The application relates to a network access node and a client device for generating and using random access sequences. Furthermore, the application also relates to corresponding methods and a computer program.
In cellular networks, such as LTE and NR, the p isical random access channel (PRACH) conveys uplink (UL) synchronization signals in order to establish an initial access from a user equipment (UF) to a base station (BS). The cellular network should support multiple PRACH signals, called preambles, to enable simultaneous detection of multiple LIEs accessing the network in a random access procedure. In order for the BS to correctly detect multiple preambles as well as estimating their timing for synchronization, the preambles should have low out-of-phase auto-correlation and low cross-correlations. It is also desirable that the PRACH signals have low peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) as typically required for UL signals.
In 3GPP LTE systems, the preambles are constructed from Zadoff-Chu (ZC) sequences with different cyclic shifts and root indexes, interpolated and transmitted by discrete Fourier transform spread orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (DFT-s-OFDM) with a cyclic prefix (CP). The cyclic-prefix allows receiver detection via periodic correlation of the received signal with a bank of candidate preambles. LTE PRACH includes four preambles formats with sequence length NZC=839 with a subcarrier spacing (SCS) of ΔfRA=1.25 kHz. An additional format, used only in time-division duplexing (TDD) small cell, was late introduced based on L=139 and ΔfRA=7.5 kHz.
An objective of enibodinients of the application is to provide a solution which mitigates or solves the drawbacks and problems of conventional solutions.
The above and further objectives are solved by the subject matter of the independent claims. Further advantageous embodiments of the application can be found in the dependent claims.
According to a first aspect of the application, the above mentioned and other objectives are achieved with a network access node for a wireless communication system, the network access node being configured to
generate a subset of sequences belonging to a set of sequences,
It is herein understood that the first sequence and the second sequence both belongs to the generated subset of sequences which comprises the plurality of cubic phase polynomial sequences. Hence, each of the first sequence and the second sequence has sequence length L and the third order coefficient value a3.
It is further understood that the cross-correlation between the first sequence and the second sequence is less than or equal to √{square root over (L)} also when no one of the first sequence and the second sequence are cyclically shifted.
In order to enable new use cases, such as low-latency, millimeter-wave (mmWave), and high-speed transmissions, the ongoing 3GPP 5G NR standardization recently introduced several new preamble formats constructed from larger subcarrier spacing (i.e. ΔfRA=15, 30, 60, 120 kHz) and the short sequence length of L=139. Unfortunately, the combination of such large SCS with a short sequence reduces drastically the number of ZC sequences that can be constructed to support PRACH in the network, to a level that 5G NR may face a PRACH capacity shortfall. An advantage of the network access node according to the first aspect is to increase the number of available sequences for random access in cells without increasing interference.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, a cross-correlation between two sequences belonging to two different subsets of sequences is less than or equal to 2√{square root over (L)}.
An advantage with this implementation form is to increase further the number of available sequences for random access in cells with a minimum increase of intra-cell interference.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, third order coefficients of sequences belonging to different subsets of sequences are different.
An advantage with this implementation form is that it provides a convenient partitioning of sequences such that sequences from two different subsets have a maximum cross-correlation over all possible cyclic shifts greater than √{square root over (L)} and less than or equal to 2√{square root over (L)}. Therefore, the intra-cell correlation, and hence intra-cell interference, is not increased if sequences from different subsets are allocated to different cells.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, each sequence belonging to the set of sequences has a non-zero third order coefficient value a3.
An advantage with this implementation form is that with non-zero third order coefficient value a3 new sequences can be generated in addition to Zadoff-Chu sequences as currently used in LTE and NR.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, wherein generate the subset of sequences comprises
element-by-element multiplication of a Zadoff-Chu sequence with an Alltop sequence.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, wherein generate the subset of sequences comprises
element-by-element multiplication of the Zadoff-Chu sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS with any cyclically-shifted version of the Alltop sequence.
An advantage with this implementation form is that it offers the largest possible set of new sequences constructed by covering ZCZ-ZC (zero-correlation zone Zadoff-Chu) which are defined in NR standardization.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, wherein generate the subset of sequences comprises
element-by-element multiplication of any cyclically shifted version of the Zadoff-Chu sequence with the Alltop sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS.
An advantage with this implementation form is that all sequences in the subset are kept orthogonal in the case of no delay uncertainty. This may provide improved detection if a delay uncertainty is non-uniformly distributed in the low-correlation zone (LCZ) with a probability pick for zero delay.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, a second order coefficient value a2 is a product of the third order coefficient value a3 times the cyclical shift value NCS.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, wherein the generated subset of sequences is associated with a cell served by the network access node according to a random access procedure.
An advantage with this implementation form is that is to increase the number of available sequences for random access in cells without increasing inter-cell interference, and with a minimum increase of intra-cell interference.
In an implementation form of a network access node according to the first aspect, wherein the cyclical shift value NCS is larger than zero and less than or equal to L.
According to a second aspect of the application, the above mentioned and other objectives are achieved with a client device for a wireless communication system, the client device being configured to
receive a control message from a network access node, wherein the control message indicates a cyclical shift value NCS and a third order coefficient value a3 of a subset of sequences;
determine a cubic polynomial phase sequence belonging to the subset of sequences based on the cyclical shift value NCS and the third order coefficient value a3;
transmit the determined cubic polynomial phase sequence as a random access preamble to the network access node.
An advantage of the client device is that the client device is able randomly pick a sequence among a subset of sequences as indicated by the network node in the control message.
In an implementation form of a client device according to the second aspect, wherein determine the cubic polynomial phase sequence comprises
determine a first order coefficient value a, based on the third order coefficient value a3 and the cyclical shift value NCS and a second order coefficient value a2 based on the third order coefficient value a3.
An advantage with this implementation form is that the client device is able to construct multiple non-trivial subset of sequences with desired correlation properties only based on the received third order coefficient value a3 and cyclical shift value NCS.
In an implementation form of a client device according to the second aspect, wherein determine the cubic polynomial phase sequence comprises
determine a first order coefficient value a, as an arbitrary value and a second order coefficient value a2 based on the third order coefficient value a3 and the cyclical shift value NCS.
An advantage with this implementation form is that the client device is able to construct multiple non-trivial subsets of sequences with desired correlation properties only based on the received third order coefficient value a3 and cyclical shift value NCS.
In an implementation form of a client device according to the second aspect, the subset of sequences is a subset belonging to a set of sequences,
An advantage with this implementation form is to increase the number of available sequences for random access in cells without increasing interference.
In an implementation form of a client device according to the second aspect, the cyclical shift value NCS is larger than zero and less than L.
According to a third aspect of the application, the above mentioned and other objectives are achieved with a method for a network access node, the method comprises generating a subset of sequences belonging to a set of sequences,
the second sequence is cyclically shifted less than the cyclical shift value NCS; and transmitting a control message to a client device, wherein the control message indicates the cyclical shift value NCS and the third order coefficient value a3.
The method according to the third aspect can be extended into implementation forms corresponding to the implementation forms of the network access node according to the first aspect. Hence, an implementation form of the method comprises the feature(s) of the corresponding implementation form of the network access node.
The advantages of the methods according to the third aspect are the same as those for the corresponding implementation forms of the network access node according to the first aspect.
According to a fourth aspect of the application, the above mentioned and other objectives are achieved with a method for a client device, the method comprises
receiving a control message from a network access node, wherein the control message indicates a cyclical shift value NCS and a third order coefficient value a3 of a subset of sequences;
determining a cubic polynomial phase sequence belonging to the subset of sequences based on the cyclical shift value NCS and the third order coefficient value a3;
transmitting the determined cubic polynomial phase sequence as a random access preamble to the network access node.
The method according to the fourth aspect can be extended into implementation forms corresponding to the implementation forms of the client device according to the second aspect. Hence, an implementation form of the method comprises the feature(s) of the corresponding implementation form of the client device.
The advantages of the methods according to the fourth aspect are the same as those for the corresponding implementation forms of the client device according to the second aspect.
The application also relates to a computer program, characterized in program code, which when run by at least one processor causes said at least one processor to execute any method according to embodiments of the application. Further, the application also relates to a computer program product comprising a computer readable medium and said mentioned computer program, wherein said computer program is included in the computer readable medium, and comprises of one or more from the group: ROM (Read-Only Memory), PROM (Programmable ROM), EPROM (Erasable PROM), Flash memory, EEPROM (Electrically EPROM) and hard disk drive.
Further applications and advantages of the embodiments of the application will be apparent from the following detailed description.
The appended drawings are intended to clarify and explain different embodiments of the application, in which:
As explained previously, 5G will support new use cases, such as low-latency, millimeter-wave (mmWave), and high-speed transmissions, which requires new synchronization signals. This requires a shorter PRACH sequence with larger SCS and bandwidth than what is required in LTE. Unfortunately, this may lead to a preamble capacity shortfall with ZC sequences. With NCS=1 and L prime, the collection of ZC sequences forms a set of (L−1) subsets of L orthogonal vectors with maximum inner product equal to √{square root over (L)}. A set of L orthogonal vectors provides a vector basis of the vector space L. Two bases whose vectors have pairwise absolute inner product equal to √{square root over (L)} are known as mutually unbiased bases (MUBs). One cannot construct more than (L+1) MUBs in L which means that ZC sequence set gives almost the maximum number of sequences with such correlation properties. Consequently, to obtain a larger set than the set of LTE PRACH sequences, one will inevitably have to increase the maximum cross-correlation which nevertheless should be kept as small as possible to minimize interference and collision. Therefore, embodiments of the application relate to a network access node 100 and a client device 300 which solves or mitigates the aforementioned drawbacks.
With reference to
The network access node 100 is further configured to transmit a control message 510 to a client device 300, and the control message 510 indicates the cyclical shift value NCS and the third order coefficient value a3.
The method 200 further comprises the step 204 of transmitting a control message 510 to a client device 300, wherein the control message 510 indicates the cyclical shift value NCS and the third order coefficient value a3.
Therefore, embodiments of the application provide, among other things, a solution to construct/generate a set of PRACH sequences =∪kk made of several subsets k of cubic polynomial phase sequences of length L. In other words, the following properties holds (mathematical definitions and interference measures disclosed herein are defined and explained in the later part of the present disclosure):
The construction can include, as a subset of sequences the set of zero-correlation zone Zadoff-Chu (ZCZ-ZC) sequences from all roots so that the two properties above are still satisfied. We therefore obtain larger subsets of sequences with a similar LCZ than the full set of ZC sequences with multiple roots. and thus enable a similar detection and timing estimation accuracy. Each subset of sequences can be uniquely allocated to a cell in order to minimize the intra-cell interference. Moreover, the cross-subset correlation is limited to be twice the intra-subset correlation, and so several cells can be supported in the wireless communication system 500 with limited inter-cell interference.
Moreover, some further points in respect of the generated subset of sequences can be noted. in one case, the third order coefficients of sequences belonging to different subsets of sequences k are different. For example, a third order coefficient of a sequence belonging to a first subset of sequences 1 is different from a third order coefficient of a sequence belonging to a second subset of sequences 2 which is different from the first subset of sequences 1. Further, each sequence belonging to the set of sequences and not belonging to the subset of ZCZ-ZC sequence has a non-zero third order coefficient value a3. It can also be noted that the cyclical shift value NCS is larger than zero and less than L.
Hence, embodiments of the application provide the generation or construction of a set =∪kk made of several subsets k of cubic polynomial phase sequences all of length L, i.e. all sequences belonging to the set are of the form
From the Carlitz-Uchiyama bound, it can be shown that the property ΩXS(k, j)≤2√{square root over (L)} is satisfied if the value of the third-degree coefficient a3 is fixed and different in each subset of sequences. Thus for a given subset with a fixed third-degree coefficient a3, the phase difference between two sequences pa
In embodiments of the application generating the subset of sequences k comprises element-by-element multiplication of a Zadoff-Chu sequence with an Alltop sequence. There are two different embodiments to achieve this.
In a first embodiment of generating the subset of sequences k comprises element-by-element multiplication of a Zadoff-Chu sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS with any cyclically-shifted version of an Alltop sequence. In other words, the subset of sequences k is generated by element-by-element multiplication of the Zadoff-Chu sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value. NCS with any cyclically-shifted version of the Alltop sequence. Thereby, the largest possible set is obtained by element-by-element multiplication of the ZCZ-ZC sequences with a set of cover sequences which are characterized as follows
Consider the sequences defined as
with 0≤l, w, λ, u≤L−1 and 0≤v≤NSPR−1, and where gw,λ[n] and xu,v[n] are cyclic-shifted Alltop and ZC sequences defined in equations (3) and (2), respectively, which can be found in the end of the present disclosure. Recall that Cv=vNCS and NSPR=└L/NCS┘. From this sequence definition, we generate the following set construction
Where for the subset l=0 it is the full set of ZCZ-ZC sequences
Y
0,N
={{y
0,w,λ,u,v
[n]}v=0N
and for any other subset index 1≤l≤L−1
Y
l,N
={{y
l,w,λ
,u
,v
[n]}v=0N
such that the ZC root is any 1≤ul≤L−1 and 0≤λl, ≤L−1 but fixed for a given l.
We then obtain a collection of L subsets with the following properties:
Ω(Yl,N
ΩXS(Yl,N
The subsets are of size |Yl,N
For a given l and all possible w and v, we obtain a subset of sequences with a LCZ of size NCS (i.e. same correlation as for ZC sequences with different roots). Such subset can be used as cell-specific sequences for unambiguous detection in a NCS delay zone. Sequences with different l that can be used in different cell.
In the above generation, not only changing the cover from conventional solution is important but also fixing the root in the ZC sequence for a given 3rd-degree coefficient. In the proposed construction, the index l increment all the degree coefficients of the polynomial phase, the index w increments the 1st- and 2nd-degree coefficients, the index v increment only the 1st-degree. For two sequences from the same index l and different index w, their inner product reduces to a Fourier transform of a ZC sequences whose absolute value is √{square root over (L)}.
If instead one will use
as a cover, the 2nd-degree coefficient in the polynomial phase could only be incremented from the root of the ZC sequence, however by doing so we create ambiguity in the desired LCZ. When using
while at the same time fixing the root u in the ZC sequence, the 2nd-degree coefficient is then only controlled by the parameter w. A similar observation follows on fixing the 1st-degree coefficient λ in the Alltop cover.
In a second embodiment of generating the subset of sequences k comprises element-by-element multiplication of any cyclically shifted version of the Zadoff-Chu sequence with the Alltop sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS. In other words, the subset of sequences k is instead generated by element-by-element multiplication of any cyclically shifted version of the Zadoff-Chu sequence with the Alltop sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS. By multiplying all possible cyclically shifts of a single-root ZC sequence with a power of a Alltop sequence which is then shifted with a. constant gap the subset of sequences is generated. For a given power, a subset of Alltop cover shifted with a constant gap satisfied the desired LCZ.
These sequences are defined as
with 0≤l, w, λ, u≤L−1, 0≤v≤NSPR−1. Again, Cw=w NCS and NSPR└L/NCS┘. We generate the set
where the subset {tilde over (Y)}0,N
{tilde over (Y)}
l,N
={{{tilde over (y)}
l,w,λ
,u
,v
[n]}
v=0
L−1}w=0N
such that 1≤ul≤L−1 and 0≤λl, ≤L−1 but fixed for a given l.
This embodiment fulfils the same correlation bounds and the same subsets/set size as in in the first embodiment. Namely, we have Ω({tilde over (Y)}l,N
However, the constructed sets in these two embodiments are not exactly equivalent as the pair-wise cross-correlation functions have different nulls.
The subsets for 1≤l≤L−1 can also be equivalently defined as
{tilde over (Y)}
l,N
={{{tilde over (y)}
l,w,λ,u
,v
[n]}λ=0L=1}w=0N
such that 0≤ul, vl≤L−1 but fixed for a given l. As such the 1st-degree coefficient is incremented in the Alltop sequence and not in the ZC sequence. In this case the ZC sequence is common to all sequences in a subset and do not play any role in the correlation properties of this subset. An interesting special case is then provided by
which corresponds to add a 3rd-degree coefficient l and cyclic-shifting the Alltop sequences with a constant gap. It is noted that this last sequence definition does not allow defining ZC sequences from the same construction,
In a further embodiment of the application a second order coefficient value a2 of a cubic phase polynomial is a. product of the third order coefficient value a3 times the cyclical shift value NCS. According to this embodiment, to avoid a sequence ambiguity among different third degree polynomial phase sequences in the desired delay zone is to directly sample the second order coefficient value a2 in a polynomial enumeration. As such the second order coefficient value a2 in the phase difference of two sequences in the same subset is never zero. The cubic polynomial phase sequences are defined as
where
This produces a collection of L−1 subsets N
such that Ω(a
With reference to
A random access procedure initiated in a client device 300 generally follows from the reception of a synchronization signal broadcasted by the network access node 100. The synchronization signal comprises cell identification and related system information for generating a PRACH signal valid in the cell 530. Notably, the network access node 100 broadcasts the necessary PRACH parameters for generating the corresponding cell-specific subset of sequences. Each cell has a specific subset of sequences.
At step I in
At step II in
At step III in
In one embodiment to determine the cubic polynomial phase sequence comprises determine a first order coefficient value al based on the third order coefficient value a3 and the cyclical shift value NCS and a second order coefficient value a2 based on the third order coefficient value a3. In one embodiment to determine the cubic polynomial phase sequence comprises determine a first order coefficient value a1 as an arbitraty value and a second order coefficient value a2 based on the third order coefficient value a3 and the cyclical shift value NCS. The client device 300 can use any of these two methods for determine the cubic polynomial phase sequence.
At step IV in
At step V in
At step VI in
At step VII in
The steps in
The performance of different embodiments of the application have been compared with conventional solutions that considered low-correlation zone for PRACH detection and the results are given in Table 1 below. As explained above, in many 5G NR scenarios the ratio └L/NCS┘ is often small so that several subsets of ZCZ-ZC sequences needs to be assigned to a single cell, resulting to an inter-cell correlation ≤√{square root over (L)}. The first and second embodiments of generating the subset of sequences using ZC and Alltop sequences offer subsets already larger than the total set of ZCZ-ZC sequences with the same maximum correlation. One effect of embodiments of the application is to increase the number of available PRACH sequences in a cell without increasing the inter-cell interference, and with a minimum increase of intra-cell interference. With agreed sequence length L=139 in NR, the previously denoted first embodiment (generating the subset of sequences k comprises element-by-element multiplication of a Zadoff-Chu sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS with any cyclically-shifted version of an Alltop sequence) and second embodiments (generating the subset of sequences k comprises element-by-element multiplication of any cyclically shifted version of the Zadoff-Chu sequence with the Alltop sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS.) provides a PRAM preamble capacity increase of 139 times for any cell radius i.e. any value of NCS. Some results related to different embodiments of the application are shown in Table I below. It is shown that different embodiments of the application enable to construct many subsets of sequences with the same low-correlation zone in a subset than ZC sequences, and limited increased crosscorrelation compared to ZCZ-ZC sequences. The embodiments in Table I are the previously denoted first embodiment and second embodiment which performance results are given in the last row in Table I. The mentioned first embodiment relates to generating the subset of sequences k by element-by-element multiplication of a Zadoff-Chu sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS with any cyclically-shifted version of an Allsop sequence; and the mentioned second embodiment relates to generating the subset of sequences k by element-by-element multiplication of any cyclically shifted version of the Zadoff-Chu sequence with the Alltop sequence cyclically shifted by a multiple of the cyclical shift value NCS. As a result the total number of sequences is greatly increased with embodiments of the application compared to conventional solutions.
In the following section of the disclosure some mathematical definitions and interference measures are defined and explained so as to provide even further understanding of embodiments of the application.
Periodic correlation: A finite sequence is typically treated as the period of an infinite periodic sequence. Accordingly, the periodic correlation between two sequences x[n] and y[n] of length L is defined as
where τ is an integer cyclic shift modulo L. This function has the following symmetly property: θx,y[−τ]=(θy,x[τ])*. The zero-lag absolute correlation is by definition the absolute inner product between the two sequences as θx,y[0]=|x,y| where x=(x[0], . . . , x[L−1]) and y=(y[0], . . . , y[L−1]).
Maximum correlation over a delay-zone: Given a set of sequences ={sk: 1≤k≤Nseq}, we define the maximum correlation Ω(; Z) of the set over a delay zone of length Z by
is the maximum out-of-phase auto-correlation in the zone of length Z; and where
is the maximum cross-correlation in the zone of length Z.
Cross-set correlation: Given two sets 1, 2 of sequences with same length L, we define the cross-set correlation as
We note that this cross-correlation is defined over all possible shifts −L<τ<L.
Cardinality of a set: The cardinality or size of the set is denoted as ||=Nseq.
ZC sequences: A ZC sequence of odd length L is defined as
where the root u is relatively prime to L. We denote the total number of roots by NR≤L−1, and if L is a prime then 1≤u≤L−1 are all possible roots. ZC sequences satisfy the following correlation properties: ΩA(xu; L)=0 and ΩC({xu, xu′}; L)=√{square root over (gu,u′L)} if u≠u′ where gu,u′ is the greatest common divisor of (u−u′) and NZC. Therefore if L is a prime we have ΩC({xu, xu′}; L)=√{square root over (L)}. From this construction, one can obtain a set Z={xu}u=1N
Minimize intra-cell interference: In a cell, multi-user detection and precise timing estimation can be achieved if the maximum of the periodic correlation over a range of expected shifts is minimized. Namely given the subset of cell-specific PRACH sequences, k for cell k, one should minimize its maximum correlation Ω(k; NCS) where NCS is the maximum possible cyclic shift of a sequence as observed by the receiver due to the delay uncertainty. This depends on the cell radius and for a PRACH signal modulated by DFT-s-OFDM as in LTE and NR is dimensioned as
where R is the cell radius, τmax is the maximum expected delay spread of the channel, ΔfRA is the PRACH subcarrier spacing, and ng are additional guard samples due to the pulse shaping fitter. For simplicity, one often assumes that all cells have the same radius and thus NCS is the same for cell-specific sequence subsets. Nevertheless, all descriptions below can be directly applied to cells with different radius and different NCS values.
Minimize inter-cell interference: Sequences transmitted in different cells may also interfere with each other. Here, the delay uncertainty between sequences from different cell can span all possible values, and thus restricted delay zone cannot be considered in the design. It follows that given two subsets of cell-specific sequences k and l, one must also minimize their cross-set correlation ΩXS(k, l).
The overall sequence design for the set =∪kk made of a collection of cell-specific subsets k is to minimize inner subset correlation Ω(k; NCS) with delay zone NCS, and the cross-subset correlation ΩXS(k, l). Because PRACH is performed (at least initially) without power control, sequences from different cells are less susceptible to interfere than sequences within the cell. As a result, the “over-the-air” correlation between two cells is decreased and minimizing Ω(k; NCS) is more important than ΩXS(k, l). This can be reflected in the sequence design by
Ideally, the auto- and cross-correlations of the cell-specific sequences should be set to zero, i.e. Ω(k; NCS)=0. This leads to the consideration of ZCZ sequences. One way to achieve ZCZ is to take specific cyclically-shifted version of constant amplitude zero autocorrelation (CAZAC) sequences. ZC sequence is a well-known example of a CAZAC sequence.
In 3GPP LTE and NR, the set of PRACH sequences is obtained from orthogonal cyclically-shifted ZC sequences. Shifts are done with a constant value 0<NCS≤L such that it enables unambiguous detection with timing uncertainty |τ|<NCS. Sequences are generated as
x
u,v[n]=xu[n+Cv], 0≤n≤L−1 (2)
where Cv=vNCS with 0≤v≤NSPR−1 and NSPR=└L/NCS┘, and xu[n] is a ZC sequence with root u as defined in (1).
This produces (L−1) subsets Zu,N
The ZC sequences are quadratic (second-degree) polynomial phase sequences that achieves a cross-correlation of √{square root over (L)}. From the Carlitz-Uchiyama bound, the cross-correlation between general polynomial phase sequences of degree r>0 is hounded by (r−1)√{square root over (L)}. An enlarged structured construction with higher degree polynomial phase would inevitably introduces inner product of the order of 2√{square root over (L)}.
A top's cubic phase sequences: these sequences are defined for every prime length L≥5 as
with 0λ≤L−1. This produces a small set ={aλ}λ=0L−1 of L sequences with Ω(; L)≤√{square root over (L)}.
MUB set from Alltop sequences: It can be shown that a complete set of MUBs can be constructed from all cyclic shifts of the Alltop's cubic phase sequences and the canonical vector basis of L which forms an identity matrix. In this case, the set of sequences is treated as a set of vectors whose performance is evaluated from the maximum zero-lag correlation (absolute inner product) without further consideration for the full periodic correlation properties. The sequences are defined as
where 0≤w≤L−1. The sequences gw,λ[n] are not exactly the cyclic-shift aλ[n−w] of the original sequences but differ only by constant phases which do not impact the cross-correlation properties of the set.
Two sequences with different linear coefficient gw,λ[n] and gw,λ′[n] are orthogonal, while two different shifted-version of the same sequence gw,λ[n] and gw′,λ[n] have a zero-lag cross-correlation equal to √{square root over (L)}.
The set ={gw,λ}λ,w=0L−1 is of size L2, i.e. only slightly larger than the set of all cyclically-shifted. ZC sequences Z1. As only zero-lag correlation is considered in this construction, the full set reaches the maximum correlation Ω(; NCS)=L for any delay zone NCS≥1, and as such would not enable unambiguous detection in PRACH.
Quasi-orthogonal supersets: Enlarged sets of sequences are constructed by unions of quasi-orthogonal subsets of sequences ∪h where each subset is obtained by multiplying every sequence in elements-by-elements with different sequence covers. Therein, the extended sequence set is treated also as a set of vectors, i.e. the cross-correlation analysis is limited to the zero-lag (τ=0) case. In this context, the full set of ZC sequences is the set of quadratic sequences which is itself a subset of polynomial phase sequences of degree less or equal to two:
where 0≤a1, a2≤L−1. This can be extended with the polynomial phase sequences with higher degree, of which e.g. polynomial phase sequences of degree less or equal to three
with 0≤a1, a2, a3≤L−1. This construction provides a complete enumeration of all possible polynomial phase sequences with degree less or equal to three, however, many sequences are then cyclic-shifted versions of each other, as pa
The client device 300 herein, may be denoted as a user device, a User Equipment (UE), a mobile station, an internet of things (IoT) device, a sensor device, a wireless terminal and/or a mobile terminal, is enabled to communicate wirelessly in a wireless communication system, sometimes also referred to as a cellular radio system. The UEs may further be referred to as mobile telephones, cellular telephones, computer tablets or laptops with wireless capability. The UEs in this context may be, for example, portable, pocket-storable, hand-held, computer-comprised, or vehicle-mounted mobile devices, enabled to communicate voice and/or data, via the radio access network, with another entity, such as another receiver or a server. The LTE can be a Station (STA), which is any device that contains an IEEE 802.11-conformant Media Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) interface to the Wireless Medium (WM). The UE may also be configured for communication in 3GPP related LTE and LTE-Advanced, in WiMAX and its evolution, and in fifth generation wireless technologies, such as New Radio.
The network access node 100 herein may also be denoted as a radio network access node, an access network access node, an access point, or a base station, e.g. a Radio Base Station (RBS), which in some networks may be referred to as transmitter, “gNB”, “gNodeB”, “eNB”, “eNodeB”, “NodeB” or “B node”, depending on the technology and terminology used. The radio network access nodes may be of different classes such as e.g. macro eNodeB, home eNodeB or pico base station, based on transmission power and thereby also cell size. The radio network access node can be a Station (STA), which is any device that contains an IEEE 802.11-conforrnant Media Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) interface to the Wireless Medium (WM). The radio network access node may also be a base station corresponding to the fifth generation (5G) wireless systems.
Furthermore, any method according to embodiments of the application may be implemented in a computer program, having code means, which when run by processing means causes the processing means to execute the steps of the method. The computer program is included in a computer readable medium of a computer program product. The computer readable medium may comprise essentially any memory, such as a ROM (Read-Only Memory), a PROM (Programmable Read-Only Memory), an EPROM (Erasable PROM), a Flash memory, an EEPROM (Electrically Erasable PROM), or a hard disk drive.
Moreover, it is realized by the skilled person that embodiments of the client device 300 and the network access node 100 comprises the necessary communication capabilities in the form of e.g., functions, means, units, elements, etc., for performing the solution. Examples of other such means, units, elements and functions are: processors, memory, buffers, control logic, encoders, decoders, rate matchers, de-rate matchers, mapping units, multipliers, decision units, selecting units, switches, interleavers, de-interleavers, modulators, demodulators, inputs, outputs, antennas, amplifiers, receiver units, transmitter units, DSPs, MSDs, TCM encoder, TCM decoder, power supply units, power feeders, communication interfaces, communication protocols, etc. which are suitably arranged together for performing the solution.
Especially, the processor(s) of the client device 300 and the network access node 100 may comprise, e.g., one or more instances of a Central Processing Unit (CPU), a processing unit, a processing circuit, a processor, an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), microprocessor, or other processing logic that may interpret and execute instructions. The expression “processor” may thus represent a processing circuitry comprising a plurality of processing circuits, such as, e.g., any, some or all of the ones mentioned above. The processing circuitry may further perform data processing functions for inputting, outputting, and processing of data comprising data buffering and device control functions, such as call processing control, user interface control, or the like.
Finally, it should be understood that the application is not limited to the embodiments described above, but also relates to and incorporates all embodiments within the scope of the appended independent claims.
This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/EP2018/063424, filed on May 23, 2018, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2018/063424 | May 2018 | US |
Child | 16950159 | US |