1. Field of the Invention
The present application generally relates to a system and method for providing a wireless system having multiple relays with coordinated operation.
2. Description of the Related Art
A Wireless Distribution System (WDS) is a system that enables the wireless interconnection of access points (AP) in an IEEE 802.11 network. The WDS allows a wireless network to be expanded using multiple access points without the need for a wired backbone to link them, as is conventionally required. The notable advantage of WDS over other solutions is that it preserves the MAC addresses of client packets across links between access points. An access point can be either a main, relay or remote base station. A main base station is typically connected to the wired Ethernet. A relay base station relays data between remote base stations, wireless clients or other relay stations to either a main or another relay base station. A remote base station accepts connections from wireless clients and passes them to relay or main stations. Connections between clients are made using MAC addresses rather than by specifying IP assignments. Typically, nodes in WDS are configured to use the same radio channel. The WDS can be configured to different service set identifiers.
The nodes in a WDS may bridge wireless clients. It should be noted, however, that throughput in this method is traditionally inversely proportional to 2 raised to the power of the number of hops, since all traffic uses the same channel. For example, client traffic going through one relay station before it reaches the main access point in conventional system will see at most half the maximum throughput that a directly connected AP would experience, and a client two hops from the directly connected AP will see at most one quarter of the maximum throughput seen at the directly connected AP. In response to this bandwidth problem, a source node and a relay node may transmit concurrently, and a destination node may be adapted to interpret the combined signals. However, this configuration, as described in greater detail below, also suffers from limitations.
At the same time, wireless communications systems, such as a WDS, typically operate over comparatively short ranges. These limitations in distance are caused by multiple factors. For example, the allowed signal strengths of wireless transmissions are typically low to reduce potential public health risks from the electro-magnetic radiation and to minimize interference with other transmissions. Furthermore, wireless communications typically require substantially line-of-site access between a transmitter and receiver, such that an intermediate structure may block or otherwise attenuate the transmission sufficiently to degrade communications.
Thus, it is known in conventional systems to expand the coverage of a wireless communications network by adding a relay node. However, as described in greater detail below, the conventional relay configuration result in sub-optimal performance due to factors, such as non-uniform signal amplification.
In response to these and other needs, embodiments of the present application provide a communications system that includes a source, a destination, and multiple relays. In a first time period, the source emits a first transmission and a first relay retransmits a prior source transmission. Then, in a second, subsequent time period, the source node emits a second transmission and a second relay transmits the source transmission from the first time period. Optionally, the transmission from the second relay also includes the message from the first relay during the first time period. Similarly, in a third time period, the first relay transmits a message that includes the second relay's transmission and the second source transmission from the second time period. Alternatively, the source node transmit in a first frequency band, the first and second relays receive only in the first frequency band, and retransmit in a second frequency band, and the destination receives in both the first and second frequency bands.
In another embodiment, the present application provides a method for relaying transmissions between a source node and a destination node in wireless network. The method includes a destination node receiving a first broadcast comprising a first source transmission from the source node and a first relay transmission from a first relay node, whereby the first relay transmission includes a prior source transmission received from the source node. The destination node then receives a second broadcast that includes a second source transmission from the source node and a second relay transmission from a second relay node, whereby the second relay transmission includes the first source transmission. The destination node then decodes the first and second broadcasts. Optionally, the decoding includes using a linear minimum mean square error decision feedback equalizer receiver to detect transmitted data symbols.
In one implementation, the second relay transmission further includes the first relay transmission. Likewise, the destination node in a third time period receives a third broadcast including a third source transmission from the source node and a third relay transmission from the first relay node, whereby the third relay transmission includes the second source transmission and the second relay transmission. In this way, a relay node during any of the time period rebroadcasts all symbols received from the source node during all prior time periods. Alternatively, the first and second source transmission are in a first frequency band, and the first relay and the second relay transmissions are in a second frequency band, whereby the relays are configured to listen in the first frequency band and to transmit in the second frequency band.
Thus, embodiments of the present application provide a destination node for receiving relayed transmissions from source node. This destination node includes a receiver configured to receive a first broadcast including a first source transmission from the source node and a first relay transmission from a first relay node, whereby the first relay transmission includes a prior source transmission received from the source node. The receiver is further configured to receive a second broadcast that includes a second source transmission from the source node and a second relay transmission from a second relay node, whereby the second relay transmission includes the first source transmission. Optionally, the destination node includes a processor configured to decode the first and second broadcasts. Optionally, this processor includes a linear minimum mean square error decision feedback equalizer receiver to detect transmitted data symbols.
Optionally, in the destination node, the second relay transmission further includes the first relay transmission. Similarly, the receiver may be configured to receive a third broadcast including a third source transmission from the source node and a third relay transmission from the first relay node, whereby the third relay transmission includes the second source transmission and the second relay transmission.
Alternatively, the first and second source transmissions include a first frequency band, and the first relay and the second relay transmissions include a second frequency band. Thus, the relays are configured to listen in the first frequency band and to transmit in the second frequency band.
In another embodiment, a provided method for relaying a message from a source node to a destination node includes a relay node receiving a first broadcast including a first source transmission from the source node, and then transmitting a second relay transmission that includes the first source transmission. Meanwhile, the destination node receives a first broadcast and second broadcast, and this first broadcast includes the first source transmission from the source node and a first relay transmission from another relay node. The first relay transmission includes a prior source transmission received from the source node. The second broadcast includes a second source transmission from the source node and the second relay transmission. Optionally, the destination node includes a linear minimum mean square error decision feedback equalizer receiver to detect transmitted data symbols.
The second relay transmission further optionally includes the first relay transmission. Similarly, the destination node may further receive a third broadcast that includes a third source transmission from the source node and a third relay transmission from the relay node, whereby the third relay transmission includes the second source transmission and the second relay transmission.
The first and second source transmission may be transmitted in a first frequency band, and the first relay and the second relay transmissions may be transmitted in a second frequency band. The relays may be configured to listen and receive messages sent in the first frequency band and but to transmit only in the second frequency band. In this way, the relays would not communicate with one another because they would not listen in the second frequency band.
A relay node for relaying a message from a source node to a destination node, the relay node may include a receiver configured to receive a first broadcast including a first source transmission from the source node, and transmitter configured to transmit a second relay transmission, whereby the second relay transmission includes the first source transmission. In this configuration, the destination node receives a first broadcast and second broadcast, whereby the first broadcast includes the first source transmission from the source node and a first relay transmission from a relay node, where the first relay transmission includes a prior source transmission received from the source node. Similarly, the second broadcast includes a second source transmission from the source node and the second relay transmission. Optionally, the destination node includes a linear minimum mean square error decision feedback equalizer receiver to detect transmitted data symbols.
In one implementation, the relay node is configured to produce the second relay transmission using the first relay transmission. In this way, the retransmissions include the prior transmissions from the source node. For example, the second relay transmission may further include the first relay transmission. Similarly, during a third time period, the receiver may be configured to receive a third broadcast including a third source transmission from the source node. The third broadcast further includes a third relay transmission from the relay node, whereby the third relay transmission includes the second source transmission and the second relay transmission.
Alternatively, the first and second source transmission again may be transmitted in a first frequency band, and the first relay and the second relay transmissions again may be transmitted in a second frequency band. Thus, the relays may be configured to listen and receive messages sent in the first frequency band and but to transmit only in the second frequency band. In this way, the relays would not communicate with one another because they would not listen in the second frequency band.
For proper understanding of the invention, reference should be made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In cooperative relaying, a relay R processes received signals from a source S and to retransmit to a destination D by means of AF (amplify-and-forward) or DF (detection-and-forward) modes. Typically, the relay R receives a transmission from the source in a first time cycle, and then rebroadcasts the received transmission in a second, subsequent time cycle.
Cooperative diversity is conventional cooperative relaying strategy to provide diversity gain to the system without increasing transmission time or transmission bandwidth. Referring now to
However, as a consequence, the cooperative diversity system 100 provides non-symmetrical transmissions for different data symbols, as depicted in process flow 200 of
Continuing with
Likewise, at time period t3, the source 110 broadcasts a symbol x3 that is received by both the relay 130 and the destination 120 as transmissions 250 and 260. Then, at the next time period t4, the source 110 in transmission 280 broadcasts another symbol x4 to the destination 120. Also during this period t4, the relay 120 rebroadcasts the symbol x3 (previously received during the prior period t3) as transmission 270. Again, as with symbol x2 in time period t2, the broadcast symbol x4 is not received by the relay 130 in time period t4 because the relay is occupied with the retransmission of symbol x3 in transmission 270 during that period.
Thus, the x2 symbol and the x4 symbol are only transmitted from once in the path 140 from the source 110 to the destination terminal 120, and consequently a diversity gain is not applied to these symbols that are now retransmitted by the relay 130. Therefore, the error rates of two symbols, such as x1 and x2, may be different due to the difference in the diversity gain applied to each received data symbol.
The data symbol y1 received at the destination during the time slot t1 may be given in Equation 1:
y1=hSDx1+n1. (Eq. 1).
Similarly, the data symbol y1′ received at the relay during that time slot t1 is given as Equation 2:
y1′=hSRx1+n1′ (Eq. 2).
where n1 and n1′ are additive white Gaussian noise with N˜(0, σ2). The variable hSD is the equivalent channel between source S 110 and destination D 120. The variable hSR is the equivalent channel between source S 110 and the relay R 130. The modulated data symbols satisfy the condition that E{∥xi∥2}=1 for i=1, 2.
The relay normalizes the received data symbol by a factor β, as follows in Equation 3:
This factor β is used in order to normalize the average energy to unity before the relay R 130 forwards the symbol in time slot t2.
As a result, the destination receives the superimposed signals from the relay node and the source node during time slot t2 as provided in Equation 4:
y2=hSDx2+βhRDhSRx1+ñ (Eq. 4),
where ñ=hRDβn1′+n2 and hRD is the equivalent channel between relay R 130 and destination D 120.
In summary, the effective input-output relation for a single relay cooperative scheme in AF mode is given by Equation 5:
y=Hax+n (Eq. 5),
where y=[y1 y2]T is the received data symbol vector.
An equivalent channel matrix, Ha, is obtained in Equation 6 as:
where x=[x1 x2]T is the transmitted data symbol vector where E{∥x1∥2}=E{∥x2∥2}=1, and n=[n1 ñ]T is the received noise vector.
A linear minimum mean square error (MMSE) receiver may be used to detect the transmitted data symbols according to Equation 7:
x=(HaHHa+Iσ2)−1HaHy (Eq. 7)
If the DF mode is applied, only the equivalent channel matrix, Ha from Equation 6 is simplified as shown in Equation 6′:
All the other equations used in DF mode are the similar to those as described in the AF mode, as described above Equations 1-7.
Thus, the cooperative relaying, such as the system 100, is relatively simple, but provides an unbalanced diversity gain to the received data symbols, as described above.
In order to provide a balance diversity gain to all the received data symbols, embodiments of the present application provide a symmetrical cooperative relaying scheme that overcomes the above described non-symmetry transmission for different data symbols in the conventional cooperative relaying.
Referring now to
Continuing with the symmetrical cooperative relay system 300 of
Referring to
The exemplary detailed transmission and receiver protocols for this cooperative relaying scheme are shown in table 1.
For AF mode, the mathematical representation of the system model is given by Equations 8a and 8b:
y(2k−1)=hSD(2k−1)·x(2k−1)+α2D·h2D(2k−1)·βR2(2k−2)·xR2(2k−2)+nD(2k−1) (Eq. 8a);
y(2k)=hSD(2k)·x(2k)+α1D·h1D(2k)·βR1(2k−1)·xR1(2k−1)+nD(2k) (Eq. 8b),
where xR1(2k−1) and xR2(2k−2) are the signals received by relay R1 at time slot 2k−1 and relay R2 at time slot 2k−2 respectively. α1D=√{square root over ((d1d/dSD)−n)} is the normalized path loss coefficient from the relay R1 to the destination D with respect to the distance dSD, α2D=√{square root over ((d2D/dSD)−n)} is the normalized path loss coefficient from relay R2 to the destination D, and n is the pass loss exponent. The equation of βR1(2k−1)=1/√{square root over (E{∥xR1(2k−1)∥2})} corresponds to the factor that the relay R1 normalizes its received data symbol in order to make the average energy be equal to unity when it amplifies and forwards its signal to the next stage. Similarly, βR2(2k−2)=1/√{square root over (E{∥xR2(2k−2)∥2})} is the factor that the relay station R2 normalizes its received data symbol in order to make the average energy is unity when it amplifies and forwards its signal to the next stage. In general, hxx defines the channel state information defined as zero-mean, complex Gaussian random variables. Also, the variable nD corresponds to the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) at the destination.
These signals of xR1(2k−1) and xR2(2k−2) are defined in Equations 9a and 9b:
xR2(2k−2)=αS2·hS2(2k−2)·x(2k−2)+α12·h12(2k−2)βR1(2k−3)·xR1[2k−3]+nR2[2k−2] (Eq. 9a),
xR1(2k−1)=αS1·hS1(2k−1)·x[2k−1]+α12·h12(2k−1)·βR2(2k−2)·xR2(2k−2)+nR1(2k−1) (Eq. 9b).
Similarly as previously defined, the variable αS1=√{square root over ((dS1/dSD)−n)} is the normalized path loss coefficient from the source to relay R1, the variable αS2=√{square root over ((dS2/dSD)−n)} is the normalized path loss coefficient from the source to relay R2, the variable α12=√{square root over ((d12/dSD)−n)} is the normalized path loss coefficient from relay R1 to relay R2, and n is the pass loss exponent. The equation of βR1(2k−3)=1/√{square root over (E{∥xR1(2k−3)∥2})} provides the factor that relay R1 uses in order to normalize its received data symbol in order to make the average energy become unity when it amplifies and forwards its signal to the next stage.
In order to model the system in matrix form, the following values are set in Equations 10-14:
After some manipulations, the final expression is given by Equation 15, as follows:
For DF mode of this system model, it can simply be obtained from the above AF mode according to conventional techniques, as described above.
Now, a linear MMSE decision feedback equalizer receiver may be used to detect the transmitted data symbols, for example, as defined in Equation 16
MMSE—LEi=Rx−(Rx−1+HHRn−1H)−1HHRn−1HRx[i,i] (Eq. 16).
Consequently, the symmetrical cooperative relaying system 300 of the present application provides significant advantage by providing a balanced diversity gain to each received data symbol when two or more relays 330 and 340 are communicating information to each other. Therefore, the system 300 provide significantly improved performance over to conventional cooperative relaying, such as described above in the system 100 of
A relay network 500 in accordance with embodiments of the present application, as presented in systems 300 and 700 of
As depicted in
Likewise, the destination 520 may include a processor 521, memory 522, and input and output devices 523-524. The destination 520 may further include software 525 and related hardware 526 for performing the functions related to the receiving and decoding of the broadcast of signals, as disclosed in the present application. For example, the destination node 520 may include the above described a linear MMSE decision feedback equalizer receiver implemented either as a decoder circuit in the hardware 526 or the software 525.
The relays 530 may also include a processor 521, memory 522, and input and output devices 523-524, as needed to receive and forward a message. The relays 530 may further include software 525 and related hardware 526 for performing the various functions related to the receiving and decoding of the broadcast of signals, as disclosed in the present application. For example, the relays may receive and store messages to be transmitted, and access the memory and transmit the stored messages. Thus, the processing of the messages to be transmitted may be performed, as needed by circuitry in the hardware 526 or software 525.
Referring now to
Continuing with cooperative relay method 600 of
Referring now to
In a preferred implementation, the source S 710 transmits messages 750 to the destination node, and messages 760 and 770, respective, to the relay stations 730 and 740. The transmissions from the source node S 710 are in a first frequency band f1, and the relay stations 730 and 740, respectively, receive the transmissions 760 and 770 from the source 710 in this f1 frequency band. However, the relay stations 730 and 740 transmit messages 780 and 790 in a second frequency band f2 that is distinct from the first frequency band f1. In addition, the destination node D 720 receives and decodes both the message 750 in first frequency band f1 and the message 780 and 790 in the second frequency band f2. In particular, as described in greater detail below, the destination node D 720 generally decodes the first frequency band f1 and the second frequency band f2. using maximum ratio combining to obtain a macro-diversity gain.
Thus, as schematically depicted in the partial cooperation system 700 of
Returning to
Continuing with
For AF mode, a mathematical expression of the system 700 with partial cooperation as depicted in
Again, the DF mode of this system model may be obtained from the above-AF mode through known techniques.
Continuing with
MMSE—LEi=Rx−(Rx−1+HHRn−1H)−1HHRn−1HRx[i,i] (Eq. 18)
Referring now to
Continuing with partial cooperative relay method 800 of
Referring to
Then, at second time t2, the first relay R1 730 retransmits in the second frequency band f2 the signals 910 (x1) received during the previous time slot t2, transmission 940, and the second relay R2 also receives the transmission 930 (x2) from the source S 710. This process similarly repeats during time periods t3, t4, and subsequent periods with transmissions 960 and 980 in which, respectively, the second relay R2 740 or the first relay R1 730 rebroadcasts second frequency band f2 transmissions received from a prior time period to the destination node 720.
While the above description describes the first and second relay nodes as broadcasting in the same second frequency band f2, it should be appreciated that these two nodes may also transmit in two different frequency modes, such that the transmissions from the relay nodes occur in a different frequency from the transmission from the source node. Alternatively, as described above, other known techniques such as code differences or phase differences may be used to differentiate the signals from the source node and the relay node.
Furthermore, it should be appreciated that while the present application refers to configurations with two relay nodes, the principles of the present application may be adapted for multiple relays. For example, as suggested in
In another embodiment (not illustrated), the first and second relay nodes may be combined into a single component, such that a single node may perform both receiving and transmission related functions during each time period.
Referring now to
In this way, embodiments of the present application disclose a cooperative relaying scheme. In one embodiment, cooperative relaying uses a full cooperation, and in a second embodiment, the disclosed configuration provides partial cooperation. In either embodiment, the schemes disclosed in the present application provide balanced diversity gain to each received data symbol. Therefore, the system performance is improved as compared to the conventional cooperative relaying, which is an unbalanced diversity system.
One having ordinary skill in the art will readily understand that the invention as discussed above may be practiced with steps in a different order, and/or with hardware elements in configurations which are different than those which are disclosed. Therefore, although the invention has been described based upon these preferred embodiments, it would be apparent to those of skill in the art that certain modifications, variations, and alternative constructions would be apparent, while remaining within the spirit and scope of the invention. In order to determine the metes and bounds of the invention, therefore, reference should be made to the appended claims.
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