The present patent application is a non-provisional application of International Application No. PCT/FR02/00783, filed Mar. 5, 2002.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a channel equalization and decoding device for frequency selective channels.
2. Description of Related Art
In digital transmission, the solutions proposed generally use channel equalization and coding processes. In the conventional approach, the elementary channel equalization and coding functions are processed separately, utilizing only part of the information placed at their disposal. Therefore, the overall performance of the receiver remains suboptimal.
An aim of the invention is to remedy this drawback.
For a few years now, several authors prompted by the techniques of turbo-codes [1] have proposed solutions based on a maximum likelihood detector, an interference canceller and channel coding to combat interference between symbols. Among these solutions let us briefly recall the most significant contributions.
In 1995, a receiver called a turbo-detector [2] associated a detector based on maximum a posteriori likelihood with a channel decoder, through an iterative procedure. The performance obtained was then quasi-optimal for many channels. However, the turbo-detector remained reserved rather for modulations with a small number of states and for channels having short impulse responses.
In 1997, another turbo-equalizer receiver [3] was devised with the aim of being able to reduce the complexity of the turbo-detector and of being able to quasi-optimally equalize modulations with a large number of states on channels exhibiting considerable spreading with respect to the symbol duration.
An aim of the invention is to improve the performance of both of the aforementioned receivers.
To do this, a device according to the invention is a channel equalization and decoding device comprising a series of modules which each comprise an equalizer and a decoder with weighted outputs, and whose modules of rank greater than 1 receive, on the one hand, a string of samples emanating from a sensor and delayed by a quantity equal to the processing time of the previous modules, and, on the other hand, the output of the previous module, characterized in that the modules each comprise means of reception of at least two strings of different samples and an equalizer able to determine one and the same equalized string of samples by utilizing these at least two strings received as two unequalized different representations of the string of samples to be determined.
The invention uses the spatial and/or temporal diversity provided by an antenna possessing several sensors (multi-channel receivers) from which sensors there typically emanate respectively the two strings of samples forming the two different representations. The invention differs from the contributions [4-8] through its multi-channel processing of the information received and/or the possibility of using modulations with a large number of states for transmissions with considerable temporal spreading.
In this way, spatial and/or temporal diversity of reception which markedly improves the results obtained is utilized.
A multi-channel signal is equalized and one and the same block of received data is decoded repeatedly using the information provided by the previous processing.
Other characteristics, aims and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the detailed description which follows, given with reference to the appended figures in which:
a represents a transmission chain of bit-interleaver type;
b represents a transmission chain of symbol-interleaver type;
a diagrammatically represents a possible decomposition of a channel decoder with M-ary weighted output and input, used in an embodiment of the invention, in particular in respect of transmissions with multistate modulations in the case of a bit-interleaver;
b diagrammatically represents a possible decomposition of a channel decoder with M-ary weighted output and input, used in an embodiment of the invention, in particular in respect of transmissions with multistate modulations in the case of a symbol-interleaver;
Illustrated in
Each passage of a set of 2m coded data Ck through the interleaver referenced 2 and through the binary to symbol converter (BSC) referenced 3 generates a complex symbol dn=an+jbn of variance σ2d. The symbols an and bn take their values in the alphabet {±1 . . . , ±(2p+1), . . . , ±(√M−1)} with √M=2m. This operation can, without loss of generality, integrate the techniques of trellis-coded modulation, of differential coding or any other system making it possible to associate a modulation symbol with a set of binary elements. The transmission chains depicted in
The assembly consisting of modulator, transmission medium, demodulators, and transmit and receive filters is modeled by a multi-channel equivalent discrete pathway 4, where each channel i, i=1, . . . , N, is disturbed by centered, Gaussian additive noise wi,n of variance σi2. The output of each channel is equal to:
where the hi,1 are the coefficients of the pathway corresponding to channel i and such that the transfer function associated with this channel may be written:
The coefficients of the pathways of the various channels are assumed to be normalized in such a way that the signal received at the level of the receiver, here denoted 5, is of unit power:
Considering the noise wi,n to be mutually uncorrelated, the variance of the noise seen by a receiver referenced 5 is equal to:
The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the input of the turbo-equalizer is equal to:
where Eb is the mean energy received per data item transmitted, N0 the spectral power density of the noise at the input of the receiver 5 and R the rate of the channel coder 1.
In what follows, an elementary processing of an information block will be referred to as a module. As represented in
In the case of multistate modulations, the channel decoder 20 can be split into five distinct elements (
In what follows, we shall present two embodiments. One, called a multi-channel turbo-equalizer (MCTE), is composed of simple digital filters and the other, called a multi-channel turbo-detector (MCTD), associates digital filters and a maximum a posteriori likelihood detector with multiple inputs.
The structure of the multi-channel equalizer according to the first variant (MCTE), represented in
For the module of rank 1, the transverse filter Q is fed either with the output from the equalizer of this same module, or with decided data at the output of the equalizer of this same module. The transverse filter Q is fed with the output from the previous module, and advantageously either with the output from the equalizer of this same module, or with decided data at the output of the equalizer of this same module for the module of rank 1.
This last filter 13 makes it possible to reconstruct some or all of the inter-symbol interference present at the output of the adder 12 in a manner similar to the teaching of FR 2 763 454.
To describe the device, we have considered an PM2 modulation and a fixed number N=2 of channels. The transmission pathways are such that the powers of the signal and of the noise are identical on each channel. For the first module (p=1), the linear equalizer optimal in the mean square error sense can then be embodied, apart from by the filter Q, by two transverse filters with transfer function Pi(Z) and a summator.
with H1=h1,1; h1,2; . . . h1,L1 and H2=h2,1; h2,2; . . . ; h2,L2.
These filters are generally embodied in transverse form, but may equally well be embodied by cascading a transverse filter and a recursive filter. It is also entirely possible to use a simple matched filter or else a decision feedback nonlinear equalizer.
The output of the multi-channel equalizer 10 feeds the input of the channel decoder 20 with weighted inputs and outputs. The output from the channel decoder 20 provides the estimated data that will be used by the next module to feed a filter Q(z) referenced 13. The iterative procedure is then instigated and can continue. When the number of iterations is sufficient and the MCTE has operated correctly, then the transfer functions of the filters Pi(z) and Q(z) are close or equal to:
Pi(z)=H*i(1/z*) i=1,2; p>1 (7)
The number of coefficients of these filters is finite. These filters are
Q(z)=H1H*1(1/z*)+H2(z)H*2(1/z*)−1 p>1 (8)
embodied in transverse form.
The manner in which the coefficients of the filters P1, P2 and Q of the equalizers are determined in practice as well as the manner in which the weighted outputs of the channel decoder 20 are obtained can be those set forth in FR 2 763 454.
To illustrate the manner of operation of the MCTE, we have considered two highly frequency-selective channels whose non-normalized discrete impulse responses are equal to:
H1=[0.38 0.6 0.6 0.38]
H2=[0.8264−0.1653 0.8512 0.1636 0.81]
The coefficients of the filters are calculated from relations (6), (7), and (8), assuming that the coefficients of H1 and H2 are known. For the simulations, the transmission chain depicted in
The performance of the MCTE is represented in
These results show that the MCTE is very efficient in combating inter-symbol interference and rivals the performance of the frequency unselective Gaussian channel when the signal-to-noise ratio exceeds a few dB.
A second embodiment, which is a receiver based on the use of a multi-channel detector, will now be described.
The structure of the multi-channel detector of the MCTE, represented in
The weighted output of the detector 15 is deduced from a likelihood ratio logarithm calculation. An intrinsic value can be obtained by subtracting the previous module's estimated data, weighted by a coefficient, from the output of the detector 15.
It should be pointed out that, for the module of rank 1, the estimated data provided by the previous module are not known. They will be taken equal to zero, their reliability being considered to be nil.
To describe this device, we have considered an PM2 modulation and a fixed number N=2 of channels. The transmission pathways are such that the powers of the signal and of the noise are identical on each channel. We have also assumed that the filters 14 preceding the detector 15 possessed just a single coefficient equal to 1. In this case, detecting the most likely sequence then amounts to minimizing the metric (9) below with respect to all the possible sequences j:
where γ is a positive coefficient and dk the estimated data item obtained from the output of the channel decoder of a previous module, and which is easily calculated on the model of the process set forth in FR 2 730 370.
The output from the detector 15 provides a likelihood ratio logarithm from which is subtracted the estimated data item dk multiplied by the coefficient γ as in FR 2 730 370. The extrinsic value obtained feeds the input of the channel decoder 20 with weighted input and output (
The manner in which the coefficients of the filters H1(z) and H2(z) are determined in practice and the manner in which the weighted outputs of the detector and of the channel decoder are obtained are in themselves well known. Reference may be made in particular to FR 2 730 370.
To illustrate the manner of operation of the MCTD, we have considered the two channels H1 and H2 described previously.
The coefficients of H1 and H2 are assumed to be known to the receiver. For the simulations, the transmission chain depicted in
The performance of the MCTD is represented in
These results show that the MCTD is very efficient in combating inter-symbol interference and rivals the performance of the frequency unselective Gaussian channel when the signal-to-noise ratio exceeds a few dB.
The devices just described advantageously find application in any multi-channel receiver for a system for digital communication on frequency-selective channels possessing (convolutional or block) channel coding and interleaving.
Two distinct structures have been proposed. The first structure (MCTE) makes it possible to equalize transmission pathways possessing long impulse responses for transmissions by modulations with a large number of states. The second structure (MCTD) is better suited to modulations with a small number of states for transmission pathways with small temporal dispersion.
The invention is applicable to any transmission system using linear modulations such as phase modulations (PM), amplitude modulations on quadrature carriers (QAM), modulations associated with a differential coding, trellis-coded modulations (TCM) and nonlinear modulations that can be decomposed into sums of linear modulations (GMSK, CPM, . . . ).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01 03012 | Mar 2001 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR02/00783 | 3/5/2002 | WO | 00 | 9/4/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/071712 | 9/12/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5453797 | Nicolas et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
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6307901 | Yu et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6690723 | Gosse et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
7012957 | Allpress et al. | Mar 2006 | B2 |
20010017904 | Pukkila et al. | Aug 2001 | A1 |
20020099985 | Cheng | Jul 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 959 580 | Nov 1999 | EP |
9105279 | Oct 1992 | FR |
95 01603 | Feb 1995 | FR |
2 730 370 | Aug 1996 | FR |
2 763 454 | Nov 1998 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040120432 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |