17 research outputs found

    Cloud RAN for Mobile Networks - a Technology Overview

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    Cloud Radio Access Network (C-RAN) is a novel mobile network architecture which can address a number of challenges the operators face while trying to support growing end-user’s needs. The main idea behind C-RAN is to pool the Baseband Units (BBUs) from multiple base stations into centralized BBU Pool for statistical multiplexing gain, while shifting the burden to the high-speed wireline transmission of In-phase and Quadrature (IQ) data. C-RAN enables energy efficient network operation and possible cost savings on base- band resources. Furthermore, it improves network capacity by performing load balancing and cooperative processing of signals originating from several base stations. This article surveys the state-of-the-art literature on C-RAN. It can serve as a starting point for anyone willing to understand C-RAN architecture and advance the research on C-RA

    Cloud Radio Access Network architecture. Towards 5G mobile networks

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    Design methodology addressing static/reconfigurable partitioning optimizing software defined radio (SDR) implementation through FPGA dynamic partial reconfiguration and rapid prototyping tools

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    The characteristics people request for communication devices become more and more demanding every day. And not only in those aspects dealing with communication speed, but also in such different characteristics as different communication standards compatibility, battery life, device size or price. Moreover, when this communication need is addressed by the industrial world, new characteristics such as reliability, robustness or time-to-market appear. In this context, Software Defined Radios (SDR) and evolutions such as Cognitive Radios or Intelligent Radios seem to be the technological answer that will satisfy all these requirements in a short and mid-term. Consequently, this PhD dissertation deals with the implementation of this type of communication system. Taking into account that there is no limitation neither in the implementation architecture nor in the target device, a novel framework for SDR implementation is proposed. This framework is made up of FPGAs, using dynamic partial reconfiguration, as target device and rapid prototyping tools as designing tool. Despite the benefits that this framework generates, there are also certain drawbacks that need to be analyzed and minimized to the extent possible. On this purpose, a SDR design methodology has been designed and tested. This methodology addresses the static/reconfigurable partitioning of the SDRs in order to optimize their implementation in the aforementioned framework. In order to verify the feasibility of both the design framework and the design methodology, several implementations have been carried out making use of them. A multi-standard modulator implementing WiFi, WiMAX and UMTS, a small-form-factor cognitive video transmission system and the implementation of several data coding functions over R3TOS, a hardware operating system developed by the University of Edinburgh, are these implementations.Las características que la gente exige a los dispositivos de comunicaciones son cada día más exigentes. Y no solo en los aspectos relacionados con la velocidad de comunicación, sino que también en diferentes características como la compatibilidad con diferentes estándares de comunicación, autonomía, tamaño o precio. Es más, cuando esta necesidad de comunicación se traslada al mundo industrial, aparecen nuevas características como fiabilidad, robustez o plazo de comercialización que también es necesario cubrir. En este contexto, las Radios Definidas por Software (SDR) y evoluciones como las Radios Cognitivas o Radios Inteligentes parecen la respuesta tecnológica que va a satisfacer estas necesidades a corto y medio plazo. Por ello, esta tesis doctoral aborda la implementación de este tipo de sistemas de comunicaciones. Teniendo en cuenta que no existe una limitación, ni en la arquitectura de implementación, ni en el tipo de dispositivo a usar, se propone un nuevo entrono de diseño formado por las FPGAs, haciendo uso de la reconfiguración parcial dinámica, y por las herramientas de prototipado rápido. A pesar de que este entorno de diseño ofrece varios beneficios, también genera algunos inconvenientes que es necesario analizar y minimizar en la medida de lo posible. Con este objetivo, se ha diseñado y verificado una metodología de diseño de SDRs. Esta metodología se encarga del particionado estático/reconfigurable de las SDRs para optimizar su implementación sobre el entrono de diseño antes comentado. Para verificar la viabilidad tanto del entorno, como de la metodología de diseño propuesta, se han realizado varias implementaciones que hacen uso de ambas cosas. Estas implementaciones son: un modulador multi-estándar que implementa WiFi, WiMAX y UMTS, un sistema cognitivo y compacto de transmisión de video y la implementación de varias funciones de codificación de datos sobre R3TOS, un sistema operativo hardware desarrollado por la Universidad de Edimburgo

    Data Acquisition Applications

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    Data acquisition systems have numerous applications. This book has a total of 13 chapters and is divided into three sections: Industrial applications, Medical applications and Scientific experiments. The chapters are written by experts from around the world, while the targeted audience for this book includes professionals who are designers or researchers in the field of data acquisition systems. Faculty members and graduate students could also benefit from the book

    Sub-sampling Receivers for Wireless Communications

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    Digital Front-End Signal Processing with Widely-Linear Signal Models in Radio Devices

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    Necessitated by the demand for ever higher data rates, modern communications waveforms have increasingly wider bandwidths and higher signal dynamics. Furthermore, radio devices are expected to transmit and receive a growing number of different waveforms from cellular networks, wireless local area networks, wireless personal area networks, positioning and navigation systems, as well as broadcast systems. On the other hand, commercial wireless devices are expected to be cheap, be relatively small in size, and have a long battery life. The demands for flexibility and higher data rates on one hand, and the constraints on production cost, device size, and energy efficiency on the other, pose difficult challenges on the design and implementation of future radio transceivers. Under these diametric constraints, in order to keep the overall implementation cost and size feasible, the use of simplified radio architectures and relatively low-cost radio electronics are necessary. This notion is even more relevant for multiple antenna systems, where each antenna has a dedicated radio front-end. The combination of simplified radio front-ends and low-cost electronics implies that various nonidealities in the remaining analog radio frequency (RF) modules, stemming from unavoidable physical limitations and material variations of the used electronics, are expected to play a critical role in these devices. Instead of tightening the specifications and tolerances of the analog circuits themselves, a more cost-effective solution in many cases is to compensate for these nonidealities in the digital domain. This line of research has been gaining increasing interest in the last 10-15 years, and is also the main topic area of this work. The direct-conversion radio principle is the current and future choice for building low-cost but flexible, multi-standard radio transmitters and receivers. The direct-conversion radio, while simple in structure and integrable on a single chip, suffers from several performance degrading circuit impairments, which have historically prevented its use in wideband, high-rate, and multi-user systems. In the last 15 years, with advances in integrated circuit technologies and digital signal processing, the direct-conversion principle has started gaining popularity. Still, however, much work is needed to fully realize the potential of the direct-conversion principle. This thesis deals with the analysis and digital mitigation of the implementation nonidealities of direct-conversion transmitters and receivers. The contributions can be divided into three parts. First, techniques are proposed for the joint estimation and predistortion of in-phase/quadrature-phase (I/Q) imbalance, power amplifier (PA) nonlinearity, and local oscillator (LO) leakage in wideband direct-conversion transmitters. Second, methods are developed for estimation and compensation of I/Q imbalance in wideband direct-conversion receivers, based on second-order statistics of the received communication waveforms. Third, these second-order statistics are analyzed for second-order stationary and cyclostationary signals under several other system impairments related to circuit implementation and the radio channel. This analysis brings new insights on I/Q imbalances and their compensation using the proposed algorithms. The proposed algorithms utilize complex-valued signal processing throughout, and naturally assume a widely-linear form, where both the signal and its complex-conjugate are filtered and then summed. The compensation processing is situated in the digital front-end of the transceiver, as the last step before digital-to-analog conversion in transmitters, or in receivers, as the first step after analog-to-digital conversion. The compensation techniques proposed herein have several common, unique, attributes: they are designed for the compensation of frequency-dependent impairments, which is seen critical for future wideband systems; they require no dedicated training data for learning; the estimators are computationally efficient, relying on simple signal models, gradient-like learning rules, and solving sets of linear equations; they can be applied in any transceiver type that utilizes the direct-conversion principle, whether single-user or multi-user, or single-carrier or multi-carrier; they are modulation, waveform, and standard independent; they can also be applied in multi-antenna transceivers to each antenna subsystem separately. Therefore, the proposed techniques provide practical and effective solutions to real-life circuit implementation problems of modern communications transceivers. Altogether, considering the algorithm developments with the extensive experimental results performed to verify their functionality, this thesis builds strong confidence that low-complexity digital compensation of analog circuit impairments is indeed applicable and efficient

    Traitement du signal pour les communications numériques au travers de canaux radio-mobiles

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    This manuscript of ''Habilitation à diriger les Recherches'' (Habilitation to conduct researches) gives me the opportunity to take stock of the last 14 years on my associate professor activities and on my research works in the field of signal processing for digital communications, particularly for radio-mobile communications. The purpose of this signal processing is generally to obtain a robust transmission, despite the passage of digital information through a communication channel disrupted by the mobility between the transmitter and the receiver (Doppler effect), the phenomenon of echoes (multi-path propagation), the addition of noise or interference, or by limitations in bandwidth, in transmitted power or in signal-to-noise ratio. In order to recover properly the digital information, the receiver needs in general to have an accurate knowledge of the channel state. Much of my work has focused on receiver synchronization or more generally on the dynamic estimation of the channel parameters (delays, phases, amplitudes, Doppler shifts, ...). We have developed estimators and studied their performance in asymptotic variance, and have compared them to minimum lower bound (Cramer-rao or Bayesian Cramer Rao bounds). Some other studies have focused only on the recovering of information (''detection'' or ''equalization'' task) by the receiver after channel estimation, or proposed and analyzed emission / reception schemes, reliable for certain scenarios (transmit diversity scheme for flat fading channel, scheme with high energy efficiency, ...).Ce mémoire de HDR est l'occasion de dresser un bilan des 14 dernières années concernant mes activités d'enseignant-chercheur et mes travaux de recherche dans le domaine du traitement du signal pour les communications numériques, et plus particulièrement les communications radio-mobiles. L'objet de ce traitement du signal est globalement l'obtention d'une transmission robuste, malgré le passage de l'information numérique au travers d'un canal de communication perturbé par la mobilité entre l'émetteur et le récepteur (effet Doppler), le phénomène d'échos, l'addition de bruit ou d'interférence, ou encore par des limitations en bande-passante, en puissance transmise ou en rapport-signal à bruit. Afin de restituer au mieux l'information numérique, le récepteur a en général besoin de disposer d'une connaissance précise du canal. Une grande partie de mes travaux s'est intéressé à l'estimation dynamique des paramètres de ce canal (retards, phases, amplitudes, décalages Doppler, ...), et en particulier à la synchronisation du récepteur. Quelques autres travaux se sont intéressés seulement à la restitution de l'information (tâches de ''détection'' ou d' ''égalisation'') par le récepteur une fois le canal estimé, ou à des schémas d'émission / réception spécifiques. La synthèse des travaux commence par une introduction générale décrivant les ''canaux de communications'' et leurs problèmes potentiels, et positionne chacun de mes travaux en ces termes. Une première partie s'intéresse aux techniques de réception pour les signaux à spectre étalé des systèmes d'accès multiple à répartition par codes (CDMA). Ces systèmes large-bande offrent un fort pouvoir de résolution temporelle et des degrés de liberté, que nous avons exploités pour étudier l'égalisation et la synchronisation (de retard et de phase) en présence de trajets multiples et d'utilisateurs multiples. La première partie regroupe aussi d'autres schémas d'émission/réception, proposés pour leur robustesse dans différents scénarios (schéma à diversité pour canaux à évanouissement plats, schéma à forte efficacité énergétique, ...). La seconde partie est consacrée à l'estimation dynamique Bayésienne des paramètres du canal. On suppose ici qu'une partie des paramètres à estimer exhibe des variations temporelles aléatoires selon une certaine loi à priori. Nous proposons d'abord des estimateurs et des bornes minimales d'estimation pour des modèles de transmission relativement complexes, en raison de la distorsion temporelle due à la forte mobilité en modulation multi-porteuse (OFDM), ou de la présence de plusieurs paramètres à estimer conjointement, ou encore de non linéarités dans les modèles. Nous nous focalisons ensuite sur le problème d'estimation des amplitudes complexes des trajets d'un canal à évolution lente (à 1 ou plusieurs bonds). Nous proposons des estimateurs récursifs (dénommés CATL, pour ''Complex Amplitude Tracking Loop'') à structure imposée inspirée par les boucles à verrouillage de phase numériques, de performance asymptotiques proches des bornes minimales. Les formules analytiques approchées de performances asymptotiques et de réglages de ces estimateurs sont établies sous forme de simples fonctions des paramètres physiques (spectre Doppler, retards, niveau de bruit). Puis étant donné les liens établis entre ces estimateurs CATL et certains filtres de Kalman (construits pour des modèles d'état de type marche aléatoire intégrée), les formules approchées de performances asymptotiques et de réglage de ces filtres de Kalman sont aussi dérivées

    Multi-GNSS signals acquisition techniques for software defines receivers

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    Any commercially viable wireless solution onboard Smartphones should resolve the technical issues as well as preserving the limited resources available such as processing and battery. Therefore, integrating/combining the process of more than one function will free up much needed resources that can be then reused to enhance these functions further. This thesis details my innovative solutions that integrate multi-GNSS signals of specific civilian transmission from GPS, Galileo and GLONASS systems, and process them in a single RF front-end channel (detection and acquisition), ideal for GNSS software receiver onboard Smartphones. During the course of my PhD study, the focus of my work was on improving the reception and processing of localisation techniques based on signals from multi-satellite systems. I have published seven papers on new acquisition solutions for single and multi-GNSS signals based on the bandpass sampling and the compressive sensing techniques. These solutions, when applied onboard Smartphones, shall not only enhance the performance of the GNSS localisation solution but also reduce the implementation complexity (size and processing requirements) and thus save valuable processing time and battery energy. Firstly, my research has exploited the bandpass sampling technique, if being a good candidate for processing multi-signals at the same time. This portion of the work has produced three methods. The first method is designed to detect the GPS, Galileo and GLONASS-CDMA signals’ presence at an early stage before the acquisition process. This is to avoid wasting processing resources that are normally spent on chasing signals not present/non-existent. The second focuses on overcoming the ambiguity when acquiring Galileo-OS signal at a code phase resolution equal to 0.5 Chip or higher and this achieved by multiplying the received signal with the generated sub-carrier frequency. This new conversion saves doing a complete correlation chain processing when compared to conventionally used methods. The third method simplifies the joining implementation of the Galileo-OS data-pilot signal acquisition by constructing an orthogonal signal so as to acquire them in a single correlation chain, yet offering the same performance as using two correlation chains. Secondly, the compressive sensing technique is used to acquire multi-GNSS signals to achieve computation complexity reduction over correlator based methods, like Matched Filter, while still maintaining acquisition integrity. As a result of this research work, four implementation methods were produced to handle single or multi-GNSS signals. The first of these methods is designed to change dynamically the number and the size of the required channels/correlators according to the received GPS signal-power during the acquisition process. This adaptive solution offers better fix capability when the GPS receiver is located in a harsh signal environment, or it will save valuable processing/decoding time when the receiver is outdoors. The second method enhances the sensing process of the compressive sensing framework by using a deterministic orthogonal waveform such as the Hadamard matrix, which enabled us to sample the signal at the information band and reconstruct it without information loss. This experience in compressive sensing led the research to manage more reduction in terms of computational complexity and memory requirements in the third method that decomposes the dictionary matrix (representing a bank of correlators), saving more than 80% in signal acquisition process without loss of the integration between the code and frequency, irrespective of the signal strength. The decomposition is realised by removing the generated Doppler shifts from the dictionary matrix, while keeping the carrier frequency fixed for all these generated shifted satellites codes. This novelty of the decomposed dictionary implementation enabled other GNSS signals to be combined with the GPS signal without large overhead if the two, or more, signals are folded or down-converted to the same intermediate frequency. The fourth method is, therefore, implemented for the first time, a novel compressive sensing software receiver that acquires both GPS and Galileo signals simultaneously. The performance of this method is as good as that of a Matched Filter implementation performance. However, this implementation achieves a saving of 50% in processing time and produces a fine frequency for the Doppler shift at resolution within 10Hz. Our experimental results, based on actual RF captured signals and other simulation environments, have proven that all above seven implementation methods produced by this thesis retain much valuable battery energy and processing resources onboard Smartphones

    Spectrum sensing for cognitive radios: Algorithms, performance, and limitations

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    Inefficient use of radio spectrum is becoming a serious problem as more and more wireless systems are being developed to operate in crowded spectrum bands. Cognitive radio offers a novel solution to overcome the underutilization problem by allowing secondary usage of the spectrum resources along with high reliable communication. Spectrum sensing is a key enabler for cognitive radios. It identifies idle spectrum and provides awareness regarding the radio environment which are essential for the efficient secondary use of the spectrum and coexistence of different wireless systems. The focus of this thesis is on the local and cooperative spectrum sensing algorithms. Local sensing algorithms are proposed for detecting orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) based primary user (PU) transmissions using their autocorrelation property. The proposed autocorrelation detectors are simple and computationally efficient. Later, the algorithms are extended to the case of cooperative sensing where multiple secondary users (SUs) collaborate to detect a PU transmission. For cooperation, each SU sends a local decision statistic such as log-likelihood ratio (LLR) to the fusion center (FC) which makes a final decision. Cooperative sensing algorithms are also proposed using sequential and censoring methods. Sequential detection minimizes the average detection time while censoring scheme improves the energy efficiency. The performances of the proposed algorithms are studied through rigorous theoretical analyses and extensive simulations. The distributions of the decision statistics at the SU and the test statistic at the FC are established conditioned on either hypothesis. Later, the effects of quantization and reporting channel errors are considered. Main aim in studying the effects of quantization and channel errors on the cooperative sensing is to provide a framework for the designers to choose the operating values of the number of quantization bits and the target bit error probability (BEP) for the reporting channel such that the performance loss caused by these non-idealities is negligible. Later a performance limitation in the form of BEP wall is established for the cooperative sensing schemes in the presence of reporting channel errors. The BEP wall phenomenon is important as it provides the feasible values for the reporting channel BEP used for designing communication schemes between the SUs and the FC

    Modeling and Digital Mitigation of Transmitter Imperfections in Radio Communication Systems

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    To satisfy the continuously growing demands for higher data rates, modern radio communication systems employ larger bandwidths and more complex waveforms. Furthermore, radio devices are expected to support a rich mixture of standards such as cellular networks, wireless local-area networks, wireless personal area networks, positioning and navigation systems, etc. In general, a "smart'' device should be flexible to support all these requirements while being portable, cheap, and energy efficient. These seemingly conflicting expectations impose stringent radio frequency (RF) design challenges which, in turn, call for their proper understanding as well as developing cost-effective solutions to address them. The direct-conversion transceiver architecture is an appealing analog front-end for flexible and multi-standard radio systems. However, it is sensitive to various circuit impairments, and modern communication systems based on multi-carrier waveforms such as Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) and Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) are particularly vulnerable to RF front-end non-idealities.This thesis addresses the modeling and digital mitigation of selected transmitter (TX) RF impairments in radio communication devices. The contributions can be divided into two areas. First, new modeling and digital mitigation techniques are proposed for two essential front-end impairments in direct-conversion architecture-based OFDM and OFDMA systems, namely inphase and quadrature phase (I/Q) imbalance and carrier frequency offset (CFO). Both joint and de-coupled estimation and compensation schemes for frequency-selective TX I/Q imbalance and channel distortions are proposed for OFDM systems, to be adopted on the receiver side. Then, in the context of uplink OFDMA and Single Carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA), which are the air interface technologies of the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Long Term Evolution (LTE) and LTE-Advanced systems, joint estimation and equalization techniques of RF impairments and channel distortions are proposed. Here, the challenging multi-user uplink scenario with unequal received power levels is investigated where I/Q imbalance causes inter-user interference. A joint mirror subcarrier processing-based minimum mean-square error (MMSE) equalizer with an arbitrary number of receiver antennas is formulated to effectively handle the mirror sub-band users of different power levels. Furthermore, the joint channel and impairments filter responses are efficiently approximated with polynomial-based basis function models, and the parameters of basis functions are estimated with the reference signals conforming to the LTE uplink sub-frame structure. The resulting receiver concept adopting the proposed techniques enables improved link performance without modifying the design of RF transceivers.Second, digital baseband mitigation solutions are developed for the TX leakage signal-induced self-interference in frequency division duplex (FDD) transceivers. In FDD transceivers, a duplexer is used to connect the TX and receiver (RX) chains to a common antenna while also providing isolation to the receiver chain against the powerful transmit signal. In general, the continuous miniaturization of hardware and adoption of larger bandwidths through carrier aggregation type noncontiguous allocations complicates achieving sufficient TX-RX isolation. Here, two different effects of the transmitter leakage signal are investigated. The first is TX out-of-band (OOB) emissions and TX spurious emissions at own receiver band, due to the transmitter nonlinearity, and the second is nonlinearity of down-converter in the RX that generates second-order intermodulation distortion (IMD2) due to the TX in-band leakage signal. This work shows that the transmitter leakage signal-induced interference depends on an equivalent leakage channel that models the TX path non-idealities, duplexer filter responses, and the RX path non-idealities. The work proposes algorithms that operate in the digital baseband of the transceiver to estimate the TX-RX non-idealities and the duplexer filter responses, and subsequently regenerating and canceling the self-interference, thereby potentially relaxing the TX-RX isolation requirements as well as increasing the transceiver flexibility.Overall, this thesis provides useful signal models to understand the implications of different RF non-idealities and proposes compensation solutions to cope with certain RF impairments. This is complemented with extensive computer simulations and practical RF measurements to validate their application in real-world radio transceivers
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