44 research outputs found
Adaptive Demodulation in Differentially Coherent Phase Systems: Design and Performance Analysis
Adaptive Demodulation (ADM) is a newly proposed rate-adaptive system which
operates without requiring Channel State Information (CSI) at the transmitter
(unlike adaptive modulation) by using adaptive decision region boundaries at
the receiver and encoding the data with a rateless code. This paper addresses
the design and performance of an ADM scheme for two common differentially
coherent schemes: M-DPSK (M-ary Differential Phase Shift Keying) and M-DAPSK
(M-ary Differential Amplitude and Phase Shift Keying) operating over AWGN and
Rayleigh fading channels. The optimal method for determining the most reliable
bits for a given differential detection scheme is presented. In addition,
simple (near-optimal) implementations are provided for recovering the most
reliable bits from a received pair of differentially encoded symbols for
systems using 16-DPSK and 16- DAPSK. The new receivers offer the advantages of
a rate-adaptive system, without requiring CSI at the transmitter and a coherent
phase reference at the receiver. Bit error analysis for the ADM system in both
cases is presented along with numerical results of the spectral efficiency for
the rate-adaptive systems operating over a Rayleigh fading channel.Comment: 25 pages, 11 Figures, submitted to IEEE Transactions on
Communications, June 1, 201
On the Energy Efficiency of LT Codes in Proactive Wireless Sensor Networks
This paper presents an in-depth analysis on the energy efficiency of Luby
Transform (LT) codes with Frequency Shift Keying (FSK) modulation in a Wireless
Sensor Network (WSN) over Rayleigh fading channels with pathloss. We describe a
proactive system model according to a flexible duty-cycling mechanism utilized
in practical sensor apparatus. The present analysis is based on realistic
parameters including the effect of channel bandwidth used in the IEEE 802.15.4
standard, active mode duration and computation energy. A comprehensive
analysis, supported by some simulation studies on the probability mass function
of the LT code rate and coding gain, shows that among uncoded FSK and various
classical channel coding schemes, the optimized LT coded FSK is the most
energy-efficient scheme for distance d greater than the pre-determined
threshold level d_T , where the optimization is performed over coding and
modulation parameters. In addition, although the optimized uncoded FSK
outperforms coded schemes for d < d_T , the energy gap between LT coded and
uncoded FSK is negligible for d < d_T compared to the other coded schemes.
These results come from the flexibility of the LT code to adjust its rate to
suit instantaneous channel conditions, and suggest that LT codes are beneficial
in practical low-power WSNs with dynamic position sensor nodes.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin