14 research outputs found

    Space-Time Codes for MIMO systems : Quasi-Orthogonal design and concatenation

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    Der Nachfrage an Mobilfunksystemen mit hoher Datenrate und Übertragungsqualität für eine Vielfalt von Anwendungen ist in den letzten Jahren dramatisch gestiegen. Zur Deckung des hohen Bedarfs werden jedoch neue Konzepte und Technologien benötigt, die den Beeinträchtigungen des Mobilfunkkanals entgegenwirken oder sich diese zu Nutze machen und die knappen Ressourcen wie Bandbreite und Leistung optimal ausnutzen. Eine effiziente Maßnahme zur Erhöhung der Performanz stellen Mehrantennensysteme dar. Um das große Potenzial von solchen Mehrantennensystemen auszunutzen, wurden neue Sendestrategien, so genannte Raum-Zeit Codes entworfen und analysiert, die neben der zeitlichen und spektralen auch die räumliche Komponente ausnutzen sollen. In dieser Arbeit wird die Leistungsfähigkeit solcher Raum-Zeit Codes zunächst isoliert und später, im zweiten Teil der Arbeit, in Kombination mit herkömmlichen Kanalcodierungsverfahren untersucht. Im ersten Abschnitt, d.h. im Fall ohne herkömmliche Kanalcodierung liegt der Fokus auf diversitäts-orientierten Raum-Zeit Codes. Zunächst werden basierend auf den Raum-Zeit Codes mit orthogonaler Struktur (OSTBC) Raum-Zeit Codes mit quasi-orthogonaler Struktur für eine beliebige Anzahl von Sende-und Empfangsantennen entworfen. Aus der Konstruktion resultieren dann zwei Gruppen von Codes. Die wesentliche Charakteristik der ersten Gruppe ist es, dass sie Verbindungen mit hoher Qualität gewährleistet. Dies wird erreicht, indem räumliche und zeitliche Redundanz eingebracht wird und daraus die volle Diversität (entspricht dem maximalen Abfall der Bitfehlerratenkurve) resultiert. Volle Diversität wird auch von den OSTBC erreicht, die aufgrund ihrer Struktur den matrix-wertigen Kanal für Mehrantennensysteme, so genannte Multiple-Input-Multiple-Output (MIMO)-Kanäle in parallele skalare Ersatzkanäle, so genannte Single-Input-Single-Output (SISO)-Kanäle, transformieren. Die Anzahl der parallelen Ersatzkanäle entspricht dabei der Anzahl der Sendeantennen. Diese Erkenntnis und die Einsicht in die Eigenschaften dieser Ersatzkanäle waren ein wichtiger Meilenstein und ermöglichten es, die Leistungsfähigkeit der OSTBC zu analysieren. Die Bestimmung der Ersatzkanalstuktur ist daher auch hier von zentraler Bedeutung. Im Falle von Raum-Zeit Codes mit quasi-orthogonaler Struktur wird in dieser Arbeit gezeigt, dass der MIMO-Kanal in einen block-diagonalen MIMO-Kanal zerlegt wird, dessen Eigenvektoren konstant und Blöcke identisch sind. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Eigenwerte von jedem Block voneinander unabhängig sind und einer nichtzentralen Chi-Quadrat-Verteilung mit einer Anzahl von Freiheitsgraden, die dem Vierfachen der Anzahl der Empfangsantennen entspricht, folgen. Durch Lockerung der Anforderung von voller Diversität an die zu entwerfenden Codes gelangt man zu der zweiten Gruppe der Raum-Zeit Codes mit quasi-orthogonaler Stuktur, welche eine Verallgemeinerung der OSTBC darstellen. Insbesondere wird in dieser Arbeit gezeigt, dass nicht nur das Alamouti-Schema, ein OSTBC für zwei Sendeantennen, sondern auch eine verallgemeinerte Version dieses Alamouti-Schemas, die Kapazität im Falle einer Empfangsantenne erreicht. Die in dieser Arbeit entworfenen Raum-Zeit Codes werden schließlich hinsichtlich ihrer Fehlerraten-Performanz und ihrer spektralen Effizienz mit optimalen als auch mit suboptimalen Empfängerstrukturen analysiert. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit werden verschiedene Raum-Zeit Codes mit herkömmlichen Kanalcodierungsverfahren kombiniert. Dabei werden neue Empfängerstrukturen vorgestellt und die Leistungsfähigkeit der Raum-Zeit Codes mit iterativen Algorithmen zur so genannten Soft-Input-Soft-Output-Decodierung mit Hilfe von neuen Analysetechniken, den so genannten EXIT-Charts, untersucht und optimiert. Im Falle von OSTBC werden zusätzlich Kriterien für die optimale Abbildung von Bitsequenzen auf Sendesymbole hergeleitet.The demand for mobile communication systems with high data rates and improved link quality for a variety of applications has dramatically increased in recent years. New concepts and methods are necessary in order to cover this huge demand, which counteract or take advantage of the impairments of the mobile communication channel and optimally exploit the limited resources such as bandwidth and power. Multiple antenna systems are an efficient means for increasing the performance. In order to utilize the huge potential of multiple antenna concepts, it is necessary to resort to new transmit strategies, referred to as Space-Time Codes, which, in addition to the time and spectral domain, also use the spatial domain. The performance of such Space-Time Codes is analyzed in this thesis with and without conventional channel coding strategies. In case without conventional channel codes, the focus is on diversity-oriented Space-Time Codes. Based on Space-Time Block Codes from orthogonal designs (OSTBC), the Space-Time Block Codes from quasi-orthogonal designs are developed for any number of transmit and receive antennas. The outcome of this construction are two groups of codes. The main property of the first group is the support of links with high quality. This is achieved by incorporating spatial and temporal redundancy, which results in full diversity or in other words, in the maximum decay of the bit error rate curves. Full diversity is also achieved by OSTBC, which due to their structure transform the matrix-valued channel for multi-antenna systems, so called multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO)-channels, into several parallel, scalar single-input-single-output (SISO)-channels. This insight and the understanding of the properties of the equivalent SISO-channels were the key results in order to analyze the performance of the OSTBC. The determination of the structure of the equivalent channel is also a matter of vital importance in this work. To this end, we show that the MIMO-channel in the case of Space-Time Codes from quasi-orthogonal designs is transformed into an equivalent block-diagonal MIMO-channel with identical blocks having constant eigenvectors, independent of the channel realization. Furthermore, we show that the eigenvalues of each block are pairwise independent and follow a non-central chi-square distribution, where the number of degrees of freedom equals four times the number of receive antennas. By relaxing the requirement of full diversity one arrives at the second group of Space-Time Codes from quasi-orthogonal designs. These codes represent a generalization of Space-Time Codes from orthogonal designs. Particularly, we show in this work, that not only the Alamouti-scheme, a OSTBC for two transmit antennas, but also its generalized version achieves capacity in the case of one receive antenna. The drafted codes are then analyzed with respect to the error rate performance and the spectral efficiency with optimal as well as suboptimal receiver structures. In the second part of this work the combination of Space-Time Codes with conventional channel coding techniques is considered. New receiver structures are presented and the performance of Space-Time Codes with iterative algorithms for soft-input-soft-output-decoding is analyzed and optimized with the help of new analytical tools, the so called EXIT-charts. Furthermore, some criteria for the optimal mapping strategy are derived in the case of OSTBC

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

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    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

    Uncoded space-time labelling diversity : data rate & reliability enhancements and application to real-world satellite broadcasting.

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    Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.Abstract available in PDF

    Channel estimation for SISO and MIMO OFDM communications systems.

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2010.Telecommunications in the current information age is increasingly relying on the wireless link. This is because wireless communication has made possible a variety of services ranging from voice to data and now to multimedia. Consequently, demand for new wireless capacity is growing rapidly at a very alarming rate. In a bid to cope with challenges of increasing demand for higher data rate, better quality of service, and higher network capacity, there is a migration from Single Input Single Output (SISO) antenna technology to a more promising Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) antenna technology. On the other hand, Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) technique has emerged as a very popular multi-carrier modulation technique to combat the problems associated with physical properties of the wireless channels such as multipath fading, dispersion, and interference. The combination of MIMO technology with OFDM techniques, known as MIMO-OFDM Systems, is considered as a promising solution to enhance the data rate of future broadband wireless communication Systems. This thesis addresses a major area of challenge to both SISO-OFDM and MIMO-OFDM Systems; estimation of accurate channel state information (CSI) in order to make possible coherent detection of the transmitted signal at the receiver end of the system. Hence, the first novel contribution of this thesis is the development of a low complexity adaptive algorithm that is robust against both slow and fast fading channel scenarios, in comparison with other algorithms employed in literature, to implement soft iterative channel estimator for turbo equalizer-based receiver for single antenna communication Systems. Subsequently, a Fast Data Projection Method (FDPM) subspace tracking algorithm is adapted to derive Channel Impulse Response Estimator for implementation of Decision Directed Channel Estimation (DDCE) for Single Input Single Output - Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (SISO-OFDM) Systems. This is implemented in the context of a more realistic Fractionally Spaced-Channel Impulse Response (FS-CIR) channel model, as against the channel characterized by a Sample Spaced-Channel Impulse Response (SS)-CIR widely assumed by other authors. In addition, a fast convergence Variable Step Size Normalized Least Mean Square (VSSNLMS)-based predictor, with low computational complexity in comparison with others in literatures, is derived for the implementation of the CIR predictor module of the DDCE scheme. A novel iterative receiver structure for the FDPM-based Decision Directed Channel Estimation scheme is also designed for SISO-OFDM Systems. The iterative idea is based on Turbo iterative principle. It is shown that improvement in the performance can be achieved with the iterative DDCE scheme for OFDM system in comparison with the non iterative scheme. Lastly, an iterative receiver structure for FDPM-based DDCE scheme earlier designed for SISO OFDM is extended to MIMO-OFDM Systems. In addition, Variable Step Size Normalized Least Mean Square (VSSNLMS)-based channel transfer function estimator is derived in the context of MIMO Channel for the implementation of the CTF estimator module of the iterative Decision Directed Channel Estimation scheme for MIMO-OFDM Systems in place of linear minimum mean square error (MMSE) criterion. The VSSNLMS-based channel transfer function estimator is found to show improved MSE performance of about -4 MSE (dB) at SNR of 5dB in comparison with linear MMSE-based channel transfer function estimator

    Mathematical optimization and signal processing techniques for cooperative wireless networks

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    The rapid growth of mobile users and emergence of high data rate multimedia and interactive services have resulted in a shortage of the radio spectrum. Novel solutions are therefore required for future generations of wireless networks to enhance capacity and coverage. This thesis aims at addressing this issue through the design and analysis of signal processing algorithms. In particular various resource allocation and spatial diversity techniques have been proposed within the context of wireless peer-to-peer relays and coordinated base station (BS) processing. In order to enhance coverage while providing improvement in capacity, peer-to-peer relays that share the same frequency band have been considered and various techniques for designing relay coefficients and allocating powers optimally are proposed. Both one-way and two-way amplify and forward (AF) relays have been investigated. In order to maintain fairness, a signal-to-interference plus noise ratio (SINR) balancing criterion has been adopted. In order to improve the spectrum utilization further, the relays within the context of cognitive radio network are also considered. In this case, a cognitive peer-to-peer relay network is required to achieve SINR balancing while maintaining the interference leakage to primary receiver below a certain threshold. As the spatial diversity techniques in the form of multiple-input-multipleoutput (MIMO) systems have the potential to enhance capacity significantly, the above work has been extended to peer-to-peer MIMO relay networks. Transceiver and relay beamforming design based on minimum mean-square error (MSE) criterion has been proposed. Establishing uplink downlink MSE duality, an alternating algorithm has been developed. A scenario where multiple users are served by both the BS and a MIMO relay is considered and a joint beamforming technique for the BS and the MIMO relay is proposed. With the motivation of optimising the transmission power at both the BS and the relay, an interference precoding design is presented that takes into account the knowledge of the interference caused by the relay to the users served by the BS. Recognizing joint beamformer design for multiple BSs has the ability to reduce interference in the network significantly, cooperative multi-cell beamforming design is proposed. The aim is to design multi-cell beamformers to maximize the minimum SINR of users subject to individual BS power constraints. In contrast to all works available in the literature that aimed at balancing SINR of all users in all cells to the same level, the SINRs of users in each cell is balanced and maximized at different values. This new technique takes advantage of the fact that BSs may have different available transmission powers and/or channel conditions for their users

    Orthogonal Time Frequency Space (OTFS) Modulation for Wireless Communications

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    The orthogonal time frequency space (OTFS) modulation is a recently proposed multi-carrier transmission scheme, which innovatively multiplexes the information symbols in the delay-Doppler (DD) domain instead of the conventional time-frequency (TF) domain. The DD domain symbol multiplexing gives rise to a direct interaction between the DD domain information symbols and DD domain channel responses, which are usually quasi-static, compact, separable, and potentially sparse. Therefore, OTFS modulation enjoys appealing advantages over the conventional orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) modulation for wireless communications. In this thesis, we investigate the related subjects of OTFS modulation for wireless communications, specifically focusing on its signal detection, performance analysis, and applications. In specific, we first offer a literature review on the OTFS modulation in Chapter~1. Furthermore, a summary of wireless channels is given in Chapter 2. In particular, we discuss the characteristics of wireless channels in different domains and compare their properties. In Chapter 3, we present a detailed derivation of the OTFS concept based on the theory of Zak transform (ZT) and discrete Zak transform (DZT). We unveil the connections between OTFS modulation and DZT, where the DD domain interpretations of key components for modulation, such as pulse shaping, and matched-filtering, are highlighted. The main research contributions of this thesis appear in Chapter 4 to Chapter 7. In Chapter 4, we introduce the hybrid maximum a posteriori (MAP) and parallel interference cancellation (PIC) detection. This detection approach exploits the power discrepancy among different resolvable paths and can obtain near-optimal error performance with a reduced complexity. In Chapter 5, we propose the cross domain iterative detection for OTFS modulation by leveraging the unitary transformations among different domains. After presenting the key concepts of the cross domain iterative detection, we study its performance via state evolution. We show that the cross domain iterative detection can approach the optimal error performance theoretically. Our numerical results agree with our theoretical analysis and demonstrate a significant performance improvement compared to conventional OTFS detection methods. In Chapter 6, we investigate the error performance for coded OTFS systems based on the pairwise-error probability (PEP) analysis. We show that there exists a fundamental trade-off between the coding gain and the diversity gain for coded OTFS systems. According to this trade-off, we further provide some rule-of-thumb guidelines for code design in OTFS systems. In Chapter 7, we study the potential of OTFS modulation in integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) transmissions. We propose the concept of spatial-spreading to facilitate the ISAC design, which is able to discretize the angular domain, resulting in simple and insightful input-output relationships for both radar sensing and communication. Based on spatial-spreading, we verify the effectiveness of OTFS modulation in ISAC transmissions and demonstrate the performance improvements in comparison to the OFDM counterpart. A summary of this thesis is presented in Chapter 8, where we also discuss some potential research directions on OTFS modulation. The concept of OTFS modulation and the elegant theory of DD domain communication may have opened a new gate for the development of wireless communications, which is worthy to be further explored

    Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995)

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    The files on this record represent the various databases that originally composed the CD-ROM issue of "Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding" database, which is now part of the Dudley Knox Library's Abstracts and Selected Full Text Documents on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995) Collection. (See Calhoun record https://calhoun.nps.edu/handle/10945/57364 for further information on this collection and the bibliography). Due to issues of technological obsolescence preventing current and future audiences from accessing the bibliography, DKL exported and converted into the three files on this record the various databases contained in the CD-ROM. The contents of these files are: 1) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_xls.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.xls: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format; RDFA_Glossary.xls: Glossary of terms, in Excel 97-2003 Workbookformat; RDFA_Biographies.xls: Biographies of leading figures, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format]; 2) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_csv.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.TXT: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in CSV format; RDFA_Glossary.TXT: Glossary of terms, in CSV format; RDFA_Biographies.TXT: Biographies of leading figures, in CSV format]; 3) RDFA_CompleteBibliography.pdf: A human readable display of the bibliographic data, as a means of double-checking any possible deviations due to conversion

    History of Construction Cultures Volume 2

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    Volume 2 of History of Construction Cultures contains papers presented at the 7ICCH – Seventh International Congress on Construction History, held at the Lisbon School of Architecture, Portugal, from 12 to 16 July, 2021. The conference has been organized by the Lisbon School of Architecture (FAUL), NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanities, the Portuguese Society for Construction History Studies and the University of the Azores. The contributions cover the wide interdisciplinary spectrum of Construction History and consist on the most recent advances in theory and practical case studies analysis, following themes such as: - epistemological issues; - building actors; - building materials; - building machines, tools and equipment; - construction processes; - building services and techniques ; -structural theory and analysis ; - political, social and economic aspects; - knowledge transfer and cultural translation of construction cultures. Furthermore, papers presented at thematic sessions aim at covering important problematics, historical periods and different regions of the globe, opening new directions for Construction History research. We are what we build and how we build; thus, the study of Construction History is now more than ever at the centre of current debates as to the shape of a sustainable future for humankind. Therefore, History of Construction Cultures is a critical and indispensable work to expand our understanding of the ways in which everyday building activities have been perceived and experienced in different cultures, from ancient times to our century and all over the world
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