A telecommunications transmission system using a DTM system as multicarrier system and having at least two VDSL systems, each comprising a pair of modems, said at least two VDSL systems belonging to a single binder group common to both VDSL systems, a method in said DMT system for keeping DMT frames aligned to the same frame timing.
DMT is a multi-carrier technique standardised and well known for a man skilled in the art used for high bit-rate data transmission on twisted-pair lines, such as subscriber loops for telephony.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,812,523 describes a method of demultiplexing OFDM signals and a receiver for such signals. More particularly the method is concerned with synchronization in an OFDM receiver. A signal is read into a synchronization unit, in the time domain, i.e., before fourier transforming the signal by means of an FFT processor. In the synchronization unit, a frame clock is derived for triggering the start of the FFT process and for controlling the rate at which data is supplied to the FFT processor. For OFDM reception, it is vital that the FFT process commences at the right point in time. Once the frame clock has been recovered, a frequency error can be estimated by the synchronization unit The frequency error is used to control; an oscillator which generates a complex rotating vector which is, in turn, multiplied with the signal to compensate for frequency errors. The method can be used both with OFDM systems in which symbols are separated by guard spaces, and with OFDM systems in which symbols are pulse shaped. Our invention have put in to practice a new method which is partly based on this earlier known method.
One problem that is always present is the signal cross-talk between pairs located in the same cable bundle. The cross-talk is usually described as two components, NEXT and FEXT. NEXT (Near End X-Talk) is the interference from other transmitters in the same end as the receiver. FEXT (Far End X-Talk) is the interference from other transmitters in the opposite end of the line.
DMT is a digital transmission technology relying on the orthogonality between carriers. The up-stream and down-stream transmission is done on separate sets of carriers. Thus, NEXT is associated with transmission in the opposite direction and FEXT with transmission in the same direction as the received data. NEXT is usually the strongest interference signal, since it is generated close to a receiver that is receiving a weak signal.
The orthogonality is the best means to reduce the influence of NEXT. As long as the DMT frames are aligned to the same frame timing, the orthogonality holds and adjacent carriers can be used for different transmission directions without any capacity loss due to NEXT. This synchronisation has been posed as a problem for operators to implement, especially in an “unbundled” environment, where different operators share the same cable bundles.
In accordance with the invention the solution is what is stated in the claims.
The new technique in this invention is a step towards the synchronized DMT, again allowing the use of adjacent carriers without any NEXT influence and the full capacity of the synchronized DMT. It is an adaptive timing technique that is easy to implement and does not need any extra communication between modems or between operators' installations.
The foregoing and other features of the present invention will be better understood from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In order to facilitate an understanding of the present invention a glossary of terms used in this patent specification is provided below:
Turning first to
However is there always signal cross-talk between pairs located in the same cable bundle.
There are bascially two different forms of crosstalk in neighbouring copper pairs in the same cable: near-end crosstalk (NEXT) and far-end crosstalk (FEXT). NEXT is usually the strongest interference signal and occurs at the central office (base station)/optical network side when the weak upstream signal, is disturbed by strong downstream signals FEXT is crosstalk from one transmitted signal to another in the same direction and appears at the opposite end of the line, which is the premise side.
DMT is our transmission technology, which is well known for a man skilled in the art. Turning now to
The extension is created as copies of parts of the DMT symbol, as shown in
The invention uses the inherent property of DMT signals and that part of the signal is correlated in terms of cyclic extensions.
Via auto-correlation on the received time-domain DMT signal the time mis-alignment of cross-talkers can be estimated using the correlator shown in
In
The received signal x(k) is divided into two branches. One of the branches delays the signal by 2N samples corresponding to the length of one DMT symbol. A new signal, y(k), is then created as the product of the two signals x(k) and x(k−2*N). The signal y(k) is divided into two branches whereas one branch delays the signal CE samples, corresponding to the length of the total cyclic extension of the DMT frame. A new signal, w(k), is created as the difference y(k)−y(k−CE). The signal, w(k), is finally fed into an accumulator unit to create the correlation signal c(k).
The implementation of the correlation algorithm will be substantially simplified by using only the sign bit of the input signal X(k).
If there are no cross-talkers present, the correlation sequence c(k) will have the principal shape as depicted in
If, however, there are DMT cross-talk signals added to the signal, they will contribute to the auto-correlation with the same kind of correlation peaks located according to the frame timing. If the individual signals are uncorrelated, the correlation of a sum of signals equals the sum of the correlations of the individual signals. If the DMT receiver has knowledge of its own frame boundaries, it can easily determine which correlation peaks correspond to the desired signal and the cross-talk signals, respectively. An example is shown by
The time shift of the correlation peaks of the cross-talkers is a measure of the time misalignment relative to the desired signal. The amplitude of each cross-talk peak is a relative measure of the power of the cross-talker.
At start-up the receiver makes a correlation on the signal including the cross-talkers. Assuming that all cross-talkers are aligned to common frame timing, they will all have their correlation peaks located in a small range of time. The starting-up modem, therefore, should use the correlation information to align its own frame timing to the cross-talkers. If every starting-up modem uses this method, all modems that cause interference in each other's receivers will become aligned to the same frame timing. The method estimating the time mis-alignment and power of cross-talk DMT signals added to a received DMT signal when the estimate is used by the modem to synchronise its own frame timing to a main cross-talkers frame timing. Auto-correlation is used on the received signal and a delayed copy of the received signal. Correlation maxima detects that determine the frame boundaries of different DMT components of the received signal.
It is important to mention that the method uses the inherent property of DMT signals and that part of the signal is correlated, in the time domain, in terms of cyclic extensions. The method further comprising the step that the time mis-alignment, which illustrates in
As can bee seen in
The method further comprising the step that when the time offset of the cross-talk is estimated at the VTU-O, this information will be used to adjust its clock and frame boundaries to align with the cross-talker and hence orthogonality is achieved and the distortion is minimized.
The method further comprising the step that if the auto-correlation peak amplitude of the cross-talk signal is low the VTU-O can choose to not align clock and frame boundaries since the cross-talker then do not significantly contribute to the distortion and hence a threshold level will be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99850150 | Oct 1999 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5668802 | Chalmers | Sep 1997 | A |
5812523 | Isaksson et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
6134283 | Sands et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6178025 | Hardcastle et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 917 315 | May 1999 | EP |
WO 9706619 | Feb 1997 | WO |
WO 9943123 | Aug 1999 | WO |