The present invention relates to downlink signal transmission, and more particularly to a mobile device that supports downlink transmit diversity.
In wireless signal transmission, a base station can use two antennas per transmission to improve signal reception at a mobile device. The base station can apply downlink transmit diversity which utilizes a second antenna to transmit a different version of a signal. The mobile device must be configured to detect when the base station is utilizing downlink transmit diversity. The base station can indicate that transmit diversity is being utilized via higher layer messaging. However, the mobile device cannot access such messages until it is connected to the core network after initial signal acquisition.
In the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the invention, reference is made to the accompanied drawings, which form a part hereof, and which is shown by way of illustration, specific exemplary embodiments of which the invention may be practiced. Each embodiment is described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention, and it is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized, and other changes may be made, without departing from the spirit or scope of the present invention. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of the present invention is defined only by the appended claims.
Throughout the specification and claims, the following terms take the meanings explicitly associated herein, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. The meaning of “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural references. The meaning of “in” includes “in” and “on.” Additionally, a reference to the singular includes a reference to the plural unless otherwise stated or is inconsistent with the disclosure herein.
Briefly stated, the present invention is directed to a mobile device that detects downlink transmit diversity. Slot and frame timing knowledge and a downlink scrambling code are applied to pilot and synch channels of the signal. An algorithm suited for the diversity case and an algorithm suited for the non-diversity case are utilized. The output of the diversity algorithm is compared to the output of the non-diversity algorithm. The output yielding the highest energy determines whether downlink transmit diversity is applied.
The algorithms detect transmission diversity even under harsh channel conditions in both initial acquisition and steady-state modes. In one embodiment of the invention, initial acquisition is characterized by the presence of a constant frequency offset of about 1.5 kHz in the signal, and steady-state is characterized by a constant frequency offset of about 200 Hz.
Each signal includes a pilot channel (P-CPICH) and a synch channel (P-SCH). Both the pilot channel and the synch channel contain known fixed data. The data format of the synch and pilot channels depends on whether diversity is applied.
During non-diversity downlink transmission, base station 100 transmits the pilot channel and the synch channel from first antenna 120 via channel h1. The synch channel in non-diversity mode is shown in
The structure and content of the synch channel are known and a is present for both diversity and non-diversity cases. The basic principle of diversity detection is to determine the sign of a on the synch channel. If a=+1, transmit diversity is applied. If a=−1, transmit diversity is not used.
Two cross-correlation metrics (si, pi) are computed over the ith slot, where si despreads the PSC from the synch channel and pi descrambles the scrambling code from the pilot channel.
si=<ri,cp>1:256
pi*=<ri,csc>*1:256/1:512
where ri is the received signal over ith slot;
cp is the PSC code in the synch channel; and
csc is the scrambling code of the pilot channel.
The correlation of the synch channel with the pilot channel takes place at the same instant to obtain the same channel information from the two correlations. The PSC correlator may be used in parallel with the scrambling code correlator.
Non-Diversity Algorithm: Slow Changing Channel
The process flow of the non-diversity algorithm for the ith slot is illustrated in
The two noiseless correlation metrics (si, pi) have the following relationships.
si˜ah1cpcp*=ah1 (since cpcp*=1)
Thus, si has information on product of a and h1.
pi˜h1csccsc*=h1 (since csccsc*=1)
Thus, pi has information on h1.
sipi*˜ah1h1*=a|h1|2
Since |h1|2>0, sign of sipi* depends only on a.
The final non-diversity statistic:
For small frequency offsets, the scrambling code (csc) is correlated over 512 chips coherently.
pi=<ri,csc>1:512
The product of the metrics is summed over m slots and the real part is taken to obtain the overall metric for non-diversity.
Non-Diversity Algorithm: Fast Changing Channel
In the fast changing channel case, two modifications are made to the slow changing channel algorithm. First, the scrambling code and the PSC are correlated over 256 chips instead of 512 chips. The two 256-chip correlations are decomposed into two correlations over 128 chips. The metric value is computed using the results of the first 128-chip correlation, and then adding to it the metric value resulting from the second 128-chip correlation. Mathematically, this can be expressed as:
Diversity Algorithm Slow Changing Channel
The concept for the diversity algorithm is the same as for the non-diversity case, but two channels are derotated instead of just one. The metrics for the non-diversity case are used by correlating the received signal with the PSC and the scrambling code. The metrics are combined in a way to accomplish the aggregate derotation. Instead of computing a metric for each slot as above, a pair of slots is used to derotate the aggregate channel and obtain a sample of the diversity statistic.
By correlating the received signal with the PSC, a different channel is obtained depending on the slot. The pattern is governed by the TSTD transmission of the synch channel. Likewise, for the scrambling code, the pilot channel is transmitted with alternating signs on the pilot symbols. In the diversity case, the scrambling code is correlated over a symbol period (e.g., 256 chips) since the next symbol period will have different signs on the pilot symbols.
In the steady-state case, the following holds from a channel rotation perspective for the fourth and fifth slots:
(s5−s4)p4,1*+(s5+s4)p4,2*≈a[|h1,t−h2,t|2+|h1,t+h2,t|2]=2a[|h1,t|2+|h2,t|2]
Thus, if the channel does not change over 2 slots, the metric fully derotates the channel and yields a sign depending only on a.
The process flow of the diversity algorithm is shown in
In the diversity case, the metric is computed over pairs of slots, not over individual slots. The overall metric for diversity obtained by summing metrics over m/2 pairs of slots is:
A slot pair used for individual metric computation cannot cross a frame boundary, but the overall metric computation can cross the frame boundary.
Diversity Algorithm: Fast Changing Channel
The fast changing channel is characterized by the presence of frequency offsets on the order of 1500 Hz in the received signal. For frequency offsets of the same order, the channel will be different one slot later. The algorithm requires modification such that the cross-metric multiplications take place within the same slot, facilitating channel phase derotation. This can be achieved for fourth and fifth slots with the metric:
s4(p4,2−p4,1)*+s5(p5,1+p5,2)*˜2a[|h2,t|2+|h1,f+Δ|2]
The above equality is to be interpreted loosely as to only account for channel rotation issues, ignoring noise and interference.
According to another embodiment the algorithm splits each correlation into two separate correlations done over 128 chips (instead of 256 chips) and adds the two non-coherently. This further insulates from the effects of frequency offsets since the correlation is performed over half the frequency-offset signal. This version of the algorithm is used for initial acquisition:
Mobile device 1000 may include many more components than those shown in
Mobile device 1000 may optionally communicate with the base station, or directly with another mobile device, via wireless interface unit 1010. Wireless interface unit 1010 includes circuitry for coupling mobile device 1000 to a network, and is constructed for use with various communication protocols including, but not limited to, UDP, TCP/IP, SMS, GPRS, Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) and the like.
Mass memory 1048 generally includes RAM 1016, ROM 1032, and one or more data storage units 1036. The mass memory stores operating system 1020 for controlling the operation of mobile device 1000. Basic input/output system (“BIOS”) 1018 is also provided for controlling the low-level operation of mobile device 1000.
The mass memory also stores application code and data used by mobile device 1000. More specifically, the mass memory stores transmit diversity application 1030, and programs 1034. Transmit diversity application 1030 may be loaded into memory 1048 and run under control of operating system 1020. Also, programs 1034 may include computer executable instructions which, when executed by mobile device 1000, transmit and receive WWW pages, e-mail, audio, video, and enable telecommunication with another user of another mobile device.
Power supply 1026 provides power to mobile device 1000. A rechargeable or non-rechargeable battery may be used to provide power. The power may also be provided by an external power source, such as an AC adapter or a powered docking cradle that supplements and/or recharges a battery.
The above specification, examples, and data provide a complete description of the manufacture and use of the composition of the invention. Since many embodiments of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, the invention resides in the claims hereinafter appended.
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