This invention relates to communications, for example for a cellular wireless communications system, using a combination of so-called turbo, space-time (ST), and trellis coding (TC) or trellis coded modulation (TCM) techniques.
As is well known, wireless communications channels are subject to time-varying multipath fading, and it is relatively difficult to increase the quality, or decrease the effective error rate, of a multipath fading channel. While various techniques are known for mitigating the effects of multipath fading, several of these (e.g. increasing transmitter power or bandwidth) tend to be inconsistent with other requirements of a wireless communications system. One technique which has been found to be advantageous is antenna diversity, using two or more antennas (or signal polarizations) at a transmitter and/or at a receiver of the system.
In a cellular wireless communications system, each base station typically serves many remote (fixed or mobile) units and its characteristics (e.g. size and location) are more conducive to antenna diversity, so that it is desirable to implement antenna diversity at least at a base station, with or without antenna diversity at remote units. At least for communications from the base station in this case, this results in transmit diversity, i.e. a signal is transmitted from two or more transmit antennas.
S. M. Alamouti, “A Simple Transmit Diversity Technique for Wireless Communications”, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 16, No. 8, pages 1451-1458, October 1998 describes a simple transmit diversity scheme using space-time block coding (STBC). For the case of two transmit antennas, complex symbols s0 and −s1* are successively transmitted from one antenna and simultaneously complex symbols s1 and s0* are successively transmitted from the other antenna, where * represents the complex conjugate. These transmitted symbols constitute what is referred to as a space-time block.
It is also known to use various coding schemes in order to enhance communications. Among such schemes, it has been recognised that so-called turbo coding (parallel concatenated convolutional coding) enables iterative decoding methods to achieve results which are close to the Shannon limit for AWGN (additive white Gaussian noise) communication channels. A turbo coder uses two, typically identical, recursive systematic convolutional (RSC) component coders, signals to be transmitted being supplied directly to one of the component coders and via an interleaver to the other of the component coders. Accordingly, it would be desirable to combine turbo and space-time coding techniques in the same transmitter.
V. Tarokh et al., “Space-Time Codes for High Data Rate Wireless Communication: Performance Criterion and Code Construction”, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 44, No. 2, pages 744-765, March 1998 describes various convolutional, or trellis, codes which can be used with two or more transmit antennas to provide the advantages of trellis (convolutional) coding and space-time coding. Although these codes are considered optimal for maximum diversity gain, they are not necessarily optimal for coding gain. Furthermore, these codes are non-recursive. In contrast, it is well established that the best efficiency for turbo coding is achieved using recursive codes. Consequently, the codes described by Tarokh et al. are not suitable for use in a turbo coding arrangement.
P. Robertson et al., “Bandwidth-Efficient Turbo Trellis-Coded Modulation Using Punctured Component Codes”, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 16, No. 2, pages 206-218, February 1998 describes a turbo coder using Ungerboeck and multidimensional TCM component codes, in which the interleaver operates on groups each of m information bits. For each step corresponding to a group of m information bits, a signal mapper associated with each component coder produces n symbols, where n=D/2 and D is the signal set dimensionality; for example D=2 or 4 and n=1 or 2. An n-symbol de-interleaver de-interleaves output symbols from the second component coder, and a selector alternately for successive steps selects symbols output from the first component coder and symbols from the de-interleaver and supplies them to a single output path. This arrangement does not provide transmit diversity and this document is not concerned with space-time coding.
G. Bauch, “Concatenation of Space-Time Block Codes and “Turbo”-TCM”, Proceedings of the International Conference on Communications, ICC'99, pages 1202-1206, June 1999 describes two types of turbo trellis coded modulation (TCM) coder, whose output is supplied to a space-time block coder, so that the turbo-TCM and STBC arrangements are simply concatenated with one another. One of these two types of turbo TCM coder is as described by Robertson et al. (to which reference is made for details) as discussed above using Ungerboeck codes and providing one symbol at the output of the mapping function, but the Bauch illustration of this does not show the symbol de-interleaver. This Bauch publication does not discuss multidimensional component codes.
A continuing need exists to provide further improvements in wireless communications.
According to one aspect, this invention provides a method of providing space-time diversity for information to be transmitted from a plurality T of antennas, comprising the steps of: in each of a plurality of successive symbol intervals, producing T symbols comprising systematic information and parity information at outputs of each of two recursive systematic convolutional coders, to one of which coders input bits are supplied directly and to the other of which coders said information bits are supplied after interleaving of bit groups for respective symbol intervals in an interleaving block; and selecting first and second different mappings, each of T symbols from said symbols produced at the outputs of the coders, in respective alternating symbol intervals for supply to the T antennas to provide said space-time diversity, the interleaving and mappings being arranged so that systematic information is selected for all of the input bits in the interleaving block.
Preferably the first mapping selects the T symbols from one of the coders and the second mapping selects the T symbols from the other of the coders.
In an embodiment of the invention described below, T=2 and in each symbol interval each coder produces a systematic information symbol and a parity information symbol, the first mapping provides the systematic information symbol and the parity information symbol from one of the coders for supply respectively to first and second antennas, and the second mapping provides the systematic information symbol and the parity information symbol from the other of the coders for supply respectively to the second and the first antennas. Thus this is an example of a case in which T is even and in each symbol interval each coder produces T/2 systematic information symbols and T/2 parity information symbols.
Alternatively, the T symbols produced by each coder in each symbol interval can include at least one symbol comprising systematic and parity information.
The method may also include the step of changing a phase of symbols from the two coders relative to one another, in particular providing a phase rotation of π/2 for symbols at the output of one of the coders. This can be particularly desirable when t>2, for example when T=4.
Preferably the interleaved bit groups each comprise m bits where m is an integer, and symbols produced at the outputs of the coders comprise M-PSK symbols where M=2m.
Another aspect of the invention provides a coding arrangement comprising: first and second recursive systematic convolutional coders each arranged to produce a plurality of T symbols in each of a plurality of successive symbol intervals from m bits supplied thereto, where m is an integer; an interleaver arranged to interleave groups each of m input bits within an interleaving block with a mapping of even-to-even and odd-to-odd, or even-to-odd and odd-to-even, positions; input bits supplied to the first coder and to the interleaver, and interleaved bits supplied from the interleaver to the second coder; and a selector arranged to supply different ones of the T symbols from the coders in alternate symbol intervals to respective ones of T output paths, the T symbols selected in each of the alternating symbol intervals including all of the systematic information from a respective one of the coders.
Thus the method and coding arrangement of the invention provide a desirable combination of turbo coding with recursive systematic convolutional component coders and space-time coding for transmit diversity.
The invention also provides a decoding arrangement for iteratively decoding received symbols coded by the coding arrangement recited above, comprising: first and second soft output decoders for decoding the coding by said first and second recursive systematic convolutional coders respectively, in response to an input vector and soft input information; an interleaver corresponding to the interleaver of the coder, arranged to couple soft output information from the first decoder as soft input information to the second decoder; a de-interleaver converse to said interleavers, arranged to couple soft output information from the second decoder as soft input information to the first decoder; and a selector arranged to supply a received signal vector and a zero input vector alternately in successive symbol intervals as the input vector to the first and second decoders.
The invention further provides a method of iteratively decoding a received signal comprising symbols coded by the method recited above, comprising the steps of: supplying a received signal vector and a zero input vector alternately in successive symbol intervals as input vectors to two decoders for decoding the coding by said two recursive systematic convolutional coders respectively; interleaving, in the same manner as in the method of coding, a soft output of one of the decoders, corresponding to said one of the coders, to provide a soft input to the other of the decoders; and de-interleaving, conversely to the interleaving, a soft output of said other of the decoders to provide a soft input to said one of the decoders.
The invention will be further understood from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which by way of example:
Referring to the drawings,
The transmitter of
For example, as shown in
The QPSK symbols x1, x2, . . . , represented by complex numbers, are supplied to the STBC 14, which for simplicity is shown in
More particularly, the STBC function is represented by a T-by-T orthogonal matrix Hx, where T is the number of transmit antennas and hence symbol outputs of the STBC 14. For the case of T=2 as represented in
In accordance with this matrix Hx, for each pair of PSK symbols x1 and x2 supplied to the input of the STBC 14, in a first symbol interval the antenna 16 is supplied with the symbol x1 and the second antenna 18 is supplied with the symbol x2, and in a second symbol interval the first antenna 16 is supplied with the symbol −x2* and the second antenna 18 is supplied with the symbol x1*, where * denotes the complex conjugate. Thus both PSK symbols in each pair are transmitted twice in different forms, from different antennas and at different times to provide both space and time diversity. It can be seen that each column of the matrix Hx indicates the symbols transmitted in successive intervals from a respective antenna, and each row represents a respective symbol transmission interval.
Referring to
The selector 26 selects all of the systematic bits S1, and some or all of the parity bits P1 and P2 from the coders 20 and 22 respectively, and supplies them to an output of the turbo coder as output bits. The selection of parity bits depends upon the rate of the coder. For example, for a rate 1/3 (3 output bits for each input bit) coder, the selector 26 can select all of the parity bits P1 and P2. For a rate 1/2 (2 output bits for each input bit) coder, the selector 26 can alternately select the parity bits P1 and P2, so that only half of the parity bits P1 and half of the parity bits P2 are output, this process being referred to as puncturing.
In the turbo-TCM arrangement (Robertson et al.) referred to in the Background of the Invention, the interleaver 24 operates on groups each of m bits which are mapped at the output of each component coder (20, 22) into, for example, a PSK symbol combining the systematic and parity information. The symbols from the second component coder (22) are de-interleaved by a symbol de-interleaver, and the output selector alternately selects the symbols output from the first component coder (20) and the de-interleaver. The interleaver (and consequently also the de-interleaver) in this case must provide an even-to-even and odd-to-odd (or even-to-odd and odd-to-even) position mapping.
In the concatenated SBTC and turbo code (Bauch) arrangements referred to in the Background of the Invention, in essence the output bits of a turbo coder such as that of
The bits supplied in parallel from the S-P converter 10 are interleaved in groups (in this case, in pairs) by the interleaver 34. The non-interleaved bit pairs supplied to the function 30, and the interleaved bit pairs supplied to the function 32, are coded and mapped into QPSK symbols by these functions as described further below. Consequently, the function 30 produces at its two outputs QPSK symbols SS1 which represent systematic information corresponding to the input bits, and QPSK symbols PS1 which represent parity information produced by the recursive convolutional coding of the function 30. Similarly, the function 32 produces at its two outputs QPSK symbols SS2 which represent systematic information corresponding to the input bits as interleaved in bit pairs by the interleaver 34, and QPSK symbols PS2 which represent parity information produced by the recursive convolutional coding of the function 32 from the interleaved input bit pairs. Although it is assumed here for convenience and simplicity that the RSC coding and mapping functions 30 and 32 are identical, as is typically the case for the component coders of a turbo coder as described above with reference to
The selector 36 is controlled by a control signal of alternating ones and zeros (1010 . . . as illustrated) at the symbol (bit pair) rate, and performs selection and puncturing functions as represented in
It can be appreciated that, with the selector 36 alternately selecting the non-interleaved systematic symbols SS1 and the interleaved systematic symbols SS2, in order to ensure that all of the systematic information is transmitted it is necessary for the interleaver 34 to map even positions at its input to even positions at its output, and odd positions at its input to odd positions at its output (or, alternatively, even-to-odd and odd-to-even position mapping), as in the case of the Robertson et al. arrangement discussed above. The interleaver 34 is arranged to provide such mapping accordingly.
From the above description and from
It is necessary to determine desirable recursive trellis or convolutional codes, and hence forms of the functions 30 and 32, for use in the arrangement described above with reference to
For a coder having N states and supplied with input symbols with M possible values (e.g. in this description M=4 for the paired input bits for QPSK), a coder state matrix B is an N by M matrix (N rows and M columns) whose elements B(i,j) determine the coder state for the next symbol, depending upon the current state represented by i, which is an integer from 0 to N−1, and the current input symbol represented by j, which is an integer from 0 to M−1. A coder output matrix C is also an N by M matrix whose elements C(i,j) determine the output symbol produced when, similarly, the current coder state and the current input symbol are represented by i and j respectively.
For a coder having T output paths for supplying a corresponding number of antennas, a further coder output matrix Z is defined which is also an N by M matrix, derived from the matrix C, with elements Z(i,j) where i and j are as defined above. Each element Z(i,j) consists of T Q-ary symbols which identify the signal supplied to the respective antennas, where Q is determined by the modulation type and for example Q=4 for QPSK. Thus each element consists of T Q-ary symbols zt(i,j) identifying the signal supplied to the antenna t, where t is an integer from 0 to T−1.
The encoding process is further described by a mapping function from the coder outputs to the signal point constellations used for transmission. For simplicity and convenience, throughout the following description this mapping function is assumed to be as described above with reference to
Although an encoding process can be fully described for implementation in the manner outlined above, this is not sufficient to classify a code. For the latter purpose, a convolutional code can be described by a coder state matrix equation:
Φi+1=WΦi⊕GUi
and a coder output matrix equation:
Zi=HφΦi⊕HuUi
where Φi is an n-dimensioned binary vector of the current coder state and n=log2(N), Ui is an m-dimensioned binary input vector and m=log2(M), Zi is a p-dimensioned binary output vector, and p=log2(P) and P=QT, ⊕ represents modulo-2 addition (or, equivalently, an exclusive-or function), and G, W, Hφ, and Hu are respective gain or weighting factor binary matrices.
To assist in an understanding in this respect,
A convolutional or trellis code can be classified using the matrix W and a matrix H=[Hφ Hu]. In particular, if each row of the matrix W contains no more than one “1”, then the code is non-recursive, otherwise the code is recursive. Also, if the matrix Hu has a column with a single non-zero element at the j-th row position and the elements of the j-th row of the matrix Hφ are all “0”, the code contains a systematic component for the j-th bit of the input sequence.
As discussed above, the codes described in the publication by Tarokh et al. referred to above are non-recursive and accordingly are unsuitable for providing an efficient turbo coder arrangement as illustrated in
For a 4-state RSC coder and QPSK mapping function which can be used in the transmitter of
An implementation of such a coder and its mapping functions, which can be used to form each of the functions 30 and 32 in the arrangement of
Referring to
A pair of input bits, supplied from the S-P converter 10 in the case of the function 30 or from the interleaver 34 in the case of the function 32 as described above with reference to
The upper one (as illustrated) of the bit inputs to the coder of
For an 8-state RSC coder and QPSK mapping function which can be used in the transmitter of
An implementation of such a coder and its mapping functions, which can be used to form each of the functions 30 and 32 in the arrangement of
For a 16-state RSC coder and QPSK mapping function which can be used in the transmitter of
An implementation of such a coder and its mapping functions, which can be used to form each of the functions 30 and 32 in the arrangement of
It can be appreciated from the above description of the coding arrangement of
In the arrangements described above, the mapping functions are arranged so that each QPSK symbol is produced entirely from systematic information or entirely from parity bits. However, this need not be the case, and alternative arrangements are possible in which, for example, each QPSK symbol is instead produced from one systematic information bit and one parity bit. In other words, the inputs to the mapping functions (e.g. 56 and 57 in
This is the case for the coder described by way of example below with reference to
Referring to
The lines 60, delay elements 65 and 66, and modulo-2 adders 67 to 72 are otherwise interconnected as illustrated in
Again, it should be appreciated that the connections to the mapping functions 61 to 64 in
The optional phase rotation unit 90 provides a phase rotation of each symbol by π/2, and can comprise four multipliers each arranged to multiply a respective one of the QPSK symbols supplied to it by a signal ejπ/2, this having been found to improve performance in some situations, in particular in a transmitter using four antennas. This phase rotation unit can be omitted, a similar phase rotation unit can if desired be provided in a coding arrangement for a transmitter using only two antennas as described above, and/or phase rotations can be provided for some but not all of the QPSK symbols.
Thus it can be seen that the selector 88 couples to its outputs the systematic and parity information QPSK symbols from the unit 80 supplied with non-interleaved input bits in a first one of each two successive symbol intervals, and couples to its outputs the systematic and parity information QPSK symbols from the unit 82 supplied with interleaved input bits in a second one of each two successive symbol intervals.
The decoding arrangement comprises a de-puncturing selector 104, two soft trellis code decoders 105 and 106, an interleaver 107 which operates in the same manner as the interleaver of the turbo coding arrangement in the transmitter, e.g. the interleaver 34 in the arrangement of
It will be recalled from the description above that the coding arrangement of
The performance of a coding and decoding arrangement as described above in accordance with an embodiment of this invention can usefully be compared with that of a concatenated turbo-TCM and STBC arrangement known from the prior art (Bauch) referred to in the Background of the Invention. In each case with two transmit antennas, two receive antennas, an interleaver block length of 1000 bits (500 symbols), and a Doppler frequency of 256 Hz, arrangements in accordance with the invention as described above have been found to provide a significant improvement, compared with the Bauch concatenated arrangement, in terms of bit error rate of about 0.75 to 1.1 dB over a range of signal (energy per information bit) to noise ratios from 1 to 4 dB.
Although particular embodiments of the invention are described in detail above, it can be appreciated that numerous modifications, variations, and adaptations may be made within the scope of the invention as defined in the claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/RU00/00475 | 11/22/2000 | WO | 00 | 3/7/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/43314 | 5/30/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5907582 | Yi | May 1999 | A |
6298463 | Bingeman et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
7436895 | Tujkovic | Oct 2008 | B1 |