The invention relates to signal transmission and, more specifically, to multiple input multiple output (MIMO) signal transmission.
In the last few years, the demand for high network capacity and performance in wireless services has increased. One method of increasing spectral efficiency is through the implementation of a multiple input, multiple output (MIMO) system where signals are space-multiplexed with an antenna array. MIMO systems use multiple transmit and multiple receive antennas, all communicating on the same frequencies at the same time in an orthogonal, de-correlated fashion. A MIMO signal may transmit a signal with less error in an environment where line of sight is reduced or eliminated and different path lengths are expected for different parts of the signal.
In order to efficiently extend the coverage area for wireless signals, repeaters and repeater-like systems are used. However, conventional repeaters or repeater-like systems are single input, single output (SISO) systems designed to amplify and relay a transmission signal from a base station to a receiver through a single transmission channel. It would be cost-effective to utilize these conventional repeaters and repeater-like systems to amplify and relay MIMO transmissions. However, in implementing a SISO system with MIMO signals, there is a concern that a SISO repeater may reduce the benefits of such MIMO signals. More specifically, there is a concern that such a SISO device or system might destroy the MIMO coding of the signals and thereby create interference and degrade the system.
It is thus desirable to extend the coverage of a MIMO signal using a SISO repeater to transmit the MIMO signal without losing the benefits of the MIMO system.
A SISO relay device subjects each of the separate antenna signals of the MIMO transmission to a scrambler that simulates the effects of Rayleigh fading. The Rayleigh channel simulators output to the single input SISO relay. In one embodiment, the relay is a wireless repeater. In another embodiment, the relay is a fiber optic or coaxial cable transmission station.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
As shown in
In some situations, multiple SISO repeaters 30a, 30b may be able to work in parallel in order to better carry the signal, as shown in
The present invention addresses such concerns and provides a SISO component that operates within a MIMO or diversity network while maintaining the benefits of the MIMO network. Particularly, a SISO component is provided by the invention that subjects the signals coming from the MIMO antennas to an artificial Rayleigh channel prior to transmission via the SISO component or SISO signal path.
For the purpose of illustrating features and benefits of the invention, a simulation was created evaluating the error rate of SISO and MIMO systems, both with and without SISO repeaters, in a situation where the radio wave propagation resembles the distribution of Rayleigh fading channels.
In a real radio channel, wave propagation phenomena can and do occur. The most common phenomena are vacuity propagation, reflection, transmission, diffusion, deflection and refraction. If only the first two phenomena are taken into consideration and used for a first approximation, the result will be that the receiver receives signals that have gone through various different paths. Since these paths have different lengths, they will have different delays and will, in turn, produce either constructive or destructive interference.
If the number of types of different channels is not exactly known, the problem of channel modeling must be approximated using statistical means. In the case of a multipath channel, the signal amplitudes follow a Rice distribution, whereas the phase shifts must be considered as evenly distributed. In accordance with the invention, in a radio channel with no line of sight (NLOS), where no particular path is dominant, the Rice distribution turns into a Rayleigh distribution. Such channels are then denominated as Rayleigh fading channels. Moreover, a signal where the distribution is Rayleigh and the phases are evenly distributed can be modeled using multiplication with a complex Gaussian, zero mean random variable.
The simulation process establishing one embodiment of the invention is shown in diagrammatic form in
The simulation discussed below is designed to evaluate the effects of zero, one, or two repeaters on the bit error rate (BER) associated with a given signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio for the transmitted signals. The results are shown in the chart at
The introduction of a SISO repeater impairs the bit error rate. This is clear from a comparison of the MIMO systems with zero, one, and two repeaters, and additionally from a comparison of the SISO systems with zero, one, and two repeaters. However, the gain of the MIMO system remains almost unaffected by the addition of one or more repeaters. Both one- and two-repeater curves for the MIMO systems show the steep decrease in BER at higher S/N characteristic of the MIMO system, and above approximately 12 dB, the BER is improved over a no-repeater SISO system at the same S/N. A MIMO system with two repeaters shows a steeper curve with a better BER at a S/N above 17 dB. Even so, the significant increase in the cost of the additional SISO repeater equipment may not be worth the small benefit of adding a second SISO repeater in parallel with the first.
As a further evaluation of aspects of the invention, a physical measuring system was constructed in a laboratory setting, the basic configuration of which is shown in
To be able to use the standard components available in the laboratory, a frequency of 2115 MHz was chosen. Two signal generators 70a, 70b with an integrated arbitrary wave form generator were used as transmitters and then radiated via two independent transmitting antennas 72a, 72b. The signals were captured by two independent receiving antennas 82a, 82b. All four antennas 72a, 72b, 82a, 82b were structurally identical. The receivers 80a, 80b used to analyze the signal provided baseband data directly via a computer interface (GPIB) in the Matlab format as would be known to a person of ordinary skill in the art.
Since a highly scattering radio channel was desired, the transmission environment 90 used for the laboratory setup was specially prepared. The setup was configured to avoid a direct line of sight between transmitting antennas 72a, 72b and receiving antennas 82a, 82b. Measurements were taken with zero, one, and two SISO repeaters added to the transmission environment 90. The SISO repeater type used for the measurements was a sub-band selective, off-air repeater, with a gain of 50 dB. Since these SISO repeaters provide no protection against feedback (which creates interference and possibly oscillation), the receiving and donor antennas were separated by a thick, metal-coated fire door in the test configuration. This setup also served to ensure there was no propagation path from transmitter to receiver that had not passed through the SISO repeater.
Five megasamples were recorded per measurement. These were first down-sampled by a factor of 2. Thus, a maximum of 130 frames were recorded. Assuming that the first and the last frame were not received completely, 128 frames of useable data remained, comprising 2,359,296 data bits. With 12 different energy stages, an average of 196,608 bits was available for each energy stage. Measurements were repeated several times.
The results of both the computer simulation and experimental measuring system establish that the effects and benefits of a MIMO system continue to apply even with the addition of one or two SISO repeaters, providing that the Rayleigh channels dominate the signal transmission. The present invention takes advantage of these results and provides a signal processing prior to SISO transmission of the signals.
Specifically, the invention includes processing MIMO transmission signals to include a simulated Rayleigh distribution in each channel before combining the signals and relaying them through a SISO repeater.
In one embodiment of the invention, the Rayleigh channel simulator may modify the signal by use of a complex Gaussian, represented by:
g
n
=x
n
+iy
n (1)
where each xn is randomly generated from a Gaussian distribution with a mean of zero, and each yn is generated independently from xn by the same Gaussian distribution (having a mean of zero and the same variance). By generating a separate complex Gaussian g1, g2, etc. for each channel of the MIMO transmission, Rayleigh channels are approximated even in situations where Rayleigh scattering does dominate the transmission environment. One embodiment of a Rayleigh channel simulator may be implemented in a digital signal processing environment, such as that used in certain off-air wireless repeaters as known in the art.
In another embodiment, the Rayleigh channel simulator may comprise the use of analog delay channels, with the lengths of the channels decorrelated so as to decouple the phase distribution of the signal as required by a Rayleigh distribution. Such physical delay channels may be preferable in an analog signal processing environment, such as that used in certain analog cable repeaters as known in the art.
Other signal processing methods for generating the effects of a Rayleigh distribution are known to one of ordinary skill and may be utilized in accordance with the principals of the present invention.
The SISO repeater of
As demonstrated above, adding the Rayleigh channel simulators on the donor antenna side preserves MIMO effects for downlink transmission.
The combined electrical signal is then converted by an optical transceiver 56 into an optical signal. In the illustrated embodiments of
As with
The embodiments described herein are not intended as limiting examples. Any number of MIMO signals can be combined as described. The example of two MIMO signals in some examples is in no way limiting on the scope of the invention.
Similarly, one skilled in the art recognizes that other methods of simulating Rayleigh scattering and other methods of MIMO transmission might be used to practice the present invention.
This application is a National U.S. Application filing of, and claims the priority benefit of PCT Application No. PCT/EP2009/004835, filed Jul. 4, 2009, entitled “Single Input Single Output Repeater for Relaying a Multiple Input Multiple Output Signal”, which is a PCT Application claiming priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/118,226, filed Nov. 26, 2006, entitled “Single Input Single Output Repeater for Relaying a Multiple Input Multiple Output Signal”, which applications are both incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/004835 | 7/4/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/8/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61118226 | Nov 2008 | US |