18 research outputs found

    Receiver algorithms that enable multi-mode baseband terminals

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    Timing and Carrier Synchronization in Wireless Communication Systems: A Survey and Classification of Research in the Last 5 Years

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    Timing and carrier synchronization is a fundamental requirement for any wireless communication system to work properly. Timing synchronization is the process by which a receiver node determines the correct instants of time at which to sample the incoming signal. Carrier synchronization is the process by which a receiver adapts the frequency and phase of its local carrier oscillator with those of the received signal. In this paper, we survey the literature over the last 5 years (2010–2014) and present a comprehensive literature review and classification of the recent research progress in achieving timing and carrier synchronization in single-input single-output (SISO), multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), cooperative relaying, and multiuser/multicell interference networks. Considering both single-carrier and multi-carrier communication systems, we survey and categorize the timing and carrier synchronization techniques proposed for the different communication systems focusing on the system model assumptions for synchronization, the synchronization challenges, and the state-of-the-art synchronization solutions and their limitations. Finally, we envision some future research directions

    Synchronisation, détection et égalisation de modulation à phase continue dans des canaux sélectifs en temps et en fréquence

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    Si les drones militaires connaissent un développement important depuis une quinzaine d’année, suivi depuis quelques années par les drones civiles dont les usages ne font que se multiplier, en réalité les drones ont un siècle avec le premier vol d’un avion équipé d’un système de pilotage automatique sur une centaine de kilomètre en 1918. La question des règles d’usage des drones civiles sont en cours de développement malgré leur multiplication pour des usages allant de l’agriculture, à l’observation en passant par la livraison de colis. Ainsi, leur intégration dans l’espace aérien reste un enjeu important, ainsi que les standards de communication avec ces drones dans laquelle s’inscrit cette thèse. Cette thèse vise en effet à étudier et proposer des solutions pour les liens de communications des drones par satellite.L’intégration de ce lien de communication permet d’assurer la fiabilité des communications et particulièrement du lien de Commande et Contrôle partout dans le monde, en s’affranchissant des contraintes d’un réseau terrestre (comme les zones blanches). En raison de la rareté des ressources fréquentielles déjà allouées pour les futurs systèmes intégrant des drones, l’efficacité spectrale devient un paramètre important pour leur déploiement à grande échelle et le contexte spatiale demande l’utilisation d’un système de communication robuste aux non-linéarités. Les Modulations à Phase Continue permettent de répondre à ces problématiques. Cependant, ces dernières sont des modulations non-linéaire à mémoire entraînant une augmentation de la complexité des récepteurs. Du fait de la présence d’un canal multi-trajet (canal aéronautique par satellite), le principal objectif de cette thèse est de proposer des algorithmes d’égalisation (dans le domaine fréquentiel pour réduire leur complexité) et de synchronisation pour CPM adaptés à ce concept tout en essayant de proposer une complexité calculatoire raisonnable. Dans un premier temps, nous avons considéré uniquement des canaux sélectifs en fréquence et avons étudier les différents égaliseurs de la littérature. En étudiant leur similitudes et différences, nous avons pu développer un égaliseur dans le domaine fréquentiel qui proposant les mêmes performances a une complexité moindre. Nous proposons également des méthodes d’estimation canal et une méthode d’estimation conjointe du canal et de la fréquence porteuse. Dans un second temps nous avons montré comment étendre ces méthodes à des canaux sélectifs en temps et fréquence permettant ainsi de conserver une complexité calculatoire raisonnable

    The Application of Spatial Complementary Code Keying in Point-to-Point MIMO Wireless Communications Systems

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    Development and verification of semi-blind receiver structures for broadband wireless communication systems

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    The increasingly high demands for high data rate wireless communication services require spectrum- and energy-efficient solutions. In this thesis, a number of energy-efficient semi-blind receiver structures are proposed to perform Doppler spread estimation, channel estimation and equalisation for broadband wireless orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) systems. A real-time wireless communication testbed is developed to verify the proposed semi-blind receiver structures. In the first contribution, a semi-blind Doppler spread estimation and Kalman filtering based channel estimation approach is proposed for wireless OFDM systems. A short sequence of reference data is carefully designed and applied as pilot symbols for Doppler spread estimation and channel estimation initialisation of the Kalman filter. Then the estimates of inter-carrier interference (ICI) caused by Doppler spread are gathered into the equivalent channel model and compensated for through channel equalisation, which dramatically reduces the computational complexity. The simulation results show that the proposed approach outperforms the conventional pilot aided Doppler spread and channel estimation schemes. In the second contribution, a semi-blind Doppler spread estimation and independent component analysis (ICA) based equalisation scheme aided by non-redundant precoding is proposed for wireless multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) OFDM systems. A number of reference data sequences are selected from a pool of orthogonal sequences for two purposes. First, the reference data sequences are superimposed in the source data sequences through non-redundant linear precoding to enable the Doppler spread estimation by minimising the sum cross-correlation between the compensated signals and the rest of the orthogonal sequences in the pool. Second, the same reference data sequences are applied to eliminate the phase and permutation ambiguity in the ICA equalised signals. Simulation results show that the proposed semi-blind MIMO OFDM system can achieve a bit error rate (BER) performance which is close to the ideal case with perfect channel state information (CSI). In the third contribution, a real-time wireless communication testbed is developed with a vector signal generator, a vector signal analyser and a pair of antennas, to verify the effectiveness of the proposed receiver structures over the air in different environments such as Reverberation chamber and office area. Measurement results show a good match with simulation results. Also, a pilot is employed for three purposes at a semi-blind receiver: time synchronisation, Doppler spread estimation and Kalman filtering initialisation, which is an extension of the work in the first contribution

    Superimposed training for single carrier transmission in future mobile communications

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    The amount of wireless devices and wireless traffic has been increasing exponentially for the last ten years. It is forecasted that the exponential growth will continue without saturation till 2020 and probably further. So far, network vendors and operators have tackled the problem by introducing new evolutions of cellular macro networks, where each evolution has increased the physical layer spectral efficiency. Unfortunately, the spectral efficiency of the physical layer is achieving the Shannon-Hartley limit and does not provide much room for improvement anymore. However, considering the overhead due to synchronization and channel estimation reference symbols in the context of physical layer spectral efficiency, we believe that there is room for improvement. In this thesis, we will study the potentiality of superimposed training methods, especially data-dependent superimposed training, to boost the spectral efficiency of wideband single carrier communications even further. The main idea is that with superimposed training we can transmit more data symbols in the same time duration as compared to traditional time domain multiplexed training. In theory, more data symbols means more data bits which indicates higher throughput for the end user. In practice, nothing is free. With superimposed training we encounter self-interference between the training signal and the data signal. Therefore, we have to look for iterative receiver structures to separate these two or to estimate both, the desired data signal and the interfering component. In this thesis, we initiate the studies to find out if we truly can improve the existing systems by introducing the superimposed training scheme. We show that in certain scenarios we can achieve higher spectral efficiency, which maps directly to higher user throughput, but with the cost of higher signal processing burden in the receiver. In addition, we provide analytical tools for estimating the symbol or bit error ratio in the receiver with a given parametrization. The discussion leads us to the conclusion that there still remains several open topics for further study when looking for new ways of optimizing the overhead of reference symbols in wireless communications. Superimposed training with data-dependent components may prove to provide extra throughput gain. Furthermore, the superimposed component may be used for, e.g., improved synchronization, low bit-rate signaling or continuous tracking of neighbor cells. We believe that the current systems could be improved by using the superimposed training collectively with time domain multiplexed training
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