258 research outputs found
Performance Analysis of Project-and-Forward Relaying in Mixed MIMO-Pinhole and Rayleigh Dual-Hop Channel
In this letter, we present an end-to-end performance analysis of dual-hop
project-and-forward relaying in a realistic scenario, where the source-relay
and the relay-destination links are experiencing MIMO-pinhole and Rayleigh
channel conditions, respectively. We derive the probability density function of
both the relay post-processing and the end-to-end signal-to-noise ratios, and
the obtained expressions are used to derive the outage probability of the
analyzed system as well as its end-to-end ergodic capacity in terms of
generalized functions. Applying then the residue theory to Mellin-Barnes
integrals, we infer the system asymptotic behavior for different channel
parameters. As the bivariate Meijer-G function is involved in the analysis, we
propose a new and fast MATLAB implementation enabling an automated definition
of the complex integration contour. Extensive Monte-Carlo simulations are
invoked to corroborate the analytical results.Comment: 4 pages, IEEE Communications Letters, 201
Turbo Packet Combining for Broadband Space-Time BICM Hybrid-ARQ Systems with Co-Channel Interference
In this paper, efficient turbo packet combining for single carrier (SC)
broadband multiple-input--multiple-output (MIMO) hybrid--automatic repeat
request (ARQ) transmission with unknown co-channel interference (CCI) is
studied. We propose a new frequency domain soft minimum mean square error
(MMSE)-based signal level combining technique where received signals and
channel frequency responses (CFR)s corresponding to all retransmissions are
used to decode the data packet. We provide a recursive implementation algorithm
for the introduced scheme, and show that both its computational complexity and
memory requirements are quite insensitive to the ARQ delay, i.e., maximum
number of ARQ rounds. Furthermore, we analyze the asymptotic performance, and
show that under a sum-rank condition on the CCI MIMO ARQ channel, the proposed
packet combining scheme is not interference-limited. Simulation results are
provided to demonstrate the gains offered by the proposed technique.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, and 2 table
Multi-Level Kernel-Based QAM Symbol Error Probability Estimation
Kernel density estimators technique has been successfully applied to efficient Bit Error Rate (BER) computation issue under a diversity of simulation frameworks. However, as contemporary and emerging digital communication systems are increasingly provided with advanced transceivers, it is questionable if the Symbol Error Rate (SER) can be anyway derived from the BER. This paper investigates for a direct way to efficiently compute the SER. Focusing on the ubiquitous multi-level Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) transmission schemes, a Gaussian kernel-based estimator is designed. Simulation of the 4-QAM transmission scheme under various channel models shows that the proposed estimator can achieve efficient estimations with a very high degree of accuracy and reliability
Turbo Packet Combining Strategies for the MIMO-ISI ARQ Channel
This paper addresses the issue of efficient turbo packet combining techniques
for coded transmission with a Chase-type automatic repeat request (ARQ)
protocol operating over a multiple-input--multiple-output (MIMO) channel with
intersymbol interference (ISI). First of all, we investigate the outage
probability and the outage-based power loss of the MIMO-ISI ARQ channel when
optimal maximum a posteriori (MAP) turbo packet combining is used at the
receiver. We show that the ARQ delay (i.e., the maximum number of ARQ rounds)
does not completely translate into a diversity gain. We then introduce two
efficient turbo packet combining algorithms that are inspired by minimum mean
square error (MMSE)-based turbo equalization techniques. Both schemes can be
viewed as low-complexity versions of the optimal MAP turbo combiner. The first
scheme is called signal-level turbo combining and performs packet combining and
multiple transmission ISI cancellation jointly at the signal-level. The second
scheme, called symbol-level turbo combining, allows ARQ rounds to be separately
turbo equalized, while combining is performed at the filter output. We conduct
a complexity analysis where we demonstrate that both algorithms have almost the
same computational cost as the conventional log-likelihood ratio (LLR)-level
combiner. Simulation results show that both proposed techniques outperform
LLR-level combining, while for some representative MIMO configurations,
signal-level combining has better ISI cancellation capability and achievable
diversity order than that of symbol-level combining.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, and 2 table
Frequency Domain Hybrid-ARQ Chase Combining for Broadband MIMO CDMA Systems
In this paper, we consider high-speed wireless packet access using code
division multiple access (CDMA) and multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO).
Current wireless standards, such as high speed packet access (HSPA), have
adopted multi-code transmission and hybrid-automatic repeat request (ARQ) as
major technologies for delivering high data rates. The key technique in
hybrid-ARQ, is that erroneous data packets are kept in the receiver to
detect/decode retransmitted ones. This strategy is refereed to as packet
combining. In CDMA MIMO-based wireless packet access, multi-code transmission
suffers from severe performance degradation due to the loss of code
orthogonality caused by both interchip interference (ICI) and co-antenna
interference (CAI). This limitation results in large transmission delays when
an ARQ mechanism is used in the link layer. In this paper, we investigate
efficient minimum mean square error (MMSE) frequency domain equalization
(FDE)-based iterative (turbo) packet combining for cyclic prefix (CP)-CDMA MIMO
with Chase-type ARQ. We introduce two turbo packet combining schemes: i) In the
first scheme, namely "chip-level turbo packet combining", MMSE FDE and packet
combining are jointly performed at the chip-level. ii) In the second scheme,
namely "symbol-level turbo packet combining", chip-level MMSE FDE and
despreading are separately carried out for each transmission, then packet
combining is performed at the level of the soft demapper. The computational
complexity and memory requirements of both techniques are quite insensitive to
the ARQ delay, i.e., maximum number of ARQ rounds. The throughput is evaluated
for some representative antenna configurations and load factors to show the
gains offered by the proposed techniques.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology (Apr 2009
Opportunistic Random Access Scheme Design for OFDMA-based Indoor PLC Networks
International audienceMulti-user systems can benefit from multi-user diversity by assigning channels to users with bestchannel conditions at different time instants. In this paper, we present an opportunistic random accessscheme for OFDMA-based indoor PLC systems, based on time- and frequency-varying channel conditions,to exploit multi-user diversity. The proposed scheme dynamically adjusts the backoff time ofeach user according to its own channel state variations in both time and frequency domains duringthe contention procedure, and thus ’better’ users have higher priority to contend over their favorablesubchannels. Moreover, subchannels are assigned to users with best channel conditions in order tofurther enhance the system throughput. In addition, an analytical throughput model for such a multiuserand multi-channel system is derived to obtain the optimal parameter settings of the proposedaccess scheme. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme provides significant improvement inthe system throughput even in the case where the number of users highly exceeds that of subchannels
Spectrally-efficient SIMO relay-aided underlay communications: An exact outage analysis
International audienceIn this paper, we carry out an exact outage analysis for a secondary (unlicensed) system operating under a strict primary (licensed) system outage constraint. We focus on single-user singleinput multiple-output (SIMO) secondary communications where the direct link is being assisted by a cluster of single-antenna decodeand-forward (DF) relay nodes acting in a half-duplex selective-andincremental relaying mode. Firstly, we derive a transmit power model for the secondary system where the source and relays adapt their transmit power based on: 1) a perfect acquisition of the underlying interference channel state information (I-CSI), and 2) an interference constraint that is either fixed or proportional to the primary system outage probability. Secondly, the cumulative distribution functions (CDF)s of the received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the secondary receiving nodes are devised in a recursive and tractable closed-form expressions. These statistics are used to derive the exact end-to-end secondary system outage probability. The analytical and simulation results are then compared and interestingly shown to perfectly match, while revealing that with a moderate number of primary and secondary receive antennas, the secondary system spectral efficiency is amply enhanced as opposed to being severely degraded in the single receive antenna case
Signal-Level Cooperative Spatial Multiplexing for Uplink Throughput Enhancement in MIMO Broadband Systems
International audienceIn this paper, we address the issue of throughputefficient half-duplex constrained relaying schemes for broadband uplink transmissions over multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) channels. We introduce a low complexity signal-level cooperative spatial multiplexing (CM) architecture that allows for the shortening of the relaying phase without resorting to any symbol detection or re-mapping at the relay side. Half-duplex latency is thereby reduced, resulting in a remarkable throughput gain compared to amplify-and-forward (AF) relaying scheme. Surprisingly, we show that CM strategy becomes more powerful in boosting uplink throughput as the relay approaches cell edge
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