119 research outputs found

    Gaussian Pulse-Based Two-Threshold Parallel Scaling Tone Reservation for PAPR Reduction of OFDM Signals

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    Tone Reservation (TR) is a technique proposed to combat the high Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) problem of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) signals. However conventional TR suffers from high computational cost due to the difficulties in finding an effective cancellation signal in the time domain by using only a few tones in the frequency domain. It also suffers from a high cost of hardware implementation and long handling time delay issues due to the need to conduct multiple iterations to cancel multiple high signal peaks. In this paper, we propose an efficient approach, called two-threshold parallel scaling, for implementing a previously proposed Gaussian pulse-based Tone Reservation algorithm. Compared to conventional approaches, this technique significantly reduces the hardware implementation complexity and cost, while also reducing signal processing time delay by using just two iterations. Experimental results show that the proposed technique can effectively reduce the PAPR of OFDM signals with only a very small number of reserved tones and with limited usage of hardware resources. This technique is suitable for any OFDM-based communication systems, especially for Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB) systems employing large IFFT/FFT transforms

    A novel combined PAPR reduction and channel estimation approach for OFDM systems

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    International audienceIn this paper, a novel combination of peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) reduction and channel estimation techniques for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) systems is addressed. In order to reduce the spectrum efficiency loss due the insertion of dedicated pilots for PAPR reduction issues, we propose to use some pilots dedicated for channel estimation to reduce the PAPR value. These pilots follow particular laws which allow their blind detection at the receiving side and avoid sending side information. At the receiver, based on these properties, the pilots are detected and channel estimation is then performed. The proposed laws operate in discrete domain to mitigate the performance degradation due to residual estimation error in continuous domain. Simulation results performed using the new DVB-T2 standard parameters show that the proposed approach gives better performance and higher spectral efficiency when compared to conventional Tone Reservation (TR) method

    Democratic Representations

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    Minimization of the \ell_{\infty} (or maximum) norm subject to a constraint that imposes consistency to an underdetermined system of linear equations finds use in a large number of practical applications, including vector quantization, approximate nearest neighbor search, peak-to-average power ratio (or "crest factor") reduction in communication systems, and peak force minimization in robotics and control. This paper analyzes the fundamental properties of signal representations obtained by solving such a convex optimization problem. We develop bounds on the maximum magnitude of such representations using the uncertainty principle (UP) introduced by Lyubarskii and Vershynin, and study the efficacy of \ell_{\infty}-norm-based dynamic range reduction. Our analysis shows that matrices satisfying the UP, such as randomly subsampled Fourier or i.i.d. Gaussian matrices, enable the computation of what we call democratic representations, whose entries all have small and similar magnitude, as well as low dynamic range. To compute democratic representations at low computational complexity, we present two new, efficient convex optimization algorithms. We finally demonstrate the efficacy of democratic representations for dynamic range reduction in a DVB-T2-based broadcast system.Comment: Submitted to a Journa

    Analysis and Implementation of PAPR reduction algorithms for C-OFDM signals

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    Nowadays multicarrier modulation has become a key technology for communication systems; for example C-OFDM schemes are used in wireless LAN (802.11a/g/n), terrestrial digital television (DVB-T) and audio broadcaster (DAB) in Europe, and discrete multitone (DMT) in x.DSL systems. The principal difficulty with OFDM is the occurrence of the coherent alignment of the time domain parallel signals at the transmitted side which forces system designer to introduce either additional hard computationally device or a suitable power back-off at the high power amplifier in order to cope with the large magnitude signal fluctuation. This leads to a significant increment in computational cost in the former case whereas in a worse allowable power utilization in the latter case with respect to the original system. However since both allowable power and computational cost are subject to a design as well as regulatory limit others solution must be accomplished. Peak reduction techniques reduce maximum-to-mean amplitude fluctuations nominating as a feasible solution. Peak-to-average power ratio is the key metric to measure this amplitude fluctuations at transmitter and to give a clear figure of merit for comparison among different techniques

    Analysis of an offset modulation transmission

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    In this article, a method called offset modulation (OM-OFDM) is proposed to control the peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) of an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) signal. The theoretical bandwidth occupancy of the proposed offset modulated signal is derived. Using these bandwidth occupancy results, a closed-form theoretical bit error rate (BER) expression for an offset modulated transmission is derived and validated. Thereafter, a BER comparison between OM-OFDM and OFDM at a PAPR value of 13 dB shows that both methods offer similar BER characteristics for frequency selective fading channel conditions. The OM-OFDM method in addition is able to accurately control the PAPR of a transmission for a targeted BER. The authors have further proposed a newly applied power performance decision metric, which can be used throughout the PAPR field, in order to compare various methods. By using this power performance decision metric, the authors show that OM-OFDM offers between 4 dB–1.2 dB (60.34%–24.6%) and 4.1 dB–1.2 dB (60.8%–23.6%), net power performance gain (at a BER of 10−4) when compared to a clipped OFDM, OFDM, tone reserved (TR) OFDM and an active constellation extended (ACE) OFDM transmission in a frequency selective fading channel. Finally, by using a complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF), the OM-OFDM method is shown to offer between 3.2 dB and 2 dB PAPR reduction (at a CCDF of 10−1) when compared to an OFDM, TR, clipped, and ACE OFDM transmission.This work is currently being patented by the University of Pretoria. Both authors are inventors on the patent, with the University of Pretoria holding the patent rights. This paper is based on work, for which the author has been awarded a PhD at the University of Pretoria. The necessary permissions have been obtained to publish such material.http://jwcn.eurasipjournals.com/content/2013/1/19am2013ai201

    DVB-T2: The Second Generation of Terrestrial Digital Video Broadcasting System

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    This paper provides a review of the second generation of terrestrial digital video broadcasting standard (DVB-T2). DVB-T2 is the evolution of DVB-T and, together with DVB-S2 and DVB-C2, inaugurated a new transition from the firstgeneration digital broadcasting systems, similar to the transition from analog-to-digital systems. In this paper, the most relevant features of DVB-T2 are explained in detail, along with their benefits and trade-offs. This paper also presents a comprehensive review of the laboratory and field trial results available so far. Especial emphasis is placed in the results of the measurements carried out to test the mobile reception and the novel technologies as multiple input single output and time frequency slicing.This work was supported in part by the University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU under Grant UFI 11/30, in part by the Basque Government under Grants IT-683-13 and SAIOTEK, and in part by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness Project HEDYT-GBB under Grant TEC2012-33302.Eizmendi, I.; Velez, M.; Gómez Barquero, D.; Morgade, J.; Baena Lecuyer, V.; Slimani, M.; Zoellner, J. (2014). DVB-T2: The Second Generation of Terrestrial Digital Video Broadcasting System. IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting. 60(2):258-271. https://doi.org/10.1109/TBC.2014.2312811S25827160

    An Overview of the ATSC 3.0 Physical Layer Specification

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    "(c) 2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works.")This paper provides an overview of the physical layer specification of Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) 3.0, the next-generation digital terrestrial broadcasting standard. ATSC 3.0 does not have any backwards-compatibility constraint with existing ATSC standards, and it uses orthogonal frequency division multiplexing-based waveforms along with powerful low-density parity check (LDPC) forward error correction codes similar to existing state-of-the-art. However, it introduces many new technological features such as 2-D non-uniform constellations, improved and ultra-robust LDPC codes, power-based layered division multiplexing to efficiently provide mobile and fixed services in the same radio frequency (RF) channel, as well as a novel frequency pre-distortion multiple-input single-output antenna scheme. ATSC 3.0 also allows bonding of two RF channels to increase the service peak data rate and to exploit inter-RF channel frequency diversity, and to employ dual-polarized multiple-input multiple-output antenna system. Furthermore, ATSC 3.0 provides great flexibility in terms of configuration parameters (e.g., 12 coding rates, 6 modulation orders, 16 pilot patterns, 12 guard intervals, and 2 time interleavers), and also a very flexible data multiplexing scheme using time, frequency, and power dimensions. As a consequence, ATSC 3.0 not only improves the spectral efficiency and robustness well beyond the first generation ATSC broadcast television standard, but also it is positioned to become the reference terrestrial broadcasting technology worldwide due to its unprecedented performance and flexibility. Another key aspect of ATSC 3.0 is its extensible signaling, which will allow including new technologies in the future without disrupting ATSC 3.0 services. This paper provides an overview of the physical layer technologies of ATSC 3.0, covering the ATSC A/321 standard that describes the so-called bootstrap, which is the universal entry point to an ATSC 3.0 signal, and the ATSC A/322 standard that describes the physical layer downlink signals after the bootstrap. A summary comparison between ATSC 3.0 and DVB-T2 is also provided.Fay, L.; Michael, L.; Gómez Barquero, D.; Ammar, N.; Caldwell, MW. (2016). An Overview of the ATSC 3.0 Physical Layer Specification. IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting. 62(1):159-171. doi:10.1109/TBC.2015.2505417S15917162

    DVB-NGH: the Next Generation of Digital Broadcast Services to Handheld Devices

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    This paper reviews the main technical solutions adopted by the next-generation mobile broadcasting standard DVB-NGH, the handheld evolution of the second-generation digital terrestrial TV standard DVB-T2. The main new technical elements introduced with respect to DVB-T2 are: layered video coding with multiple physical layer pipes, time-frequency slicing, full support of an IP transport layer with a dedicated protocol stack, header compression mechanisms for both IP and MPEG-2 TS packets, new low-density parity check coding rates for the data path (down to 1/5), nonuniform constellations for 64 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) and 256QAM, 4-D rotated constellations for Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK), improved time interleaving in terms of zapping time, end-to-end latency and memory consumption, improved physical layer signaling in terms of robustness, capacity and overhead, a novel distributed multiple input single output transmit diversity scheme for single-frequency networks (SFNs), and efficient provisioning of local content in SFNs. All these technological solutions, together with the high performance of DVB-T2, make DVB-NGH a real next-generation mobile multimedia broadcasting technology. In fact, DVB-NGH can be regarded the first third-generation broadcasting system because it allows for the possibility of using multiple input multiple output antenna schemes to overcome the Shannon limit of single antenna wireless communications. Furthermore, DVB-NGH also allows the deployment of an optional satellite component forming a hybrid terrestrial-satellite network topology to improve the coverage in rural areas where the installation of terrestrial networks could be uneconomical.Gómez Barquero, D.; Douillard, C.; Moss, P.; Mignone, V. (2014). DVB-NGH: the Next Generation of Digital Broadcast Services to Handheld Devices. IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting. 60(2):246-257. doi:10.1109/TBC.2014.2313073S24625760

    Physical Layer Signaling for the Next Generation Mobile TV Standard DVB-NGH

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    [ES] Esta tesina tiene como objetivo investigar, estudiar y desarrollar la nueva capa física para la nueva generación TV digital móvil DVB-NGH. Esta nueva capa física se basa en las especificaciones de la capa física de DVB-T2, pero introduce una serie de mecanismos avanzados que permiten la transmisión de servicios HDTV en entornos móviles.[EN] The next generation mobile broadcasting standard DVB-NGH (Next Generation Handheld) has enhanced the physical layer signaling of DVB-T2 (Second Generation Terrestrial) in several aspects: higher signaling capacity, improved transmission robustness, reduced signaling overhead, and reduced peak-to-average-power ratio (PAPR). The physical layer signaling of DVB-T2 and DVB-NGH is transmitted in preamble OFDM symbols at the beginning of each frame. The preamble provides a means for fast signal detection, enabling fast signal scanning, and it carries a limited amount of signaling data in a robust way that allows accessing the physical layer pipes within the frame. This thesis provides an overview of the physical layer signaling in DVB-NGH. Results are compared with DVB-T2.Llorca Beltrán, JM. (2012). Physical Layer Signaling for the Next Generation Mobile TV Standard DVB-NGH. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/27341.Archivo delegad
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