
its particularly low complexity and its efficient use of the radio resources we choose two-way
relaying with a MIMO amplify and forward relay. We demonstrate that the required channel
knowledge can be obtained by a simple algebraic tensor-based channel estimation scheme. We
also discuss the design of the relay amplification matrix in such a setting. Existing approaches
are either based on complicated numerical optimization procedures or on ad-hoc solutions
that to not perform well in terms of the bit error rate or the sum-rate. Therefore, we propose
algebraic solutions that are inspired by these performance metrics and therefore perform well
while being easy to compute. For the MIMO case, we introduce the algebraic norm maximizing
(ANOMAX) scheme, which achieves a very low bit error rate, and its extension Rank-Restored
ANOMAX (RR-ANOMAX) that achieves a sum-rate close to an upper bound. Moreover, for
the special case of single antenna terminals we derive the semi-algebraic RAGES scheme which
finds the sum-rate optimal relay amplification matrix based on generalized eigenvectors. Numerical
simulations evaluate the resulting system performance in terms of bit error rate and
system sum rate which demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed algebraic solutions