The present invention relates to an OFDM generation apparatus and method for generating OFDM transmission signals from OFDM symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, for transmission in a multi-carrier data transmission system.
The present invention relates further to a transmission apparatus and method, a corresponding receiving apparatus and method, a data transmission system and a computer readable non-transitory medium storing computer program for implementing the OFDM generation methods on a computer.
The present invention relates particularly to the field of broadcasting, in particular of Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB), especially to devices, systems and methods in accordance with the DVB-C2 standard or the upcoming DVB-NGH standard.
Broadcast systems in accordance with the DVB-C2 standard as described in the DVB-C2 specification (DVB BlueBook A138 “Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Frame structure channel coding and modulation for a second generation digital transmission system for cable systems (DVB-C2)”) apply the concept of Absolute OFDM, in which all OFDM subcarriers are seen relative to the absolute frequency 0 MHz instead of a signal center frequency. Reason for the application of Absolute OFDM and unique pilot pattern across the medium spectrum in DVB-C2 is to avoid repeating OFDM subcarrier allocations in the frequency domain that result in an increased PAPR (Peak to Average Power Ratio). The Absolute OFDM signal is described in the final RF frequency domain. This means, however, that a baseband signal cannot be shifted to any RF carrier frequency (also called “mixing frequency” hereinafter) without the introduction of common phase rotations between OFDM symbols after the step of mixing during the OFDM generation by use of the RF carrier frequency.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an OFDM generation apparatus and method dealing with the problem of common phase rotations of the OFDM subcarriers of successive OFDM symbols, in particular by which such common phase rotations are avoided or compensated.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a corresponding transmission apparatus and method, a corresponding receiving apparatus and method, a data transmission system and a computer readable non-transitory medium storing a corresponding computer program.
According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided an OFDM generation apparatus for generating OFDM transmission signals from OFDM symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, for transmission in a multi-carrier data transmission system, said apparatus comprising
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided an OFDM generation apparatus for generating OFDM transmission signals from OFDM symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, for transmission in a multi-carrier data transmission system, said apparatus comprising
According to still another aspect of the present invention there is provided an OFDM generation apparatus for generating OFDM transmission signals from OFDM symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, for transmission in a multi-carrier data transmission system, said apparatus comprising
According to still another aspect of the present invention there is provided an OFDM decoding apparatus for decoding OFDM transmission signals into OFDM symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, received in a multi-carrier data transmission system, said apparatus comprising
According to still another aspect of the present invention there is provided an OFDM decoding apparatus for decoding OFDM transmission signals into data symbols, each comprising a plurality of OFDM subcarriers, received in a multi-carrier data transmission system, said apparatus comprising
According to further aspects of the present invention there are provided corresponding OFDM generation methods and OFDM decoding methods, a transmission apparatus and method, a receiving apparatus and method, a data transmission system as well as a computer readable non-transitory medium having instructions stored thereon which, when carried out on a computer, cause the computer to perform the steps of said OFDM generation methods or said OFDM decoding methods as defined above.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are defined in the dependent claims. It shall be understood that the claimed devices, methods, system and computer program have similar and/or identical preferred embodiments as defined in the dependent claims defining preferred embodiment of the OFDM generation apparatus.
The present invention is based on the common inventive idea that undesired common phase rotations of the OFDM subcarriers of an OFDM symbol or a data symbol (in case of using a segmented OFDM as, for instance, according to the DVB-C2 standard) are avoided or compensated by taking appropriate measures related to the carrier frequency by which the complex time-domain samples are mixed. This is of particular importance for systems according to the DVB-C2 standard that apply Absolute OFDM, since the generated OFDM signal is described in the passband and does not contain any phase rotations between adjacent OFDM symbol. It should be understood that generating an OFDM signal in the passband is very complex and costly. Therefore it is beneficial to generate the signal in the equivalent baseband and to mix it with a suitable mixing frequency into the passband. However, normally this mixing process results in the described phase rotations between OFDM symbols.
To overcome this problem, according to the present invention the carrier frequency is selected such that such common phase rotations are completely avoided or compensated. According to another solution, based on the same idea, the OFDM symbols are multiplied with a multiplication factor, which artificially introduces common phase rotations between OFDM symbols in the baseband signal, which, however, balance the phase rotations caused by the mixing of the complex time-domain samples of the OFDM symbol from a baseband frequency up to a passband frequency by use of a mixing frequency, so that finally no common phase rotations appear in the passband signal (i.e. the Absolute OFDM signal contains no phase rotations between OFDM symbols). Hence, according to the present invention it can be achieved, that signals can be generated that are in conformity with the related standards, if there is any standard to be observed.
It shall be noted that herein the terms “carrier” and “subcarrier” are used interchangeably and shall carry the same meaning.
These and other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from and explained in more detail below with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter. In the following drawings
The DVB-C2 specification introduces the new concept of Absolute OFDM, in which all OFDM subcarriers are seen relative to the absolute frequency 0 MHz instead of a signal centre frequency. In particular, the L1 part 2 signalling blocks begin at the absolute frequency of 0 MHz and are partitioned in steps of 7.61 MHz. In contrast to other DVB standards it is not possible to shift a C2 baseband signal to any RF mixing frequency rather than being defined in a unique way for the whole cable spectrum. Especially the pilot sequences of the OFDM signal are different for all different frequencies. The reason for that behavior is to avoid unwanted repetitions in the frequency domain which may cause unwanted high peak values of the OFDM signal in time domain. Furthermore the unambiguous pilot sequences allow for easy and reliable synchronization and offset compensation. Although the L1 part 2 block partitioning and the related pilot sequences are defined for the whole cable spectrum, L1 blocks are only transmitted in those frequencies where data slices are present.
The formulas given in section 10.1 of DVB-C2 specification defining the passband signal emitted from the OFDM generator are of the precise theoretical mathematical description, but are impractical for real implementations. Real implementations for OFDM signal generation are normally based on the inverse Fast Fourier Transform and the equivalent lowpass representation of signals. However, the generation of a standard compliant DVB-C2 signal using the equivalent lowpass representation requires additional considerations. Otherwise, unwanted phase jumps may be generated between adjacent OFDM symbols that could disturb the synchronisation procedure within the receiver. Practical implementations based on the inverse Fast Fourier Transform and the equivalent lowpass representation are therefore proposed according to the present invention.
Due to the application of Absolute OFDM the direct signal generation within the passband is complex or even impractical. Therefore, OFDM generation using the equivalent lowpass representation is proposed. The signal is generated at low frequencies and shifted to the final frequency afterwards.
According to the DVB-C2 specification the emitted passband signal is described by the following expression:
and
In order to generate this signal within using the equivalent lowpass representation, a carrier to shift the frequencies is added, which is compensated within the equation of Ψ:
Equation (2) cannot be directly transformed into the equation known from section 9.5 of the DVB-T2 specification (ETSI EN 302 755 V1.1.1 (2009-09) “Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB): Frame structure channel coding and modulation for a second generation digital terrestrial television broadcasting system (DVB-T2)”) defining the signal emitted by the OFDM generator as used in a transmitter according to the DVB-T2 standard. The reason is the second exponential term. While the equations defined in section 9.5 of the DVB-T2 specification are independent from the actual mixing frequency fc, this initially will lead to phase jumps between OFDM symbols of the DVB-C2 signal. However, this effect can be avoided by means of a well-chosen mixing frequency fc. Therefore, the mixing frequency shall be defined as:
where 1/TU is the OFDM subcarrier spacing, and kc is the OFDM subcarrier index at the mixing frequency. Furthermore, k shall be substituted by k=k′+kc. This leads to:
which can be reformulated as:
Equation (4) looks similar to the signal definition of the DVB-T2 signal as described in section 9.5 of the DVB-T2 specification. However, both equations differ in the last exponential term. This term is independent of the time t and causes a constant phase rotation for all OFDM subcarriers of a given OFDM symbol. Generally, it is possible to choose kc freely (and thus fc) and to compensate this phase rotation. However, this term can be avoided by choosing kc properly. For this purpose, equation (4) can be written as:
where (Δ/TU) is the relative Guard Interval duration (e.g. 1/64 or 1/128 for DVB-C2). Additional simplification of (5) leads to:
Hence, this leads to a common phase rotation of
for all OFDM subcarriers between two consecutive OFDM symbols, which depends on the choice of the relative Guard Interval duration (Δ/TU) (e.g. 1/64 or 1/128 for DVB-C2) and the OFDM subcarrier kc at the mixing frequency.
If kc (Δ/TU) is integer, the phase shift can be removed from the equation as it becomes multiples of 2π. Hence, if kc is multiple of 128 for Guard Interval 1/128, or multiple of 64 for Guard Interval 1/64, equation (6) can be written as:
which is similar to the equation for the generation of a DVB-T2 signal. However, it has to be noted that the mixing frequency fc is consequently not the centre frequency of the signal in most cases.
As described above, a common phase rotation may be artificially introduced to the system, depending on the mixing frequency. This common phase rotation is compensated according to an embodiment of the present invention in order to obtain an output signal as defined in the DVB-C2 specification. Alternatively, according to another embodiment this common phase rotation can be avoided by carefully choosing the mixing frequency fc. Therefore, the OFDM subcarrier kc at the mixing frequency fc shall be chosen as:
where (Δ/TU) is the relative Guard Interval duration (i.e. 1/64 or 1/128 in DVB-C2). Practically, equation (9) obtains the carrier kc that is closest to the central OFDM subcarrier (Kmax+Knin)/2, and additionally, generates multiples of 2π in the above equation (7). Here, the operation └x┘ denotes the floor operation (largest integer not greater than x). More generally, the mixing frequency fc is selected as
with the OFDM subcarrier kc at the mixing frequency fc being selected to be close or as close as possible to the central subcarrier among the subcarriers of said OFDM symbol. Here, “close” shall be understood such that not necessarily the mixing frequency fc must be located as close as possible to the central subcarrier, but can also be located farther away. For instance, one of the next possible mixing frequencies (seen from the frequency of the central subcarrier) that fulfills the above mentioned condition that kc (Δ/TU) is integer can be selected as well.
Consequently, the obtained mixing frequency fc is:
where 1/TU is the OFDM subcarrier spacing. Here, the resulting mixing frequency fc is not the centre frequency of the OFDM signal in most cases.
In a more general embodiment the mixing frequency fc is selected as
with the OFDM subcarrier kc at the mixing frequency fc being selected to be as close as possible to the central subcarrier among the subcarriers of said OFDM symbol, wherein TU is the useful OFDM symbol duration. In other words, the mixing frequency fc is selected such that the OFDM subcarrier kc at the mixing frequency fc is selected that is nearest to
In the following it is assumed that the mixing frequency fc is chosen as described above in equations (9) and (10). Hence, the transmitted signal can be described as:
where
Practically, this generation is equivalent to the generation of a DVB-T2 signal as shown above. The only difference is the additional phase correction term φm,l that linearly increases every OFDM symbol and compensates the unwanted phase rotations in the generated output signal. The data c′k that is used for calculating the inverse FFT is the inner bracket of equation (11), i.e. (cm,l,k·ejφ
An embodiment of a possible implementation of a transmitter will now be described. First, in
The transmitter 1 is provided for processing input data, e.g. one or more MPEG-2 Transport Streams and/or one or more Generic Streams, to obtain OFDM transmission signals, which are fed into a cable network 3, to which said receivers 2 are connected. For this purpose the transmitter comprises particularly an OFDM generator 10 for generating said OFDM transmission signals from OFDM symbols obtained as input data or generated from the input data of the transmitter 1 (for which purpose the transmitter 1 may additionally comprise further elements, e.g. as described in the DVB-C2 standard). Further, the transmitter 1 comprises a transmitter unit 11 for feeding the obtained OFDM transmission signals into the cable network 3.
The receivers 2 each comprise a receiver unit 20 for receiving said OFDM transmission signals from the cable network 3 and an OFDM decoder 21 for decoding OFDM transmission signals into OFDM symbols, which are then outputted for further processing or which are directly further processed in the receiver 2 (for which purpose the receiver 2 may additionally comprise further elements, e.g. as described in the DVB-C2 standard).
The zero padding in a zero padding unit 12 is preferably provided to pre-condition the signal for the transformation of the frequency domain signal into the time domain using the Inverse Fast Fourier Transform. Firstly, the signal is stuffed in order to fit the IFFT size N. Secondly, a realignment of the subcarrier positions is done to be able to use the IFFT.
In order to use the Inverse Fast Fourier Transform, e.g. based on the Radix 2 algorithm, it has to hold N=2P, p=1, 2, 3, 4, . . . . Generally, instead of using a Fast Fourier Transform it is also possible to use a Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT). Furthermore, the value N shall be significantly higher than the actual number of used OFDM subcarriers in order to avoid alias effects, i.e.
K
total
=K
max
−K
min+1≦N=Ktotal+x (13),
where x shall preferably be at least 512 for practical implementations according to DVB-C2, but could also be lower, e.g. 64 for WLAN applications.
where X(n)m,l (or Xn in short) is the N element input signal of the subsequent IFFT unit 13.
The output signal Xn of the zero padding unit 12 has been generated within the frequency domain. The task of the IFFT unit 13 is the calculation of the corresponding time signal. This is achieved by means of
for 0≦n′<N, where m is the OFDM symbol, l the C2 frame number, and Ktotal the total number of active OFDM subcarriers.
The time domain signal xk (which is the short hand notation for x(n′)m,l in (15) if n′ is substituted by k) outputted from the IFFT unit 13 is provided to a guard interval insertion unit 14.
The previous calculations have been made in the digital domain. The task of the D/A & low-pass filtering unit 15 is the conversion into an analogue signal. Therefore, the signal x′(n)m,l sampled with the sampling rate N/TU has to be analogized OFDM symbol by OFDM symbol. This causes alias at multiples of the sampling rate as depicted in
Finally, the equivalent lowpass signal outputted from unit 15 is shifted into the wanted passband by a mixer 16. The mixer 16 mixes the signal output of unit 15 with the mixing frequency fc, which is equivalent to a complex multiplication of the signal by ej2πf
The correct mixing frequency may optionally be predetermined and stored in a storage means 18, e.g. a memory unit. In addition or as an alternative, a frequency calculation means 19 may be provided for calculating the mixing frequency.
The same principle explained above can also be applied in systems using a segmented frame structure, as is the case in the DVB-C2 system. Said frame structure (called “C2 frame structure”) is depicted in
Data slices can be treated as separate channels and no interleaving is performed between different ones. Each data slice is identified by a start OFDM carrier KDS min and an end OFDM carrier KDS, max. Hence, KDS, min is the carrier index of first active carrier of the data segment, onto which the data symbol mixed with said mixing frequency is mapped, having the lowest frequency and KDS, max is the carrier index of the last active carrier of the data segment, onto which the data symbol mixed with said mixing frequency is mapped, having the highest frequency.
On the transmitter side the IFFT and the mixing on the OFDM symbols is done as usual by use of a transmitter mixing frequency, which can be selected freely or in accordance with the above described embodiment. In addition, however, receiver mixing frequencies are determined and signaled to the receiver from the transmitter (in addition to the transmitter mixing frequency) for use by the receiver, in particular an OFDM decoding apparatus. These receiver mixing frequencies are determined for each data segment or group of data segments. In other words, if the channel having a certain channel bandwidth is subdivided into multiple data segments covering a bandwidth portion of said channel bandwidth, these data segments are dealt with independently by the OFDM decoder in the receiver, and for each data segment (or group of data segments) an individual receiver mixing frequency is determined.
Thus, in an embodiment 10b as depicted in
Said receiver mixing frequencies fDS,c are thus determined for the individual data segments (or, alternatively, if a data symbols extends over multiple data segments for said group of multiple data segments) since the receiver, in particular the OFDM decoder of the receiver also handles the data segments (or groups of data segments) individually in systems using such a segmented frame structure.
In particular, in an embodiment the receiver mixing frequency fDS,c of a data segment (data slice) DS is selected as
with the OFDM subcarrier kDS,c at the mixing frequency fDS,c fulfilling the condition that
is an integer, wherein TU is the useful OFDM symbol duration and Δ is the duration of the guard interval. Further, in another embodiment, the mixing frequency fDS,c of a data segment (data slice) DS is selected as
with the OFDM subcarrier kDS,c at the mixing frequency fDS,c being selected as
More generally, a receiver mixing frequency fDS,c is selected as
with the OFDM subcarrier kDS,c at the receiver mixing frequency fDS,c being selected to be close or as close as possible to the central subcarrier among the subcarriers of said data symbol.
As shown in
Another embodiment 10c of an OFDM generator is depicted in
Thus, it can be calculated in advance that a common phase rotation of
is generated, which can be compensated by, on purpose, introducing an “opposite” common phase rotation by said multiplication factor, which can then be selected in an embodiment as M=ejφ
A block diagram of an embodiment of an OFDM decoder 21a is depicted in
The mixer 41 is adapted means for mixing the receive OFDM transmission signal (s′(t)) from a passband frequency down to a baseband frequency by use of a mixing frequency fc to obtain complex time-domain samples of an OFDM symbol. The mixing frequency fc, which has also been used by the OFDM generator and which has preferably been signaled from the transmitter to the receiver, is selected such that common phase rotations of the OFDM subcarriers of said OFDM symbol with respect to adjacent OFDM symbols of said OFDM transmission signal s′(t) are avoided or compensated.
In another embodiment of an OFDM decoder 21b, as schematically depicted in
According to another embodiment the tuning positions of the data segments relative to the mixing frequency can be selected appropriately such that no unwanted phase rotations between the OFDM symbols appear in the receiver. Further, this alleviates time interpolation over multiple OFDM symbols that are of special importance in mobile OFDM systems such as an upcoming DVB-NGH (Next Generation Handheld) Standard.
Further, in an embodiment, applying a similar idea the lower and upper border frequencies of a data segment can be chosen appropriately such that, when the receiver tunes on the center frequency between said upper and lower boundary frequencies, no common phase rotations are generated.
The present invention is generally applicable to any data transmission systems that are faced with the above described problem of the generation of unwanted common phase rotations during the step of mixing on the transmitter side. This problem may particularly appear in any system using the concept of Absolute OFDM, as is applied in DVB-C2 broadcast systems. Hence, in all data transmission systems making use of the concept of Absolute OFDM the invention could be applied, preferably in broadcast systems.
The invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, but such illustration and description are to be considered illustrative or exemplary and not restrictive. The invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. Other variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure, and the appended claims.
In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. A single element or other unit may fulfill the functions of several items recited in the claims. 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.
A computer program may be stored/distributed on a suitable medium, such as an optical storage medium or a solid-state medium supplied together with or as part of other hardware, but may also be distributed in other forms, such as via the Internet or other wired or wireless telecommunication systems.
Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10151486.7 | Jan 2010 | EP | regional |
This is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/487,924, filed Sep. 16, 2014, which claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/005,046, filed on Jan. 12, 2011, and claims priority to European Application No. 10151486.7, filed Jan. 22, 2010, and the contents of each are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14487924 | Sep 2014 | US |
Child | 15155837 | US | |
Parent | 13005046 | Jan 2011 | US |
Child | 14487924 | US |