The present application claims the benefit under 35U.S.C. §119(a) to a European patent application filed in the European Patent Office on Jul. 15, 2008 and assigned Serial No. 08160469.6, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
This invention relates to estimation, and optionally reduction, of inter-carrier interference in a received multi-carrier signal and to apparatus and methods for estimation, and optionally reduction, of inter-carrier interference in a received multi-carrier signal as well as to software able to perform such methods.
Multi-carrier transmission schemes such as Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) are being deployed in, or proposed for, a wide range of communications systems such as wireless networking, radio and television broadcasting and multicasting, and Fourth Generation (4G) communications networks. In a multi-carrier transmission scheme a number of orthogonal carrier signals are used. Data to be transmitted is divided into parallel data streams, one stream for each carrier, and data symbols are formed. Each carrier is modulated using a modulation scheme such as Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) or Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK). Multi-carrier transmission schemes are popular because they are particularly robust where the channel between a transmitter and a receiver suffers from impairments such as time dispersion and/or frequency selective fading.
One problem facing multi-carrier transmission schemes is their susceptibility to frequency offsets, phase noise, and Doppler effects when the channel is rapidly changing. These problems can cause inter-carrier interference (ICI) between the multiple carriers, and can result in bit errors.
Various techniques are known to cancel inter-carrier interference but they generally require significant processing resources with complexity that is of the order of O(N.log2(N)) to O(N3), where N is the symbol length. This makes the known techniques unsuitable for use in terminals which have limited processing resources or power budgets. WO 2006/111843 describes an inter-carrier interference reduction technique which uses windowing of the received signal and then uses a matrix computation to estimate the ICI impact on each carrier by means of sequential channel estimations, after time-domain to frequency-domain processing.
One object of this invention is to provide apparatus and methods for estimation, and reduction, of inter-carrier interference in a received multi-carrier signal. The present invention seeks to provide a way of estimating inter-carrier interference which requires less computational resources.
A first aspect of the present invention provides a method of estimating inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a multi-carrier signal received from a channel, in which signal symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol, the method includes estimating inter-carrier interference using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1]
rx(n) is the received signal at time n,
rx(n−N) is the received signal at time n−N,
N is the symbol length (not including the cyclic extension),
G is the cyclic extension length;
the estimating of the inter-carrier interference being in the time-domain before time-domain-to-frequency processing of the received signal.
More preferably the estimation is made using the function:
where: ICIestimated(n) is the estimated inter-carrier interference.
The present invention also provides a method of reducing inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a received multi-carrier signal in which symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol, the method comprising:
performing an estimation of ICI;
using the estimation of ICI to reduce ICI in the received signal. The estimation can be calculated by:
or
where W(n) is a windowing function.
The present invention also provides an ICI reduction stage, e.g. in a receiver, or transceiver, a controller for a receiver, or a transceiver, software for implementing any of the methods of the present invention as well as a storage medium storing the software.
This invention can be applied to wireless communication systems, but can be used in any environment with varying channels such as found in wireline systems, e.g., for use with ADSL modems. For example, temperature changes result in channel characteristics changing.
The present invention can be applied to all transmission schemes using a cyclic extension as guard interval, e.g., OFDM and DMT. The method can be applied to any communication scheme which uses guard intervals, e.g. a cyclic prefix, a cyclic postfix or combination of both.
A method according to an embodiment of the present invention can estimate ICI with a complexity of O(G), where G is guard interval length. The method is not tied to any particular modulation scheme.
A further improvement can be obtained by optimal windowing when correcting the received signal in the time-domain.
The estimation of ICI can be used to calculate the channel impulse response (CIR) length.
The functionality described here can be implemented in software, hardware or a combination of these. The invention can be implemented by means of hardware comprising several distinct elements, and by means of a suitably programmed processing apparatus. The processing apparatus can comprise a computer, a processor, a state machine, a logic array or any other suitable processing apparatus. The processing apparatus can be a general-purpose processor which executes software to cause the general-purpose processor to perform the required tasks, or the processing apparatus can be dedicated to perform the required functions. Another aspect of the invention provides machine-readable instructions (software) which, when executed by a processor, perform any of the steps of the described methods. The software may be stored on an electronic memory device, hard disk, optical disk or other machine-readable storage medium. The software may be delivered as a computer program product on a machine-readable carrier or it may be downloaded to a terminal via a network connection.
Embodiments of the invention will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a shows the Taylor approximation of a single tap for low Fdnorm(=0.3);
b shows the approximation for Fdnorm=0.5; and
The term cyclic extension as used throughout the specification and claims refers to any system that makes use of a guard interval, e.g. a cyclic prefix or a cyclic postfix or a combination of both. In any part of this specification or in the claims, reference to a cyclic prefix may be replaced by cyclic postfix or a combination of cyclic postfix and prefix.
The present invention will be described with respect to particular embodiments and with reference to certain drawings but the invention is not limited thereto but only by the claims. The drawings described are only schematic and are non-limiting. In the drawings, the size of some of the elements may be exaggerated and not drawn on scale for illustrative purposes.
Where the term “comprising” is used in the present description and claims, it does not exclude other elements or steps. Furthermore, the terms first, second, third and the like in the description and in the claims, are used for distinguishing between similar elements and not necessarily for describing a sequential or chronological order. It is to be understood that the terms so used are interchangeable under appropriate circumstances and that the embodiments of the invention described herein are capable of operation in other sequences than described or illustrated herein.
A fixed wireless channel 30 can be modelled as a multi-tap channel. A channel of L+1 taps can be expressed as:
By adding mobility the taps become time-dependent:
In a sampled system the mobile wireless channel becomes:
In mobile wireless communication systems the channel 30 between the transmitter and receiver will usually vary during a transmission. This is often called fading, and there are different kinds of fading, each resulting in different impairments with specific properties. One such impairment is inter-carrier interference (ICI). For a varying wireless channel, the channel variation speed is related to the Doppler frequency (Fd), which is defined by:
where Fc is the carrier frequency, c is the speed of light, θ the angle of arrival.
We will now define:
and this average constant during a symbol period, where
where a(l) is the slope of tap l during symbol k. This approximation is better for low values of Fdnorm. In general, the approximation is valid for Fdnorm<0.3, but it depends on the required accuracy.
Taylor approximations are illustrated in
The Received Signal
All the following equations only consider reception of a single symbol, but can be extended to multiple symbols. At the receiver:
In this equation rx(n) is the received signal, tx(n) is the transmitted signal, h(n,l) is the channel and w(n) is the Additive White Gaussian Noise. The AWGN noise is not due to ICI. White Gaussian noise is for instance thermal noise or noise generated by the analog circuit. The frequency spectrum of AWGN is flat and the noise is uncorrelated.
For n=[−G, N−1], the equation can be expanded using results from equation (1) to:
The second term in the equation is related to the channel variation and results in ICI noise.
If we now define:
then the received signal can be expressed as:
Assign
so:
ICI noise will not always be the dominant form of noise in the received signal. If the ICI noise is not dominant, i.e. if:
with E{ }=expectation= average, then reducing ICI will not improve performance. Therefore the only cases of interest are when the ICI is a dominant noise, i.e., if:
At this point tx(n) is unknown and rx(n) can not be correctly demodulated due to the (large) ICI term.
Estimation of A(n)
In this and the following sections, all equations are valid for n=[N−G, N−1]. Due to the cyclic extension (42
tx(n)=tx(n−N)
Substituting this in:
we finally obtain:
Note that for n=[N−G+L, N−1]: A(n−N)=A(n)
Finally after many computation, one can obtain:
rx(n)−rx(n−N)≅N.A(n)−ISI(n)+w′(n)
with
and w′(n)=w(n)−w(n−N)
Note that for n=[N−G+L, N−1]: ISI(n)=0 and rx(n)−rx(n−N)≅N.A(n)+w′(n)
Rewriting the last equation:
Stated in words, the estimation of A(n) noise is given by first subtracting the received signal at point (n−N) from the received signal at point (n), and then dividing by the symbol length. This relationship makes use of the periodicity in the received symbol, which arises due to the presence of the cyclic extension.
When the range is reduced to n=[N−G+L, N−1] we observed that ISI(n)=0, hence the estimation of A(n) is very good. For the range n=[N−G, N−G+L−1] the estimation is biased by ISI(n) which can be significant.
As described earlier, the estimation of ICI assumes a slow variation of the channel. The two points rx(n), rx(n−N) have the same value if no ICI and no noise is present.
If no ICI is present then
Therefore:
And due to cyclic extension:
rx(n)−rx(n−N)=w(n)−w(n−N)=w′(n)
Since the invention is preferably used when the ICI is the dominant noise and so w(n) is small, the equation results in almost zero.
A(n) is estimated every symbol (i.e. is signal dependent). The equation to be used is (3). Once A(n) is estimated, the ICI is preferably cancelled.
Reduction of the ICI
Ideally, the received signal with no ICI impairment can be expressed as:
Let KIN(n) be a windowing function, not specified yet. AWGN noises w(n) and w′(n) are omitted for sake of clarity:
This formula assumes that:
Expanding equation (4) using (3) finally leads to:
Since the ISI contribution can be rather significant we choose WIN(n) as follows:
WIN(n)=1 for n=[N−G+L, N−1]
WIN(n)=0 for n=[N−G, N−G+L−1]
This results in the following:
rxreducedICI(n)≅rxnoICI(n) for n=[N−G+L, N−1]
rxreducedICI(n)≅rx(n) for n=[N−G, N−G+L−1]
Equation (5) shows how the ICI can be removed from rx(n) with a specific choice of WIN(n).
The ICI is removed from the received symbol for n=[N−G+L, N−1] for example, but the ICI power is the biggest at that position—as can be derived from equation (2). For the ICI reduction take placing in the time-domain reference is made in to block 54 of
Noise Power Reduction of the Invention
It can be shown that the new ICI reduction method is not boosting the other noise power. Restating equation (4), assuming the range of n where WIN(n)=1:
Expanding the formula:
The second term is the noise created by the new ICI reduction method and should be compared to w(n)—see equation (2).
The result is shown in
One communication system in which the ICI reduction method can be used is a Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld (DVB-H) communication system. In DVB-H the normalised Doppler frequency Fd(3 dB) is defined as “the Doppler frequency on which the total noise has increased by 3 dB with respect to a quasi static environment”. This can also be stated as “the Doppler frequency on which the ICI noise power equals the non-ICI noise power”. Assume the value of K=(G−L)/N=¼.
the new ICI reduction method has decreased the total noise by 1.4 dB.
Until now it was assumed that the channel impulse response length was known. However this is not always the case. In the following paragraphs will be shown that when A(n) is computed, the channel impulse response length can be derived from it.
Estimating the Channel Impulse Response Length
One typical operation in a wireless receiver is to estimate, or calculate, the channel impulse response (CIR) length of the communication channel. The result of this calculation can be used to apply appropriate settings in an equaliser at the receiver to compensate for the channel. If the CIR length is estimated, or assumed, too short the possibility exists that extra noise (due to the Inter-Symbol-Interference or ISI) is introduced as already shown in (3).
Considering again the equations in the “Estimation of the A(n)” section:
with:
and w′(n)=w(n)−w(n−N)
The amplitude of the ISI(n) term is approximately proportional to the number of terms in the summation (L), or the power is proportional to (L)2. This means that the power of Ã(n) will increase when ISI(n) becomes dominant, meaning when n≦N−G+L−1. This is shown in
Windowing
Deriving the Optimal Window
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention a windowing function is used and defines the amount of the ICI-estimate that will be used to compensate the received signal rx(n). The idea is to optimize this amount since at some point the estimate will be wrong due to ISI which is much more dominant than ICI (see previous paragraph). It is the correction to be applied that is windowed. This will be done in block 54 of
This embodiment relates to the same case as described in the previous section. Equation (5) is repeated below for convenience:
Define:
It shows that there is a trade-off between removing ICI power and adding ISI power. This trade-off can be optimized by choosing WIN(n) correctly.
The optimum value of WIN(n) can be computed using a Minimum Mean-Square Error (MMSE) calculation as follows:
for n=[N−G, N−1]
Simplifying the Window Definition
The requirement stated above can be suboptimal because ISI(n) and A(n) are both unknown and will typically change from symbol to symbol in the received signal.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention the equation “in the mean” (over different symbols) can be used:
The numerator E{|A(n)|2} can be assumed independent of n, so:
E{|A(n)|2}=A2
The denominator can be obtained using the estimation Ã(n):
Combining all, results in:
Using the constraint that on WIN(n)=1 for n=[N−G+L, N−1] so certainly for n=N−1, WIN(n) can be rewritten, e.g. one can compute the scaling factor A2 as follows:
A2=WIN(N−1).E{|Ã(N−1)|2}=E{|Ã(N−1)|2}
Finally:
The windowing function WIN(n) equals the average power of A(n=N) divided by the average power of A(n). Since A(n) will be computed every symbol (e.g. to cancel ICI) it can be averaged from symbol-to-symbol using for instance a leaky integrator. The windowing function can then be obtained by inverting the averaged A(n)^2, scaled such that WIN(N−1)=1. This has the advantage that the windowing function is hence obtained as a byproduct of the ICI canceling mechanism, and no additional complexity is required.
The more accurate the division is, the higher the performance of the ICI canceling will be. However, if desired, it is possible to further reduce the complexity of this calculation by optionally approximating the division. E.g. approximation example 1: reducing the number of bits in numerator and denominator. Approximation example 2: right-shifting both numerator and denominator until denominator=“000001.xxx”. The “fractional” value in the numerator represents the division.
Accordingly, the present invention also provides an ICI reduction stage, e.g. for a receiver, having means for estimating inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a received multi-carrier signal in which symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol, the ICI reduction stage comprising:
means for estimating inter-carrier interference using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1]
where:
rx(n) is the received signal at time n,
rx(n−N) is the received signal at time n-N
N is the symbol length (not including the cyclic extension),
the means for estimating being adapted to estimate the inter-carrier interference in the time-domain before time-domain-to-frequency processing of the received signal. More preferably the function:
is used for estimating the inter-carrier interference.
The ICI reduction stage is preferably adapted to assume that a variation in the channel is linear during a symbol.
The ICI reduction stage may comprise means for estimating the channel impulse response length by methods described above.
The ICI reduction stage may also be adapted to estimate the ICI as above and to use the estimation of ICI to reduce ICI in the received signal.
The ICI reduction stage may be adapted to use a windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal.
The windowing function may equal the average power of A (n=N) divided by the average power of A(n) or may be calculated using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1], where:
The ICI reduction stage may be adapted to calculate the ICI reduction using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1] where WIN(n) is the windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal.
The multi-carrier signal to be processed by the ICI reduction stage can be an orthogonal frequency division multiplexed (OFDM) or a DMT signal.
The present invention also provides a controller, e.g. for a receiver, having means for estimating inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a received multi-carrier signal in which symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol, the controller comprising:
means for estimating inter-carrier interference using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1]
where:
rx(n) is the received signal at time n,
rx(n−N) is the received signal at time n-N
N is the symbol length (not including the cyclic extension),
the means for estimating being adapted to estimate the inter-carrier interference in the time-domain before time-domain-to-frequency processing of the received signal. More preferably the function:
is used for estimating the inter-carrier interference.
The controller is preferably adapted to assume that a variation in the channel is linear during a symbol.
The controller may comprise means for estimating the channel impulse response length by methods described above.
The controller may also be adapted to estimate the ICI as above and to use the estimation of ICI to reduce ICI in the received signal.
The controller may be adapted to use a windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal.
The windowing function may equal the average power of A (n=N) divided by the average power of A(n) or may be calculated using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1], where:
The controller may be adapted to calculate the ICI reduction using a windowing function using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1].
where WIN(n) is the windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal
The multi-carrier signal to be processed by the controller can be an orthogonal frequency division multiplexed (OFDM) or a DMT signal.
The controller may be included in an apparatus such as a receiver or a transceiver.
Any of the functionality described above, including blocks, modules, circuits, and algorithm steps may be implemented as hardware, computer software, or combinations of both. The various illustrative logical blocks, modules, and circuits described may be implemented or performed with a general purpose processor, a digital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field programmable gate array (FPGA) or other programmable logic device, discrete gate or transistor logic, discrete hardware components, or any combination designed to perform the functions described herein. A general purpose processor may be a microprocessor, controller, microcontroller or state machine. A processor may also be implemented as a combination of computing devices, e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core, or any other such configuration.
The present invention also includes software comprising code which when executed on a computing system estimates inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a received multi-carrier signal in which symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol. The software includes code for estimating inter-carrier interference using the functions:
for n=[N−G, N−1]
where: rx(n) is the received signal at time n,
rx(n−N) is the received signal at time n−N
N is the symbol length (not including the cyclic extension),
the estimating of the inter-carrier interference being in the time-domain before time-domain-to-frequency processing of the received signal. More preferably the function
is used for estimating the inter-carrier interference.
The software may be based on assuming that a variation in the channel is linear during a symbol.
The software may be adapted to estimate the channel impulse response length by methods described above.
The present invention also includes software comprising code which when executed on a computing system reduces inter-carrier interference (ICI) for a received multi-carrier signal in which symbols are separated by a guard interval containing a cyclic extension of a symbol.
The software may be adapted to perform an estimation of ICI as above followed by using the estimation of ICI to reduce ICI in the received signal.
The software may be adapted to use a windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal.
The software may be adapted to calculate the windowing function according to the average power of A (n=N) divided by the average power of A(n). The software may be adapted to calculate the windowing function using the function:
for n=[N−G, N−1], where:
The software may be adapted to reduce the ICI by applying:
for n=[N−G, N−1].
where WIN(n) is any windowing function which determines an amount of the estimated ICI that is used to compensate the received signal.
The software may be stored on any suitable storage medium such as diskette, hard drive, tape drive, solid state memory such as a USB memory stick, optical disk such as a CD-ROM or DVD-ROM are variant of such.
Some practical examples can illustrate the savings possible using the new ICI estimation/reduction method:
1. Wireless LAN or IEEE 802.11a/g/n with: N=64, G=N/4, Fs=20 MHz
2. DVB-H with: N=8192, G-N/4, Fs=8 MHz
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described herein, which may be modified or varied without departing from the scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100220822 A1 | Sep 2010 | US |