The present invention relates generally to wireless receivers, and more particularly to processing delay allocation for multi-carrier receivers that receive multi-path signals.
Wireless signals often travel multiple propagation paths between a transmitter and an intended receiver. As a result, the intended receiver receives a composite signal that includes multiple images of a transmitted signal, where each image generally experiences different path delay, phase, and attenuation effects. Different signal images therefore arrive at the receiver at different times, causing a delay spread between the received signal images. The maximum delay spread between signal images depends on, among other things, the differing characteristics of the signal propagation paths.
Because the signal energy is distributed among the multiple signal images, wireless devices often use a receiver that combines the received signal images to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the output signal, e.g., a RAKE receiver. RAKE receivers include a plurality of RAKE fingers tuned to different delays to despread signal images. Typically, the RAKE receiver tunes its available RAKE fingers to the strongest signal images, such that each selected signal image is despread, weighted, and subsequently combined with the other selected and despread signal images. Combining multiple signal images in this manner generally improves the SNR of the received signal.
To improve wireless data rates, wireless communication systems may also use different frequency carriers for different users. To compensate for multi-path propagation issues associated with each carrier, receivers in such multi-carrier systems may include one RAKE receiver subsystem for each carrier, where each RAKE receiver subsystem includes a fixed number of RAKE fingers. Ideally, each RAKE receiver subsystem includes enough fingers to adequately process the received signal for the corresponding carrier. However, because receiver complexity increases as the number of fingers increases, the ideal finger distribution is not always possible.
The present invention provides methods and apparatuses for a multi-carrier receiver that distributes processing delays among a plurality of received carriers based on a channel dispersion determined for each carrier. As used herein, the term “processing delay” generally refers to the delay(s) associated with multi-path receiver structures. For example, processing delay(s) as used herein may refer to the delays associated with fingers for symbol level receiver structures (e.g., RAKE or generalized RAKE receivers), tap delay(s) for the linear filter(s) used by chip equalization receiver structures, etc. The receiver may use the root mean square (RMS) delay spread as an indicator of the channel dispersion. The multi-carrier receiver may be realized in a wireless communication device as a multi-carrier linear equalization receiver, e.g., a multi-carrier symbol equalization receiver such as a RAKE or generalized RAKE receiver, or a multi-carrier chip equalization receiver.
In one embodiment, the receiver allocates a minimum number of processing delays to each carrier. Each lightly dispersive carrier, e.g., those carriers having a channel dispersion less than a dispersion threshold, is only allocated the minimum number of processing delays. However, additional processing delays are distributed among the more dispersive carriers, e.g., those carriers having a channel dispersion greater than or equal to a dispersion threshold. In one exemplary embodiment, the additional processing delays are distributed among the dispersive carriers based on a comparison between the signal-to-interference ratios (SIRs) determined for the dispersive carriers. For example, the receiver may distribute the additional processing delays among the dispersive carriers to favor the carriers with the larger SIRs when the comparison between the largest and smallest SIR meets a second criteria, e.g., is greater than a threshold.
By using dispersion, and in some cases SIR comparisons, to distribute the processing delays, the present invention enables system designers to limit the total number of available processing delays without sacrificing performance. Further, the dispersion-based aspect of the present invention, has one key advantage. The RMS delay spread metric is easily computed and reliably indicates channel dispersion. Further still, the present invention is simple and can allocate processing delays without needing past or future information, which eliminates the need for buffering.
Typical multi-carrier linear equalization receivers include a separate linear equalization subsystem for each carrier, where each linear equalization subsystem includes a fixed number of processing delays for each carrier. As used herein, the term “processing delay” generally refers to the delay(s) associated with multi-path receiver structures. For example, processing delay(s) as used herein may refer to the delays associated with fingers for symbol level receiver structures (e.g., RAKE or generalized RAKE receivers), tap delay(s) for the linear filter(s) used by chip equalization receiver structures, etc. When designed for a large number of carriers, the excessively large number of processing delays required for the separate subsystems makes the receiver prohibitively complex. Further, a fixed allocation is inefficient; there will be some circumstances where the linear equalization subsystem for one carrier has more processing delays than necessary, while the linear equalization subsystem for another carrier does not have enough processing delays.
The multi-carrier linear equalization system 100 of the present invention solves this problem by providing an allocation unit 118 that distributes the processing delays in a common delay pool 130 of Ntotal processing delays among the carriers. The allocation unit 118 determines the number of processing delays to allocate to each carrier based on the channel conditions associated with each carrier. When the common delay pool 130 has enough processing delays to give each carrier the desired number of processing delays, the allocation unit 118 allocates the desired number of processing delays to each carrier. However, when the common pool of carriers 130 does not include enough processing delays to give each carrier the desired number of processing delays, allocation unit 118 distributes the processing delays among the carriers based on the channel conditions.
To distribute the processing delays among the carriers when the number of desired processing delays exceeds the number of processing delays in the delay pool 130, the allocation unit 118 initially allocates a predetermined minimum number of processing delays to each antenna of each carrier. The minimum number of processing delays is generally sufficient for lightly dispersive carriers. Subsequently, allocation unit 118 determines how to allocate any remaining additional processing delays, e.g., the Nadd
For example, allocation unit 118 may first determine Ñi
When the total number of desired additional processing delays does not exceed the remaining additional processing delays in the delay pool 130, e.g., when
allocation unit 118 allocates the desired number of additional processing delays to each dispersive carrier, e.g., Ni
the allocation unit 118 of embodiments of the present invention distributes the additional processing delays among the I dispersive carriers, e.g., based on the I signal-to-noise ratios (SIRs) computed for the dispersive carriers.
The RMS delay spread used by process 200 may be determined according to any known means. For example, the allocation unit 118 may compute τRMS for each of the j={1, 2, . . . , J} carriers according to:
In Equation (1), ĥ=[ĥ1, ĥ2, . . . , ĥL-1]T represents a vector of estimated net channel coefficients for the delays reported by a delay searcher, including the effects of the radio channel coefficients as well as the effects of the transmit and receive filters, L represents the number of delays, {circumflex over (τ)}k represents the kth estimated delay, and τCOG represents the center of gravity delay. Alternatively, the allocation unit 118 may compute the τRMS for each of the j={1, 2, . . . , J} carriers according to:
where PDPk represents the kth sample of the power distribution profile, {circumflex over (τ)}k represents the delay associated with the kth PDP sample, and Np represents the number of PDP samples. It will be appreciated that the RMS delay spread provided by either Equation (1) or Equation (2) may be smoothed using a simple filter, e.g., an FIR or IIR filter. Alternatively, non-linear smoothing/filtering, e.g., median filtering, may be used to increase the reliability of the RMS delay spread metric. Process 200 may distribute the taps based on either the non-smoothed or the smoothed value of τRMS.
Allocation unit 118 may distribute the additional taps among the dispersive carriers using any desired means. For example, the allocation unit 118 may distribute the additional taps based on signal-to-noise ratios (SIRs) computed for the carriers, as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/391,371 filed 24 Feb. 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference. The following describes how the SIR may be used to distribute the additional processing delays.
For simplicity, process 250 is described for two dispersive carriers. The allocation unit 118 determines SIR1 and SIR2 for respective carrier input signals r1 and r2 (block 252). The allocation unit 118 then compares SIR1 and SIR2 to determine a comparison metric SIRcomp (block 254), and compares SIRcomp to a threshold, where the threshold is selected to generally indicate whether or not SIR1 and SIR2 differ by a small amount (block 256). For example, a threshold of ψSIR=0.5 dB may be used to generally indicate whether or not SIR1 and SIR2 differ by more than 0.5 dB. If SIRcomp≦ψSIR (block 256), indicating that the difference between SIR1 and SIR2 is small, the allocation unit 118 distributes the processing delays evenly between the dispersive carriers (block 258). However, if SIRcomp>ψSIR (block 256), indicating that the difference between SIR1 and SIR2 is large, the allocation unit 118 distributes the processing delays among the carriers to favor the carrier with the strongest SIR (block 260).
It will be appreciated that embodiments of the present invention are not limited to the threshold criterion described herein for process 250; other criteria may be used. It will also be appreciated that a basic embodiment of process 250 may omit the even delay distribution option, and instead may always distribute the processing delays to favor the carrier with the strongest SIR. Thus, blocks 256 and 258 in
The following describes different methods for distributing the additional processing delays among r1 and r2 to favor the carrier with the larger SIR when the total number of desired additional processing delays for the carriers exceeds the total number of available additional processing delays, e.g., Ñ1
In some embodiments, the allocation unit 118 uses the initial allocation as the final allocation (block 340). However, other optional embodiments may further consider one or more predefined receiver requirements when distributing the processing delays. As long as the delay distribution satisfies the predefined receiver requirement(s) (block 334), the allocation unit 118 distributes the initially allocated N1
In another exemplary embodiment, the allocation unit 118 uses a scaling factor β1 to enable external factors, e.g., Doppler frequency, to control how the finger allocation favors the carrier with the higher SIR. The scaling factor β1 is a value between 0.0 and 1.0 and may be fixed or periodically updated based on current channel or communication conditions. A scaling factor of 0.0 corresponds to granting a carrier 0% of the desired number of additional processing delays, while a scaling factor of 1.0 corresponds to granting the carrier 100% of the desired number of additional processing delays.
For the scaling embodiment, the preliminary allocation is determined based on a relative comparison between the total number of additional processing delays Nadd
In one exemplary embodiment, the allocation unit 118 sets β1=1.0. This scaling factor guarantees that the carrier with the highest SIR will be granted as many additional delays as possible regardless of any other system conditions.
In another embodiment, the scaling factor β1 may be periodically adjusted based on current conditions, e.g., the Doppler frequency shift of the carriers. For example, the carrier experiencing a higher Doppler shift may be allocated slightly fewer additional delays. This option accounts for the fact that processing in linear equalization receivers is generally less effective in the presence of high Doppler shifts, and therefore compensates for the problem that may arise when two mobile devices traveling at the same speed are associated with different carrier frequencies, and therefore have different Doppler shifts. Another embodiment may determine a final scaling factor β1 based on a combination of multiple different determination methods.
As mentioned above, when distributing the processing delays, the allocation unit 118 may also consider the additional number of computational cycles required to determine the combining weights for the allocated processing delays. In general, X computational cycles are required to determine the combining weights for the already allocated minimum number of processing delays. The allocation unit 118 may distribute the additional processing delays so that the total number of additional computational cycles required for the additional processing delays allocated to the dispersive carriers does not exceed the maximum number of additional computational cycles, e.g., cycles(N1
Alternatively, the allocation unit 118 may consider the computational cycles separately for each carrier when distributing the processing delays. For example, the allocation unit 118 may allocate N1
Processor 110 distributes the RAKE fingers 132 among the carriers, provides the corresponding path delays and combining weights for each carrier, and generates control signals for the switch unit 120 and combine unit 140 based on the determined finger distribution. Switch unit 120 selectively connects each of the baseband signals r1 and r2 to the allocated RAKE fingers 132 responsive to the control signal. The RAKE fingers 132 delay and despread different images of the input signals {r1, r2} to generate despread symbol streams. The combine unit 140 weights and combines the despread symbol streams for each carrier to generate the symbol estimates {tilde over (s)}1 and {tilde over (s)}2 for each carrier.
The processor 110 includes a path searcher 112, channel estimator 114, weight calculator 116, and allocation unit 118. The path searcher 112 determines a set of path delays τj for each of the carriers based on the input signals rj, while the channel estimator 114 determines channel estimates hj for the paths determined by the allocation unit 118. The weight calculator 116 determines a set of combining weights wj allocated to each carrier based on the finger delays and channel estimates. The allocation unit 118 distributes the RAKE fingers 132 according to the processes discussed above. Once allocation unit 118 determines the finger distribution, the allocation unit 118 generates the corresponding control signal for the switch unit 120 and the combine unit 140. Further, the allocation unit 118 generates a control signal for the weight calculator 116 to match the combining weights with the correct RAKE fingers 132.
Processor 110 distributes the delay taps 134 among the carriers, provides the corresponding processing delays and combining weights for each carrier, and generates control signals for the combine unit 140 based on the determined tap distribution. The tap delays 134, the number of which is allocated to each carrier by the allocation unit 118, successively delay the corresponding input signal according to the delay values of the tap delays 134. The combine unit 140 weights and combines the successively delayed samples for each carrier to generate chip estimates. Despread units 150 despread the chip estimates to generate the symbol estimates ŝ1 and ŝ2 for each carrier.
The processor 110 includes a coarse delay estimator 113, channel estimator 114, weight calculator 116, and allocation unit 118. The coarse delay estimator 113 determines the delay value for each tap delay 134 using any known means, while the channel estimator 114 determines channel estimates hj associated with the tap delays determined by the allocation unit 118. The weight calculator 116 determines the combining weight wj corresponding to each tap delay 134 based on the received signals and channel estimates. The allocation unit 118 distributes the tap delays 134 according to the processes discussed above. Once allocation unit 118 determines the tap delay distribution, the allocation unit 118 generates the corresponding control signal for the combine unit 140. Further, the allocation unit 118 generates a control signal for the weight calculator 116 to match the combining weights with the correct tap delays 134.
While not explicitly shown, the present invention also applies to other linear equalization receivers that process time-aligned signals and/or sample sets corresponding to a transmitted signal. Regardless of the type of receiver, the present invention allocates processing delays to each carrier of a multi-carrier signal based on channel dispersion, and in some cases, SIR.
The SIR-based embodiments discussed herein are described in terms of a two-carrier system. However, each embodiment may be extended to a multi-carrier system having more than two dispersive carriers. The extended multi-carrier solution of embodiments of the present invention assumes that the total number of additional processing delays desired for all dispersive carriers, exceeds the total number of additional processing delays available in the common delay pool 130, e.g.,
and that SIR1≧SIR2≧ . . . ≧SIRI for the I dispersive carriers. While not required, the following descriptions include the computational cycle requirement when distributing the additional processing delays 132, 134 based on SIR.
For the extended multi-carrier solution, the comparison metric SIRcomp is derived from the difference between the largest and smallest SIRs, e.g., SIR1 and SIRI, respectively, for the dispersive carriers. When none of the dispersive carriers have a dominant SIR, e.g., when SIRcomp is less than or equal to a threshold, the allocation unit 118 evenly distributes the additional processing delays 132, 134 among the dispersive carriers. For example, the allocation unit 118 may allocate
additional processing delays 132, 134 to each of the I dispersive carriers. When the allocation unit 118 also considers the number of additional computational cycles, the allocation unit 118 may further limit Neven to the maximum number of processing delays satisfying
where cycles(x) represents the number of computational cycles required to calculate x combining weights for x delays.
When the comparison metric exceeds the threshold, e.g., when SIR1>>SIRJ, the allocation unit 118 favors the dispersive carrier(s) with the stronger SIR(s). More particularly, the allocation unit 118 will, in this example, favor the first carrier over the second carrier, the second carrier over the third carrier, etc. For example, the allocation unit 118 may distribute the additional processing delays 132, 134 among the carriers based on the number of path delays for the different carriers. First, the allocation unit 118 determines the maximum number of additional processing delays 132, 134 for the first dispersive carrier (N1
and optionally
where cycles(x) represents the number of computational cycles required to calculate x combining weights for x delays. Subsequently, the allocation unit 118 determines the maximum number of additional processing delays 132, 134 for the second carrier (N2
and optionally
This process continues until the allocation unit 118 allocates the number of processing delays 132, 134 for the carrier with the lowest SIR by determining the maximum value for NI that satisfies
and optionally
The scaling factor-based distribution embodiment discussed above may also be used for the extended multi-carrier solution. In this case, the allocation unit 118 may use a carrier-specific scaling factor to determine Ni
and optionally
The above describes how multi-carrier linear equalization systems 100 may distribute a common pool 130 of processing delays 132, 134 among carriers, even when the multi-carrier linear equalization system 100 limits the number of available processing delays 132, 134 to reduce the complexity of the system 100. Thus, embodiments of the present invention reduce the complexity associated with conventional multi-carrier linear equalization systems without sacrificing performance. Further, one key advantage of the dispersion-based aspect of the present invention is that the RMS delay spread metric is easily computed and reliably indicates the channel dispersion for each carrier. Further, the present invention is simple and can allocate processing delays without needing past or future information, which eliminates the need for buffering.
Embodiments of the present invention may, of course, be carried out in other ways than those specifically set forth herein without departing from essential characteristics of the invention. The present embodiments are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, and all changes coming within the meaning and equivalency range of the appended claims are intended to be embraced therein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6744821 | Van Acker et al. | Jun 2004 | B1 |
6791964 | Hwang et al. | Sep 2004 | B1 |
7085311 | Iwasaki | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7277474 | Sharma et al. | Oct 2007 | B2 |
20020080862 | Ali | Jun 2002 | A1 |
20040072553 | Wang et al. | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20050018758 | Keranen et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20060083292 | Khayrallah et al. | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20080310485 | Soliman et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
20090116575 | Hochwald et al. | May 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2350986 | Dec 2000 | GB |
0152468 | Jul 2001 | WO |
2008031761 | Mar 2008 | WO |
2010039156 | Apr 2010 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Author Unknown. “CDMA Cellular Radio Systems Research.” Publication date unknown. Article available online at: http://www.tech.plym.ac.uk/see/research/CDMA/CDMAIntro.htm. |
Hara, S. et al. “Overview of Multicarrier CDMA.” IEEE Communications Magazine, Dec. 1997, pp. 126-133. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100303132 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |