The present invention relates generally to wireless communication networks, and in particular to a receiver generating SINR back-off values for each transmission mode in the event of data decoding errors.
Wireless communication systems are required to transmit ever-increasing amounts of data, in support of expanded subscriber services, such as messaging, e-mail, music and video streaming, and the like. Transmitting a higher volume of data over a given channel requires transmission at a higher data rate.
One known technique to improve data transmission rates in wireless communications is the use of multiple input, multiple output (MIMO) technology, wherein signals are transmitted from multiple transmit antennas and may be received by multiple receiver antennas. Using advanced coding and modulation schemes, two or more streams of data may be transmitted simultaneously to a receiver, increasing the data rate.
Maintaining high data rates in MIMO systems requires fast scheduling and link adaptation. That is, the transmitter must constantly alter its selection of packets to transmit, and its transmission parameters based on the current characteristics of the channel, which can change rapidly. In a Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) system, the instantaneous downlink channel conditions are not available at the base station, and must be determined by a receiver and communicated to the base station. In Wideband CDMA (WCDMA) and Long Term Extension (LTE), the instantaneous downlink channel conditions are communicated to the base station through a Channel Quality Indicator (CQI).
Estimating the CQI is a delicate task, comprising a number of computational steps, each considering a large number of factors. The transport format selection process at the transmitter is very sensitive to CQI estimation errors. Accordingly, a targeted Block Error Rate (BLER) might be difficult to achieve with poor CQI estimation.
CQI estimation may involve a suggested selection, based on instantaneous channel conditions, of the modulation and coding rate and transport block size that the receiver can support with a given BLER. For MIMO systems, the suggested selection may also include the number of transmitted streams and the optimal preceding matrix.
The capacity that can be supported by a known channel, with additive white Gaussian noise with known variance, is well known. In practice, however, a number of phenomena add to the CQI estimation errors. One error source is the delay between the measurement of CQI and the time the actual transmission takes place. During this period, the channel and interference may change significantly.
Another source of error is channel and noise/interference estimation errors. Channel estimation quality depends on the SNR, delay and Doppler spread, and the power allocated to reference symbols. Channel estimation errors affect not only the SNR calculation for CQI, but also the demodulation performance, and in a way that could be difficult to model. Interference estimation should thus ideally be based on measurements on data channels, and not reference symbols. This is especially the case for orthogonal frequency division multiplex (OFDM) systems like LTE, since the interference situation may be different on reference symbols than on data symbols. However, this may not be feasible since it may be hard to distinguish the signal coming from a receiver's own cell from signals transmitted by the neighbor cells.
One potential solution to improve CQI estimation would be to measure the performance of the UE in various conditions, including SNR, delay and Doppler spread, MIMO transmission mode, different reference symbol powers, bandwidth, and the like. The result could be stored in tables, and multidimensional interpolation employed to determine the CQI for the prevailing conditions. However, due to the large number of parameters affecting CQI, such tables may become prohibitively large, and still may not capture all effects.
According to one or more embodiments of the present invention, an estimated signal to interference and noise ratio (SINR) calculated for each potential transmission mode, is reduced in response to errors detected in decoding data in each of a plurality of data streams. A Channel Quality Indicator CQI is then generated based on the reduced SINRs. Reducing the SINR estimates in the presence of known data errors allows a UE to more accurately track a target BLER.
One embodiment relates to a method of reporting channel quality in a wireless communication system operative to transmit signals in a plurality of modes, each mode transmitting data in one or more streams. Data and reference signals are received in at least one stream, and the data for each stream are decoded. A data error indicator is generated for each stream based on the decoded data. Channel and noise estimates are generated, and a SINR is generated for each potential transmission mode based on the channel and noise estimates. An SINR back-off value is generated for each transmission mode in response to the data error indicators. Each SINR is reduced by the corresponding SINR back-off value. A CQI is calculated based on the reduced SINRs, and the CQI is transmitted.
Pilot signals are provided by the receiver front-end circuits 34 to a channel estimation function 38. The channel estimator 38 generates channel noise and interference estimates, and provides these to the demodulator and decoder function 36, so that it can detect the received data symbols. The channel estimator 38 additionally provides a SINR to the CQI estimator function 40, which estimates a CQI for transmission to the base station for link adaptation. The CQI is provided to an encoder and modulator function 44. Encoded and modulated CQI data are processed by a transmitter front-end 46 and other circuits, and the modulated CQI estimate is transmitted to the base station on one or more antennas 14, 16.
According to one or more embodiments disclosed herein, in order to control the BLER, a back-off strategy is employed to adjust the SINR before it is used to calculate the CQI. As a consequence, the BLER will be closer to the targeted BLER. The input to the calculation of the SINR back-off is whether the latest data packet for each stream was received correctly. This is indicated by a data error indicator, such as the ACK/NAK indicator resulting from the CRC check. As depicted in
Each time a SINR value is calculated in order to update the CQI, it is adjusted by an SINR back-off value. The SINR back-off depends on the transmission mode, which means that the back-off is calculated separately, and may be different, for different transmission modes. The SINR back-off is updated every time a data verification operation, such as a CRC check, is performed. The only input needed is the latest data error indicator. One possible implementation of the SINR back-off calculation is described below.
First, determine the instantaneous BLER in the current TTI (Transmission Time Interval), averaged over all data streams transmitted. Based on the instantaneous BLER, adjust the SINR_back-off for the current transmission mode. The adjustment, positive or negative, is made to achieve a long term BLER rate equal to a predetermined BLER target. The adjustment is positive if the instantaneous BLER rate is larger than the BLER target, and negative otherwise. Also, the adjustment is done in small steps in order to avoid too large fluctuations in the SINR_back-off. There is a delay of several TTIs from the transmission of an uplink CQI report until data can be sent in the downlink. During that delay the downlink transmitter does not know anything about performance of recent transmissions, so there is no point in doing too fast adjustments during this delay. To summarize, when determining the amount of adjustment the UE should take the CQI delay into account. Finally, make sure that the SINR back-off does not exceed the maximum allowed value or is lower than the minimum allowed value
An additional restriction is that if the maximum modulation and coding scheme is chosen for the transmission on any stream, the SINR back-off saturates and should not be reduced for the current transmission mode.
While the SINR back off is described above as being dependent on the transmission mode, this is not necessarily the case. For example, for a receiver employing Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC), the SINR back-off may be applied in the general case when different data streams originate from different users. In the case of a MIMO receiver, the SINR back-off could be different for the different code words, since it is likely that the first code word is not perfectly cancelled, and hence the theoretical performance can not be achieved in reality.
By reducing the SINR estimates for each transmission mode when data are erroneously decoded, more accurate CQI estimates are generated, allowing the receiver BLER to more closely track a targeted BLER.
While the present invention has been described herein as being implemented in a UE, those of skill in the art will readily recognize that the downlink SINR back-off value may be calculated in the base station, rather than the UE, based on the CQI and ACK/NACK reports fed back from UEs, and the known transmission scheme corresponding to the ACK/NACK report. The base station may use an SINR back-off value it calculates to modify the CQI reported by UEs. The SINR back-off value calculated in the base station may not be as accurate as one calculated in the UE, since the base station has much less information available, in the sense that the reported CQI might not contain the full SINR information.
Of course, the base station may also implement the inventive SINR back-off operation to adjust SINR estimates decoding uplink transmissions, to better track a BLER target for uplink transmission.
Those of skill in the art will readily recognize that the functional blocks depicted in
The present invention may, of course, be carried out in other ways than those specifically set forth herein without departing from essential characteristics of the invention. The present embodiments are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, and all changes coming within the meaning and equivalency range of the appended claims are intended to be embraced therein.
The present invention claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/037,769, entitled “Rank Dependent CQI Back-off,” filed Mar. 19, 2008, and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61037769 | Mar 2008 | US |