3,369 research outputs found
Short-Packet Communications over Multiple-Antenna Rayleigh-Fading Channels
Motivated by the current interest in ultra-reliable, low-latency, machine-type communication systems, we investigate the tradeoff between reliability, throughput, and latency in the transmission of information over multiple-antenna Rayleigh block-fading channels. Specifically, we obtain finite-blocklength, finite-SNR upper and lower bounds on the maximum coding rate achievable over such channels for a given constraint on the packet error probability. Numerical evidence suggests that our bounds delimit tightly the maximum coding rate already for short blocklengths (packets of about 100 symbols). Furthermore, our bounds reveal the existence of a tradeoff between the rate gain obtainable by spreading each codeword over all available time-frequency-spatial degrees of freedom, and the rate loss caused by the need of estimating the fading coefficients over these degrees of freedom. In particular, our bounds allow us to determine the optimal number of transmit antennas and the optimal number of time-frequency diversity branches that maximize the rate. Finally, we show that infinite-blocklength performance metrics such as the ergodic capacity and the outage capacity yield inaccurate throughput estimates.This work was supported in part by the Swedish Research Council under grant 2012-4571, by the National Science Foundation CAREER award under grant agreement CCF-12-53205, by the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under Grant 333680, by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad of Spain under Grants RYC-2014-16322, TEC2013-41718-R,
and CSD2008-00010, and by the Comunidad de Madrid under Grant S2013/ICE-2845
Low-latency Ultra Reliable 5G Communications: Finite-Blocklength Bounds and Coding Schemes
Future autonomous systems require wireless connectivity able to support
extremely stringent requirements on both latency and reliability. In this
paper, we leverage recent developments in the field of finite-blocklength
information theory to illustrate how to optimally design wireless systems in
the presence of such stringent constraints. Focusing on a multi-antenna
Rayleigh block-fading channel, we obtain bounds on the maximum number of bits
that can be transmitted within given bandwidth, latency, and reliability
constraints, using an orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing system similar
to LTE. These bounds unveil the fundamental interplay between latency,
bandwidth, rate, and reliability. Furthermore, they suggest how to optimally
use the available spatial and frequency diversity. Finally, we use our bounds
to benchmark the performance of an actual coding scheme involving the
transmission of short packets
Short Packets over Block-Memoryless Fading Channels: Pilot-Assisted or Noncoherent Transmission?
We present nonasymptotic upper and lower bounds on the maximum coding rate
achievable when transmitting short packets over a Rician memoryless
block-fading channel for a given requirement on the packet error probability.
We focus on the practically relevant scenario in which there is no \emph{a
priori} channel state information available at the transmitter and at the
receiver. An upper bound built upon the min-max converse is compared to two
lower bounds: the first one relies on a noncoherent transmission strategy in
which the fading channel is not estimated explicitly at the receiver; the
second one employs pilot-assisted transmission (PAT) followed by
maximum-likelihood channel estimation and scaled mismatched nearest-neighbor
decoding at the receiver. Our bounds are tight enough to unveil the optimum
number of diversity branches that a packet should span so that the energy per
bit required to achieve a target packet error probability is minimized, for a
given constraint on the code rate and the packet size. Furthermore, the bounds
reveal that noncoherent transmission is more energy efficient than PAT, even
when the number of pilot symbols and their power is optimized. For example, for
the case when a coded packet of symbols is transmitted using a channel
code of rate bits/channel use, over a block-fading channel with block
size equal to symbols, PAT requires an additional dB of energy per
information bit to achieve a packet error probability of compared to
a suitably designed noncoherent transmission scheme. Finally, we devise a PAT
scheme based on punctured tail-biting quasi-cyclic codes and ordered statistics
decoding, whose performance are close ( dB gap at packet error
probability) to the ones predicted by our PAT lower bound. This shows that the
PAT lower bound provides useful guidelines on the design of actual PAT schemes.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, journa
Correlated shadowing and fading characterization of MIMO off-body channels by means of multiple autonomous on-body nodes
In off-body communication systems low-cost and compact transceivers are important for realistic applications. An autonomous off-body wireless node was designed and integrated onto a textile antenna. Channel measurements were performed for an indoor non line-off-sight 4x2 MIMO (Multiple-Input Multiple-Output) link using four off-body transmitting nodes and two similar fixed receiving nodes. The channel behavior is characterized as Rayleigh fading with lognormal shadowing and is fitted to a model determining fading and shadowing correlation matrices. The physics of the propagation is captured accurately by the model which is further used to simulate a link using diversity by means of Selection Combining, as implemented on the wireless nodes. The performance of measured and simulated links is compared in terms of outage probability level. The measurements and analysis confirm that the correlated shadowing and fading model is relevant for realistic off-body networks employing diversity by means of Selection Combining
Peak-Age Violation Guarantees for the Transmission of Short Packets over Fading Channels
We investigate the probability that the peak age of information in a
point-to-point communication system operating over a multiantenna wireless
fading channel exceeds a predetermined value. The packets are scheduled
according to a last-come first-serve policy with preemption in service, and are
transmitted over the channel using a simple automatic repetition request
protocol. We consider quadrature phase shift keying modulation, pilot-assisted
transmission, maximum-likelihood channel estimation, and mismatched scaled
nearest-neighbor decoding. Our analysis, which exploits nonasymptotic tools in
information theory, allows one to determine, for a given information packet
size, the physical layer parameters such as the SNR, the number of transmit and
receive antennas, the amount of frequency diversity to exploit, and the number
of pilot symbols, to ensure that the system operates below a target peak-age
violation probability.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. To be presented at Infocom 201
Finite-Blocklength Bounds on the Maximum Coding Rate of Rician Fading Channels with Applications to Pilot-Assisted Transmission
We present nonasymptotic bounds on the maximum coding rate achievable over a
Rician block-fading channel for a fixed packet size and a fixed packet error
probability. Our bounds, which apply to the scenario where no a priori channel
state information is available at the receiver, allow one to quantify the
tradeoff between the rate gains resulting from the exploitation of
time-frequency diversity and the rate loss resulting from fast channel
variations and pilot-symbol overhead
A Simple Cooperative Diversity Method Based on Network Path Selection
Cooperative diversity has been recently proposed as a way to form virtual
antenna arrays that provide dramatic gains in slow fading wireless
environments. However most of the proposed solutions require distributed
space-time coding algorithms, the careful design of which is left for future
investigation if there is more than one cooperative relay. We propose a novel
scheme, that alleviates these problems and provides diversity gains on the
order of the number of relays in the network. Our scheme first selects the best
relay from a set of M available relays and then uses this best relay for
cooperation between the source and the destination. We develop and analyze a
distributed method to select the best relay that requires no topology
information and is based on local measurements of the instantaneous channel
conditions. This method also requires no explicit communication among the
relays. The success (or failure) to select the best available path depends on
the statistics of the wireless channel, and a methodology to evaluate
performance for any kind of wireless channel statistics, is provided.
Information theoretic analysis of outage probability shows that our scheme
achieves the same diversity-multiplexing tradeoff as achieved by more complex
protocols, where coordination and distributed space-time coding for M nodes is
required, such as those proposed in [7]. The simplicity of the technique,
allows for immediate implementation in existing radio hardware and its adoption
could provide for improved flexibility, reliability and efficiency in future 4G
wireless systems.Comment: To appear, IEEE JSAC, special issue on 4
Optimizing Pilot Overhead for Ultra-Reliable Short-Packet Transmission
In this paper we optimize the pilot overhead for ultra-reliable short-packet
transmission and investigate the dependence of this overhead on packet size and
error probability. In particular, we consider a point-to-point communication in
which one sensor sends messages to a central node, or base-station, over AWGN
with Rayleigh fading channel. We formalize the optimization in terms of
approximate achievable rates at a given block length, pilot length, and error
probability. This leads to more accurate pilot overhead optimization.
Simulation results show that it is important to take into account the packet
size and the error probability when optimizing the pilot overhead.Comment: To be published on IEEE ICC 2017 Communication Theory Symposiu
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