23 research outputs found
AFDM vs OTFS: A Comparative Study of Promising Waveforms for ISAC in Doubly-Dispersive Channels
This white paper aims to briefly describe a proposed article that will
provide a thorough comparative study of waveforms designed to exploit the
features of doubly-dispersive channels arising in heterogeneous high-mobility
scenarios as expected in the beyond fifth generation (B5G) and sixth generation
(6G), in relation to their suitability to integrated sensing and communications
(ISAC) systems. In particular, the full article will compare the
well-established delay-Doppler domain-based orthognal time frequency space
(OTFS) and the recently proposed chirp domain-based affine frequency division
multiplexing (AFDM) waveforms. Both these waveforms are designed based on a
full delay- Doppler representation of the time variant (TV) multipath channel,
yielding not only robustness and orthogonality of information symbols in
high-mobility scenarios, but also a beneficial implication for environment
target detection through the inherent capability of estimating the path delay
and Doppler shifts, which are standard radar parameters. These modulation
schemes are distinct candidates for ISAC in B5G/6G systems, such that a
thorough study of their advantages, shortcomings, implications to signal
processing, and performance of communication and sensing functions are well in
order. In light of the above, a sample of the intended contribution (Special
Issue paper) is provided below
OTFS-NOMA: An Efficient Approach for Exploiting Heterogenous User Mobility Profiles
This paper considers a challenging communication scenario, in which users
have heterogenous mobility profiles, e.g., some users are moving at high speeds
and some users are static. A new non-orthogonal multiple-access (NOMA)
transmission protocol that incorporates orthogonal time frequency space (OTFS)
modulation is proposed. Thereby, users with different mobility profiles are
grouped together for the implementation of NOMA. The proposed OTFS-NOMA
protocol is shown to be applicable to both uplink and downlink transmission,
where sophisticated transmit and receive strategies are developed to remove
inter-symbol interference and harvest both multi-path and multi-user diversity.
Analytical results demonstrate that both the high-mobility and low-mobility
users benefit from the application of OTFS-NOMA. In particular, the use of NOMA
allows the spreading of the high-mobility users' signals over a large amount of
time-frequency resources, which enhances the OTFS resolution and improves the
detection reliability. In addition, OTFS-NOMA ensures that low-mobility users
have access to bandwidth resources which in conventional OTFS-orthogonal
multiple access (OTFS-NOMA) would be solely occupied by the high-mobility
users. Thus, OTFS-NOMA improves the spectral efficiency and reduces latency