303 research outputs found
Modeling and Efficient Cancellation of Nonlinear Self-Interference in MIMO Full-Duplex Transceivers
This paper addresses the modeling and digital cancellation of
self-interference in in-band full-duplex (FD) transceivers with multiple
transmit and receive antennas. The self-interference modeling and the proposed
nonlinear spatio-temporal digital canceller structure takes into account, by
design, the effects of I/Q modulator imbalances and power amplifier (PA)
nonlinearities with memory, in addition to the multipath self-interference
propagation channels and the analog RF cancellation stage. The proposed
solution is the first cancellation technique in the literature which can handle
such a self-interference scenario. It is shown by comprehensive simulations
with realistic RF component parameters and with two different PA models to
clearly outperform the current state-of-the-art digital self-interference
cancellers, and to clearly extend the usable transmit power range.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. To be presented in the 2014 International
Workshop on Emerging Technologies for 5G Wireless Cellular Network
Reference Receiver Based Digital Self-Interference Cancellation in MIMO Full-Duplex Transceivers
In this paper we propose and analyze a novel self-interference cancellation
structure for in-band MIMO full-duplex transceivers. The proposed structure
utilizes reference receiver chains to obtain reference signals for digital
self-interference cancellation, which means that all the transmitter-induced
nonidealities will be included in the digital cancellation signal. To the best
of our knowledge, this type of a structure has not been discussed before in the
context of full-duplex transceivers. First, we will analyze the overall
achievable performance of the proposed cancellation scheme, while also
providing some insight into the possible bottlenecks. We also provide a
detailed formulation of the actual cancellation procedure, and perform an
analysis into the effect of the received signal of interest on
self-interference coupling channel estimation. The achieved performance of the
proposed reference receiver based digital cancellation procedure is then
assessed and verified with full waveform simulations. The analysis and waveform
simulation results show that under practical transmitter RF/analog impairment
levels, the proposed reference receiver based cancellation architecture can
provide substantially better self-interference suppression than any existing
solution, despite deploying only low-complexity linear digital processing.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. To be presented in the 2014 IEEE Broadband
Wireless Access Worksho
Cancellation of Power Amplifier Induced Nonlinear Self-Interference in Full-Duplex Transceivers
Recently, full-duplex (FD) communications with simultaneous transmission and
reception on the same channel has been proposed. The FD receiver, however,
suffers from inevitable self-interference (SI) from the much more powerful
transmit signal. Analogue radio-frequency (RF) and baseband, as well as digital
baseband, cancellation techniques have been proposed for suppressing the SI,
but so far most of the studies have failed to take into account the inherent
nonlinearities of the transmitter and receiver front-ends. To fill this gap,
this article proposes a novel digital nonlinear interference cancellation
technique to mitigate the power amplifier (PA) induced nonlinear SI in a FD
transceiver. The technique is based on modeling the nonlinear SI channel, which
is comprised of the nonlinear PA, the linear multipath SI channel, and the RF
SI canceller, with a parallel Hammerstein nonlinearity. Stemming from the
modeling, and appropriate parameter estimation, the known transmit data is then
processed with the developed nonlinear parallel Hammerstein structure and
suppressed from the receiver path at digital baseband. The results illustrate
that with a given IIP3 figure for the PA, the proposed technique enables higher
transmit power to be used compared to existing linear SI cancellation methods.
Alternatively, for a given maximum transmit power level, a lower-quality PA
(i.e., lower IIP3) can be used.Comment: To appear in proceedings of the 2013 Asilomar Conference on Signals,
Systems & Computer
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