3,394 research outputs found

    Asymptotic Behavior of Error Exponents in the Wideband Regime

    Full text link
    In this paper, we complement Verd\'{u}'s work on spectral efficiency in the wideband regime by investigating the fundamental tradeoff between rate and bandwidth when a constraint is imposed on the error exponent. Specifically, we consider both AWGN and Rayleigh-fading channels. For the AWGN channel model, the optimal values of Rz(0)R_z(0) and Rz˙(0)\dot{R_z}(0) are calculated, where Rz(1/B)R_z(1/B) is the maximum rate at which information can be transmitted over a channel with bandwidth B/2B/2 when the error-exponent is constrained to be greater than or equal to z.z. Based on this calculation, we say that a sequence of input distributions is near optimal if both Rz(0)R_z(0) and Rz˙(0)\dot{R_z}(0) are achieved. We show that QPSK, a widely-used signaling scheme, is near-optimal within a large class of input distributions for the AWGN channel. Similar results are also established for a fading channel where full CSI is available at the receiver.Comment: 59 pages, 6 figure

    On Non-coherent MIMO Channels in the Wideband Regime: Capacity and Reliability

    Full text link
    We consider a multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) wideband Rayleigh block fading channel where the channel state is unknown to both the transmitter and the receiver and there is only an average power constraint on the input. We compute the capacity and analyze its dependence on coherence length, number of antennas and receive signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) per degree of freedom. We establish conditions on the coherence length and number of antennas for the non-coherent channel to have a "near coherent" performance in the wideband regime. We also propose a signaling scheme that is near-capacity achieving in this regime. We compute the error probability for this wideband non-coherent MIMO channel and study its dependence on SNR, number of transmit and receive antennas and coherence length. We show that error probability decays inversely with coherence length and exponentially with the product of the number of transmit and receive antennas. Moreover, channel outage dominates error probability in the wideband regime. We also show that the critical as well as cut-off rates are much smaller than channel capacity in this regime

    Optimized Training Design for Wireless Energy Transfer

    Full text link
    Radio-frequency (RF) enabled wireless energy transfer (WET), as a promising solution to provide cost-effective and reliable power supplies for energy-constrained wireless networks, has drawn growing interests recently. To overcome the significant propagation loss over distance, employing multi-antennas at the energy transmitter (ET) to more efficiently direct wireless energy to desired energy receivers (ERs), termed \emph{energy beamforming}, is an essential technique for enabling WET. However, the achievable gain of energy beamforming crucially depends on the available channel state information (CSI) at the ET, which needs to be acquired practically. In this paper, we study the design of an efficient channel acquisition method for a point-to-point multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) WET system by exploiting the channel reciprocity, i.e., the ET estimates the CSI via dedicated reverse-link training from the ER. Considering the limited energy availability at the ER, the training strategy should be carefully designed so that the channel can be estimated with sufficient accuracy, and yet without consuming excessive energy at the ER. To this end, we propose to maximize the \emph{net} harvested energy at the ER, which is the average harvested energy offset by that used for channel training. An optimization problem is formulated for the training design over MIMO Rician fading channels, including the subset of ER antennas to be trained, as well as the training time and power allocated. Closed-form solutions are obtained for some special scenarios, based on which useful insights are drawn on when training should be employed to improve the net transferred energy in MIMO WET systems.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, to appear in IEEE Trans. on Communication

    Adaptive multicoding and robust linear-quadratic receivers for uncertain CDMA frequency-selective fading channels

    Get PDF
    Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA) communications in the presence of channel uncertainty poses a challenging problem with many practical applications in the wireless communications filed. In this dissertation, robust linear-quadratic (LQ) receivers for time-varying, frequency-selective CDMA channels in the presence of uncertainty regarding instantaneous channel state information are proposed and studied. In order to enhance the performance of the LQ receivers, a novel modulation technique adaptive multicoding is employed. We proposed a simple, intuitively appealing cost function the modified deflection ratio that can be maximized to find signal constellations and associated LQ receivers that are optimal in a certain sense. We discuss the properties of the proposed LQ cost function and derive a related adaptive algorithm for the simultaneous design of signals and receivers based on a simple multicoding technique. The Chernoff bound for the LQ receivers is also derived to compensate for the analytical intractability of the probability of bit error. Finally, in order to achieve higher data rate transmission in favorable channels, we extend our approach from binary signals to M-ary signal constellations in a multi-dimension subspace
    corecore