The object of the present invention is a receiver for a CDMA system, i.e. for code division multiple access systems, a technology known in English by the abbreviation CDMA. More generally, this technology falls within the framework of digital transmission with direct sequence spread spectrum (abbreviated to DSSS).
The invention finds applications in radiocommunications systems with mobiles, in wireless local area networks (WLAN), in wireless local loops (WLL), in cable television, etc.
It is assumed that the requirement is to transmit information constituted by a symbol stream of duration Ts, each symbol being able to be, for example, a bit equal to 0 or 1.
The direct sequence spread spectrum consists in modulating each symbol of the digital signal in a pseudorandom binary sequence. Such a sequence is composed of N pulses or “chips” the duration Tc of which is equal to Ts/N. The modulated signal has a spectrum which spreads over a range N times wider than that of the original signal. At reception, demodulation consists in correlating the signal with the sequence used at emission, which allows the information linked to the start symbol to be relocated.
The advantages of this technology are manifold:
Turning this last advantage to good account, CDMA technology consists of the simultaneous emission, in a same band, of several spread signals using different pseudorandom spread sequences. The sequences are chosen so that the intercorrelations remain small.
If the different emitters do not have a common time reference, the system is said to be asynchronous since the beginnings of the symbols particular to each user reach the receiver at different moments. This is shown in the appended
It can be arranged for the beginnings of the symbols received 1, 2 and 3 to coincide (modulo the period Ts of a symbol). The system is then said to be “synchronous”. It is shown in
In an asynchronous CDMA system, the sequences have any relative phases at reception. A good separation of the signals presupposes therefore that the intercorrelations between sequences are small, whatever the relative phases between sequences. On the other hand, in synchronous CDMA, the sequences arriving with nil relative phases, the number of intercorrelations having to be close to zero is much smaller. This particularity gives the synchronous system a very clear advantage over the asynchronous variant in terms of the number of sequences (therefore of users) being able to coexist without mutual totally unacceptable disturbance.
These questions can be made rather clearer by giving an expression of the signal emitted and of the signal received. It will be hypothetically assumed that the different sequences linked to each symbol are synchronous. This implies that the number N, length of sequences counted as a number of chips, takes the same value whatever the sequence (or the emission) concerned.
Given these hypotheses, the emitted signal may be expressed, in base-band, by an emitter of rank k by the expression:
with:
It is assumed, so as to simplify the model that the channels are not selective in frequency.
The pulse response of a channel for the user of rank k is:
hk(t)=gkδ(t−τk)
with:
where the sign * indicates a convolution product This expression may further be written:
If the system is synchronous, then τ0k−τk=τ whatever k may be where τ is anything. Thus, in emitters, the τ0k must be adjusted so that this relation is verified.
In the event of there being only one emitting source, this condition would obviously be fulfilled.
The appended
If there are several users, therefore several distinct sequences, the receiver includes as many channels as sequences, as shown in
Components are commercially available today to make such receivers. As an example the following may be quoted:
The first circuit of each channel, whether it is a sliding correlator or an adapted filter, plays an important role which may be clarified by means of
A sliding correlator (
As for the adapted filter (
Seen from the output of the sub-sampler 28, these two architectures are equivalent. On the other hand, seen from the input of the sub-sampler 28, they are different since they do not deliver the same signal, as
It is clear, from these Figures, that the sliding correlator requires information linked to symbol timing, a signal called a “symbol clock” and denoted Hs, so that the sequence local reply is aligned with the sequence modulating the symbols received, otherwise demodulating the symbols is impossible (the case in
An adapted filter enables symbol clock recovery, for example by recursive detection of the correlation peak on a window of N points (
If these two structures allow the symbol clock to be relocated, they do not do so with the same speed: the symbol clock recovery operation lasts at the most N symbol periods, i.e. NTs with a sliding correlator, whereas it requires only a single symbol period Ts with an adapted filter.
The advantage of the adapted filter is therefore obvious in terms of the rapidity of symbol clock signal acquisition. Its disadvantage is its operational complexity, since its installation in the form of a digital filter with finite pulse response (working at the chip rate) requires N multiplications and N additions for each sample. Its structural complexity goes hand in hand with its operational complexity.
The sliding correlator only effects one multiplication and one addition for each new sample. If it is relatively ill adapted to clock recovery, it is on the other hand very advantageous in terms of operational complexity.
Thus, whether recourse is made to adapted filters or to sliding correlators certain disadvantages cannot be avoided. The purpose of the present invention is precisely to overcome these.
The invention proposes to combine the advantages of each of these structures (adapted filter and sliding correlator) by using, in a multiple channel receiver, an adapted filter in at least one channel, this in order to restore rapidly and efficiently the symbol clock, and by using sliding correlators in the other channels so as to benefit from their low level complexity, these correlators being controlled by the symbol clock signal produced by the adapted filter.
The receiver of the invention is thus a hybrid, in the sense that it includes at least one channel using an adapted filter and other channels using sliding correlators. The complexity of the receiver is reduced by the use of correlators, without the efficiency of the symbol clock signal restoration suffering as a result since the latter is provided by an adapted digital filter.
It may be noted that in some mobile telephone installations both an adapted filter and sliding correlators can be found, the adapted filter delivering a synchronisation signal. But, in these installations, the filter is adapted to a very particular sequence called a pilot and not to the sequences used to carry information. This adapted filter only operates therefore at the moment of pilot symbol reception. The sliding correlations then process the sequences carrying the information, whereas the adapted filter is inoperative. Synchronisation is therefore obtained prior to demodulation.
In the present invention, the adapted filter processes symbols carrying the information and permanently maintains the clock signal necessary to sliding correlators.
When the synchronism between the sequences is not perfect, it is possible to use several channels of the type with adapted filter, (instead of just one) so as to produce several symbol clock signals slightly offset relative to each other.
In an exact way, the object of the present invention is a receiver for CDMA system, intended to receive signals corresponding to streams of spread spectrum information symbols by pseudorandom binary sequences, this receiver including K processing channels and being characterized in that at least one of these channels includes a filter adapted to one of the pseudorandom sequences having been used for information symbols spectrum spreading and a symbol timing clock signal recovery circuit, the other channels each including a sliding correlator working with one of the other sequences having been used for information symbols spectrum spreading, each sliding correlator being controlled by a symbol clock signal, which is the clock signal produced by the channel using the adapted filter.
The channel V2 includes a sliding correlator 302, an additional processing circuit 142 and a decision circuit 162 delivering the restored information d2. Likewise for the other channels, and in particular for the Vk, which includes a correlator 30k, a processing circuit 14k and a decision circuit 16k restoring the information dk. The correlators 302, . . . , 30k, require, as has been explained, a clock signal in order to be synchronised and this is constituted, in accordance with the invention, by the symbol clock Hs signal recovered in the first channel V1. This clock may also be applied to the circuits 141, 142, . . . , 14K and 161, 162, . . . , 16K.
Table 1 allows an architecture according to the invention to be compared with a conventional architecture using either sliding correlators, or adapted filters. The comparison is made in terms of operational complexity and symbol clock acquisition time (for K synchronous emitters and sequences of length N).
By way of example, the case may be taken of K=64 synchronous users with sequences of N=128 chips:
From this example can be seen the excellent compromise obtained by the structure proposed by the invention. Moreover, it must be understood that a non hybrid structure with adapted filters would be excessively costly, if not even unrealisable on account of problems of size.
To sum up, the structure proposed by the invention makes it possible to:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
98 06952 | Jun 1998 | FR | national |
This application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/701,391 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,973,120) filed on Dec. 4, 2000 as a 35 U.S.C. §371 National Stage application PCT No. PCT/FR99/01287 dated Jun. 2, 1999. This application claims the benefit of priority from French Application 98 06952 filed Jun. 3, 1998.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4984247 | Kaufmann et al. | Jan 1991 | A |
5648955 | Jensen et al. | Jul 1997 | A |
5671219 | Jensen et al. | Sep 1997 | A |
5768264 | Anderson et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5787076 | Anderson et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
5818820 | Anderson et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
5953369 | Suzuki | Sep 1999 | A |
5974083 | Fujita | Oct 1999 | A |
6084932 | Veintimilla | Jul 2000 | A |
6215778 | Lomp et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6414949 | Boulanger et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6973120 | Ouvry et al. | Dec 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0810741 | Mar 1997 | EP |
9321667 | Dec 1997 | JP |
WO9526094 | Sep 1995 | WO |
WO9963678 | Dec 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060078043 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09701391 | US | |
Child | 11288663 | US |