The purpose of this invention is a process for transmission of data using repetitive sets of spreading sequences, and a corresponding transmitter and receiver.
The invention is broadly applied for digital communications and more particularly for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs), Wireless subscriber Local Loops (WLL), mobile telephony, intelligent building management systems and remote charging, communication for transport, cable television, multimedia service on cable networks, etc.
The invention relates to the spectrum spreading technique. It is known that this technique consists of modulating a digital symbol to be transmitted by a pseudo random sequence known to the user. Each sequence is composed of N elements called “chips” that have a duration of one Nth of the duration of a symbol. The result is a signal for which the spectrum is spread over a range N times wider than the range of the original signal. On reception, demodulation consists of correlating the received signal with the sequence used in sending to find the initial symbol.
This technique has many advantages, but it cannot overcome a disadvantage related to an interference effect between symbols which originates as follows. In a radioelectric channel, the wave that propagates from the transmitter to the receiver may follow various paths such that several signals reach the receiver at different time, with different amplitudes and phases, for the same transmitted signal. Therefore the response of the channel to the transmitted signal is spread. Since the sent signal is usually short, it can be treated like a pulse and it is then referred to as a pulse response. In high throughput systems, these various replicas of the same signal can interfere with other signals.
Since it is assumed that Ts=Tm, it is obvious that the signals a2 and b1 will interfere and degrade reception. This source of degradation can be avoided by taking steps such that b1 appears beyond a2, in other words the duration Ts of the symbols is greater than the spreading Tm of the pulse response. In other words, the symbol flow rate must be less than 1/Tm. The constraint on the flow rate is greater when the pulse response is spread more.
The purpose of the invention is to overcome this disadvantage. By reducing the interference phenomenon between symbols, the invention enables higher flow rates in environments in which spreading of the pulse response of the channel is much greater than the duration of the symbol (up to 16 times in an example described later).
Document EP-A-0 693 834 describes a CDMA type mobile radiocommunication system in which the base station/mobile station link uses one or the other spreading sequence, the sequence being used in sending being identified such that the mobile station can unspread the received signal. The signal can be transmitted on three parallel channels using three different codes, to increase the information flow rate.
The invention recommends that successive symbols should be processed with different pseudo random sequences in order to reduce the risks of interference between symbols, since this makes it possible to better discriminate received signals on reception. According to the invention, the number of different successive sequences is limited to a fixed number S. Beyond S sequences, the previously used sequences are reused. In other words, packets of S symbols can be processed by repetitive sets of S sequences. The result is that the time interval after which the same pseudo random sequence is repeated is no longer Ts, but becomes S times Ts. Therefore the constraint on the duration of the symbol is no longer Ts>Tm, but becomes STs>Tm. In terms of throughput, this means that for a given spreading, the authorized throughput is S times higher than in prior art. The upper limit is no longer 1/Tm, but becomes S/Tm.
This process that consists of processing packets of S symbols in repetitive sets of S pseudo random sequences can be further improved by processing several packets of S symbols in parallel, each with different sequence sets.
Therefore, more precisely, the purpose of the invention is a process for data transmission by spectrum spreading in which:
The conversion made during transmission could be a summation.
In one particular embodiment, several packets of S symbols are processed in parallel.
Another purpose of the invention is a transmitter and a receiver for embodiment of this process.
Data to be transmitted are firstly organized into symbols using standard techniques. Each symbol may include one or several bits. The symbols are then organized in packets of S. If required, parallel processing can also be carried out, L packets of S symbols are used in parallel giving a total of M=LS symbols. The following symbols are organized in the same way to build up a new set of M symbols and so on.
Table I illustrates this series-parallel organization. Each box represents a symbol. The first set of symbols is denoted
where i denotes the row in the table, in other words the rank of the packet (where i varies from 1 to L) and j is the column, in other words the rank in the packet (where j varies from 1 to S). In the second set, the LS symbols are denoted
and so on.
All these symbols are processed by spectrum spreading using LS different pseudo-random sequences, preferably orthogonal. These sequences are organized as shown in table II. They are denoted Cij, where i varies from 1 to L and j varies from 1 to S.
A symbol Sij in table I is processed by the corresponding pseudo-random sequence Cij in table II. When the M sequences have been used for a set of M symbols, the same sequences are reused for the next set of M symbols and so on. Therefore, the interval at which sequences are reused is STS.
Some numerical examples are given for explanatory purposes to illustrate the advantages provided by the invention; these examples are in no way restrictive. It is assumed that work is done with a binary flow rate of 2 Mbits/s in QPSK (Quaternary Phase Shift Keying) modulation. Therefore the number of bits per symbol is 2. The duration Ts of a symbol is 1 μS. With a process in accordance with the state of prior art, this would mean that spreading of the channel Tm should be limited to 1 μs. The invention uses L channels in parallel (where L=M/S). Therefore the number of bits transmitted in a symbol period Ts is equal to m=2 L. Table III contains a few examples of maximum spreading Tmmax that can be allowed for two values of M (8 and 16), and 3 values of S (4, 8 and 16 respectively) for each.
The receiver shown in
Processing in parallel is simply an option, the essential feature of the invention being that a set of different successive sequences is used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99 09947 | Jul 1999 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR00/02177 | 7/28/2000 | WO | 00 | 1/30/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/10051 | 2/8/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6160803 | Yuen et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
20020196842 | Onggosanusi et al. | Dec 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 693 834 | Jan 1996 | EP |
0 708 534 | Apr 1996 | EP |