The present invention relates to a method, according to the preamble of Claim 1, for adaptive Tomlinson-Harashima precoding in a digital data communications link.
The invention also relates to an apparatus, according to the preamble of Claim 4, for adaptive Tomlinson-Harashima precoding in a digital data communications link and for a receiver according to Claim 7.
Equalizers, located in either the transmitter, or the receiver, or partly in both, are generally used to compensate the transmission channel's distorting effect on the signal. The equalizers can be either fixed or adaptive. The effect of noise is compensated with various coding techniques, such as Reed-Solomon coding, convolution coding, trellis coding, and turbo coding.
The most generally used method for equalizing channel distortion is an adaptive linear equalizer (FFE). However, on certain channels, using a linear equalizer alone is not enough. This situation arises, if transmission zeroes occur on the signal band, thus preventing certain frequencies from passing over the channel 2. A feedback equalizer is used to compensate the distortion caused by the transmission zeroes. Even in systems, in which the channel 2 does not contain transmission zeroes, the use of a feedback equalizer is often preferable, as it improves the noise tolerance of the system. A feedback equalizer located in the receiver is a decision-feedback equalizer (DFE) while one located in the transmitter is a Tomlinson-Harashima precoder (TML). The system can include both a DFE and a TML. A linear equalizer too can be located in either the transmitter, the receiver, or part in the transmitter and part in the receiver. In the present publication, the following abbreviations are used in the descriptions of both the prior art and the invention:
In the following, a digital data communications link is examined in terms of channel distortion compensation. The line code used is either pulse amplitude modulation (PAM), quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM), or carrierless amplitude and phase modulation (CAP).
Tomlinson-Harashima precoding has the advantage over a DFE that, unlike a DFE, precoding does not result in the feedback of the detection error. Particularly if the amplitude response of the channel 2 has a shape that causes large coefficient parameter values to appear in the DFE, feedback of erroneous decisions by the detector is a real problem. In the most serious cases, when using a DFE a single erroneous decision can lead to loss of connection.
Adjustment of the linear equalizer alone is generally sufficient to compensate for the effects of variation in the channel 2. In some cases, the channel 2 includes analog band-stop filters to eliminate, for example, radio interference. The positions of the transmission zeroes of analog band-stop filters may vary when the component values of the filters change with the temperature. Such variation in the characteristics of the channel 2 cannot be compensated by adjusting only the linear equalizer. Another drawback is that the system cannot adapt optimally to changed noise conditions, as the feedback equalizer is not adjusted in steady state transmission.
The system shown in FIGS. 2 or 3 could be directly improved by calculating, in the receiver, the adjustment increments of the coefficient parameters, using the detection error and the symbol decisions, as if adjusting the DFE, but instead to transmit the calculated adjustment increments to the transmitter, over an auxiliary upstream transmission channel. The precoder's coefficient parameter values are updated using the said adjustment increments. The precoder would then also be adjusted in steady state transmission, making the receiver's DFE unnecessary, or allowing the increase in its coefficient parameter values to be limited. However, it can be shown that the adjustment method described above will not work in a general case.
A Tomlinson-Harashima precoder can be updated to correspond to the varying channel characteristics by repeating the following operations: 1) the coefficient parameter values of the feedback equalizer, corresponding to the changed state of the channel, are formed in the receiver, 2) the formed coefficient parameter values, or changes in the coefficient parameter values, are transferred to the Tomlinson-Harashima precoder using, for example, an auxiliary upstream transmission channel.
The present invention is intended to provide an improved method and apparatus, by means of which coefficient parameter values, corresponding to the changed state of the channel, can be formed for a Tomlinson-Harashima precoder.
According to the invention, the coefficient parameter values (or changes in the coefficient parameter values) corresponding to the changed state of the channel are formed in the receiver as follows:
Because the signal passing the inverse precoder transfer function corresponds, in terms of distortion, to the signal that would be received if precoding did not take place in the transmitter, the coefficient parameter values corresponding to the changed state of the channel can be formed using the same known methods as when adjusting the DFE's coefficient parameter values.
The invention is based on creating a situation in the receiver, in Tomlinson-Harashima precoded transmission, which corresponds in terms of equalizer adjustment, to non-precoded data transmission, in relation to channel distortion. Coefficient parameter values corresponding to the changed state of the channel can then be formed using suitable known methods for non-precoded data transmission. The reconstruction of the transmitted data is naturally carried out using a signal in which the effect of the precoder transfer function is not compensated.
More specifically, the method according to the invention is characterized by what is stated in the characterizing portion of Claim 1.
The apparatus according to the invention is, in turn characterized by what is stated in the characterizing portion of Claim 4.
The receiver according to the invention is characterized by what is stated in the characterizing portion of Claim 7.
Considerable advantages are gained with the aid of the invention.
The invention makes it possible for the precoder to be able to adapt continuously, even during data transmission, to changes in noise conditions taking place in the channel 2 and also to the drift arising from temperature variations in the analog filters and other phenomena.
In the following, the invention is examined in greater detail with the aid of examples of embodiments according to the accompanying drawings.
The invention relates to a method and apparatus, by means of which it is possible to implement a data transmission system, in which coefficient parameter values, corresponding to a changed state in the channel, can be formed for a Tomlinson-Harashima precoder,
Notations:
The precoder transfer function is obtained with the aid of
The inverse precoder transfer function is then
1z−1T(z−1),
which can be implemented as shown in
because T′(z−1)=T(z−1),
Q=S×C(z−1)×E(z−1)×z−N is obtained,
from which it can be seen that there is no precoder transfer function effect in the signal Q. Thus, with the aid of the signal Q, the symbol decision S′, and the output of the decision-feedback equalizer, it is possible to form the error variable e, with the aid of which both the linear equalizer and the decision-feedback equalizer can be adjusted in the same way (e.g. using the LMS algorithm) as in a case in which precoding is not performed in the transmitter.
The precoder is updated by copying the coefficient parameter values of the decision-feedback equalizer in the precoder and in the filter forming the inverse precoder transfer function:
D(z−1)→T(z−1) and D(z−1)→T′(z−1).
The precoder can also be updated by first of all calculating the coefficient parameter change values ΔT(z−1)=D(z−1)−T′(z−1), which are transferred to the transmitter using upstream transmission and added to the old precoder coefficient parameter values Tnew(Z−1)=Told(z−1)+)T(z−1). The change values can be formed in the receiver, because in the method according to the invention, the precoder coefficient parameter values are always known in the receiver too, as T′(z−1)=T(z−1).
A criterion for deciding when to update the precoder can be created, for example, as follows: the precoder is always updated when the absolute value of the change value of one or more coefficient parameter reaches a specific proportion (e.g., 1%) of the absolute value of the corresponding parameter. A second alternative is to update the precoder at specific fixed intervals (e.g., 10-s intervals).
However, it is preferable to reconstruct the transmitted data with the aid of a signal, from which the effect of the precoder transfer function has not been removed. For example, in the system shown in
Systems according to the invention may differ from each other in relation to the linear equalizer, which in some cases may also be fixed. Further, systems according to the invention may differ from each other in relation to their signal processing means, which are used to reconstruct the transmitted data in the receiver. The characteristic feature of systems according to the invention is that a signal is formed in the receiver, the effect of the precoder transfer function on which signal is compensated, and the information contained in the signal is used to update the precoder in steady state transmission.
Reference:
[Lee & Messerschmitt] E. A. Lee and D. G. Messerschmitt, Digital Communication, Kluwer Academic Publishers 1994.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20020330 | Feb 2002 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI03/00122 | 2/19/2003 | WO |