663 research outputs found
Influence of Timing Offset in Multiband OFDM Systems
In Cyclix Prefix OFDM (CP) systems, synchronization to the maximal multipath signal generally causes no problem, however, inter carrier interference (ICI) will be introduced in Zero-padding OFDM (ZP-OFDM) systems, e.g, multiband OFDM UWB (MB-OFDM) systems. In this paper, based on the overlap-and-add (ZP-OFDM-OLA) method typically applied in MB-OFDM, we analyze the cause of the ICI and the performance degradation due to the ICI. The expressions of the channel estimation error, signal-to-noise ratio and ICI are derived. Simulation results are also provided, which show good match with the theoretical results
Enhancing MB-OFDM throughput with dual circular 32-QAM
Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) and Dual Carrier Modulation (DCM) are currently used as the modulation schemes for Multiband Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (MB-OFDM) in the ECMA-368 defined Ultra-Wideband (UWB) radio platform. ECMA-368 has been chosen as the physical radio platform for many systems including Wireless USB (W-USB), Bluetooth 3.0 and Wireless HDMI; hence ECMA-368 is an important issue to consumer electronics and the users experience of these products.
To enable the transport of high-rate USB, ECMA-368 offers up to 480 Mb/s instantaneous bit rate to the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer, but depending on radio channel conditions dropped packets unfortunately result in a lower throughput. This paper presents an alternative high data rate modulation scheme that fits within the configuration of the current standard increasing system throughput by achieving 600 Mb/s (reliable to 3.1 meters) thus maintaining the high rate USB throughput even with a moderate level of dropped packets. The modulation system is termed Dual Circular 32-QAM (DC 32-QAM). The system performance for DC 32-QAM modulation is presented and compared with 16-QAM and DCM1
A Novel Frequency Synchronization Algorithm and its Cramer Rao Bound in Practical UWB Environment for MB-OFDM Systems
This paper presents an efficient time-domain coarse frequency offset (FO) synchronizer (TCFS) for multi-band orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) systems effective for practical ultra-wideband (UWB) environment. The proposed algorithm derives its estimates based on phase differences in the received subcarrier signals of several successive OFDM symbols in the preamble. We consider different carrier FOs and different channel responses in different bands to keep the analysis and simulation compatible for practical multiband UWB scenario. Performance of the algorithm is studied by means of bit error rate (BER) analysis of MBOFDM system. We derive the Cramer Rao lower bound (CRLB) of the estimation error variance and compare it with the simulated error variance both in additive white Gaussian noise and UWB channel model (CM) environments, CM1-CM4. Both analysis and simulation show that TCFS can estimate coarse carrier FO more efficiently in UWB fading channels for MB-OFDM applications compared to the other reported results in literature. Also, computational complexity of the proposed algorithm is analyzed for its usability evaluation
Error Rate Analysis for Coded Multicarrier Systems over Quasi-Static Fading Channels
This paper presents two methods for approximating the performance of coded
multicarrier systems operating over frequency-selective, quasi-static fading
channels with non-ideal interleaving. The first method is based on
approximating the performance of the system over each realization of the
channel, and is suitable for obtaining the outage performance of this type of
system. The second method is based on knowledge of the correlation matrix of
the frequency-domain channel gains and can be used to directly obtain the
average performance. Both of the methods are applicable for
convolutionally-coded interleaved systems employing Quadrature Amplitude
Modulation (QAM). As examples, both methods are used to study the performance
of the Multiband Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) proposal for
high data-rate Ultra-Wideband (UWB) communication.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to Globecom 200
Wavelet Based Semi-blind Channel Estimation For Multiband OFDM
This paper introduces an expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm within a
wavelet domain Bayesian framework for semi-blind channel estimation of
multiband OFDM based UWB communications. A prior distribution is chosen for the
wavelet coefficients of the unknown channel impulse response in order to model
a sparseness property of the wavelet representation. This prior yields, in
maximum a posteriori estimation, a thresholding rule within the EM algorithm.
We particularly focus on reducing the number of estimated parameters by
iteratively discarding ``unsignificant'' wavelet coefficients from the
estimation process. Simulation results using UWB channels issued from both
models and measurements show that under sparsity conditions, the proposed
algorithm outperforms pilot based channel estimation in terms of mean square
error and bit error rate and enhances the estimation accuracy with less
computational complexity than traditional semi-blind methods
Design issues toward a cost effective physical layer for multiband OFDM (ECMA-368) in consumer products
The creation of Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) offers the Consumer Electronics industry a mechanism to truly unwire consumer products, leading to portability and ease of installation as never seen before. WPAN's can offer data-rates exceeding those that are required to convey high quality broadcast video, thus users can easily connect to high quality video for multimedia presentations in education, libraries, advertising, or have a wireless connection at home. There have been many WPAN proposals, but this paper concentrates on ECMA-368 as this standard has the largest industrial and implementers' forum backing. With the aim to effective consumer electronic define and create cost equipment this paper discusses the technology behind ECMA-368 physical layer, the design freedom availabilities, the required processing, buffer memory requirements and implementation considerations while concentrating on supporting all the offered data-rates(1)
- …