284 research outputs found
Improved Successive Cancellation Flip Decoding of Polar Codes Based on Error Distribution
Polar codes are a class of linear block codes that provably achieves channel
capacity, and have been selected as a coding scheme for generation
wireless communication standards. Successive-cancellation (SC) decoding of
polar codes has mediocre error-correction performance on short to moderate
codeword lengths: the SC-Flip decoding algorithm is one of the solutions that
have been proposed to overcome this issue. On the other hand, SC-Flip has a
higher implementation complexity compared to SC due to the required
log-likelihood ratio (LLR) selection and sorting process. Moreover, it requires
a high number of iterations to reach good error-correction performance. In this
work, we propose two techniques to improve the SC-Flip decoding algorithm for
low-rate codes, based on the observation of channel-induced error
distributions. The first one is a fixed index selection (FIS) scheme to avoid
the substantial implementation cost of LLR selection and sorting with no cost
on error-correction performance. The second is an enhanced index selection
(EIS) criterion to improve the error-correction performance of SC-Flip
decoding. A reduction of in the implementation cost of logic elements
is estimated with the FIS approach, while simulation results show that EIS
leads to an improvement on error-correction performance improvement up to
dB at a target FER of .Comment: This version of the manuscript corrects an error in the previous
ArXiv version, as well as the published version in IEEE Xplore under the same
title, which has the DOI:10.1109/WCNCW.2018.8368991. The corrections include
all the simulations of SC-Flip-based and SC-Oracle decoders, along with
associated comments in-tex
A Multi-Kernel Multi-Code Polar Decoder Architecture
Polar codes have received increasing attention in the past decade, and have
been selected for the next generation of wireless communication standard. Most
research on polar codes has focused on codes constructed from a
polarization matrix, called binary kernel: codes constructed from binary
kernels have code lengths that are bound to powers of . A few recent works
have proposed construction methods based on multiple kernels of different
dimensions, not only binary ones, allowing code lengths different from powers
of . In this work, we design and implement the first multi-kernel successive
cancellation polar code decoder in literature. It can decode any code
constructed with binary and ternary kernels: the architecture, sized for a
maximum code length , is fully flexible in terms of code length, code
rate and kernel sequence. The decoder can achieve frequency of more than
GHz in nm CMOS technology, and a throughput of Mb/s. The area
occupation ranges between mm for and mm for
. Implementation results show an unprecedented degree of
flexibility: with , up to code lengths can be decoded with
the same hardware, along with any kernel sequence and code rate
Rate-Flexible Fast Polar Decoders
Polar codes have gained extensive attention during the past few years and
recently they have been selected for the next generation of wireless
communications standards (5G). Successive-cancellation-based (SC-based)
decoders, such as SC list (SCL) and SC flip (SCF), provide a reasonable error
performance for polar codes at the cost of low decoding speed. Fast SC-based
decoders, such as Fast-SSC, Fast-SSCL, and Fast-SSCF, identify the special
constituent codes in a polar code graph off-line, produce a list of operations,
store the list in memory, and feed the list to the decoder to decode the
constituent codes in order efficiently, thus increasing the decoding speed.
However, the list of operations is dependent on the code rate and as the rate
changes, a new list is produced, making fast SC-based decoders not
rate-flexible. In this paper, we propose a completely rate-flexible fast
SC-based decoder by creating the list of operations directly in hardware, with
low implementation complexity. We further propose a hardware architecture
implementing the proposed method and show that the area occupation of the
rate-flexible fast SC-based decoder in this paper is only of the total
area of the memory-based base-line decoder when 5G code rates are supported
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