1,136 research outputs found
Complex Block Floating-Point Format with Box Encoding For Wordlength Reduction in Communication Systems
We propose a new complex block floating-point format to reduce implementation
complexity. The new format achieves wordlength reduction by sharing an exponent
across the block of samples, and uses box encoding for the shared exponent to
reduce quantization error. Arithmetic operations are performed on blocks of
samples at time, which can also reduce implementation complexity. For a case
study of a baseband quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) transmitter and
receiver, we quantify the tradeoffs in signal quality vs. implementation
complexity using the new approach to represent IQ samples. Signal quality is
measured using error vector magnitude (EVM) in the receiver, and implementation
complexity is measured in terms of arithmetic complexity as well as memory
allocation and memory input/output rates. The primary contributions of this
paper are (1) a complex block floating-point format with box encoding of the
shared exponent to reduce quantization error, (2) arithmetic operations using
the new complex block floating-point format, and (3) a QAM transceiver case
study to quantify signal quality vs. implementation complexity tradeoffs using
the new format and arithmetic operations.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Asilomar Conference on Signals,
Systems, and Computers 201
Fronthaul evolution: From CPRI to Ethernet
It is proposed that using Ethernet in the fronthaul, between base station baseband unit (BBU) pools and remote radio heads (RRHs), can bring a number of advantages, from use of lower-cost equipment, shared use of infrastructure with fixed access networks, to obtaining statistical multiplexing and optimised performance through probe-based monitoring and software-defined networking. However, a number of challenges exist: ultra-high-bit-rate requirements from the transport of increased bandwidth radio streams for multiple antennas in future mobile networks, and low latency and jitter to meet delay requirements and the demands of joint processing. A new fronthaul functional division is proposed which can alleviate the most demanding bit-rate requirements by transport of baseband signals instead of sampled radio waveforms, and enable statistical multiplexing gains. Delay and synchronisation issues remain to be solved
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