The present invention relates generally an orthogonal repetition and hybrid Automatic Repeat-reQuest (ARQ) scheme where repeated signals, from multiple users transmitting simultaneously using the same time-frequency resource, are spread using orthogonal functions such as a Fourier function or a Hadamard function in a multiple input and multiple output (MIMO) system.
During data transmission, especially wireless data transmission, error inevitably occurs to decrease the quality of the transmitted data. Therefore, the data is retransmitted in order to correct the error.
Automatic Repeat-reQuest (ARQ) is an error control method for data transmission which makes use of acknowledgments and timeouts to achieve reliable data transmission. An acknowledgment is a message sent by the receiver to the transmitter to indicate that it has correctly received a data frame.
Usually, when the transmitter does not receive the acknowledgment before the timeout occurs (i.e. within a reasonable amount of time after sending the data frame), it retransmits the frame until the data within the frame is either correctly received or the error persists beyond a predetermined number of re-transmissions.
Hybrid ARQ (HARQ), is a variation of the ARQ error control method, which gives better performance than the ordinary ARQ scheme, particularly over wireless channels, at the cost of increased implementation complexity. One version HARQ is described in the IEEE 802.16e standard.
The simplest version of HARQ is Type I HARQ which simply combines forward error correction (FEC) and ARQ by encoding the data block plus error-detection information (such as cyclic redundancy check (CRC)) with an error-correction code (such as a Reed-Solomon code or a Turbo code) prior to transmission. When the coded data block is received, the receiver first decodes the error-correction code. If the channel quality is good enough, all transmission errors should be correctable, and the receiver can obtain the correct data block. If the channel quality is bad and not all transmission errors can be corrected, the receiver will detect this situation using the error-detection code, then the received coded data block is discarded and a re-transmission is requested by the receiver, similar to ARQ.
In practice, the incorrectly received coded data blocks are often stored at the receiver rather than discarded, and when the retransmitted coded data block is received, the information from both coded data blocks are combined (as by Chase combining) before being fed to the decoder of the error-correction code, which can increase the probability of successful decoding. To further improve performance, Type II/III HARQ, or incremental redundancy HARQ, has also been proposed. In this scheme, different re-transmissions are coded differently rather than simply repeating the same coded bits as in Chase combining, which gives a somewhat better performance since coding is effectively done across re-transmissions. The difference between type III HARQ and type II HARQ is that the re-transmission packets in Type III HARQ may be decoded by themselves.
An example of incremental redundancy HARQ is High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) (sometimes known as High-Speed Downlink Protocol Access), a 3G mobile telephony protocol, wherein the data block is first coded with a punctured ⅓ Turbo code, then during each re-transmission the coded block is (usually) punctured further (i.e., only a fraction of the coded bits are chosen) and sent. The punctuation pattern used during each re-transmission can be different; therefore different coded bits can be sent at each time.
HARQ can be used in a stop-and-wait mode or in a selective repeat mode. Stop-and-wait is simpler, but the need to wait for the receiver's acknowledgment reduces efficiency, thus multiple stop-and-wait HARQ processes are often done in parallel in practice: when one HARQ process is waiting for an acknowledgment, another process can use the channel to send some more data.
When HARQ is applied in MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) scenarios, there is a possibility that the data blocks transmitted through different inputs might interfere with each other during the transmission. Therefore, it is necessary to encode the data blocks before transmission.
Recently a single user Alamouti-HARQ scheme has been proposed. This scheme may be difficult, however, to apply to multi-user MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) scenarios.
Generally, these efforts are unsuitable for MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) scenarios for multiple, simultaneous transmissions because these efforts are still plagued with difficulties in decoding even after a re-transmission, and with non-coherent noise.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved hybrid automatic repeat-request scheme, and improved transmitters and receivers incorporating this automatic repeat-request scheme.
It is another object to provide an orthogonal repetition and hybrid automatic repeat-request scheme for multiple user, multiple input and multiple output communication system and transmitters and receivers implementing the scheme.
According to the present invention, there is provided a multiple user, multiple input and multiple output communication network, including a base station disposed to communicate via the plurality of antennas with a plurality of subscriber stations by scheduling a first subscriber station and a second subscriber station to transmit in an uplink to the base station in common time and frequency slots. The base station schedules the first subscriber station to transmit a first symbol representing a first packet of user data in a first of the time and frequency slots, while the second subscriber station is scheduled to transmit a second symbol representing a second packet of user data in the first of the time and frequency slots. In addition, the base station schedules the first subscriber station to transmit a third symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the first symbol in a second of the time and frequency slots, while the second subscriber station transmits a fourth symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the second symbol in the second of the time and frequency slots. A relation exists between the orthogonal spread of the third symbol and the orthogonal spread of the fourth symbol.
In addition, the base station may instruct the first and second subscriber stations to generate the third symbol and the fourth symbol by modulating the first and second symbols according to a Fourier matrix or a Hadamard matrix.
Each element of the Fourier matrix may be established by:
where N is the dimension of the Fourier matrix and G is the total number of matrices generated, m is the row number of the element, n is the column number of the element, and g is selected to be any number between 0 and G−1. N may be selected to equal the number of the subscriber stations simultaneously instructed by the base station to make transmissions within the same time and frequency slot.
According to the present invention, there is provided a method for a base station communicated with a plurality of subscriber stations in common time and frequency slots, to instruct the transmission of information by the subscriber stations, the method includes the steps of: scheduling the first subscriber station to transmit a first symbol representing a first packet of user data in a first of said time and frequency slots, while scheduling the second subscriber station to transmit a second symbol representing a second packet of user data in said first of said time and frequency slots, and scheduling the first subscriber station to transmit a third symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the first symbol in a second of said time and frequency slots, while scheduling the second subscriber station to transmit a fourth symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the second symbol in the second of said time and frequency slots, with a relation existing between the orthogonal spread of the third symbol and the orthogonal spread of the fourth symbol.
According to the present invention, there is provided a wireless network, including a base station disposed to communicate with a subscriber station by scheduling simultaneous transmission in an uplink to the base station in common time and frequency slots. The base station schedules the subscriber station to transmit a first symbol representing a first packet of data during a first of said time and frequency slots, while the base station schedules the subscriber station to transmit a second symbol representing a second packet of data during said first of said time and frequency slots. In addition, the base station schedules the subscriber station to transmit a third symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the first symbol in a second of said time and frequency slots, while the base station schedules the subscriber station to transmit a fourth symbol that is an orthogonally spread version of the second symbol during the second of said time and frequency slots. A relation exists between the orthogonal spread of the third symbol and the orthogonal spread of the fourth symbol.
A more complete appreciation of this invention, and many of the attendant advantages thereof, will be readily apparent as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like reference symbols indicate the same or similar components, wherein:
A simplified example of data transmission/reception using Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is shown in
A discrete Fourier transform (DFT) spread (DFT-spread) OFDM system is attractive for uplink, i.e., for transmitting signals from a mobile station to a base station of a wireless system, due to its low peak-to-average power (PAPR) characteristic. This is due to limited transmission power available in a mobile station. A low PAPR enables a lower power amplifier back off and allows mobile equipment to transmit at a higher power and higher data rate, thereby improving the coverage and spectral efficiency of a wireless system.
In a DFT-spread OFDM system, the data to be transmitted is first modulated by a QAM Modulator 131. The QAM modulated symbols are FFT-pre-coded by a FFT unit 133 before mapping into IFFT unit 135 as shown in
Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) schemes use multiple transmit antennas and multiple receive antennas to improve the capacity and reliability of a wireless communication channel. A MIMO system promises linear increase in capacity with K where K is the minimum of number of transmit (M) and receive antennas (N), i.e. K=min(M,N). A simplified example of a 4×4 MIMO system is shown in
In this example, four different data streams are transmitted separately from the four transmit antennas. The transmitted signals are received at the four receive antennas. Some form of spatial signal processing is performed on the received signals in order to recover the four data streams. An example of spatial signal processing is vertical Bell Laboratories Layered Space-Time (V-BLAST) which uses the successive interference cancellation principle to recover the transmitted data streams. Other variants of MIMO schemes include schemes that perform some kind of space-time coding across the transmit antennas (e.g., diagonal Bell Laboratories Layered Space-Time (D-BLAST)) and also beamforming schemes such as Spatial Division multiple Access (SDMA).
An example of single-code word MIMO scheme is given in
On the other hand, in case of multiple-code word MIMO transmission, shown in
Hybrid automatic repeat request (ARQ) is a re-transmission scheme whereby the transmitter sends redundant coded information in small increments. The subpackets are generated at the transmitter by first performing channel coding on the information packet and then breaking the resulting coded bit stream into smaller units called subpackets as shown in
An example of Hybrid ARQ protocol is shown in
An example of Alamouti-Hybrid ARQ scheme proposed in the prior art is shown in
The problem with the Alamouti-HARQ scheme is that the Alamouti-HARQ scheme can only be applied to a single user uplink, i.e., transmitting signal from a single mobile station to a base station, or a single user downlink, i.e., transmitting signals from a base station to a single mobile station. The Alamouti-HARQ scheme, however, cannot be applied to uplink or downlink in multi-user MIMO scenario. For example, at time 2, user 1 can not transmit a complex conjugate of the signal generated by user 2 since user 1 does not have information regarding the signal transmitted by user 2. Also, the scheme cannot be applied to uplink transmissions where each user is transmitting a single stream to a base station. In the outline below, the uplink multi-user multiple access encounters a problem when the users perform transmissions using the same resources. This situation can occur in practice when uplink multi-user MIMO is supported or when a base station schedules multiple users using the same time-frequency resource and employ successive interference cancellation techniques to cancel inter-user interference.
An example of uplink multi-user MIMO communications is shown in
Assuming two users UE-1 and UE-2 transmit symbols s1 and s2 respectively in time slot 1 as shown in
r
1
=h
1
s
1
+h
2
s
2
+n
1
r
2
=h
3
s
1
+h
4
s
2
+n
2 (1)
where h1 and h3 are channel gains between UE-1 and the base station in time slots 1 and 5, respectively, h2 and h4 are channel gains between UE-2 and the base station in time slots 1 and 5, respectively, and n1 and n2 represent additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) in time slots 1 and 5, respectively. The base station performs equalization on received signals r1 and r2 and combines the two received signals to recover the signals ŝ1 and ŝ2 for each unit of the user equipment as below:
It can be seen that when h1 is independent of h3 and h2 independent of h4, at either unit of the user equipment, the desired signals combine coherently while the interference from the other signal and noise combine non-coherently, i.e., out of phase. For example, in the estimated signal ŝ1 for UE-1, the interference signal received in time slot 1, i.e., h1*h2s2, and the interference signal received in time slot 5, i.e., h3*h4s2, tend to cancel each other due to their non-coherency, and the noise signal received in time slot #1, i.e., h1*h2s2, and the noise signal received in time slot #5, i.e., h3*h2, tend to cancel each other due to their non-coherency. Therefore, the coherent combination of the desired signals |h1|2s1 and |h3|2s1 gives a 3 dB combining gain across two transmissions in slot #1 and slot #5.
Now, assuming that the channels for the two users do not change across repeated transmissions, that is h1=h3 and h2=h4 as shown in
It can be seen that in this case, both the desired signals and interference signals transmitted in slot 1 combine coherently with the desired signals and interference signals transmitted in slot 5. The noise signal transmitted in slot 1, however, still combines non-coherently with the noise signal transmitted in slot 5. Therefore, if the interference from the other signal is dominant source of degradation, there may not be a 3 dB gain by combining two transmissions. In this case, the combined signal of slot 1 and slot 5 is almost a scaling of the transmitted signal in slot 1 only. It is probable that the transmitted signal can not be decoded at slot 5 when the transmitted signal can not be decoded at slot 1; consequently, close to a 100% error rate may occur for the transmissions in slot 5.
Hereinafter several embodiments of the present invention are disclosed, including an orthogonal repetition scheme. According to several embodiments of the present invention, a scheme is disclosed where repeated signals from multiple subscriber stations transmitting using the same time and frequency resources are spread using orthogonal functions, for example Fourier functions, Hadamard functions, or other orthogonal functions. It should be understood at the outset that although illustrative implementations of one or more embodiments are illustrated below, the disclosed systems and/or methods may be implemented using any number of techniques, whether currently known or in existence. The disclosure should in no way be limited to the illustrative implementations, drawings, and techniques illustrated below, but may be modified within the scope of the appended claims along with their full scope of equivalents.
Referring to
Now the encoding function performed by the encoder will be explained. A Fourier matrix is a N×N square matrix with entries given by:
P
N
=e
j2πmn/N
m,n=0,1, . . . (N−1) (4)
For example, a 2×2 Fourier matrix can be expressed as:
Similarly, a 4×4 Fourier matrix can be expressed as:
Multiple Fourier matrices can be defined by introducing a shift parameter (g/G) in the Fourier matrix. The entry of the multiple Fourier matrices is given by:
A set of four 2×2 Fourier matrices can be defined by taking G=4, and g=0, 1, 2 and 3 are written as:
Assume that Fourier matrix P21 in equation 9 is used for encoding the signals S1 and S2 to be transmitted from the equipment of two users (UEs) for the uplink in the multi-user MIMO wireless system. Assume that user equipment 1 (UE-1) uses first column of P21 to pre-code its first transmission in slot 1 and successive retransmittion in slot 2, while UE-2 uses second column of P21. Let T11 and T12 denote first and second transmitted symbols from UE-1 in slot 1 and slot 5 respectively, while T21 and T22 denote first and second transmitted symbols from UE-2 in slot 1 and slot 5 respectively, as shown in
Referring to
The decoding scheme will now be explained. Let h1 and h12 denote channel gains between UE-1 and the base station in slot 1 and slot 5, respectively, while h21 and h22 denote channel gains between UE-2 and the base station in slot 1 and slot 5, respectively. The received symbols r1 and r2 in slot 1 and slot 5 can be written as:
r
1
=h
11
S
1
+h
21
S
2
+n
1 (14)
r
2
=h
12
·e
jπ/4
S
1
+h
12·(−ejπ/4S2)+n2 (15)
Equations 14 and 15 can be combined into a matrix format.
Therefore, the effective channel between the two UEs and the base station including the effect of Fourier spreading and the channel gain can be written as:
The received signals are decoded to recover the signals Ŝ11 and Ŝ2 for UE-1 and UE-2:
where HH denote the Hermitian transpose of H, i.e, HH=(H*)T. Therefore,
We assume that the channels for the two users do not change across repeated transmissions, that is h11=h12=h1 and h21=h22=h2. Therefore, the above expression can be simplified as:
In fact, the order of transmission of symbols S1 and ejπ/4. S1 by UE-1 is not limited to that in the first embodiment; similarly, the order of transmission of symbols S2 and −ejπ/4. S2 by UE-2 is not limited to that in the first embodiment. For example, in slot #1, UE-1 may transmit S1 and UE-2 may transmit −ejπ/4·S2; and in slot #5, UE-1 may transmit ejπ/4·S1 and UE-2 may transmit S2. In this case, let T11 and T12 denote first and second transmitted symbols from UE-1 in slot 1 and slot 5 respectively, while T21 and T22 denote first and second transmitted symbols from UE-2 in slot 1 and slot 5 respectively. Therefore, the transmitted symbols T11, T12, T21 and T22 are given as:
Let h11 and h12 denote channel gains between UE-1 and the base station in slot 1 and slot 5, respectively, while h21 and h22 denote channel gains between UE-2 and the base station in slot 1 and slot 5, respectively. The received symbols r1 and r2 in slot 1 and slot 5 can be written as:
When the transmission order is changed, the detection also needs to be changed accordingly. Therefore, the estimated symbols at UE-1 and UE-2 are:
If we assume that the channels for the two users do not change across repeated transmissions, that is h11=h12=h1 and h21=h22=h2, then the above expression can be simplified as:
In a second embodiment of the present invention, the interference cancellation principle of the current invention is applied to cancel interference for multiple data streams transmitted from the same user as shown in
In the third embodiment of the present invention shown in
In the fourth embodiment of the current invention shown in
In the fifth embodiment of the present invention shown in
In the sixth embodiment of the present invention shown in
In the seventh embodiment of the present invention shown in
In
In the eighth embodiment of the current invention shown in
In the ninth embodiment of the current invention shown in
This application makes reference to, claims all benefits inuring under 35 U.S.C. §119 and 120 from, and incorporates herein a provisional application filed in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office on the 22 Dec. 2006, and there duly assigned Ser. No. 60/876,935.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60876935 | Dec 2006 | US |