The present invention relates to mobile radio communications, and more particularly, to estimating Doppler spread in a mobile radio communications system.
In mobile radio communications systems, the signal propagation between a transmitter and a receiver can be understood by introducing the concept of a mobile radio channel impulse response that introduces a filtering action on the signal. For example, the baseband impulse response, h(t), can be expressed as:
where χi is the amplitude of the ith received signal, φi is the phase shift of the ith received signal, δ is the impulse function, and τi is the time delay of the ith received signal. Equation (1) shows that the received signal can be thought of as a series of time-delayed, phase-shifted, and attenuated versions of the transmitted signal. If the channel is time variant, then χi, φi, and τi are also functions of time.
Radio propagation is characterized by multiple reflections, diffractions, and attenuations of the signal caused by natural obstacles like buildings, hills, etc. which result in multi-path propagation. Accordingly, radio waves arrive at a mobile receiver from different directions and with different time delays, and are made up of a possible direct ray and reflected rays. Scattered reflections cause Rayleigh fading and have very small mutual delay differences that are not resolvable in the receiver. These rays (which have a magnitude and a phase) combine vectorially at the receiver to give the resultant signal, which depends on the phases and amplitudes of the reflections that exist in the multi-path field.
As a mobile radio moves from one location to another, a Doppler effect occurs. In general, the Doppler effect relates to a change in the apparent frequency of a source of electromagnetic radiation when there is a relative motion between the source and the observer. For moving mobile radios, where multi-path propagation is common, the phase relationship between the components of the various incoming rays changes, so the resultant signal is spectrally spread. This phenomenon is referred to hereafter as Doppler spreading. Whenever relative motion exists in the absence of multipath propagation, there is a Doppler shift of the frequency components of the received signal, but no spreading of the received signal spectrum. This phenomenon is referred to as Doppler shifting. This present invention is directed to estimating Doppler spread.
A multi-path signal envelope is characterized by a distribution function of amplitude that follows the so-called Rayleigh distribution function, which is why multipath is sometimes referred to as Rayleigh fading. When a mobile radio moves in a multipath environment, the received signal appears to vanish, i.e., “fade,” at certain positions. However, moving a few meters brings it back again. Thus, a mobile radio moving in a multipath environment experiences signal fluctuations, and this effect is referred to as Rayleigh or fast fading.
fd=fc·ν/c (2)
where fd is the Doppler spread, fc is the carrier frequency, ν is the mobile velocity, and c is the speed of light.
Third generation wireless cellular communications systems, such as the Universal Mobile Communications Systems (UMTS), must support communications with a mobile station traveling at a considerable velocity, e.g., up to 500 km/h, over Rayleigh fading radio channels. The resulting Doppler spreading on such a channel leads to performance degradations absent suitable compensation. To be able to track the channel accurately, knowledge of the Doppler spread is needed. One variable that affects the accuracy of such an estimation is a frequency offset caused by differences between local oscillators in the transmitter and receiver.
Accurate Doppler spread estimation can be quite useful in mobile communications systems. First, knowledge of the Doppler spread can be used to improve the performance of the demodulator and reduce bit error rates. Second, accurate Doppler spread estimations may be used to optimize interleaving links in order to reduce reception delays. Third, in a cellular system with hierarchical cell layers, the Doppler spread may also be used by the network in cell layer assignment strategies. For example, low speed mobile radios would be assigned to pico cells, medium speed mobile stations to micro cells, and high speed mobile stations to macro cells. By assigning high speed mobiles to large cells, the number of handovers can be reduced. This reduces the amount of signaling, and therefore improves system capacity.
A fourth example use for accurate Doppler estimation is to adjust the filtering bandwidth for channel estimation in the receiver, which is one way to improve demodulator performance. When a narrowband signal is transmitted over a Rayleigh fading channel, its spectrum spreads. After this spectral spreading, it looks like
A fifth example use would be to set an appropriate power control step in a wideband CDMA-type mobile communications system. For a Rayleigh fading channel with a large Doppler spread, the channel power changes rapidly. Power control tries to compensate for these channel changes. Therefore, for a rapidly changing channel (i.e., high Doppler spread), it can be advantageous to use a larger power control step size than for a slowly fading channel.
These and other benefits are achieved by estimating a Doppler spread associated with a Rayleigh or fast fading channel established between a transmitter and receiver, e.g., a base station and a mobile station. In particular, the Doppler spread is estimated through calculation of the autocorrelation function of a sequence of complex channel estimates determined from the known sequence in a received signal. More specifically, a sequence of complex channel estimates obtained from the known sequence in a first sampling interval is complex conjugated and then correlated with a sequence of complex channel estimates obtained from the known sequence in a second sampling interval which have been not been complex conjugated. A zero crossing of the complex autocorrelation function is detected, and the estimated Doppler spread is calculated using this zero crossing and a Bessel function.
In a preferred, non-limiting embodiment, the known sequence is compensated for a frequency offset. The estimated Doppler spread and the compensated known sequence may be used to estimate the Rayleigh or fast fading channel. The estimated channel response is used to filter an unknown sequence in the received signal to compensate for phase error caused by the Doppler spreading over the fast fading channel.
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of preferred, non-limiting example embodiments, as well as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The drawings are not to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention.
FIGS. 2(a) and 2(b) illustrate a transmitted signal at the output of the transmitter in
In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth, such as particular embodiments, procedures, techniques, etc., in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced in other embodiments that depart from these specific details. In some instances, detailed descriptions of well-known methods, interfaces, devices and signaling techniques are omitted so as not to obscure the description of the present invention with unnecessary detail. Moreover, individual function blocks are shown in some of the figures. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the functions may be implemented using individual hardware circuits, using software functioning in conjunction with a suitably programmed digital microprocessor or general purpose computer, using an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), and/or using a Digital Signal Processor (DSP).
The present invention may be employed in any mobile radio communications system such as that shown in FIG. 1. However, a more specific, but non-limiting example of a mobile communications system is the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) 10 shown in FIG. 4. An example Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) 10 is shown in
Each of the core networks 18 and 20 is coupled to a UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (UTRAN) 22 that includes one or more Radio Network Controllers (RNCs) 26. Each RNC is coupled to a plurality of base stations (BSs) 28 and to other RNCs in the UTRAN 22. Each base station 28 corresponds to one access point (one sector or cell) or includes plural access points. Radio communications between one or more base station access points and wireless user equipment unit (UE) 30 are by way of a radio interface. Radio access in this non-limiting example is based on Wideband-CDMA (W-CDMA) with individual radio channels distinguished using spreading codes. Wideband-CDMA provides wide radio bandwidth for multi-media services including packet data applications that have high data rate/bandwidth requirements. While Doppler spread estimation may be employed in any radio receiver, including the UE 30, it is particularly advantageously employed in radio base stations 28.
The Doppler spread estimation technique in accordance with the present invention may be used for both uplink (mobile-to-base station) and downlink (base station-to-mobile) communications. The example slot structure described herein is similar to a slot structure used in the uplink in W-CDMA. In the downlink, a common channel, such as the Common Pilot Channel, may be used for channel and Doppler estimation.
Referring to
While Doppler spread can be estimated in different ways, the present invention estimates Doppler spread by calculating a complex autocorrelation function for a sequence of complex channel estimates. These complex channel estimates are phasors or vectors in the complex plane with a magnitude and a phase angle (as opposed to a scalar which has only a magnitude and no phase angle). The Doppler spread estimation is based upon the principle that the autocorrelation function of a Rayleigh or fast fading channel Cl may be expressed as a zero order Bessel function of the first kind, J0, as set forth below in equation (3):
Cl=J0(2π·fd·l·Ts) (3)
where l is the “lag” in the autocorrelation function Cl. The lag in an autocorrelation is the time shift or difference between correlated signals. More specifically, the lag is the mutual time difference when two versions of a sequence are correlated. For example, the autocorrelation for lag=0 for the sequence x would be
C(0)=x(0)*x(0)+x(1)*x(1)+x(2)*x(2)+ . . .
and for lag=1
C(1)=x(0)*x(1)+x(1)*x(2)+x(2)*x(3)+ . . .
(in this example x is a real signal).
At a particular lag value, iz, where the autocorrelation Cl is zero, equation (3) may be set to zero and rewritten to solve for the Doppler spread as follows:
where {circumflex over (f)}d is the estimated Doppler spread in Hertz, Jz is the lowest positive value that satisfies equation (5) below, Ts is the sample time interval corresponding to one sample per timeslot, and
J0(Jz)=0 (5)
where J0 is the zero-order Bessel function of the first kind.
Using these relationships, the present invention determines the autocorrelation function of a received signal using the known sequences, detects the first zero crossing of that autocorrelation function, and solves for the Doppler spread using the determined zero crossing lag iz and equations (4) and (5) above.
The autocorrelation for a received signal is determined based on several timeslots of known sequences (see FIG. 5). The number of timeslots used for estimation is a design parameter that depends on the desired accuracy of the estimate. The more samples used, the more accurate the estimation, but at a cost of increased computational complexity. A typical value for this is 60, but it depends on input signal to noise ratio. The input to the Doppler spread estimator in accordance with the present invention is a sequence of complex channel estimates (pn) acquired from the known sequences transmitted. The autocorrelation function of this known sequence is determined in accordance with:
where l is the lag in the autocorrelation function, and N is the number of channel coefficients used for estimation. An asterisk (*) denotes the complex conjugate. The autocorrelation in the present invention uses complex values so that phase changes as well as magnitude changes are taken into account when determining an estimate of Doppler spreading.
To obtain the complex conjugate of a complex number, the sign of the imaginary number is changed, i.e., I−jQ. This change in sign is represented by the inverter 52. Thus, when a complex conjugate is desired, the inverter path is selected; otherwise, the quadrature sequence is passed without inversion to summer 54. The complex number output from summer 54 is then passed to a sampler or analog-to-digital converter 56 which samples the complex sequence once every sampling interval Ts. Since some of the symbols in the sequence are known to the receiver, those known symbols can be multiplied with the samples of the received signal corresponding to the known signal in order to estimate the effect of the channel.
C1=p0·p1*+p1·p2*+p2·p3*·+ . . .
The complex correlation for lag 2 is
C2=p0·p2*+p1·p3*+p2·p4*+ . . .
The output of the complex autocorrelator 60 is the autocorrelation function Cl illustrated in FIG. 9.
The zero crossing detector 62 determines the first zero crossing iz of the autocorrelation function. At this stage, the estimated autocorrelation function should be compared with the theoretical one, i.e., the Bessel function. This can be done by finding the location of the first zero on the positive axis and comparing it to the first zero in the estimated autocorrelation function. Locations of the first minimum in the autocorrelation function could also be compared. The search for the first zero crossing is performed by identifying the first lag value for which the autocorrelation function is negative.
Returning to
In any event, the known sequence (preferably frequency offset compensated) is provided to the Doppler spread estimator 80 which performs the Doppler spreading estimation as described above. The Doppler spread estimate is provided to the channel estimator 76 along with the known sequence used to estimate the channel. The channel estimator 76 may be, for example, a finite impulse response (FIR) transversal filter used to estimate the channel impulse response (see equation (1)) based on the known sequence. That channel estimator takes into account the Doppler spread when formulating the channel estimate. Accordingly, when the unknown sequence is received, and preferably frequency offset compensated at mixer 86, it is combined with the channel estimate at mixer 88 to generate a phase-compensated sequence. In effect, the unknown sequence is filtered by the updated channel estimate. The phase compensated sequence is then forwarded to a demodulator to extract the transmitted data content. Depending on system performance requirements, the estimated variables may be used for different purposes in the demodulator. For example, a multi-path searcher in a W-CDMA system, used to find new multipaths, may use the estimations of Doppler spread and frequency offset to make path searching more efficient.
Thus, the present invention accurately estimates Doppler spread, which may be used in a number of advantageous ways, some of which are described above. Because complex channel estimates are used, the Doppler spread estimation is not sensitive to variations in transmit power present, for example, in a power controlled W-CDMA system. Since the Doppler spread estimator is placed inside a frequency offset tracking loop, it is not sensitive to frequency offsets often present in communication systems.
While the present invention has been described with respect to particular example embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention is not limited to those specific embodiments described and illustrated herein. Different formats, embodiments, adaptations besides those shown and described, as well as many modifications, variations and equivalent arrangements may also be used to implement the invention. While the present invention is described in relation to a preferred example embodiment, it is to be understood that this disclosure is only illustrative and exemplary of the present invention. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6058261 | Rapeli | May 2000 | A |
6563861 | Krasny et al. | May 2003 | B1 |
6680967 | Westman | Jan 2004 | B1 |
6680969 | Molnar et al. | Jan 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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11234190 | Aug 1999 | JP |
0057568 | Sep 2000 | WO |
0113537 | Feb 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20020172307 A1 | Nov 2002 | US |