81 research outputs found

    The Application of Spatial Complementary Code Keying in Point-to-Point MIMO Wireless Communications Systems

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    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationMultiple-input and multiple-output (MIMO) technique has emerged as a key feature for future generations of wireless communication systems. It increases the channel capacity proportionate to the minimum number of transmit and receive antennas. This dissertation addresses the receiver design for high-rate MIMO communications in at fading environments. The emphasis of the thesis is on the cases where channel state information (CSI) is not available and thus, clever channel estimation algorithms have to be developed to bene t from the maximum available channel capacity. The thesis makes four distinct novel contributions. First, we note that the conventional MCMC-MIMO detector presented in the prior work may deteriorate as SNR increases. We suggest and show through computer simulations that this problem to a great extent can be solved by initializing the MCMC detector with regulated states which are found through linear detectors. We also introduce the novel concept of staged-MCMC in a turbo receiver, where we start the detection process at a lower complexity and increase complexity only if the data could not be correctly detected in the present stage of data detection. Second, we note that in high-rate MIMO communications, joint data detection and channel estimation poses new challenges when a turbo loop is used to improve the quality of the estimated channel and the detected data. Erroneous detected data may propagate in the turbo loop and, thus, degrade the performance of the receiver signi cantly. This is referred to as error propagation. We propose a novel receiver that decorrelates channel estimation and the detected data to avoid the detrimental e ect of error propagation. Third, the dissertation studies joint channel estimation and MIMO detection over a continuously time-varying channel and proposes a new dual-layer channel estimator to overcome the complexity of optimal channel estimators. The proposed dual-layer channel estimator reduces the complexity of the MIMO detector with optimal channel estimator by an order of magnitude at a cost of a negligible performance degradation, on the order of 0.1 to 0.2 dB. The fourth contribution of this dissertation is to note that the Wiener ltering techniques that are discussed in this dissertation and elsewhere in the literature assume that channel (time-varying) statistics are available. We propose a new method that estimates such statistics using the coarse channel estimates obtained through pilot symbols. The dissertation also makes an additional contribution revealing di erences between the MCMC-MIMO and LMMSE-MIMO detectors. We nd that under the realistic condition where CSI has to be estimated, hence the available channel estimate will be noisy, the MCMC-MIMO detector outperforms the LMMSE-MIMO detector with a signi cant margin

    Performance evaluation of detection algorithms for MOMI OFDM systems

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    Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-86).Introduction of Multi Input Multi Output (MIMO) Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) as the base air interface method for Next Generation Network (NGN) will face a number of challenges from hostile channel conditions to interference from other users. This would result in an increase of detection complexity required for mobile systems. Complex detection will reduce the battery life of mobile devices because of the many calculations that have to be done to decode the signal. Very powerful detection algorithms exist but they introduce high detection complexity. NGN will employ different MIMO systems, but this research will consider spatially multiplexed MIMO which is used to improve the data rate and network capacity. In NGN different multi access modulation schemes will be used for uplink and downlink but they both have OFDM as the basic building block. In this work performance of MIMO OFDM is investigated in different channels models and detection algorithms. A low complexity detection scheme is proposed in this research to improve performance of MIMO OFDM. The proposed detection scheme is investigated for different channel characteristics. Realistic channels conditions are introduced to evaluate the performance of the proposed detection scheme. We analyze weaknesses of existing linear detectors and the enhancements that can be done to improve their performance in different channel conditions. Performance of the detectors is evaluated by comparison of Bit Error Rate (BER) and Symbol Error Rate (SER) against signal to noise ratio (SNR). This thesis proposes a detector which shows a higher complexity than linear detectors but less than Maximum Likelihood Detector (MLD). The proposed detector shows significant BER improvement in all channel conditions. For better performance evaluation this work also investigates performance of MIMO OFDM detectors in realistic channels like Kronecker and Weichselberger channel models

    Interference Mitigation in Wireless Communications

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    The primary objective of this thesis is to design advanced interference resilient schemes for asynchronous slow frequency hopping wireless personal area networks (FH-WPAN) and time division multiple access (TDMA) cellular systems in interference dominant environments. We also propose an interference-resilient power allocation method for multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems. For asynchronous FH-WPANs in the presence of frequent packet collisions, we propose a single antenna interference canceling dual decision feedback (IC-DDF) receiver based on joint maximum likelihood (ML) detection and recursive least squares (RLS) channel estimation. For the system level performance evaluation, we propose a novel geometric method that combines bit error rate (BER) and the spatial distribution of the traffic load of CCI for the computation of packet error rate (PER). We also derived the probabilities of packet collision in multiple asynchronous FH-WPANs with uniform and nonuniform traffic patterns. For the design of TDMA receivers resilient to CCI in frequency selective channels, we propose a soft output joint detection interference rejection combining delayed decision feedback sequence estimation (JD IRC-DDFSE) scheme. In the proposed scheme, IRC suppresses the CCI, while DDFSE equalizes ISI with reduced complexity. Also, the soft outputs are generated from IRC-DDFSE decision metric to improve the performance of iterative or non-iterative type soft-input outer code decoders. For the design of interference resilient power allocation scheme in MIMO systems, we investigate an adaptive power allocation method using subset antenna transmission (SAT) techniques. Motivated by the observation of capacity imbalance among the multiple parallel sub-channels, the SAT method achieves high spectral efficiency by allocating power on a selected transmit antenna subset. For 4 x 4 V-BLAST MIMO systems, the proposed scheme with SAT showed analogous results. Adaptive modulation schemes combined with the proposed method increase the capacity gains. From a feasibility viewpoint, the proposed method is a practical solution to CCI-limited MIMO systems since it does not require the channel state information (CSI) of CCI.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Professor Gordon L. StBe

    Achievable rates of iterative MIMO receivers over interference channels

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    In this thesis, we study the achievable rates of some interference communication schemes when iterative interference-cancellation (IC) is applied. We assume multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication employing iterative receivers with linear front-ends which involves two modules concatenated serially and cooperating iteratively; a linear combiner based on minimum-mean-square-error (MMSE) detection or maximal-ratio-combining (MRC) and a SISO decoder. We investigate the achievable rates of this receiver when the transmitted signal is Gaussian-distributed with hypothetical erasure-type feedback from the decoder to the combiner and a more practical case with large-size QAM constellations with log-likelihood-ratios (LLRs) being exchanged between the receiver's modules. The achievable rate is approximated by the area below the EXIT curve of the linear FE receiver. Some properties have been observed and mathematically been proved about the iterative MIMO receivers with linear front-end

    Interference mitigation using group decoding in multiantenna systems

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