43 research outputs found

    Interference Cancellation at the Relay for Multi-User Wireless Cooperative Networks

    Full text link
    We study multi-user transmission and detection schemes for a multi-access relay network (MARN) with linear constraints at all nodes. In a (J,Ja,Ra,M)(J, J_a, R_a, M) MARN, JJ sources, each equipped with JaJ_a antennas, communicate to one MM-antenna destination through one RaR_a-antenna relay. A new protocol called IC-Relay-TDMA is proposed which takes two phases. During the first phase, symbols of different sources are transmitted concurrently to the relay. At the relay, interference cancellation (IC) techniques, previously proposed for systems with direct transmission, are applied to decouple the information of different sources without decoding. During the second phase, symbols of different sources are forwarded to the destination in a time division multi-access (TDMA) fashion. At the destination, the maximum-likelihood (ML) decoding is performed source-by-source. The protocol of IC-Relay-TDMA requires the number of relay antennas no less than the number of sources, i.e., RaJR_a\ge J. Through outage analysis, the achievable diversity gain of the proposed scheme is shown to be min{Ja(RaJ+1),RaM}\min\{J_a(R_a-J+1),R_aM\}. When {\smallMJa(1J1Ra)M\le J_a\left(1-\frac{J-1}{R_a}\right)}, the proposed scheme achieves the maximum interference-free (int-free) diversity gain RaMR_aM. Since concurrent transmission is allowed during the first phase, compared to full TDMA transmission, the proposed scheme achieves the same diversity, but with a higher symbol rate.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transaction on Wireless Communicatio

    Spatial diversity in MIMO communication systems with distributed or co-located antennas

    Get PDF
    The use of multiple antennas in wireless communication systems has gained much attention during the last decade. It was shown that such multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems offer huge advantages over single-antenna systems. Typically, quite restrictive assumptions are made concerning the spacing of the individual antenna elements. On the one hand, it is typically assumed that the antenna elements at transmitter and receiver are co-located, i.e., they belong to some sort of antenna array. On the other hand, it is often assumed that the antenna spacings are sufficiently large, so as to justify the assumption of independent fading. In this thesis, the above assumptions are relaxed. In the first part, it is shown that MIMO systems with distributed antennas and MIMO systems with co-located antennas can be treated in a single, unifying framework. In the second part this fact is utilized, in order to develop appropriate transmit power allocation strategies for co-located and distributed MIMO systems. Finally, the third part focuses on specific synchronization problems that are of interest for distributed MIMO systems

    Information-theoretic Characterization of MIMO Systems with Multiple Rayleigh Scattering

    Get PDF
    We present an information-theoretic analysis of a point-to-point Multiple-Input-Multiple-Output(MIMO) link affected by Rayleigh fading and multiple scattering, under perfect channel state informationat the receiver. Unlike previous work addressing this setting, we investigate the Random Coding ErrorExponent, its associated cutoff rate and the Expurgated Error Exponent, and derive closed-form expres-sions for them. Moreover, leveraging the average mutual information expression presented in [1], wederive another important metric, namely, the sum rate, under linear receive processing and independentstream decoding. In particular, we characterize the performance of the Minimum Mean Squared Errorreceiver in closed form, and that of the Zero Forcing receiver by resorting to bounding techniques. Thebulk of the work relies on results about finite-dimensional random matrix products, a number of whichare novel and detailed in the Appendices. The analysis, validated through numerical results, highlightsthe severe degradation in the performance of linear receivers due to multi-fold scattering. It also unveilsthe performance trend of multiple scattering MIMO channels as a function of the number of antennasand the number of scattering stages

    MIMO techniques for higher data rate wireless communications

    Get PDF
    The demand for higher data rate, higher spectral efficiency and better quality of service in wireless communications is growing fast in the past few years. However, obtaining these requirements become challenging for wireless communication systems due to the problems of channel multi-path fading, higher power loss and power bandwidth limitations. A lot of research interest has been directed towards implementing new techniques in wireless communication systems, such as MIMO an OFDM, to overcome the above mentioned problems. Methods of achieving higher data rate and better spectral efficiency have been dealt with in the thesis. The work comprised three parts; the first part focuses on channel modelling, the second looks at fading mitigation techniques, and the third part deals with adaptive transmission schemes for different diversity techniques. In the first part, we present multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) space-time geometrical channel model with hyperbolically distributed scatterers (GBHDS) for a macro-cell mobile environment. The model is based on one-ring scattering assumption. This MIMO model provides statistics of the time of arrival (TOA) and direction of arrival (DOA). Our analytical results are validated with measurement data and compared to different geometrical based signal bounce macro-cell (GBSSBM) channel models including Gaussian scatterer density (GSD) channel model, the geometrical based exponential (GBE) channel model. On the other hand, for the same channel model we investigate the analytical methods which capture physical wave and antenna configuration at both ends representing in a matrix form. In the second part, we investigate the proposed channel model using joint frequency and spatial diversity system. . We combine STBC with OFDM to improve the error performance in the fading channels. We consider two different fading scenarios namely frequency selective and time selective fading channels. For the first scenario we propose a new technique to suppress the frequency error offset caused by the motion of mobile (Doppler shift). On the other hand, we examine the performance of STBC-OFDM in time selective macro-cell channel environment. In the last part, we evaluate the spectral efficiency for different receiver diversity namely maximal ratio combiner (MRC), selection combiner (SC), and Hybrid (MRC/SC). We derive closed form expressions for the single user capacity, taking into account the effect of imperfect channel estimation at the receiver. The channel considered is a slowly varying spatially independent flat Rayleigh fading channel. Three adaptive transmission schemes are analysed: 1) optimal power rate and rate adaptation (opra), constant power with optimal rate adaptation (ora), and 3) channel inversion with fixed rate (cifr). Furthermore, we derive analytical results for capacity statistics including moment generating function (MGF), complementary cumulative distribution function (CDF) and probability density function (pdf)

    A New Differential Space-Time Modulation Scheme for MIMO Systems with Four Transmit Antennas

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn this paper, a new differential space-time modulation (DSTM) scheme for 4×4 multiple input multiple output (MIMO) systems is proposed. This scheme is used for MIMO systems where the channel coefficients are not available at both the transmitter and the receiver. The transmission matrices used in this scheme belong to the Weyl group. Simulation results show that this new scheme with four transmit antennas outperforms the well-known Tarokh's differential space-time block coding (DSTBC) scheme. The spectral efficiency of this scheme can be up to 3 bit/s/Hz
    corecore