271 research outputs found

    Labeling Diversity for 2x2 WLAN Coded-Cooperative Networks

    Get PDF
    Labelling diversity is an efficient technique recently proposed in the literature and aims to improve the bit error rate(BER) performance of wireless local area network (WLAN) systems with two transmit and two receive antennas without increasing the transmit power and bandwidth requirements. In this paper, we employ labelling diversity with different space-time channel codes such as convolutional, turbo and low density parity check (LDPC) for both point-to-point and coded-cooperative communication scenarios. Joint iterative decoding schemes for distributed turbo and LDPC codes are also presented. BER performance bounds at an error floor (EF) region are derived and verified with the help of numerical simulations for both cooperative and non-cooperative schemes. Numerical simulations show that the coded-cooperative schemes with labelling diversity achieve better BER performances and use of labelling diversity at the source node significantly lowers relay outage probability and hence the overall BER performance of the coded-cooperative scheme is improved manifolds

    Inter-carrier interference mitigation for underwater acoustic communications

    Get PDF
    Communicating at a high data rate through the ocean is challenging. Such communications must be acoustic in order to travel long distances. The underwater acoustic channel has a long delay spread, which makes orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) an attractive communication scheme. However, the underwater acoustic channel is highly dynamic, which has the potential to introduce significant inter-carrier interference (ICI). This thesis explores a number of means for mitigating ICI in such communication systems. One method that is explored is directly adapted linear turbo ICI cancellation. This scheme uses linear filters in an iterative structure to cancel the interference. Also explored is on-off keyed (OOK) OFDM, which is a signal designed to avoid ICI

    Self-concatenated code design and its application in power-efficient cooperative communications

    No full text
    In this tutorial, we have focused on the design of binary self-concatenated coding schemes with the help of EXtrinsic Information Transfer (EXIT) charts and Union bound analysis. The design methodology of future iteratively decoded self-concatenated aided cooperative communication schemes is presented. In doing so, we will identify the most important milestones in the area of channel coding, concatenated coding schemes and cooperative communication systems till date and suggest future research directions

    Superposition Coding Aided Bi-directional Relay Transmission Employing Iteratively Decoded Self-Concatenated Convolutional Codes

    No full text
    In this paper, we consider coding schemes designed for two nodes communicating with each other with the aid of a relay node, which receives information from the two nodes in the first time slot. At the relay node we combine a powerful Superposition Coding (SPC) scheme with Iteratively Decoded Self-Concatenated Convolutional Codes (SECCC-ID), which exchange mutual information between each other. It is assumed that decoding errors may be encountered at the relay node. The relay node then broadcasts this information in the second time slot after re-encoding it, again, using a SECCC encoder. At the destination, an amalgamated SPC-SECCC block then detects and decodes the signal either with or without the aid of a priori information. Our simulation results demonstrate that the proposed scheme is capable of reliably operating at a low BER for transmission over both AWGN and uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. We compare the proposed scheme’s performance to a direct transmission link between the two sources having the same throughput. Additionally, the SPC-SECCC system achieves a low BER even for realistic error-infested relaying

    Dispensing with channel estimation: differentially modulated cooperative wireless communications

    No full text
    As a benefit of bypassing the potentially excessive complexity and yet inaccurate channel estimation, differentially encoded modulation in conjunction with low-complexity noncoherent detection constitutes a viable candidate for user-cooperative systems, where estimating all the links by the relays is unrealistic. In order to stimulate further research on differentially modulated cooperative systems, a number of fundamental challenges encountered in their practical implementations are addressed, including the time-variant-channel-induced performance erosion, flexible cooperative protocol designs, resource allocation as well as its high-spectral-efficiency transceiver design. Our investigations demonstrate the quantitative benefits of cooperative wireless networks both from a pure capacity perspective as well as from a practical system design perspective

    Low-resolution ADC receiver design, MIMO interference cancellation prototyping, and PHY secrecy analysis.

    Get PDF
    This dissertation studies three independent research topics in the general field of wireless communications. The first topic focuses on new receiver design with low-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADC). In future massive multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems, multiple high-speed high-resolution ADCs will become a bottleneck for practical applications because of the hardware complexity and power consumption. One solution to this problem is to adopt low-cost low-precision ADCs instead. In Chapter II, MU-MIMO-OFDM systems only equipped with low-precision ADCs are considered. A new turbo receiver structure is proposed to improve the overall system performance. Meanwhile, ultra-low-cost communication devices can enable massive deployment of disposable wireless relays. In Chapter III, the feasibility of using a one-bit relay cluster to help a power-constrained transmitter for distant communication is investigated. Nonlinear estimators are applied to enable effective decoding. The second topic focuses prototyping and verification of a LTE and WiFi co-existence system, where the operation of LTE in unlicensed spectrum (LTE-U) is discussed. LTE-U extends the benefits of LTE and LTE Advanced to unlicensed spectrum, enabling mobile operators to offload data traffic onto unlicensed frequencies more efficiently and effectively. With LTE-U, operators can offer consumers a more robust and seamless mobile broadband experience with better coverage and higher download speeds. As the coexistence leads to considerable performance instability of both LTE and WiFi transmissions, the LTE and WiFi receivers with MIMO interference canceller are designed and prototyped to support the coexistence in Chapter IV. The third topic focuses on theoretical analysis of physical-layer secrecy with finite blocklength. Unlike upper layer security approaches, the physical-layer communication security can guarantee information-theoretic secrecy. Current studies on the physical-layer secrecy are all based on infinite blocklength. Nevertheless, these asymptotic studies are unrealistic and the finite blocklength effect is crucial for practical secrecy communication. In Chapter V, a practical analysis of secure lattice codes is provided

    Distributed Self-Concatenated Coding for Cooperative Communication

    No full text
    In this paper, we propose a power-efficient distributed binary self-concatenated coding scheme using iterative decoding (DSECCC-ID) for cooperative communications. The DSECCC-ID scheme is designed with the aid of binary extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) charts. The source node transmits self-concatenated convolutional coded (SECCC) symbols to both the relay and destination nodes during the first transmission period. The relay performs SECCC-ID decoding, where it mayor may not encounter decoding errors. It then reencodes the information bits using a recursive systematic convolutional (RSC) code during the second transmission period. The resultant symbols transmitted from the source and relay nodes can be viewed as the coded symbols of a three-component parallel concatenated encoder. At the destination node, three-component DSECCC-ID decoding is performed. The EXIT chart gives us an insight into operation of the distributed coding scheme, which enables us to significantly reduce the transmit power by about 3.3 dB in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) terms, as compared with a noncooperative SECCC-ID scheme at a bit error rate (BER) of 10-5. Finally, the proposed system is capable of performing within about 1.5 dB from the two-hop relay-aided network’s capacity at a BER of 10-5 , even if there may be decoding errors at the relay

    Two–Way Relaying Communications with OFDM and BICM/BICM-ID

    Get PDF
    Relay-aided communication methods have gained strong interests in academic community and been applied in various wireless communication scenarios. Among different techniques in relay-aided communication system, two-way relaying communication (TWRC) achieves the highest spectral efficiency due to its bi-directional transmission capability. Nevertheless, different from the conventional point-to-point communication system, TWRC suffers from detection quality degradation caused by the multiple-access interference (MAI). In addition, because of the propagation characteristics of wireless channels, fading and multipath dispersion also contribute strongly to detection errors. Therefore, this thesis is mainly concerned with designing transmission and detection schemes to provide good detection quality of TWRC while taking into account the negative impacts of fading, multipath dispersion and multiple-access interference. First, a TWRC system operating over multipath fading channels is considered and orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is adopted to handle the inter-symbol interference (ISI) caused by the multipath dispersion. In particular, adaptive physical-layer network coding (PNC) is employed to address the MAI issue. By analyzing the detection error probability, various adaptive PNC schemes are discussed for using with OFDM and the scheme achieving the best trade-off among performance, overhead and complexity is suggested. In the second part of the thesis, the design of distributed precoding in TWRC using OFDM under multipath fading channels is studied. The objective is to design a distributed precoding scheme which can alleviate MAI and achieve multipath diversity to combat fading. Specifically, three types of errors are introduced when analyzing the error probability in the multiple access (MA) phase. Through analysis and simulation, the scheme that performs precoding in both time and frequency domains is demonstrated to achieve the maximum diversity gains under all types of errors. Finally, the last part of the thesis examines a communication system incorporating forward error correction (FEC) codes. Specifically, bit-interleaved code modulation (BICM) without and with iterative decoding (BICM-ID) are investigated in a TWRC system. Distributed linear constellation precoding (DLCP) is applied to handle MAI and the design of DLCP in a TWRC system using BICM/BICM-ID is discussed. Taking into account the multiple access channel from the terminal nodes to the relay node, decoding based on the quaternary code representation is introduced. Several error probability bounds are derived to aid in the design of DLCP. Based on these bounds, optimal parameters of DLCP are obtained through analysis and computer search. It is also found that, by combining XORbased network coding with successful iterative decoding, the MAI is eliminated and thus DLCP is not required in a BICM-ID system

    802.11 Payload Iterative decoding between multiple transmission attempts

    Get PDF
    Abstract. The institute of electrical and electronics engineers (IEEE) 802.11 standard specifies widely used technology for wireless local area networks (WLAN). Standard specifies high-performance physical and media access control (MAC) layers for a distributed network but lacks an effective hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ). Currently, the standard specifies forward error correction (FEC), error detection (ED), and automatic repeat request (ARQ), but in case of decoding errors, the previously transmitted information is not used when decoding the retransmitted packet. This is called Type 1 HARQ. Type 1 HARQ uses received energy inefficiently, but the simple implementation makes it an attractive solution. Unfortunately, research applying more sophisticated HARQ schemes on top of IEEE 802.11 is limited. In this Master’s Thesis, a novel HARQ technology based on packet retransmissions that can be decoded in a turbo-like manner, keeping as much as possible compatibility with vanilla 802.11, is proposed. The proposed technology is simulated with both the IEEE 802.11 code and with the robust, efficient and smart communication in unpredictable environments (RESCUE) code. An additional interleaver is added before the convolutional encoder in the proposed technology, interleaving either the whole frame or only the payload to enable effective iterative decoding. For received frames, turbo-like iterations are done between initially transmitted packet copy and retransmissions. Results are compared against the non-iterative combining method maximizing signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), maximum ratio combining (MRC). The main design goal for this technology is to maintain compatibility with the 802.11 standard while allowing efficient HARQ. Other design goals are range extension, higher throughput, and better performance in terms of bit error rate (BER) and frame error rate (FER). This technology can be used for range extension at low SNR range and may provide up to 4 dB gain at medium SNR range compared to MRC. At high SNR, technology can reduce the penalty from retransmission allowing higher average modulation and coding scheme (MCS). However, these gains come with the cost of computational complexity from the iterative decoding. The main limiting factors of the proposed technology are decoding errors in the header and the scrambler area, and resource-hungry-processing. In simulations, perfect synchronization and packet detection is assumed, but in reality, especially at low SNR, packet detection and synchronization would be challenging. 802.11 pakettien iteratiivinen dekoodaus lähetysten välillä. Tiivistelmä. IEEE 802.11-standardi määrittelee yleisesti käytetyn teknologian langattomille lähiverkoille. Standardissa määritellään tehokas fyysinen- ja verkkoliityntäkerros hajautetuille verkoille, mutta siitä puuttuu tehokas yhdistetty automaattinen uudelleenlähetys. Nykyisellään standardi määrittelee virheenkorjaavan koodin, virheellisen paketin tunnistuksen sekä automaattisen uudelleenlähetyksen, mutta aikaisemmin lähetetyn paketin informaatiota ei käytetä hyväksi uudelleenlähetystilanteessa. Tämä menetelmä tunnetaan tyypin yksi yhdistettynä automaattisena uudelleenlähetyksenä. Tyypin yksi yhdistetty automaattinen uudelleenlähetys käyttää vastaanotettua signaalia tehottomasti, mutta yksinkertaisuus tekee siitä houkuttelevan vaihtoehdon. Valitettavasti edistyneempien uudelleenlähetysvaihtoehtojen tutkimusta 802.11-standardiin on rajoitetusti. Tässä diplomityössä esitellään uusi yhdistetty uudelleenlähetysteknologia, joka pohjautuu pakettien uudelleenlähetykseen, sallien turbo-tyylisen dekoodaamisen säilyttäen mahdollisimman hyvän taaksepäin yhteensopivuutta alkuperäisen 802.11-standardin kanssa. Tämä teknologia on simuloitu käyttäen sekä 802.11- että nk. RESCUE-virheenkorjauskoodia. Teknologiassa uusi lomittaja on lisätty konvoluutio-enkoodaajan eteen, sallien tehokkaan iteratiivisen dekoodaamisen, lomittaen joko koko paketin tai ainoastaan hyötykuorman. Vastaanotetuille paketeille tehdään turbo-tyyppinen iteraatio alkuperäisen vastaanotetun kopion ja uudelleenlähetyksien välillä. Tuloksia vertaillaan eiiteratiiviseen yhdistämismenetelmään, maksimisuhdeyhdistelyyn, joka maksimoi yhdistetyn signaali-kohinasuhteen. Tärkeimpänä suunnittelutavoitteena tässä työssä on tehokas uudelleenlähetysmenetelmä, joka ylläpitää taaksepäin yhteensopivuutta IEEE 802.11-standardin kanssa. Muita tavoitteita ovat kantaman lisäys, nopeampi yhteys ja matalampi bitti- ja pakettivirhesuhde. Kehitettyä teknologiaa voidaan käyttää kantaman lisäykseen matalan signaalikohinasuhteen vallitessa ja se on jopa 4 dB parempi kohtuullisella signaalikohinasuhteella kuin maksimisuhdeyhdistely. Korkealla signaali-kohinasuhteella teknologiaa voidaan käyttää pienentämään häviötä epäonnistuneesta paketinlähetyksestä ja täten sallien korkeamman modulaatio-koodiasteen käyttämisen. Valitettavasti nämä parannukset tulevat kasvaneen laskennallisen monimutkaisuuden kustannuksella, johtuen iteratiivisesta dekoodaamisesta. Isoimmat rajoittavat tekijät teknologian käytössä ovat dekoodausvirheet otsikossa ja datamuokkaimen siemenessä. Tämän lisäksi käyttöä rajoittaa resurssisyöppö prosessointi. Simulaatioissa oletetaan täydellinen synkronisointi, mutta todellisuudessa, erityisesti matalalla signaali-kohinasuhteella, paketin tunnistus ja synkronointi voivat olla haasteellisia
    corecore