33 research outputs found

    Multicarrier-signal design with low peaks and low out-of-band power

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    Projecte fet en col.laboració amb el Department of Electrical and Information Technology. Lund UniversityThe high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) and the high out-of-band power (OBP) are two major drawbacks of multicarrier communication systems. Many PAPR reduction and OBP supression techniques have been proposed in the literature whereas not much has been proposed regarding the jointly reduction performance. This thesis focuses on joint reducing time-domain peaks and out-of-band leakage of OFDM signals. The resulting algorithm combines the bene ts of both methods and yields better results than each method does separately

    Multicarrier-signal design with low peaks and low out-of-band power

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    Projecte fet en col.laboració amb el Department of Electrical and Information Technology. Lund UniversityThe high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) and the high out-of-band power (OBP) are two major drawbacks of multicarrier communication systems. Many PAPR reduction and OBP supression techniques have been proposed in the literature whereas not much has been proposed regarding the jointly reduction performance. This thesis focuses on joint reducing time-domain peaks and out-of-band leakage of OFDM signals. The resulting algorithm combines the bene ts of both methods and yields better results than each method does separately

    Hybrid analog-digital transmit beamforming for spectrum sharing backhaul networks

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    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This paper deals with the problem of analog-digital transmit beamforming under spectrum sharing constraints for backhaul systems. In contrast to fully digital designs, where the spatial processing is done at baseband unit with all the flexible computational resources of digital processors, analog-digital beamforming schemes require that certain processing is done through analog components, such as phase-shifters or switches. These analog components do not have the same processing flexibility as the digital processor, but on the other hand, they can substantially reduce the cost and complexity of the beamforming solution. This paper presents the joint optimization of the analog and digital parts, which results in a nonconvex, NP-hard, and coupled problem. In order to solve it, an alternating optimization with a penalized convex-concave method is proposed. According to the simulation results, this novel iterative procedure is able to find a solution that behaves close to the fully digital beamforming upper bound scheme.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Beamforming design and power control for spectrum sharing systems

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    In order to provide wireless services for the current demand of high data rate mobile applications, more spectrally efficient systems are needed. As a matter of fact, the current wireless systems are limited by a frequency splitting spectrum management which in one hand minimizes the multiuser interference but; on the other hand, it precludes the use of wider bandwidth signals. As a more aggressive frequency reuse is targeted (ideally, all transmitters might eventually share the same frequency band), the use of multiple antennas for interference reliving, jointly with a smart power allocation is compulsory. In addition, novel spectrum management regulatory policies are required for ensuring a peaceful coexistence between adjacent spectrum sharing networks and for promoting their development. The aim of this dissertation is provide a beamforming and power allocation design for these novel spectrum sharing systems which are meant to exponentially increase the spectral efficiency of the systems. A mathematical framework based on multicriteria optimization for analyzing the beamforming design is provided which serves as a fundamental tool for describing the state-of-the-art studies in multiantenna interference networks. Indeed, the achievable rates are described and several ways of computing the Pareto rate region of MISO interference channel (i.e. the communication model that represents the spectrum sharing network when the transmitters use multiple antennas) are studied. Nevertheless, as the system designer aims to work in a single efficient rate point, the sum-rate optimal beamforming design is studied. Curiously, it results that under some realistic assumptions on both the desired and interference power levels, the obtained beamformer is the reciprocal version of a known receiving one and it optimizes a notion of antenna directivity for multiuser communications. Neverthelss, it is important to remark that the higher transmit power is used, the more interference dominated is the medium, not only within the wireless network, but also to eventually adjacent networks that might suffer from inter-network interference. In order to cope with this problem, a spectrum licensing system is revisited, namely time-area-spectrum license. Under this spectrum management mechanism, a license holder is able to radiate signals under a certain portion of time, within a concrete area and in a given band. Moreover, the amount of signal strength within the area is constraint by a certain value. Since controlling the signal power levels in a given area is cumbersome, we propose to restrict the receive power as an estimation of the overall accumulated signal strength. Therefore, the optimal transmit beamformers and power allocations are studied. Concretely, the achievable rates are derived and an operational working point is envisaged. In addition, a suboptimal yet low computationally complex and decentralized beamforming design is presented and it shows a good performance in front of other decentralized designs

    A novel approach to MISO interference networks under maximum receive-power regulation

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    An aggressive frequency reuse is expected within the next years in order to increase the spectral ef¿ciency. Multiuser interference by all in-band transmitters can create a communication bottleneck and, therefore, it is compulsory to control it by means of radiated power regulations. In this work we consider received power as the main way to properly measure radiated power, serving at the same time as a spectrum sharing mechanism. Taking into account the constraints on the maximum total receive-power and maximum transmit-power, we ¿rst obtain the transmit powers that attain the Pareto-ef¿cient rates in an uncoordinated network. Among these rates, we identify the maximum sum-rate point for noise-limited scenarios. Next, in order to reach this working point using as less power as possible, we design a novel beamformer under some practical considerations. This beamformer can be calculated in a non-iterative and distributed fashion (i.e. transmitters do not need to exchange information). We evaluateour designby meansof Monte Carlosimulations, compare it with other non-iterative transmit beam formers and show its superior performance when the spectrum sharing receive-power constraints are imposed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Rate splitting for MIMO multibeam satellite systems

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    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This paper deals with the problem of precoding in multibeam satellite system with rate splitting (RS). In contrast to the single-stream (SS) case where a unique private frame is transmitted towards each beam, in RS we consider the simultaneous transmission of a public frame to all intended users superimposed with each private frames. In this context, every user terminal (UT) firstly decodes the public frame which contains data from all UTs at all beams and; posteriorly, its intended private frame which is only decodable by a set of users. With this, each UT receives information from both the public and the private frame, leading to a system sum-rate increase in some cases. This performance increase is evaluated by computing an upper bound of the attainable rates. Moreover, a low-complexity precoding alternative is proposed considering a decoupled design of the precoding of the private frames and public frames. This technique is evaluated considering a real multibeam satellite system. A substantial gain with respect to the current benchmark technique is identified.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Non-orthogonal transmission techniques for multibeam satellite systems

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    © 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Non-orthogonal transmission is a promising technology enabler to meet the requirements of 5G communication systems. Seminal papers demonstrated that non-orthogonal multiplexing techniques outperform orthogonal schemes in terms of capacity, latency, and user fairness. Since it is envisioned that satellites will be an integral component of the 5G infrastructure, it is worth studying how satellite communication systems can benefit from the application of non-orthogonal transmission schemes as well. Contrary to common perception, current communications through a satellite present a different architecture and face different impairments than those in the wireless terrestrial links. In particular, this work aims to describe different non-orthogonal schemes that are suitable for the forward link (i.e., satellite to user). In contrast with the return link of the satellite (i.e., user to satellite), where the use of non-orthogonal transmission schemes has been widely studied, less effort has been devoted to the forward link. In light of this, this article provides an overview and a novel taxonomy that is based on the forward link of different non-orthogonal multibeam transmission schemes. Finally, guidelines that open new avenues for research in this topic are provided.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Spectrum sharing backhaul satellite-terrestrial systems via analog beamforming

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    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Current satellite and terrestrial backhaul systems are deployed in disjoint frequency bands. This fact precludes an efficient use of the spectrum and limits the evolution of wireless backhauling networks. In this paper, we propose an interference mitigation technique in order to allow the spectrum coexistence between satellite and terrestrial backhaul links. This interference reliever is implemented at the terrestrial backhaul nodes, which are assumed to be equipped with multiple antennas. Due to the large bandwidth and huge number of antennas required in these systems, we consider pure analog beamforming. Precisely, we assume a phased array beamforming configuration so that the terrestrial backhaul node can only reduce the interference by changing the phases of each beamforming weight. Two cases are considered: the 18 and 28 GHz band where transmit and receive beamforming optimization problems shall be tackled, respectively. In both cases, the optimization problem results in a nonconvex problem that we propose to solve via two alternative convex approximation methods. These two approaches are evaluated and they present less than 1 dB array gain loss with respect to the upper bound solution. Finally, the spectral efficiency gains of the proposed spectrum sharing scenarios are validated in numerical simulations.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Closed-form multicast precoding for satellite flexible payloads

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    This paper investigates a novel closed-form noniterative precoding technique for multicast multibeam satellite systems. Next-generation satellite systems will be benefited from the flexible use of the satellite resources especially its power flexible allocation among beams. Intending to obtain a low-computational complexity design, we revisit the well-known signal-to-leakage-and-noise ratio design for multicast transmission. Two alternatives are introduced considering both the physical meaning of the ratio and certain multicast channel vector mapping. We observe the benefits of these techniques in satellite flexible payloads. The proposed technique shows a substantial gain compared to the benchmark according to the numerical simulations. Intuitive insights on the precoding behaviour are also presented.This work is funded by Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, Spain, under project TERESA -TEC2017-90093-C3-1-R (AEI/FEDER, UE) and by Catalan government under the grant 2017-SGR-01479.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Edge computing and communication for energy-efficient earth surveillance with LEO satellites

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    Modern satellites deployed in low Earth orbit (LEO) accommodate processing payloads that can be exploited for edge computing. Furthermore, by implementing inter-satellite links, the LEO satellites in a constellation can route the data end-toend (E2E). These capabilities can be exploited to greatly improve the current store-and-forward approaches in Earth surveillance systems. However, they give rise to an NP-hard problem of joint communication and edge computing resource management (RM). In this paper, we propose an algorithm that allows the satellites to select between computing the tasks at the edge or at a cloud server and to allocate an adequate power for communication. The overall objective is to minimize the energy consumption at the satellites while fulfilling specific service E2E latency constraints for the computing tasks. Experimental results show that our algorithm achieves energy savings of up to 18% when compared to the selected benchmarks with either 1) fixed edge computing decisions or 2) maximum power allocation.Part of the research has been supported by the project SatNEx-V, co-funded by the European Space Agency (ESA). This work has also received funding by the Spanish ministry of science and innovation under project IRENE (PID2020-115323RB-C31 / AEI / 10.13039/501100011033) and grant from the Spanish ministry of economic affairs and digital transformation and of the European union – NextGenerationEU [UNICO-5G I+D/AROMA3D-Space (TSI-063000-2021-70).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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