33 research outputs found

    Capacity, coding and interference cancellation in multiuser multicarrier wireless communications systems

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    Multicarrier modulation and multiuser systems have generated a great deal of research during the last decade. Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a multicarrier modulation generated with the inverse Discrete Fourier Transform, which has been adopted for standards in wireless and wire-line communications. Multiuser wireless systems using multicarrier modulation suffer from the effects of dispersive fading channels, which create multi-access, inter-symbol, and inter-carrier interference (MAI, ISI, ICI). Nevertheless, channel dispersion also provides diversity, which can be exploited and has the potential to increase robustness against fading. Multiuser multi-carrier systems can be implemented using Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA), a flexible orthogonal multiplexing scheme that can implement time and frequency division multiplexing, and using multicarrier code division multiple access (MC-CDMA). Coding, interference cancellation, and resource sharing schemes to improve the performance of multiuser multicarrier systems on wireless channels were addressed in this dissertation. Performance of multiple access schemes applied to a downlink multiuser wireless system was studied from an information theory perspective and from a more practical perspective. For time, frequency, and code division, implemented using OFDMA and MC-CDMA, the system outage capacity region was calculated for a correlated fading channel. It was found that receiver complexity determines which scheme offers larger capacity regions, and that OFDMA results in a better compromise between complexity and performance than MC-CDMA. From the more practical perspective of bit error rate, the effects of channel coding and interleaving were investigated. Results in terms of coding bounds as well as simulation were obtained, showing that OFDMAbased orthogonal multiple access schemes are more sensitive to the effectiveness of the code to provide diversity than non-orthogonal, MC-CDMA-based schemes. While cellular multiuser schemes suffer mainly from MAI, OFDM-based broadcasting systems suffer from ICI, in particular when operating as a single frequency network (SFN). It was found that for SFN the performance of a conventional OFDM receiver rapidly degrades when transmitters have frequency synchronization errors. Several methods based on linear and decision-feedback ICI cancellation were proposed and evaluated, showing improved robustness against ICI. System function characterization of time-variant dispersive channels is important for understanding their effects on single carrier and multicarrier modulation. Using time-frequency duality it was shown that MC-CDMA and DS-CDMA are strictly dual on dispersive channels. This property was used to derive optimal matched filter structures, and to determine a criterion for the selection of spreading sequences for both DS and MC CDMA. The analysis of multiple antenna systems provided a unified framework for the study of DS-CDMA and MC-CDMA on time and frequency dispersive channels, which can also be used to compare their performance

    Cooperative Cognitive Systems

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    Potential Game for Energy-Efficient RSS-based Positioning in Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Positioning is a key aspect for many applications in wireless sensor networks. In order to design practical positioning algorithms, employment of efficient algorithms that maximize the battery lifetime while achieving a high degree of accuracy is crucial. The number of participating anchor nodes and their transmit power have an important impact on the energy consumption of positoning a node. This paper proposes a game theoretical algorithm to optimize resource usage in obtaining location information in a wireless sensor network. The proposed method provides positioning and tracking of nodes using RSS measurements. We use the Geometric Dilution of Precision as an optimization metric for our algorithm, with the aim of minimizing the number and power of anchor nodes that collaborate in positioning, thus saving energy. The algorithm is shown to be a potential game, therefore convergence is guaranteed. A distributed low complexity solution for the implementation is presented. The game is applied to WSN and results show the trade-off between power saving and positioning error

    Planar and cylindrical active microwave temperature imaging: numerical simulations

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    A comparative study at 2.45 GHz concerning both measurement and reconstruction parameters for planar and cylindrical configurations is presented. For the sake of comparison, a numerical model consisting of two nonconcentric cylinders is considered and reconstructed using both geometries from simulated experimental data. The scattered fields and reconstructed images permit extraction of very useful information about dynamic range, sensitivity, resolution, and quantitative image accuracy for the choice of the configuration in a particular application. Both geometries can measure forward and backward scattered fields. The backscattering measurement improves the image resolution and reconstruction in lossy mediums, but, on the other hand, has several dynamic range difficulties. This tradeoff between forward only and forward-backward field measurement is analyzed. As differential temperature imaging is a weakly scattering problem, Born approximation algorithms can be used. The simplicity of Born reconstruction algorithms and the use of FFT make them very attractive for real-time biomedical imaging systems.Peer Reviewe

    Planar and cylindrical active microwave temperature imaging: numerical simulations

    Get PDF
    A comparative study at 2.45 GHz concerning both measurement and reconstruction parameters for planar and cylindrical configurations is presented. For the sake of comparison, a numerical model consisting of two nonconcentric cylinders is considered and reconstructed using both geometries from simulated experimental data. The scattered fields and reconstructed images permit extraction of very useful information about dynamic range, sensitivity, resolution, and quantitative image accuracy for the choice of the configuration in a particular application. Both geometries can measure forward and backward scattered fields. The backscattering measurement improves the image resolution and reconstruction in lossy mediums, but, on the other hand, has several dynamic range difficulties. This tradeoff between forward only and forward-backward field measurement is analyzed. As differential temperature imaging is a weakly scattering problem, Born approximation algorithms can be used. The simplicity of Born reconstruction algorithms and the use of FFT make them very attractive for real-time biomedical imaging systemsPeer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Cooperative Coverage Extension in Land Mobile Satellite Networks

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    This chapter is dedicated to the application of cooperative relaying in heterogeneous land mobile satellite (LMS) systems. Vehicular terminals are considered. We focus on a Urban scenario, an environment characterized by intermittent satellite reception due to the shadowing effect of surrounding buildings. We study benefits and limits of the cooperative approach adopting a network model that is at the same time tractable and of practical interest.We derive an analytical lower bound on the coverage and show that there is a trade-off between this and the rate at which the information can be injected in the network. We also describe a possible implementation scheme for cooperative coverage extension in heterogeneous satellite LMS systems adopting the ETSI Digital Video Broadcasting—Satellite services to Handheld (DVB-SH) standard in the space segment

    Throughput and Delay Analysis in Video Streaming over Block-Fading Channels

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    We study video streaming over a slow-fading wireless channel. In a streaming application, video packets are required to be decoded and displayed in the order they are transmitted as the transmission goes on. This results in per-packet delay constraints, and the resulting channel can be modeled as a physically degraded fading broadcast channel with as many virtual users as the number of packets. In this paper, we study two important quality of user experience (QoE) metrics, namely throughput and interdecoding delay. We introduce several transmission schemes, and compare their throughput and maximum interdecoding delay performances. We also introduce a genie-aided scheme, which provides theoretical bounds on the achievable performance. We observe that adapting the transmission rate at the packet level, i.e., periodically dropping a subset of the packets, leads to a good tradeoff between the throughput and the maximum interdecoding delay. We also show that an approach based on initial buffering leads to an asymptotically vanishing packet loss rate at the expense of a relatively large initial delay. For this scheme, we derive a condition on the buffering time that leads to throughput maximization
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