The invention generally relates to wireless code division multiple access communication systems. In particular, the invention relates to receiving user signals in such systems.
Each cell 24 may also be divided into sectors 261–266 (26), such as six sectors 26 as shown in
The distribution of UEs 22 in a cell 24 and sector 26 as well as cell and sector loading may vary.
Furthermore, a UE 22 may move between sectors 26, such as from sector 262 to sector 261, as shown in
Accordingly, it is desirable to have a Node-B/base station receiver capable of handling these varying conditions.
A Node-B/base station receiver comprises at least one antenna for receiving signals. Each finger of a pool of reconfigurable Rake fingers recovers a multipath component of a user and is assigned a code of the user, a code phase of the multipath component and an antenna of the at least one antenna. An antenna/Rake finger pool interface provides each finger of the Rake pool an output of the antenna assigned to that Rake finger. A combiner combines the recovered multipath components for a user to produce data of the user.
The antennas 28 for all sectors 26 are connected to an antennas/Rake finger pool interface 30. The interface 30 connects the antenna outputs to the Rake finger processors (finger) 321 to 32O (32) of the Rake finger pool. Each Rake finger 32 is assigned a particular user's received multipath component to recover. To recover that component, each Rake finger 32 is assigned an antenna 28, code and code phase associated with the received component. An antenna 28 in a sector 26 that the UE 22 resides is connected to the Rake fingers 32 via the antennas/Rake finger pool interface 30. The code used by the UE 22 is provided to the Rake finger 32 as well as the code phase of the desired multipath components. The Rake finger 32 recovers the multipath component and weights the component prior to being combined with other multipath components of the user.
Referring again to
Since the output of the Rake fingers 32 have varying code phase delays, a synchronization buffer 34 is used to synchronize the Rake finger outputs prior to combining. Preferably, the synchronization buffering is performed using a common memory. In an alternate embodiment, as shown in
After synchronization of each Rake finger output, each UE's multipath components are combined by the combiner 36 to produce soft symbols for that user (User 1 Data to User 2 Data).
The configuration of the Node-B/base station receiver allows for dynamic cell loading and user distributions. The reconfigurability of the Rake fingers 32 allows for allocation of the fingers 32 where needed. For a cell having users evenly distributed among its sectors, the Rake fingers 32 can be allocated evenly to each sector 26. For cells having sectors with higher loads than other sectors, more fingers can be allocated to the highly loaded sectors. More Rake fingers 32 can also be allocated on demand to users requiring a higher quality of service (QOS) than other users.
Preferably, for a receiver having multiple ASICs 52, each user is assigned to a specific ASIC 52 for processing to facility combining across sectors for softer handover. Since, preferably, none of the Rake fingers 32 are assigned to a sector 26, combining of a user's received components from multiple sectors 26 is readily achieved. This ability to combine multiple sector components facilitates softer handover as shown in
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/331,085, filed Dec. 27, 2002, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/372,531, filed on Apr. 12, 2002, which are incorporated by reference as if fully set forth.
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Parent | 10331085 | Dec 2002 | US |
Child | 10838634 | US |