The present invention relates to a receiver and a receiving method for detecting information symbols transmitted according to a CDMA technique, wherein the information symbols have been respectively spread with an identical spreading code and scrambled with different scrambling codes.
CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) transmitting systems are known from the state of the art. According to one CDMA technique, after the modulation (symbol mapping), the symbols are spread by a so-called spreading sequence or spreading code. After spreading the resulting data stream is scrambled by a scrambling sequence or a scrambling code. The thus resulting data stream, which has been spread and scrambled, is then power-amplified and sent over a communication channel. The reverse procedure is effected at the receiving side.
In
From WO96/05668 A1 and EP-A-565 506 techniques for multiple access coding for radio communication is known. According to these documents information symbols are spread using orthogonal or bi-orthogonal code words. This spread information symbols are assigned a unique scramble mask that is taken from a set of scramble masks having selected correlation properties. The set of scramble masks is selected such that the correlation between the modulo-2 sum of two scramble masks with any codeword is a constant magnitude independent of the codeword and the individual mask being compared. According to one embodiment of WO 96/05668 A1, when any two masks are summed using modulo-2 sum arithmetic, the Walsh transformation of that sum results in a maximally flat Walsh spectrum. For cellular radio telephone systems using subtractive CDMA demodulation techniques, a two-tier ciphering system ensures security at the cellular system level by using a pseudorandomly generated code key to select one of the scramble masks common to all of the mobile stations in a particular cell. As according to these techniques one common scramble mask is used for all mobile stations in a particular cell, the above-cited drawback arises that only certain types of channelisation codes can be used together limiting the number of available channelisation (spreading) codes.
The generation of spreading codes by a code tree is known from Adachi, “Tree-structured generation of orthogonal spreading codes with different lengths for forward link of DS-CDMA mobile radio”, Electronics Letters, January 1997, Vol.33, No.1, page 27, 28.
A RAKE receiver is for example shown and explained in U.S. Pat. No. 5,677,930. Therefore regarding the principles of the RAKE receiving technology and the meaning of the specific expressions such as “RAKE tap” etc. reference is made to said document.
All known receiver techniques can only cope with transmission systems utilizing only one scrambling code within one link (uplink or downlink). The present invention, however, deals with CDMA transmission systems utilizing two or more scrambling codes within one link for which up to now no receiver structure has been proposed in the state of the art.
Therefore it is the object of the present invention to provide for a receiving technique adapted to cope with CDMA transmission systems utilizing one spreading codes and two or more scrambling codes within one link (uplink or downlink).
The object as set forth above is achieved by means of the features of the independent claims. The dependent claims develop further the central idea of the present invention in a particularly advantageous manner.
Therefore, according to the present invention, a receiver for detecting information symbols transmitted according to a CDMA technique is provided, wherein the receiver is adapted to cope with received information symbols which have been spread with identical spreading codes and scrambled with different scrambling codes. The receiver thereby comprises a modified RAKE receiver.
According to the present invention furthermore a mobile telecommunications device is provided comprising a receiver as set forth above wherein the mobile telecommunications device can be a portable mobile station.
According to the present invention furthermore a method for receiving and detecting information symbols transmitted according to a CDMA technique is provided. A method is adapted to cope with the information symbols which have been respectively spread with an identical spreading code and scrambled with different scrambling codes.
According to the method of the present invention a plurality of descrambling steps is provided for descrambling an input data bit stream respectively with different descrambling codes. In a modified RAKE receiving step the output of the despreading step is passed to a number of parallel streams which are then multiplied by the different number of parallel streams which are then multiplied by the different descrambling codes before multiplication by the estimated channel coefficients. The number of RAKE receiver outputs therefore corresponds to the number of scrambling codes used.
Further aspects, advantages and features of the present invention will now be explained by means of embodiments of the present invention and with reference to the enclosed figures of the drawings.
A transmission system according to the present invention will now be explained generally with reference to FIG. 1. As shown in
On the receiving side, the received data bit stream is downconverted in a baseband downconvertor 13. The downconverted data output from the baseband downconvertor 13 are digitized in an A/D converter 14 and input to correlator 16′. The correlator 16′ can be a cyclic correlator or a taped delay line. The incoming received chip stream is correlated by the correlator 16′ by all of the different cyclic shifts. By means of the correlation the correlator 16′ detects correlation peaks representing delays corresponding to estimated path delays τ1, τ2, . . . of a multipath propagation channel.
The amplitudes of the detected correlation peaks represent the amplitudes and phases of the estimated paths. The output signals of the correlator 16′ are both supplied to a channel estimator 15 and a descrambling/despreading unit comprising a RAKE receiver 16. The descrambling/despreading unit 16 comprising a RAKE receiver is supplied with estimated tap coefficients (channel estimates) from the channel estimator 15. The output of the RAKE receiver in the descrambling/despreading unit 16 is passed through a deinterleaver 17, a channel decoder 18, a voice decoder 21 and is then D/A converted in a D/A converter 22. Finally the analog data is output on a terminal such as a telephone 23. Obviously digital data can be supplied directly from the channel decoder 18 for example to a video monitor 20 or a computer terminal 19.
With reference to
In
For the uplink 27, either the same scrambling codes Cscramble 1, . . . Cscramble M as in the case of the downlink 26, or another group of scrambling codes Cscramble 1, . . . Cscramble M or, as generally the uplink channel 27 demands for the same high bit rate as the downlink channel 26, even just one scrambling code can be used.
As it has already been set forth above, the downlink channel 26 or the uplink channel 27 can comprise subchannels for video and/or voice transmission. Different scrambling codes can be allocated for the scrambling of the channels demanding for a high bit rate, as it is the case, for example, for the transmission of video data. For transmission of, for example, voice data, only one scrambling code can be used.
Regarding the details of the spreading and scrambling process, particularly the modulo-2 sum operation for the scrambling at the transmission side and the multiplying operation for the descrambling at the reception side, the above-cited documents WO 96/05668 A1 and EP-A-565 506 are incorporated by reference. Particularly
The spreading codes can be generated for example by a code tree. This technique is known from Adachi, “Tree-structured generation of orthogonal spreading codes with different lengths for forward link of DS-CDMA mobile radio”, Electronics Letters, January 1997, Vol.33, No. 1, page 27, 28, which is incorporated herewith by reference.
Orthogonal spreading codes with different lengths can be generated by a tree-structure for orthogonal multiplexing of forward-link code-channels of different data rates in direct sequence code division multiple access DS-CDMA mobile radio. Thereby codes of the same layer of the tree constitute a set of Walsh functions and are orthogonal.
Furthermore, any two codes of different layers of the tree structure are also orthogonal except for the case that one of the two codes is a mother code of the other.
As it has already been set forth in the introductory portion, when only one scrambling code (or long code) is used per link, there are restrictions of the combinations of codes which can be used for the orthogonal codes (see Adachi et al.) These restrictions may prevent a user from being allocated to a certain channel. These restrictions are especially important for high data rate users. Furthermore the highest data rate is restricted to the shortest orthogonal code.
As according to the technique set forth above, two or more scrambling codes are assigned to one link (one user), the following advantages are achieved:
By only using two scrambling codes (M=2) per link (user), the total number of available channelisation codes (spreading codes) can be doubled and the maximum data rate can also be doubled.
As it has already been set forth above, one scrambling code can be used in conjunction with a set of channelisation codes (spreading codes) depending upon the required data rate and services required. Adjacent base stations can use different scrambling codes and every base station uses a set of scrambling codes to maintain different links in each cell.
To increase the flexibility of code assignment and increase the usage of the codes and the code tree, it is proposed to use as an option more than one scrambling code per link.
By utilizing the scheme as shown in
Now a receiver technology according to the present invention for a transmission system utilizing CDMA modulation, a plurality of spreading codes per link and only one scrambling code per link will be explained with reference to FIG. 6. The receiver technology implements the descrambling and despreading shown in FIG. 1 and designated by the reference sign 16.
The receiver technology as shown with reference to
With reference to
As it has already been explained, the RAKE receiver 16 is supplied (additionally to the information bits) both with delay information τ1, τ2, . . . , τn corresponding to the position of the correlation peaks detected by the correlator 16′ and tap coefficients (estimation values) from the channel estimator 15 input to a multiplication circuits 51 of the RAKE receiver 16.
As shown in
In
Therefore in each RAKE tap the output of the respective despreading unit is descrambled with the same set of k different descrambling codes.
The output of the descrambling units 46, 47, 48, 49 is then respectively passed to an adding circuit 50 summing up all chips of a symbol.
The respective outputs of the adding circuits 50 is then passed to multiplying circuits 51 where they are multiplied with the complex conjugate of the estimated channel coefficients supplied from the channel estimator 15. Respectively n (number of RAKE taps) outputs of the multiplying circuits 51 are then combined in one RAKE combiner 52 as shown in FIG. 7. The RAKE combiner 52, 53 output the signals output1, . . . , outputk.
Respectively one RAKE combiner 52, 53 is provided with the output of n, in the shown example two, multiplying circuits belonging to different RAKE taps (different despreading units) but at the same time belonging to streams with descrambling units using the same descrambling code. Therefore, in the example shown in
With other words, on the receiver side, see
Therefore the present invention provides for the following advantages:
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| 98120115 | Oct 1998 | EP | regional |
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