167 research outputs found
Advanced Technique and Future Perspective for Next Generation Optical Fiber Communications
Optical fiber communication industry has gained unprecedented opportunities and achieved rapid progress in recent years. However, with the increase of data transmission volume and the enhancement of transmission demand, the optical communication field still needs to be upgraded to better meet the challenges in the future development. Artificial intelligence technology in optical communication and optical network is still in its infancy, but the existing achievements show great application potential. In the future, with the further development of artificial intelligence technology, AI algorithms combining channel characteristics and physical properties will shine in optical communication. This reprint introduces some recent advances in optical fiber communication and optical network, and provides alternative directions for the development of the next generation optical fiber communication technology
Mobile and Wireless Communications
Mobile and Wireless Communications have been one of the major revolutions of the late twentieth century. We are witnessing a very fast growth in these technologies where mobile and wireless communications have become so ubiquitous in our society and indispensable for our daily lives. The relentless demand for higher data rates with better quality of services to comply with state-of-the art applications has revolutionized the wireless communication field and led to the emergence of new technologies such as Bluetooth, WiFi, Wimax, Ultra wideband, OFDMA. Moreover, the market tendency confirms that this revolution is not ready to stop in the foreseen future. Mobile and wireless communications applications cover diverse areas including entertainment, industrialist, biomedical, medicine, safety and security, and others, which definitely are improving our daily life. Wireless communication network is a multidisciplinary field addressing different aspects raging from theoretical analysis, system architecture design, and hardware and software implementations. While different new applications are requiring higher data rates and better quality of service and prolonging the mobile battery life, new development and advanced research studies and systems and circuits designs are necessary to keep pace with the market requirements. This book covers the most advanced research and development topics in mobile and wireless communication networks. It is divided into two parts with a total of thirty-four stand-alone chapters covering various areas of wireless communications of special topics including: physical layer and network layer, access methods and scheduling, techniques and technologies, antenna and amplifier design, integrated circuit design, applications and systems. These chapters present advanced novel and cutting-edge results and development related to wireless communication offering the readers the opportunity to enrich their knowledge in specific topics as well as to explore the whole field of rapidly emerging mobile and wireless networks. We hope that this book will be useful for students, researchers and practitioners in their research studies
Wavelet Theory
The wavelet is a powerful mathematical tool that plays an important role in science and technology. This book looks at some of the most creative and popular applications of wavelets including biomedical signal processing, image processing, communication signal processing, Internet of Things (IoT), acoustical signal processing, financial market data analysis, energy and power management, and COVID-19 pandemic measurements and calculations. The editor’s personal interest is the application of wavelet transform to identify time domain changes on signals and corresponding frequency components and in improving power amplifier behavior
A digital polar transmitter for multi-band OFDM Ultra-WideBand
Linear power amplifiers used to implement the Ultra-Wideband standard must be
backed off from optimum power efficiency to meet the standard specifications and
the power efficiency suffers. The problem of low efficiency can be mitigated by polar
modulation. Digital polar architectures have been employed on numerous wireless
standards like GSM, EDGE, and WLAN, where the fractional bandwidths achieved
are only about 1%, and the power levels achieved are often in the vicinity of 20 dBm.
Can the architecture be employed on wireless standards with low-power and high
fractional bandwidth requirements and yet achieve good power efficiency?
To answer these question, this thesis studies the application of a digital polar transmitter
architecture with parallel amplifier stages for UWB. The concept of the digital
transmitter is motivated and inspired by three factors. First, unrelenting advances
in the CMOS technology in deep-submicron process and the prevalence of low-cost
Digital Signal processing have resulted in the realization of higher level of integration
using digitally intensive approaches. Furthermore, the architecture is an evolution
of polar modulation, which is known for high power efficiency in other wireless applications.
Finally, the architecture is operated as a digital-to-analog converter which
circumvents the use of converters in conventional transmitters.
Modeling and simulation of the system architecture is performed on the Agilent Advanced
Design System Ptolemy simulation platform. First, by studying the envelope
signal, we found that envelope clipping results in a reduction in the peak-to-average
power ratio which in turn improves the error vector magnitude performance (figure
of merit for the study). In addition, we have demonstrated that a resolution of three
bits suffices for the digital polar transmitter when envelope clipping is performed.
Next, this thesis covers a theoretical derivation for the estimate of the error vector
magnitude based on the resolution, quantization and phase noise errors. An analysis
on the process variations - which result in gain and delay mismatches - for a
digital transmitter architecture with four bits ensues. The above studies allow RF
designers to estimate the number of bits required and the amount of distortion that
can be tolerated in the system.
Next, a study on the circuit implementation was conducted. A DPA that comprises
7 parallel RF amplifiers driven by a constant RF phase-modulated signal and 7
cascode transistors (individually connected in series with the bottom amplifiers)
digitally controlled by a 3-bit digitized envelope signal to reconstruct the UWB
signal at the output. Through the use of NFET models from the IBM 130-nm
technology, our simulation reveals that our DPA is able to achieve an EVM of -
22 dB. The DPA simulations have been performed at 3.432 GHz centre frequency
with a channel bandwidth of 528 MHz, which translates to a fractional bandwidth
of 15.4%. Drain efficiencies of 13.2/19.5/21.0% have been obtained while delivering
-1.9/2.5/5.5 dBm of output power and consuming 5/9/17 mW of power.
In addition, we performed a yield analysis on the digital polar amplifier, based
on unit-weighted and binary-weighted architecture, when gain variations are introduced
in all the individual stages. The dynamic element matching method is also
introduced for the unit-weighted digital polar transmitter. Monte Carlo simulations
reveal that when the gain of the amplifiers are allowed to vary at a mean of 1 with a
standard deviation of 0.2, the binary-weighted architecture obtained a yield of 79%,
while the yields of the unit-weighted architectures are in the neighbourhood of 95%.
Moreover, the dynamic element matching technique demonstrates an improvement
in the yield by approximately 3%.
Finally, a hardware implementation for this architecture based on software-defined
arbitrary waveform generators is studied. In this section, we demonstrate that the error vector magnitude results obtained with a four-stage binary-weighted digital polar
transmitter under ideal combining conditions fulfill the European Computer Manufacturers
Association requirements. The proposed experimental setup, believed to
be the first ever attempted, confirm the feasibility of a digital polar transmitter architecture
for Ultra-Wideband. In addition, we propose a number of power combining
techniques suitable for the hardware implementation. Spatial power combining, in
particular, shows a high potential for the digital polar transmitter architecture.
The above studies demonstrate the feasibility of the digital polar architecture with
good power efficiency for a wideband wireless standard with low-power and high
fractional bandwidth requirements
Digital Radio Encoding and Power Amplifier Design for Multimode and Multiband Wireless Communications
The evolution of wireless technology has necessitated the support of multiple communication standards by mobile devices. At present, multiple chipsets/radios operating at predefined sets of modulation schemes, frequency bands, bandwidths and output power levels are used to achieve this objective. This leads to higher component counts, increased cost and limits the capacity to cope with future communication standards. In order to tackle different wireless standards using a single chipset, digital circuits have been increasingly deployed in radios and demonstrated re-configurability in different modulation schemes (multimode) and frequency bands (multiband).
Despite efforts and progress made in digitizing the entire radio, the power amplifier (PA) is still designed using an conventional approach and has become the bottleneck in digital transmitters, in terms of low average power efficiency, poor compatibility with modern CMOS technology and limited re-configurability.
This research addresses these issues from two aspects. The first half of the thesis investigates signal encoding issues between the modulator and PA. We propose, analyze and evaluate a new hybrid amplitude/time signal encoding scheme that significantly improves the coding efficiency and dynamic range of a digitally modulated power amplifier (DMPA) without significantly increasing design complexity. The proposed hybrid amplitude/time encoding scheme combines both the amplitude domain and the time domain to optimally encode information. Experimental results show that hybrid amplitude/time encoding results in a 35% increase in the average coding efficiency with respect to conventional time encoding, and is only 6.7% lower than peak efficiency when applied to a Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) signal with a peak to average power ratio equal to 9.9 dB. A new DMPA architecture, based on the proposed hybrid encoding, is also proposed.
The second half of this thesis presents the design, analysis and implementation of a CMOS PA that is amenable to the proposed hybrid encoding scheme. A multi-way current mode class-D PA architecture has been proposed and realized in 130 nm CMOS technology. The designed PA has satisfied the objectives of wide bandwidth (1.5 GHz - 2.7 GHz at 1 dB output power), and high efficiency (PAE 63%) in addition to demonstrating linear responses using the proposed digital encoding. A complete digital transmitter combining the encoder and the multi-way PA was also investigated. The overall efficiency is 27% modulating 7.3 dB peak to average power ratio QAM signals
Use of Chaotic Oscillations for Precoding and Synchronization in OFDM
This paper proposes a novel linear precoding
method for Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex-
ing (OFDM) based on the employment of the chaotic
waveforms generated by the fourth-order chaotic os-
cillator and orthonormalized by the Gram-Schmidt
process. The proposed linear precoding method
is aimed to increase resilience to the multipath
propagation issues and reduce the Peak-to-Average
Power Ratio (PAPR) of the transmitted signal.
Moreover, the chaotic waveform enables novel timing
synchronization methods to be implemented in the re-
ceiver. The modeling of baseband Linear Precoded
OFDM (LP-OFDM) data transmission system with
Rayleigh channel has been performed in Simulink en-
vironment to validate the proposed method and to com-
pare the performance to the classic precoding meth-
ods, such as Walsh-Hadamard Transform (WHT).
Experiments have shown that in a high Signal-to-Noise
Ratio (SNR) scenario, the employment of the novel
precoding scheme allows reducing Bit Error Ratio
(BER) by several dB compared to non-precoded OFDM.
The proposed precoding method leads to the reduction
of PAPR; however, it is not as efficient as classi-
cal precoding schemes, such as WHT. Experimental
evidence of synchronization of the chaotic oscillators
within 50 samples long time interval is presented
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