The invention relates to a transmitter that is arranged to simultaneously transmit at least a first and a second signal. The invention further relates to a receiver that is arranged to simultaneously receive a first and a second signal. In addition, the invention relates to a transceiver, a wireless device and a telecommunication system comprising such a transmitter.
The invention finds its application in wireless telecommunication or data communication systems or devices that make use of Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) technology. The invention is particularly suited for telecommunication or data communication systems that require higher order modulation schemes and where the transmission medium has a random nature. Examples are Bluetooth devices, Wireless LAN devices and wireless devices such as mobile phones or personal digital assistants.
Such a telecommunication system is disclosed in the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 2002/0181509A1. Shown is a Multiple Input Multiple Output telecommunication system having a transmitter that encodes the data that is coming from a data source into several parallel data streams that are subsequently transmitted across a radio channel by means of a number of transmit antennas. In addition, the telecommunication system comprises a receiver having a number of receive antennas for receiving the multiple data streams. The receiver further comprises a decoder for merging the-multiple data streams into a single (digital) data stream. Although, such MIMO systems generally perform well in a rich-scattering environment they are prone to failure in a low-scattering environment.
It is an object of the present invention to provide transmitter that will improve the performance of a MIMO system in low-scattering environments. To this end, the transmitter for simultaneously transmitting at least a first and a second signal, the first signal being modulated according to a first modulation constellation, the second signal being modulated according to a second modulation constellation, wherein the transmitter is arranged to pre-code at least the first signal through a modification of the first modulation constellation so as to prevent a correlation between the at least first and second simultaneously transmitted signals.
The invention is based upon the insight that MIMO systems generally work well in rich scattering environments such as in a non-line-of sight scenario wherein the communication channel assures orthogonality of the transmitted signals. In low scattering environments however, such as line-of-sight scenario's, the orthogonality among the encoded data streams might be entirely lost. Or in other words, the data streams can become correlated. Consequently, the receiver will not be able to distinguish between the simultaneously transmitted data streams so that detection of the transmitted signal may partially fail. The invention is further based upon the insight that from a system point of view, it is of no importance whether the orthogonality of the parallel streams is provided by the behavior of the communication channels or by the transmitter itself. Therefore, by pre-coding the baseband signals, it is the transmitter that provides orthogonality rather than the communication channels. This provides the advantage that the MIMO system can remain operational even under unfavorable propagating conditions.
In an embodiment of the transmitter according to the present invention, the pre-coding of at least the first signal comprises a rotation of the first modulation constellation through a first angle. Each one of the at least two simultaneously transmitted signals is encoded according to a modulation constellation i.e. bits are being mapped onto symbols. At the receiver side, these two modulation constellations merge into a single (de)modulation constellation having an order that is equal to the sum of the order of first and second modulation constellations. During unfavorable transmission conditions however, the transmitted signals become correlated. Consequently, the (de)modulation constellation at the receiver shows overlapping points. Therefore order of the (de)modulation constellation is impaired so that the receiver might no longer be able to successfully demodulate the simultaneously transmitted signals. By rotating at least one of the modulation constellations, it is the transmitter that provides the required orthogonality between the at least two simultaneously transmitted signals and not the channel. Consequently, the modulation constellations of the at least two transmitted signals merge into a single (de)modulation constellation having non-overlapping points. Through this, a successful demodulation of the at least two simultaneously transmitted signals, even under poor propagating conditions, can be assured.
In yet another embodiment of the receiver according to the present invention, the pre-coding of at least the first signal comprises a change of the order of the first modulation constellation. Under poor receiving conditions is may not be possible to sustain a certain data rate. In such a situation, the transmitter may consider to lower the order of the modulation constellation of at least the first signal to reduce the achievable bit rate of at least the first signal. However, once the propagation conditions improve, the order of the modulation of the modulation constellation may be again increased.
In still another embodiment of a transmitter according to the present invention, the pre-coding further comprises a change of the number of simultaneously transmitted signals. The modulation constellations are used to map a bit stream into symbols therefore, a modification of the order of a modulation constellation will have consequences for the maximum achievable bit rate. A reduction of the order of the modulation constellation for example, will therefore automatically cause a reduction of the maximum achievable bit rate whilst an increment of the order causes an increment of the maximum achievable bit rate. As will be apparent to those skilled in the art, a MIMO transmitter is arranged to encode a single data stream into several (parallel) data streams which, are simultaneously transmitted. In principle, the number of (parallel) data streams and thus the number of simultaneously transmitted signals can be made dependent on the required bit rate. Therefore, modifying the number of transmitted signals can counteract the effect of modifying the order of the modulation constellations. For example, a reduction of the order of at least one constellation diagram can be counteracted by increasing the number of transmitted signal and of course vice-versa.
In another embodiment of the transmitter according to the present invention, the transmitter is arranged to pre-code at least the first signal after receipt of a first signal from a receiver of the at least first and second simultaneously transmitted signals. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that only the receiver can determine whether the simultaneously transmitted signals remained uncorrelated. By transmitting the first signal to the transmitter, the receiver informs the transmitter about the quality of the received signals. The signal may for example, comprise an instruction to the transmitter to pre-code at least one of the transmitted signals or it may a suitable quality indicator such as a bit error rate (BER). The first signal may be an independently transmitted (aired) signal or it may be incorporated into an (existing) communication protocol that is in use to establish and maintain the communication link between the transmitter and the receiver.
In an embodiment of the transmitter according to the present invention, the transmitter is arranged to transmit a second signal to a receiver of the at least first and second simultaneously transmitted signals so as to notify the receiver about the pre-coding of at least the first of the at least two signals. It will be understood by those skilled in the art, that a receiver cannot autonomously decode a pre-coded signal unless the receiver is informed about the details of the preceding. Alternatively, the second signal may for example, comprise an acknowledge to the receipt of the first signal The second signal may be an independently transmitted (aired) signal or alternatively, it may be incorporated into an (existing) communication protocol that is required to establish and maintain the communication link between the transmitter and the receiver. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the format of the messages that are comprised in the first and second signals will largely depend on the intelligence built into the transmitter and the receiver.
These and other aspects according to the present invention will be elucidated by means of the following drawings.
Each symbol can therefore be expressed as a (normalized) vector in the I-Q plane or as exp(jφx). By means of the mapping operation, bitstreams d1,d2 are converted into signals s1 and s2. Each signal s1, s2 is modulated into signals s′1 and S′2 by means of RF section 12 and subsequently transmitted to the receiving side of the system. Due to the behavior or the communications channel(s) between the transmitters Tx1,Tx2 and receivers Rx1,Rx2, signals s′1 and S′2 are received as r′1 and r′2. Each receivers Rx1,Rx2 comprises an RF section 11 for demodulating the signals r′1,r′2 into r1, r2 The relation between the transmitted signals S=(s1,S2) and the received signals R=(r1, r2) is given by R=H.S wherein H=(h11,h12;h21,h22)is usually referred to as the transfer matrix. The coefficients hij of transfer matrix H define the behavior of the communication channels between the transmitters and the receivers. Coefficient hi for example relates to the communication channel between antennas 10 and 16 whereas h12 relates to the channel between antennas 10 and 15. Consequently, signals r1, r2 can be expressed as r1=h11.s1+h12.s2 and r2=h21.s1+h22.s2. Since H can easily be derived by those skilled in the art, the signal processing means 13 of the receivers can easily make an estimate of the transmitted signals using the relation S=R.H1. For reasons of simplicity, the effect of added noise that would result in the addition of a noise vector to the received signals R has been disregarded. Once the transmitted signals have been estimated at the receiving end, they are de-mapped to convert the symbols of the estimated transmitted signals r1, r2 into bit streams d′1 and d′2. During proper working conditions, bit streams d′1 and d′2 correspond to the originally transmitted bit streams d1 and d2. As will be apparent to those skilled in the art, it will only be possible to retrieve the transmitted signals if the transfer matrix can be inverted i.e. DET(H)< >0. Those skilled in the art, will recognize in the mathematical requirement DET(H)< >0 the precondition that the communication channels between the transmitters Tx1,Tx2 and the receivers Rx1,Rx2 must remain un-correlated, or in other words, the transmitted signals s1 and S2 must remain orthogonal during propagation. It is well known that MIMO systems work well in rich scattering environments, but may fail in e.g. line of sight environments. This is illustrated in more detail by means of
Another option for precoding is to reduce the order of the modulation constellations of s1 and s2 for example, from QPSK to BPSK. A BPSK constellation as shown in
It is to be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. The word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those listed in a claim. The word “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03103889.6 | Oct 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB04/52063 | 10/12/2004 | WO | 4/18/2006 |