132 research outputs found
EXIT-charts-aided hybrid multiuser detector for multicarrier interleave-division multiple access
A generically applicable hybrid multiuser detector (MUD) concept is proposed by appropriately activating different MUDs in consecutive turbo iterations based on the mutual information (MI) gain. It is demonstrated that the proposed hybrid MUD is capable of approaching the optimal Bayesian MUD's performance despite its reduced complexity, which is at a modestly increased complexity in comparison with that of the suboptimum soft interference cancellation (SoIC) MU
Joint RSMA and IDMA-Based NOMA system for downlink Communication in 5G and Beyond Networks
Future communication networks may encounter various issues in order to facilitate heavy heterogeneous data traffic and large number of users, therefore more advanced multiple access (MA) schemes is required to meet the changing requirements. Recently, a promising physical-layer MA technique has been suggested for multi-antenna broadcast channels, namely Rate Splitting Multiple Access (RSMA). This new scheme has the ability to partially decode the interference and partially treat the remaining interference as noise which makes it to cope with wide range of user deployments and network loads. On the other hand, interleave division multiple access (IDMA) has already been recognized as a potential code domain NOMA (non-orthogonal multiple access) scheme, suitable for 5G and beyond communication network. Hence, in this paper, a new approach of multiple access scheme is proposed to get the grip on new challenges in future communication (6G). The proposed framework consists the joint processing of RSMA and IDMA (code domain NOMA), in which the transmitter involves an IDMA as encoder and allows rate splitting to split the message in two parts i.e. common part and private part, before the actual transmission. The mathematical modeling of proposed system is elaborated in the paper and for simulation purpose the downlink communication scenario has been considered where users faced diverse channel conditions. The weighted sum rate (WSR) performance is evaluated for the proposed scheme which validate the quality of service (QoS) of the joint RS-IDMA system
Improved IDMA for Multiple Access of 5G
Due to its good performance and low complexity, IDMA is believed to be an important technique for future radio access (FRA). However, its performances are highly affected by the interleaver design. In this paper we propose two contributions to improve the performance of the IDMA. First, we propose a new interleaver design, called "NLM interleaver", which improves the computational complexity, reduces the bandwidth consumption and the memory requirements of the system, provides the quasi-orthogonal spreading codes and interleavers with a high security and offers infinite sets of codes and interleavers based on only one parameter. Second, we propose a new user grouping algorithm based on the correlation function to improve the resources (Codes, Interleavers). All users are divided into several equal-size groups where each group's data transmitted at the same time, over the same frequencies and the same interleaver. The simulation results indicate that the proposed scheme can achieve better performances compared to the existing algorithms
Coherent receiver design and analysis for interleaved division multiple access (IDMA)
This thesis discusses a new multiuser detection technique for cellular wireless communications. Multiuser communications is critical in cellular systems as multiple terminals (users) transmit to base stations (or wireless infrastructure). Efficient receiver methods are needed to maximise the performance of these links and maximise overall throughput and coverage while minimising inter-cell interference. Recently a new technique, Interleave-Division Multiple Access (IDMA), was developed as a variant of direct-sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA). In this new scheme users are separated by user specific interleavers, and each user is allocated a low rate code. As a result, the bandwidth expansion is devoted to the low rate code and not weaker spreading codes. IDMA has shown to have significant performance gains over traditional DS-CDMA with a modest increase in complexity. The literature on IDMA primarily focuses on the design of low rate forward error correcting (FEC) codes, as well as channel estimation. However, the practical aspects of an IDMA receiver such as timing acquisition, tracking, block asynchronous detection, and cellular analysis are rarely studied. The objective of this thesis is to design and analyse practical synchronisation, detection and power optimisation techniques for IDMA systems. It also, for the first time, provides a novel analysis and design of a multi-cell system employing a general multiuser receiver. These tools can be used to optimise and evaluate the performance of an IDMA communication system. The techniques presented in this work can be easily employed for DS-CDMA or other multiuser receiver designs with slight modification. Acquisition and synchronisation are essential processes that a base-station is required to perform before user's data can be detected and decoded. For high capacity IDMA systems, which can be heavily loaded and operate close to the channel capacity, the performance of acquisition and tracking can be severely affected by multiple access interference as well as severe drift. This thesis develops acquisition and synchronisation algorithms which can cope with heavy multiple access interference as well as high levels of drift. Once the timing points have been estimated for an IDMA receiver the detection and decoding process can proceed. An important issue with uplink systems is the alignment of frame boundaries for efficient detection. This thesis demonstrates how a fully asynchronous system can be modelled for detection. This thesis presents a model for the frame asynchronous IDMA system, and then develops a maximum likelihood receiver for the proposed system. This thesis develops tools to analyse and optimise IDMA receivers. The tools developed are general enough to be applied to other multiuser receiver techniques. The conventional EXIT chart analysis of unequal power allocated multiuser systems use an averaged EXIT chart analysis for all users to reduce the complexity of the task. This thesis presents a multidimensional analysis for power allocated IDMA, and shows how it can be utilised in power optimisation. Finally, this work develops a novel power zoning technique for multicell multiuser receivers using the optimised power levels, and illustrates a particular example where there is a 50% capacity improvement using the proposed scheme. -- provided by Candidate
Capacity-Achieving MIMO-NOMA: Iterative LMMSE Detection
This paper considers a low-complexity iterative Linear Minimum Mean Square
Error (LMMSE) multi-user detector for the Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output
system with Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (MIMO-NOMA), where multiple
single-antenna users simultaneously communicate with a multiple-antenna base
station (BS). While LMMSE being a linear detector has a low complexity, it has
suboptimal performance in multi-user detection scenario due to the mismatch
between LMMSE detection and multi-user decoding. Therefore, in this paper, we
provide the matching conditions between the detector and decoders for
MIMO-NOMA, which are then used to derive the achievable rate of the iterative
detection. We prove that a matched iterative LMMSE detector can achieve (i) the
optimal capacity of symmetric MIMO-NOMA with any number of users, (ii) the
optimal sum capacity of asymmetric MIMO-NOMA with any number of users, (iii)
all the maximal extreme points in the capacity region of asymmetric MIMO-NOMA
with any number of users, (iv) all points in the capacity region of two-user
and three-user asymmetric MIMO-NOMA systems. In addition, a kind of practical
low-complexity error-correcting multiuser code, called irregular
repeat-accumulate code, is designed to match the LMMSE detector. Numerical
results shows that the bit error rate performance of the proposed iterative
LMMSE detection outperforms the state-of-art methods and is within 0.8dB from
the associated capacity limit.Comment: Accepted by IEEE TSP, 16 pages, 9 figures. This is the first work
that proves the low-complexity iterative receiver (Parallel Interference
Cancellation) can achieve the capacity of multi-user MIMO systems. arXiv
admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1604.0831
Capacity-Achieving Iterative LMMSE Detection for MIMO-NOMA Systems
This paper considers a iterative Linear Minimum Mean Square Error (LMMSE)
detection for the uplink Multiuser Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output (MU-MIMO)
systems with Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA). The iterative LMMSE
detection greatly reduces the system computational complexity by departing the
overall processing into many low-complexity distributed calculations. However,
it is generally considered to be sub-optimal and achieves relatively poor
performance. In this paper, we firstly present the matching conditions and area
theorems for the iterative detection of the MIMO-NOMA systems. Based on the
proposed matching conditions and area theorems, the achievable rate region of
the iterative LMMSE detection is analysed. We prove that by properly design the
iterative LMMSE detection, it can achieve (i) the optimal sum capacity of
MU-MIMO systems, (ii) all the maximal extreme points in the capacity region of
MU-MIMO system, and (iii) the whole capacity region of two-user MIMO systems.Comment: 6pages, 5 figures, accepted by IEEE ICC 2016, 23-27 May 2016, Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysi
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