11 research outputs found

    Técnicas de pré-codificação para sistemas multicelulares coordenados

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    Doutoramento em TelecomunicaçõesCoordenação Multicélula é um tópico de investigação em rápido crescimento e uma solução promissora para controlar a interferência entre células em sistemas celulares, melhorando a equidade do sistema e aumentando a sua capacidade. Esta tecnologia já está em estudo no LTEAdvanced sob o conceito de coordenação multiponto (COMP). Existem várias abordagens sobre coordenação multicélula, dependendo da quantidade e do tipo de informação partilhada pelas estações base, através da rede de suporte (backhaul network), e do local onde essa informação é processada, i.e., numa unidade de processamento central ou de uma forma distribuída em cada estação base. Nesta tese, são propostas técnicas de pré-codificação e alocação de potência considerando várias estratégias: centralizada, todo o processamento é feito na unidade de processamento central; semidistribuída, neste caso apenas parte do processamento é executado na unidade de processamento central, nomeadamente a potência alocada a cada utilizador servido por cada estação base; e distribuída em que o processamento é feito localmente em cada estação base. Os esquemas propostos são projectados em duas fases: primeiro são propostas soluções de pré-codificação para mitigar ou eliminar a interferência entre células, de seguida o sistema é melhorado através do desenvolvimento de vários esquemas de alocação de potência. São propostas três esquemas de alocação de potência centralizada condicionada a cada estação base e com diferentes relações entre desempenho e complexidade. São também derivados esquemas de alocação distribuídos, assumindo que um sistema multicelular pode ser visto como a sobreposição de vários sistemas com uma única célula. Com base neste conceito foi definido uma taxa de erro média virtual para cada um desses sistemas de célula única que compõem o sistema multicelular, permitindo assim projectar esquemas de alocação de potência completamente distribuídos. Todos os esquemas propostos foram avaliados em cenários realistas, bastante próximos dos considerados no LTE. Os resultados mostram que os esquemas propostos são eficientes a remover a interferência entre células e que o desempenho das técnicas de alocação de potência propostas é claramente superior ao caso de não alocação de potência. O desempenho dos sistemas completamente distribuídos é inferior aos baseados num processamento centralizado, mas em contrapartida podem ser usados em sistemas em que a rede de suporte não permita a troca de grandes quantidades de informação.Multicell coordination is a promising solution for cellular wireless systems to mitigate inter-cell interference, improving system fairness and increasing capacity and thus is already under study in LTE-A under the coordinated multipoint (CoMP) concept. There are several coordinated transmission approaches depending on the amount of information shared by the transmitters through the backhaul network and where the processing takes place i.e. in a central processing unit or in a distributed way on each base station. In this thesis, we propose joint precoding and power allocation techniques considering different strategies: Full-centralized, where all the processing takes place at the central unit; Semi-distributed, in this case only some process related with power allocation is done at the central unit; and Fulldistributed, where all the processing is done locally at each base station. The methods are designed in two phases: first the inter-cell interference is removed by applying a set of centralized or distributed precoding vectors; then the system is further optimized by centralized or distributed power allocation schemes. Three centralized power allocation algorithms with per-BS power constraint and different complexity tradeoffs are proposed. Also distributed power allocation schemes are proposed by considering the multicell system as superposition of single cell systems, where we define the average virtual bit error rate (BER) of interference-free single cell system, allowing us to compute the power allocation coefficients in a distributed manner at each BS. All proposed schemes are evaluated in realistic scenarios considering LTE specifications. The numerical evaluations show that the proposed schemes are efficient in removing inter-cell interference and improve system performance comparing to equal power allocation. Furthermore, fulldistributed schemes can be used when the amounts of information to be exchanged over the backhaul is restricted, although system performance is slightly degraded from semi-distributed and full-centralized schemes, but the complexity is considerably lower. Besides that for high degrees of freedom distributed schemes show similar behaviour to centralized ones

    INTERFERENCE MANAGEMENT IN LTE SYSTEM AND BEYOUND

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    The key challenges to high throughput in cellular wireless communication system are interference, mobility and bandwidth limitation. Mobility has never been a problem until recently, bandwidth has been constantly improved upon through the evolutions in cellular wireless communication system but interference has been a constant limitation to any improvement that may have resulted from such evolution. The fundamental challenge to a system designer or a researcher is how to achieve high data rate in motion (high speed) in a cellular system that is intrinsically interference-limited. Multi-antenna is the solution to data on the move and the capacity of multi-antenna system has been demonstrated to increase proportionally with increase in the number of antennas at both transmitter and receiver for point-to-point communications and multi-user environment. However, the capacity gain in both uplink and downlink is limited in a multi-user environment like cellular system by interference, the number of antennas at the base station, complexity and space constraint particularly for a mobile terminal. This challenge in the downlink provided the motivation to investigate successive interference cancellation (SIC) as an interference management tool LTE system and beyond. The Simulation revealed that ordered successive interference (OSIC) out performs non-ordered successive interference cancellation (NSIC) and the additional complexity is justified based on the associated gain in BER performance of OSIC. The major drawback of OSIC is that it is not efficient in network environment employing power control or power allocation. Additional interference management techniques will be required to fully manage the interference.fi=Opinnäytetyö kokotekstinä PDF-muodossa.|en=Thesis fulltext in PDF format.|sv=Lärdomsprov tillgängligt som fulltext i PDF-format

    Técnicas de quantização para sistemas de comunicação híbridos na banda de ondas milimétricas com um número elevado de antenas

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    Since the appearance of mobile communications, the users of this technology have been growing exponentially every day. The escalating mobile traffic growth it has been imposed by the proliferation of smartphones and tablets. The increasing and more intensive use of wireless communications may lead to a future breaking point, where the traditional systems will fail to support the required capability, spectral and energy efficiency. On the other hand, to cover all this current need to have more and more data it is necessary to provide a new range of data rates around the gigabits per second. Today, almost all mobile communications systems use spectrum in the range of 300MHz – 3GHz. It is needed to start looking to the range of 3GHz – 300GHz spectrum for mobile broadband applications. Millimeter waves are one way to alleviate the spectrum gridlock at lower frequencies. MIMO based systems has been researched for the last 20 years and are now part of the current standards. However, to achieve more gains, a grander view of the MIMO concept envisions the use of a large scale of antennas at each base stations, a concept referred as massive MIMO. The symbiotic combination of these technologies and other ones will lead to the development of a new generation system known as the 5G. The knowledge of the channel state information at the transmitter is very important in real massive MIMO millimeter wave systems. In this dissertation a limited feedback strategy for a hybrid massive MIMO OFDM system is proposed, where only a part of the parameters associated to the link channel are quantized and fed back. The limited feedback strategy employs a uniform-based quantization for channel amplitudes, angle of departure and angle of arrival in time domain. After being fed back, this information is used to reconstruct the overall channel in frequency domain and the transmit antenna array, which are then used to compute the hybrid analog-digital precoders. Numerical results show that the proposed quantization strategy achieve a performance close to the one obtained with perfect full channel, with a low overhead and complexityDesde o aparecimento das comunicações móveis, os utilizadores desta tecnologia têm vindo a crescer exponencialmente todos os dias. A escalada do crescimento do tráfego móvel foi imposta, principalmente, pela proliferação de smartphones e tablets. O uso crescente e intensivo das comunicações sem fios pode levar no futuro a um ponto de rutura, onde os sistemas tradicionais não suportam a capacidade requerida, a eficiência espectral e eficiência enérgica. Por outro lado, para cobrir toda esta necessidade atual de ter mais e mais dados, é necessário fornecer taxas de transmissão mais elevadas, em torno dos gigabits por segundo. Hoje, quase todos os sistemas de comunicações móveis usam espectro na faixa de 300 MHz - 3GHz. É necessário começar a procurar a gama de espectro 3GHz - 300 GHz para aplicações de banda larga móvel. Aqui vamos apresentar as ondas milimétricas, sendo esta uma maneira de aliviar espectro em frequências mais baixas. Os sistemas baseados em MIMO foram alvo de pesquisa nos últimos 20 anos e agora fazem parte dos padrões atuais. No entanto, para obter mais ganhos, uma visão mais ampla do conceito MIMO prevê o uso de uma grande quantidade de antenas em cada estação base, um conceito referido como massive MIMO. A combinação simbiótica destas tecnologias levará ao desenvolvimento de um novo sistema de geração denominado 5G. O desenvolvimento de técnicas de conhecimento da informação do canal no transmissor é muito importante em sistemas massive MIMO millimeter wave reais. Nesta dissertação é proposta e avaliada uma estratégia de envio de informação de canal para o transmissor para sistemas massive MIMO OFDM híbrido, onde apenas uma parte dos parâmetros associados ao canal são quantificados e transmitidos para o transmissor. A estratégia de feedback proposta é baseada numa quantização uniforme das amplitudes de canal, ângulos de partida e de chegada, no domínio do tempo. Depois de serem enviadas, essas informações são usadas para reconstruir o canal geral no domínio da frequência e a matriz da antena de transmissão, que são então usadas para obter os precoders híbridos analógico-digitais. Os resultados numéricos mostram que a estratégia de quantificação proposta atinge um desempenho próximo ao obtido caso se conhecesse o canal perfeito no transmissor, com um baixo overhead e complexidadeMestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e Telecomunicaçõe

    Improved interference management techniques for multi-cell multi-user MIMO systems

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    One major limiting factor for wireless communication systems is the limited available bandwidth for cellular networks. Current technologies like Long Term Evolution (LTE) and LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) have standardised a frequency reuse factor of 1 to enable more channel resources in each cell. Also multi-layer networks that consist of overlapping macro cells and small cells like pico cells, micro cells and femto cells have also been used to improve the capacity of the cellular network system. These multi-layer networks are known as heterogeneous networks or HetNets while the single layer, traditional cellular systems are referred to as homogeneous networks or HomoNets. Several interference management systems and techniques have been proposed in the past to deal with the effect of inter-cell interference (ICI) (i.e., the interference from a macro cell base station (BS) to a macro cell user in another macro cell) and inter-user interference (IUI) (i.e., the interference of another user's data signal to a given user within the same cell on the same time and frequency slot). Interference cancellation techniques such as beamforming, uses transmit pre-coders and receive beam-formers to limit the effect of interference. The interference alignment strategy ensures that the interference is aligned into a given subspace and leaves a residual subspace free for the desired signal. Coordinated scheduling/beam-forming and coordinated multi-point transmission (CoMP) have also been used to limit the interference within the cellular network. For HetNets, interference avoidance techniques based on radio resource management (RRM) have been used to limit the effect of interference within the network and improve the attainable system capacity. This thesis investigates the challenges of two main interference management techniques and proposes methods to alleviate these issues without impeding the expected performance already attained. The main techniques considered for HomoNets and HetNets are: CoMP transmission under the interference cancellation technique and resource block allocation (RBA) under the interference avoidance technique. The setbacks for the well known CoMP transmission strategy are high data overhead, energy consumption and other associated costs to the network provider. Further investigations were carried out and a joint selection of transmit antennas for the users was proposed with the main aim of preserving or exceeding the already achieved gains but obtaining a further reduction in the data overhead. Fully distributed RBA solutions are required, especially since future networks tend to become self-organising networks (SON). Another major consideration in choosing the resource blocks (RBs) for the users in each cell is the RBA metric. Since the capacity of the cell is dependent on the sum-rate of the users, it is important to consider the maximisation of the sum-rate or sum-SINR (i.e the sum signal to interference and noise ratio) when assigning RBs to users. The RBA technique aims to choose the RBs such that the interference within the cell is avoided. To achieve this, a RBA metric is required to obtain the qualification matrix before allocating RBs to the users. Many authors in the past have proposed several metrics for RBA but avoided any RBA metric that required a direct estimation of the interference power on each RB for each user's allocation. This is because the SINR or interference power on each RB for any user can only be obtained with pre-knowledge of already occupied RBs in neighbouring cells. In this thesis, two distributed RBA solutions based on a direct interference estimation was proposed to obtain the required qualification matrix for the RBA under the HomoNet and HetNet system models. The gains and advantages obtained are shown and analysed using the obtained simulation results. The issue of interference coupled with limited available channels remains a major limiting factor for HetNets. Therefore, it is very important to develop techniques that maximise the utilisation of available bandwidth for each cell while minimising possible interference from neighbouring cells. Finally, this thesis considers and investigates a possible joint solution using both interference avoidance and interference mitigation techniques. Hence two solutions are proposed: joint RBA plus beam-forming and joint RBA plus CoMP transmission, to further mitigate the high interference in HetNets. The simulation results have shown significantly improved system performance especially for a highly dense HetNet

    State-of-the-Art Sensors Technology in Spain 2015: Volume 1

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    This book provides a comprehensive overview of state-of-the-art sensors technology in specific leading areas. Industrial researchers, engineers and professionals can find information on the most advanced technologies and developments, together with data processing. Further research covers specific devices and technologies that capture and distribute data to be processed by applying dedicated techniques or procedures, which is where sensors play the most important role. The book provides insights and solutions for different problems covering a broad spectrum of possibilities, thanks to a set of applications and solutions based on sensory technologies. Topics include: • Signal analysis for spectral power • 3D precise measurements • Electromagnetic propagation • Drugs detection • e-health environments based on social sensor networks • Robots in wireless environments, navigation, teleoperation, object grasping, demining • Wireless sensor networks • Industrial IoT • Insights in smart cities • Voice recognition • FPGA interfaces • Flight mill device for measurements on insects • Optical systems: UV, LEDs, lasers, fiber optics • Machine vision • Power dissipation • Liquid level in fuel tanks • Parabolic solar tracker • Force sensors • Control for a twin roto

    Interference mitigation and interference avoidance for cellular OFDMA-TDD networks

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    In recent years, cellular systems based on orthogonal frequency division multiple access – time division duplex (OFDMA-TDD) have gained considerable popularity. Two of the major reasons for this are, on the one hand, that OFDMA enables the receiver to effectively cope with multipath propagation while keeping the complexity low. On the other hand, TDD offers efficient support for cell-specific uplink (UL)/downlink (DL) asymmetry demands by allowing each cell to independently set its UL/DL switching point (SP). However, cell-independent SP gives rise to crossed slots. In particular, crossed slots arise when neighbouring cells use the same slot in opposing link directions, resulting in base station (BS)-to-BS interference and mobile station (MS)-to-MS interference. BS-to-BS interference, in particular, can be quite detrimental due to the exposed location of BSs, which leads to high probability of line-of-sight (LOS) conditions. The aim of this thesis is to address the BS-to-BS interference problem in OFDMA-TDDcellular networks. A simulation-based approach is used to demonstrate the severity of BS-to-BS interference and a signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) equation for OFDMA is formulated to aid system performance analysis. The detrimental effects of crossed slot interference in OFDMA-TDD cellular networks are highlighted by comparing methods specifically targeting the crossed slots interference problem. In particular, the interference avoidance method fixed slot allocation (FSA) is compared against state of the art interference mitigation approaches, viz: random time slot opposing (RTSO) and zone division (ZD). The comparison is done based on Monte Carlo simulations and the main comparison metric is spectral efficiency calculated using the SINR equation formulated in this thesis. The simulation results demonstrate that when LOS conditions among BSs are present, both RTSO and ZD perform worse than FSA for all considered performance metrics. It is concluded from the results that current interference mitigation techniques do not offer an effective solution to the BS-to-BS interference problem. Hence, new interference avoidance methods, which unlike FSA, do not sacrifice the advantages of TDD are open research issues addressed in this thesis. The major contribution of this thesis is a novel cooperative resource balancing technique that offers a solution to the crossed slot problem. The novel concept, termed asymmetry balancing, is targeted towards next-generation cellular systems, envisaged to have ad hoc and multi-hop capabilities. Asymmetry balancing completely avoids crossed slots by keeping the TDD SPs synchronised among BSs. At the same time, the advantages of TDD are retained, which is enabled by introducing cooperation among the entities in the network. If a cell faces resource shortage in one link direction, while having free resources in the opposite link direction, the free resources can be used to support the overloaded link direction. In particular, traffic can be offloaded to near-by mobile stations at neighbouring cells that have available resources. To model the gains attained with asymmetry balancing, a mathematical framework is developed which is verified by Monte Carlo simulations. In addition, asymmetry balancing is compared against both ZD and FSA based on simulations and the results demonstrate the superior performance of asymmetry balancing. It can be concluded that the novel interference avoidance approach is a very promising candidate t

    1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface

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    A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance

    Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure

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    A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium
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