Recital on Multicarrier Communications: Space-Time Coded versus Adaptive OFDM/MC-CDMA
Recital on Multicarrier Communications: Space-Time Coded versus Adaptive OFDM/MC-CDMA
This overview portrays the evolution of multi-carrier systems from their conception and demonstrates that they are capable of supporting the requirements of future wireless systems of the next generation. The a novel multiple access scheme based on slow frequency hopping multicarrier direct-sequence code-division multiple-access (SFHIMC DS-CDMA) is highlighted, which can be rendered compatible with the existing 2nd-generation narrow-band CDMA, and 3rd-generation wideband CDMA mobile communication systems. A RAKE receiver structure with maximum ratio combining is considered and its performance is evaluated over the range of Nakagami multipath fading channels, under the assumption that the receiver has an explicit knowledge of the associated frequency-hopping (FH) patterns invoked. It is argued furthermore that symbol-by-symbol adaptive Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex (OFDM) modems counteract the near instantaneous channel quality variations and hence attain an increased throughput in comparison to their fixed-mode counterparts. By contrast, various diversity techniques, such as Rake receivers and space-time coding, mitigate the channel quality variations in their effort to obtain a reduced BER. This paper investigates a combined system constituted by a constant-power adaptive modem employing spacetime coded diversity techniques in the context of both OFDM and MC-CDMA. The combined system is configured to produce a constant uncoded BER and exhibits virtually error free performance, when a turbo convolutional code is concatenated with a space-time block code. It was found that the advantage of the adaptive modem erodes, as the overall diversity-order increases.
X-XVIII
Hanzo, L.
66e7266f-3066-4fc0-8391-e000acce71a1
Yang, L-L
ae425648-d9a3-4b7d-8abd-b3cfea375bc7
Munster, M
88827f3e-ca24-4f0d-9981-b3fe471836ee
Choi, B.J.
e5e6cf6f-c5a9-4fa1-a038-81782918a1f9
November 2004
Hanzo, L.
66e7266f-3066-4fc0-8391-e000acce71a1
Yang, L-L
ae425648-d9a3-4b7d-8abd-b3cfea375bc7
Munster, M
88827f3e-ca24-4f0d-9981-b3fe471836ee
Choi, B.J.
e5e6cf6f-c5a9-4fa1-a038-81782918a1f9
Hanzo, L., Yang, L-L, Munster, M and Choi, B.J.
(2004)
Recital on Multicarrier Communications: Space-Time Coded versus Adaptive OFDM/MC-CDMA.
SympoTIC'04, Bratislava, Slovakia.
23 - 26 Oct 2004.
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Other)
Abstract
This overview portrays the evolution of multi-carrier systems from their conception and demonstrates that they are capable of supporting the requirements of future wireless systems of the next generation. The a novel multiple access scheme based on slow frequency hopping multicarrier direct-sequence code-division multiple-access (SFHIMC DS-CDMA) is highlighted, which can be rendered compatible with the existing 2nd-generation narrow-band CDMA, and 3rd-generation wideband CDMA mobile communication systems. A RAKE receiver structure with maximum ratio combining is considered and its performance is evaluated over the range of Nakagami multipath fading channels, under the assumption that the receiver has an explicit knowledge of the associated frequency-hopping (FH) patterns invoked. It is argued furthermore that symbol-by-symbol adaptive Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex (OFDM) modems counteract the near instantaneous channel quality variations and hence attain an increased throughput in comparison to their fixed-mode counterparts. By contrast, various diversity techniques, such as Rake receivers and space-time coding, mitigate the channel quality variations in their effort to obtain a reduced BER. This paper investigates a combined system constituted by a constant-power adaptive modem employing spacetime coded diversity techniques in the context of both OFDM and MC-CDMA. The combined system is configured to produce a constant uncoded BER and exhibits virtually error free performance, when a turbo convolutional code is concatenated with a space-time block code. It was found that the advantage of the adaptive modem erodes, as the overall diversity-order increases.
Text
lh-lly-mm-bjc-oct04-sympIST.pdf
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More information
Published date: November 2004
Additional Information:
Keynote Address Event Dates: 23-26 October 2004
Venue - Dates:
SympoTIC'04, Bratislava, Slovakia, 2004-10-23 - 2004-10-26
Organisations:
Southampton Wireless Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 260289
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/260289
PURE UUID: 09f7135a-d854-4548-bfbb-dfeded4ff057
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 19 Dec 2005
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:49
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Contributors
Author:
L. Hanzo
Author:
L-L Yang
Author:
M Munster
Author:
B.J. Choi
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