The present disclosure relates to the field of wireless communication and signal processing, and more specifically to a phase noise suppression method for a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system with a plurality of co-reference channels.
MEMO technology realizes parallel transmission for a plurality of data links through spatial multiplexing by configuring a plurality of antennas at transmitter and receiver of a communication system, thereby multiplying the capacity of the system. As one of core technologies of the fifth/sixth generation mobile communication system (5G/6G), the MIMO technology has received a lot of attention and practical applications in many fields such as wireless access networks and wireless bearer networks. However, as communication frequencies gradually move towards millimeter wave, terahertz and other high-frequency bands, phase noise caused by non-ideal characteristics of a local oscillator in up-conversion and down-conversion processes is very significant, which greatly reduces the performance of MIMO system. Therefore, it is necessary to design a method to suppress the phase noise, to give play to a theoretical advantage of the MEM technology on improving system capacity.
At present, for phase noise suppression of MIMO system, a case in which independent local oscillators are used for each channel and a case in which a local oscillator is shared among channels are mainly considered. For the case in which independent local oscillators are used for each channel, phase noise of different channels at transmitter is not correlated with each other, and phase noise of different channels at receiver is not correlated with each other. In existing methods, impact of the phase noise is regarded as a real-time phase change of channel response coefficient. A pilot is inserted periodically, a channel response is estimated based on the pilot, and phase noise at the pilot is obtained based on the phase change of the channel response coefficient. Then, phase noise of effective data is obtained through interpolation fitting. Finally, phase noise of a plurality of channels is suppressed in the signal demodulation process. However, this method extends the degree of freedom of the phase noise. Considering that a number of antennas at transmitter and a number of antennas at receiver are Nt and Nr respectively, the degree of freedom of the phase noise is Nt+Nr, but becomes NtNr according to the above method, which makes it difficult to ensure good phase noise estimation and suppression performance. In addition, this method needs to perform channel estimation periodically, resulting in a large pilot overhead and significant impact on the throughput of effective data. For the case in which a local oscillator is shared among channels, the phase noise of different channels at transmitter is identical, the phase noise of different channels at receiver is identical, and phase noise suppression can be performed by using a method like those adopted in a single input single output (SISO) system. For the structure skating the local oscillator, power allocation needs to be performed on a local oscillator signal. However, for high-frequency band communication, power allocation is characterized by a complicated implementation structure, a large loss, and a high cost.
Considering the performance and the cost, a relatively cost-effective method for generating the local oscillator signal in the MIMO system is to generate, by the frequency multipliers, the corresponding local oscillator signal for each channel, where the input of these frequency multipliers is a common low-frequency reference signal. In this case, it is only necessary to perform power allocation on the low-frequency reference signal, where the related technology is relatively mature, and the performance and the cost can be better guaranteed than power allocation on high-frequency oscillator. In the co-reference architecture, phase noise of each channel in the MIMO system can be divided into two parts: common phase noise from the reference signal and independent phase noise additionally generated in the frequency multiplication process of each channel. In existing technical solutions, there is no phase noise suppression method for MIMO system in the above co-reference condition. Although the traditional methods for the case in which independent local oscillators are used for each channel and the case in which a local oscillator is shared among channels can achieve a certain suppression capability, the performance is poor. In view of the above problems, the present disclosure designs a phase noise suppression method for the MIMO system with a plurality of co-reference channels to improve the communication performance and further give full play to a theoretical advantage of improving the transmission capacity through spatial multiplexing.
The present disclosure is intended to provide a phase noise suppression method for an MEMO system with a plurality of co-reference channels, to improve phase noise suppression performance of the MIMO system with a plurality of co-reference channels and provide support for improving the system transmission capacity.
To achieve the above objective, the present disclosure adopts the following technical solutions:
S11: dividing phase noise of each co-reference channel in the MIMO system into common phase noise and independent phase noise, constructing a certain number of joint phase states for the independent phase noise, and calculating a log likelihood value and a multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix that correspond to each joint phase state;
S12: inserting a pilot sequence into a sent signal based on a preset cycle, estimating the common phase noise based on the pilot at receiver, Obtaining the common phase noise at the effective data other than the pilot through interpolation fitting, and performing compensation; and
S13: for each joint phase state of the independent phase noise, based on the multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix, performing signal demodulation on a result obtained after compensating for the common phase noise in S12, and calculating a posterior log likelihood value; and taking the joint phase state with the maximum posterior log likelihood value as an estimation result of the independent phase noise of the plurality of channels, and taking the corresponding demodulation result as the final output.
Compared with the prior art, the present disclosure has the following advantages:
The present disclosure divides the phase noise of each channel in the MIMO system into the common phase noise and the independent phase noise for processing. After loop filtering with a low-pass characteristic in a phase-locked loop, the common phase noise is mainly distributed in a low-frequency region, in other words, the common phase noise between adjacent symbols in the time domain is strongly correlated. After the common phase noise at the pilot is estimated by periodically inserting the pilot, the common phase noise of the effective data can be obtained through interpolation fitting, and then corresponding compensation is performed. Different from the common phase noise, the independent phase noise of each channel is mainly distributed in a high-frequency region, and fast changes. Independent phase noise between adjacent symbols are poorly correlated, which are like white Gaussian noise, and cannot be accurately estimated through conventional interpolation fitting or by using a prediction algorithm.
The present disclosure quantizes each element of the independent phase noise, that is, it is considered that each element is only distributed on a few phase states. A number of quantized states of each element may be the same or different, depending on a respective variance of each element, and the joint state of the independent phase noise of the plurality of channels, the log likelihood value, and the multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix are independent of the symbol sequence number k and can be calculated offline. Under a tradeoff between performance and complexity, a number of quantized states of each element of the independent phase noise can be selected to establish the certain number of joint states, and a signal demodulation result corresponding to each joint state is compared to select the optimal result to output.
Compared with an existing method for a case in which independent local oscillators are used or a case in which a local oscillator is shared, the present disclosure is more suitable for the co-reference architecture in an actual situation and can ensure a better phase noise suppression performance. Experimental results also verify that the solutions in the present disclosure can fully mine internal characteristics of the co-reference architecture, significantly improve the bit error rate (BER) performance, and typically reduce the error floor by more than 10 times, thereby providing support for improving the transmission capacity through spatial multiplexing.
The present disclosure is further described below with reference to the accompanying drawings and embodiments.
The present disclosure provides a phase noise suppression method for an MIMO system with a plurality of co-reference channels. As shown in
A specific implementation process includes the following steps:
Step 1: Phase noise of each channel in the MIMO system with a plurality of co-reference channels is divided into common phase noise and independent phase noise, a certain number of joint phase states is constructed for the independent phase noise, and a log likelihood value and a multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix that correspond to each joint phase state are calculated, as shown in
r(k)=Θr(k)HΘt(k)Px(k)+n(k) (1)
Herein, x(k)=[x1(k) x2(k) L xN
represents a diagonal matrix formed by ejθ
represents a diagonal matrix formed by ejθ
represent a received signal and additive white Gaussian noise of each channel at time point k respectively.
In the case of co-reference, phase noise of each channel at transmitter and receiver includes common phase noise and independent phase noise, where the common phase noise is from a reference signal, and the independent phase noise is additionally generated in the frequency multiplication process. In other words, the phase noise of each channel at transmitter and the phase noise of each channel at receiver can be expressed as θt,j(k)=θt(k)+Δθt,k(k) (1≤j≤Nt) and θr,i(k)=θr(k)+Δθr,i(k) (1≤i≤Nr) respectively, where θt,j(k) and θr,i(k) represent phase noise of the jth channel at transmitter and phase noise of the ith channel at receiver at time point k respectively, θt(k) and θr(k) represent the common phase noise of each channel at transmitter and the common phase noise of each channel at receiver at time point k respectively, and Δθt,j(k) and Δθr,i(k) represent the independent phase noise of the jth channel at transmitter and the independent phase noise of the ith channel at receiver at time point k respectively. Therefore, formula (1) can be further expressed as formula (2):
r(k)=ejθ(k)[ΔΘr(k)HΔΘt(k)Px(k)]+n(k) (2)
In the above formula, θ(k)=θt(k)+θr(k) represents the sum of the common phase noise at transmitter and the common phase noise at receiver at time point k. After loop filtering with a low-pass characteristic in a phase-locked loop, the common phase noise is mainly distributed in a low-frequency region, in other words, the common phase noise between adjacent symbols in the time domain is strongly correlated, After the common phase noise at pilot is estimated by periodically inserting the pilot, the common phase noise of effective data can be obtained through interpolation fitting, and then corresponding compensation can be performed.
represents a diagonal matrix formed by ejΔθ
represents a diagonal matrix formed by ejΔθ
The following formula is obtained:
The present disclosure quantizes each element of the independent phase noise, in other words, it is considered that each element is distributed only in a few phase states. It is assumed that the distribution function of the mth element Δθm(k) (1≤m≤Nt+Nt) in Δθ(k) is fm(x), and Δθm(k) is quantized into Zm phase states, which are denoted as
where φm,l<φm,2<L<φm,Z
In the above formula, φm,0=−∞, φm,Z
In the above formula,
and exp(x)=ex. Formula (4) provides a method for solving based on φm,Z+1 based on φm,Z−1 and φm,Z. Therefore, when a given variance σm2 is provided, the value of each discrete phase state φm,z (1≤z≤Zm) accurately calculated offline by searching φm,1. Table 1 gives the values of φm,z/σm that correspond to different numbers of phase states.
After all Nt+Nr elements of the independent phase noise are quantized, a state is selected from each element to construct a joint state. The total number of joint states is
Herein, the number Zm of quantized states of each element may be the same or different, depending on the valiance of each element.
For convenience of description, the element of the zth selection from the phase state vector φm, corresponding to the element Δθm(k) is denoted as ψz,m (where ψz,m is an element in φm (1≤m≤Nt+Nr)) to construct the zth joint state, which is denoted as
A boa likelihood value corresponding to the joint state ψz is expressed as follows:
in the above formula, υ represents a common coefficient that can be ignored, and f (.) represents a likelihood function.
When the common phase noise is corrected, according to formula (2), a multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix corresponding to the joint state ψz of the independent phase noise can be obtained based on the minimum mean square error (MMSE) algorithm, namely
In the above formula,
represents an equivalent response matrix corresponding to ψ2, and σn2 represents power of the additive white Gaussian noise.
In the present disclosure, the joint state ψz of the independent phase noise of the plurality of channels, the log likelihood value λz, and the multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix
are independent of the symbol sequence number k and can be calculated offline. A key to determine the complexity is the selected number of quantized states Zm on each element of independent phase noise. A larger value of Zm corresponds to a smaller quantization error, namely, a smaller suppression error of the independent phase noise, but results in a larger number of joint states Z, namely, higher complexity. Therefore, it is necessary to select the number of quantized states Zm on each element of the independent phase noise under a tradeoff between performance and complexity.
Step 2: A pilot sequence is inserted into the sent signal based on a preset cycle, the common phase noise at the pilot is estimated at receiver, the common phase noise of the effective data is obtained through interpolation fitting, and suppression is performed, as shown in
During suppression of the phase noise of the plurality of channels, the common phase noise needs to be suppressed first. In the present disclosure, the common phase noise at the pilot is estimated based on the pilot, then the common phase noise of the effective data is obtained through interpolation, and then compensation is performed, as shown in
θ(αP+P)=θ(αP)+Δθ(αP)
Assuming that an estimated value of the common phase noise at the position aP is {circumflex over (θ)}(aP), by denoting {tilde over (H)}(k)=ΔΘr(k)HΔΘt(k)P, the received symbol of the pilot at the position aP+P is r(aP+P)=ej|{circumflex over (θ)}(aP)+Δθ(aP)]{tilde over (H)}(aP+P)x(aP+P)+n(aP+P), where x(aP+P) is known symbol and {tilde over (H)}(aP+P) is unknown. However, corresponding Δθ(aP) can be estimated and solved for each joint state constructed by the independent phase noise. A result shown in the following formula (8) can be obtained based on the least square (LS) algorithm, where the operator z represents that the phase is taken from a complex data.
In the above formula, Δ{tilde over (θ)}z(aP) represents an initial estimated value of the change value of the zth piece of common phase noise at the pilot position aP+P relative to the position aP. After initial estimated values of change values of z pieces of common phase noise are obtained in total, the optimal estimation result needs to be selected through comparison. The present disclosure obtains log likelihood values corresponding to the z initial estimated values with respect to Δθ(aP) based on the change value of the common phase noise, the log likelihood value of each joint state of the independent phase noise, and the error of the received signal, as shown in the following formula:
In the above formula, |·|2 represents the square sum of each element module. After that, the maximum log likelihood value is selected and denoted as z′αP=arg max
{circumflex over (θ)}(aP+P)={circumflex over (θ)}(aP)+Δ{tilde over (θ)}zaP·(aP) (10)
Herein, an estimate (corresponding to a=−1) of the common phase noise of the initial pilot with k=0 can be considered as {circumflex over (θ)}(0)=Δ{tilde over (θ)}zaP′(0).
After the estimated value of the common phase noise at the pilot position is obtained, the corresponding value at the effective data can be obtained through interpolation. For example, a linear interpolation process can be expressed as follows:
In the above formula, αP+p represents the pth interpolation point between αP and αP+P.
Through interpolation, the common phase noise at time point k can be obtained, and then the common phase noise can be suppressed through phase reversal, as shown in formula (12):
r′(k)=e−j{circumflex over (θ)}(k)r(k) (12)
In the above formula, r′(k) represents a result obtained after the common phase noise is suppressed, and {circumflex over (θ)}(k) represents an estimated value of the common phase noise at time point k.
Step 3: For each joint phase state of the independent phase noise, signal demodulation is performed, and a posterior log likelihood value is calculated; and the joint phase state with the maximum posterior log likelihood value is taken as an estimation result of the independent phase noise of the plurality of channels, and the corresponding demodulation result is taken as the final output.
After the common phase noise is compensated, according to the following formula, a decorrelation result can be obtained based on the multi-channel decorrelation coefficient matrix Wz corresponding to each joint state of the independent phase noise:
yz(k)=Wzr′(k),(1≤z≤Z,k≠αP) (13)
In the above formula, yz(k) represents a decorrelation result corresponding to the zth joint state Ψz. Then, decision demodulation is performed on yz(k) to obtain {tilde over (X)}z(k).
For the demodulation result {tilde over (X)}z(k) corresponding to each joint state ((1≤z≤Z, k≠aP)), a posterior log likelihood value is calculated according to the following formula:
After that, the maximum posterior log likelihood value is selected and denoted as
Therefore, the estimated value of the independent phase noise at time point k is Ψz
The present disclosure divides the phase noise of each channel in the MIMO system into the common phase noise and the independent phase noise for processing. Compared with the existing methods for the case in which independent local oscillators are used or the case in which a local oscillator is shared, the present disclosure is more suitable for the actual co-reference architecture, and can ensure better phase noise suppression performance, thereby providing support for improving the transmission capacity through spatial multiplexing.
To further explain a beneficial effect of the present disclosure compared with the prior art, a performance simulation example is provided herein. The number of transmitting antennas and the number of receiving antennas are the same, namely, Nt=Nr=2 the communication frequency is set to 15 GHz, the transmission distance is 1.6 Km, and the spacings between two antennas at receiver and transmitter are both 3 m (equal to 0.75 times of the optimal antenna spacing), the normalized channel response matrix is shown in the following formula (15), a preceding matrix is obtained through singular value decomposition, and the result is shown in the following formula (16). After singular value decomposition, the demodulation performance of each channel in the MIMO system is different. Herein, the modulation modes of two channels are configured as 64 QAM and 16 QAM respectively. A Wiener model is set for the common phase noise at transmitter and receiver, where the power spectral density is −90 dBc/Hz at 100 kHz from the central frequency, the white Gaussian noise mode is set for the independent phase noise, and the standard deviation is 2 degree. The number of quantized states of each element of the independent phase noise is Zm=4 (m=1,2,3,4), the value of each state can be obtained based on Table 1, and the corresponding number of joint states is 256. In addition, the pilot spacing is set to 32.
The examples listed above are merely specific embodiments of the present disclosure. Apparently, the present disclosure is not limited to the above embodiments, and many variations are possible. All deformations that can be directly derived or associated by those skilled in the art from the present disclosure should be deemed as falling within the protection scope of the present disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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202110571337.8 | May 2021 | CN | national |
This application is the continuation application of International Application No. PCT/CN2022/079270, filed on Mar. 4, 2022, which is based upon and claims priority to Chinese Patent Application No. 202110571337.8, filed on May 25, 2021, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230102046 A1 | Mar 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CN2022/079270 | Mar 2022 | US |
Child | 18075466 | US |