This application claims priority benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to European patent application No. 02 027 409.8, filed Dec. 9, 2002, and No. 03 004 669.2, filed Mar. 3, 2003, which are incorporated herein by reference.
This application concerns a simplified analysis of an OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex)-signal, especially an OFDM signal for Wireless LAN as defined in IEEE802.11a, Part 11: “Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specifications” referred herein as IEEE W-LAN Standard.
It is the principle of an OFDM system to transmit the signal via several orthogonal sub-carriers. The principle of OFDM is explained e.g. in Hermann Rohling, Thomas May, Karsten Brüninghaus und Rainer Grünheid, “Broad-Band OFDM Radio Transmission for Multimedia Applications”, Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 87, No. 10, October 1999, pages 1778 ff.
A receiver design for wireless broad-band systems is known from Speth, Fechtel, Fock, Meyr: “Optimum Receiver Design for Wireless Broad-Band Systems Using OFDM—Part I”, IEEE Trans. On Comm. Vol. 47, No. 11, November 1999, pages 1668-1677 and Speth, Fechtel, Fock, Meyr: “Optimum Receiver Design for Wireless Broad-Band Systems Using OFDM—Part II”, IEEE Trans. On Comm. Vol. 49, No. 4, April 2001, pages 571-578.
The signal of wireless LAN systems is analysed in order to monitor the signal quality. For example the error vector magnitude EVM of the whole signal or of specific sub-carriers is a typical parameter to describe the signal quality.
In the past only analysing devices with wideband signal processing, especially with a wideband intermediate frequency IF section, have been used. Such analysing devices with wideband signal processing are, however, rather expensive.
Thus, it is the object of the present invention to provide a method and an analysing device being able to analyse wideband OFDM signals, especially wireless LAN signals, in spite of their reduced bandwidth.
The object is solved by the features of the method, by the features of the analyzing device, and by a storage medium storing a respective computer program.
According to the invention the spectrum of the OFDM signal can be shifted so that different parts of the OFDM spectrum can lie within the reduced bandwidth of the analysing device. Low pass filtering is necessary to suppress the mirror frequency and to limit the input bandwidth for a resampler following in the signal path.
According to one aspect of the invention the length of the impulse response of the low pass filter is shorter than the length of the guard periods of the data symbols.
The OFDM signal, especially the OFDM signal for wireless LAN application, generally has several pilot channels at specific carrier frequencies. According to IEEE W-LAN standard there are four carrier frequencies transporting a pilot signal. As the analysing device has a reduced bandwidth, not all pilot channels lie within the reduced bandwidth of the analysing device. For example, the number of useable pilot channels can be reduced from four to two. The analysing device has to estimate several synchronisation parameters of the OFDM signal, e.g. frequency offset, time or clock offset, phase offset resulting from the frequency offset and the clock offset and the gain. The accuracy of the estimation of these parameters is reduced due to the fact that only a reduced number of pilot channels can be used for the estimation.
According to another aspect of the present invention this is compensated by averaging the estimated synchronisation parameters in OFDM-symbol direction in order to achieve the same accuracy which would apply to the use of the original number of pilot channels.
The dependent claims concern further developments of the invention.
An embodiment of the present invention is described in the following with reference to the drawings. In the drawings
This following description with reference to
In the following text the abbreviations
are used. In this application the hat ^ generally describes an estimate. Example: {circumflex over (x)} is the estimate of x. In this application the tilde generally {tilde over ( )} describes a trial parameter. Example: {tilde over (x)} is the trial parameter of x.
The diagram of the interesting blocks of analysing device 40 is shown in
In the lower part of
After the coarse timing calculation the time estimate is improved by the fine timing calculation. This is achieved by first estimating the coarse frequency response Ĥk(coarse), with k=[−26,26] denoting the channel index of the occupied sub-carriers. First, the fast fourier transform FFT of the long symbol LS is calculated. After the FFT calculation the known symbol information of the LS sub-carriers is removed dividing by the symbols. The result is a coarse estimate Ĥk(coarse) of the channel transfer function. In the next step the complex channel impulse response is computed by an IFFT. Next, the energy of the windowed impulse response (the window size is equal to the guard period) is calculated for every trial time. Afterwards, the trial time of the maximum energy is detected. The trial time is used to adjust the timing.
Now the position of the long symbol LS is known and the starting point of the useful part of the first payload symbol can be derived. In the next block 9 this calculated time instant is used to position the payload window. Only the payload part is windowed. This is sufficient because the payload is the only subject of the subsequent measurements.
In the next block 10 the windowed sequence is compensated by the coarse frequency estimate Δ{circumflex over (f)}coarse. This is necessary because otherwise inter channel interference (ICI) would occur in the frequency domain.
The transition to the frequency domain is achieved by an fast fourier transform FFT of e.g. length 64 in block 11. The FFT is performed symbolwise for everyone of the nof_symbols symbols of the payload. The calculated FFTs are described by rl,k with the symbol index l=[1,nof_symbols] and the channel index k=[−31,32] for example.
In case of an additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel the FFT can be described by
rl,k=Kmod·al,k·Hk·ej2π·N
with
Furthermore, the channel dependant phase drift φk (phase drift within one useful part of the symbol) is given by
φk=ξ·k+ΔfT (2)
whereas
In eq. (1) both the phase drift φk caused by the not yet compensated frequency deviation Δf and the clock deviation ξ may not be neglected. This is illustrated by an example: In accordance with the IEEE W-LAN Standard the allowed clock deviation of the device under test (DUT) is up to ξmax=20 ppm. Furthermore, a long packet with nof_symbols=400 symbols is assumed. From eq. (1), (2) it results that the phase drift of the highest sub-carrier k=26 in the last symbol l=nof_symbols is 93 degrees. Even in the noise free case this would lead to symbol errors. The example shows that it is also necessary to estimate and compensate the clock deviation, which is accomplished in the estimation block 12 using pilot table 13 and in the compensation blocks 14 and 15.
As discussed above, the FFT must be followed by the joint estimation of the gain g, the fine frequency deviation Δf and the clock deviation ξ. Concerning to IEEE W-LAN Standard, Chapter 17.3.9.7, “Transmit modulation accuracy test”, the phase drift must be estimated from the pilot sub-carriers. Hence the estimation is performed independently for every symbol, the symbol index l is appended to the estimation parameters in the subsequent formulas.
In addition the tracking of the gain g is supported symbol for symbol. The reason is that the reference gain g=1 occurs at the time instant of the long symbol. At this time the coarse channel transfer function Ĥk(coarse) is calculated. This is useful because before symbol estimation the sequence r′l,k is compensated by the coarse channel transfer function Ĥk(coarse). Consequently a potential change of the gain at the symbol l (caused, for example, by the increase of DUT amplifier temperature) would increase the symbol error rate especially at large symbol alphabet M of the MQAM transmission. In this case the estimation and the subsequent compensation of the gain is useful. In the subsequent formulas the gain at the symbol l will be described by the parameter gl.
In this application the optimum maximum likelihood algorithm is used. Consequently, the log likelihood function
is calculated as a function of the trial parameters {tilde over (g)}l, Δ{tilde over (f)}l and {tilde over (ξ)}l. Finally, the trial parameters leading to the minimum of the log likelihood function are used as estimates {tilde over (g)}l, Δ{circumflex over (f)}l and {circumflex over (ξ)}l. In eq. (3) the known pilot symbols al,k are read from table 13. It can be shown that the search procedure is independent of the frequency response Hk (see eq. (3)). Therefore, only the current rl,k and al,k are required. This robust algorithm even works well at low signal to noise ratios of about 5 dB with the Cramer Rao Bound being reached.
After estimation the three parameters, the sequence rl,k is compensated in the compensation blocks 14 and 15. In the upper analysing branch the compensation is user-defined i.e. the user determines which of the three parameters are compensated in compensation block 14. This is useful in order to extract the influence of these parameters. The resulting output sequence is described by r′l,k. In the lower compensation branch the full compensation is always performed in compensation block 15. This separate compensation is necessary in order to avoid symbol errors. After the full compensation the secure estimation of the data symbols âl,k is performed. From equation (1) it is clear that first the channel transfer function Hk must be removed. This is achieved by dividing the known coarse channel estimate Ĥk(coarse) calculated from the LS. Usually an error free estimation of the data symbols can be assumed.
Concerning IEEE W-LAN Standard, Chapter 17.3.9.7, “Transmit modulation accuracy test”, a better channel estimate Ĥk of the data and pilot sub-carriers must be calculated by using the whole nof_symbols symbols of the payload. This can be accomplished in block 18 at this point because the phase is compensated and the data symbols are known.
In the following block 16 r′l,k is divided by the improved estimates Ĥk. The resulting channel compensated sequence is described by r″l,k.
In the last block 19 the measurement variables are calculated. The most important variable is the error vector magnitude
of the sub-carrier k of the current packet. Furthermore, the packet error vector magnitude
is derived by averaging the squared EVMk versus k. Finally, the average error vector magnitude
is calculated by averaging the packet EVM of all nof_packets detected packets. This parameter is equivalent to the so-called “RMS average of all errors ErrorRMS” of the IEEE802.11a measurement commandment, see IEEE W-LAN Standard, Chapter 17.3.9.7.
In the following text the abbreviations
are used.
In the following the. W-LAN application is discussed using an signal section 20 of the analysing device 40 with narrower bandwidth, such as Rohde & Schwarz device FSP. The problem is the smaller FSP analyser bandwidth of 8 MHz which only covers half of the OFDM signal bandwidth. The main idea of the present invention is to analyse the spectrally cut measurement signal with carefully designed filters. Simulations have shown that following properties can be expected:
In
The main task of the IF filter 21 is to avoid aliasing effects in the 8 MHz analysing window by the subsequent sampling process of the Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) 22. The sampling rate of the ADC is e.g. fs1=32 MHz.
Next, the sampled IF sequence is multiplied with the sequence e−jω
The following low pass filter 24 with the transfer function HLP(f) also possesses the passband bandwidth of 8 MHz, see schematic plot in
Next the sampling must be changed to the Nyquist rate. This is performed by a digital resampler 25. The output sequence is generated at the desired Nyquist rate of e.g. fs2=20 MHz.
Afterwards the resampled sequence is multiplied with the sequence e−jω
The schematic spectrum R(f) again is shown in
Afterwards, the sequence r(i) enters into the W-LAN application 7 which is identical to the wideband FSQ implementation shown in
According to one aspect of the present invention it is important that the length τ of the impulse response h(t) the low pass filter 24 is shorter than the length TGA of the guard periods of the data symbols. To illustrate this, two data symbols S1 and S2 of the data sequence of one of the pilot carriers is shown in
The impulse response h(t) of low pass filter 24 has a specific length τ. There are several possibilities to define the length τ of the impulse response h(t). One possibility is illustrated in
This length τ can also be defined from the bandwidth BWA of the filter. If low pass filter 24 has a bandwidth BWA of 8 MHz the length τ of the impulse response of the filter 24 can be defined as
τ=1/BWA.
In the embodiment discussed above it is
τ=⅛ MHz=125 ns
This definition is used within this application, i.e. the length τ of the impulse response of low pass filter 24 is defined as the inverse1/BWA of the bandwidth BWA of the low pass filter 24.
The length τ of the impulse response h(t) is preferably shorter than ¼ of the length TGP of guard periods 31 and most preferably about 2.5/16 of the length TGP of the guard periods 31, as in the example of IEEE W-LAN standard the length TGP of the guard periods 31 has the length of 16 symbols, which is 16·50 ns=800 ns, and 125 ns length of impulse response is equivalent to the length of 2.5 symbols, thus τ/TGP=2.5/16.
Thus, only small inter symbol interference (ISI) have to be expected. Simulations have confirmed this statement.
Further it is important to note, how many sub-carriers can be analysed in a measurement. The maximum number of sub-carriers within the transmission band of 8 MHz is
From a more conservative view about 20 sub-carriers can be used for the measurement.
It should be noticed that even this bandlimited measurement supports symbolwise tracking. This is possible because there are according to the invention always 2 pilot sub-carriers of the total 4 pilot sub-cariers within the 8 MHz analysing window. The pilots are used for symbolwise tracking, i.e. optional phase and/or timing and/or gain. The smaller number of used pilot carriers (2 instead of usually 4) leads to a higher estimation error of the synchronisation parameters Δ{circumflex over (f)}l, {circumflex over (ξ)}l and consequently to an increase of the EVM compared to a measurement with no limitation of the bandwidth. The statistical increase can be calculated however and can be compensated by averaging the synchronisation parameters Δ{circumflex over (f)}l, {circumflex over (ξ)}l over several data symbols.
Furthermore, simulations have shown that the preamble synchronisation also works well in the case of the bandlimited OFDM signal and is robust for low signal to noise ratios.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02027409 | Dec 2002 | EP | regional |
03004669 | Mar 2003 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040125742 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |