1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a VDSL transmission system in which power control is used to reduce FEXT, a modem for use in a VDSL transmission system, and a method of reducing FEXT in a VDSL transmission system by using power back-off.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
One problem, frequently encountered with VDSL transmission systems, is that upstream FEXT produced by system users having short wires can be very strong. This severely limits the performance for users with longer wires. Users having shorter wires get high bit rates whereas users having longer wires get low bit rates, or possibly a zero bit rate. In extreme cases it may happen that users with wire lengths greater than 1000 meter cannot transmit data upstream.
The present invention provides a way of overcoming this problem by using power back-off to provide a more even distribution of the available bandwidth capacity among customers with different wire lengths. Power back-off means that modems on shorter wires reduce their transmit power in order to lower the FEXT they produce. This enables modems on longer wires to obtain an acceptable bit rate.
Known techniques for reducing FEXT cannot set target bit rates for the users and cannot provide any sort of optimisation of bit rate distribution between users. The present invention gives a better performance, i.e. higher bit rates, than known techniques for reducing FEXT, especially for thinner, i.e. more lossy, wires.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a VDSL transmission system having a plurality of modems operating on an access network in which at least some of said modems operate on wires of different lengths and in which there is a target bit rate for each modem, characterised in that modems on relatively short wires have control means for reducing their transmit power so that FEXT produced by said modems is reduced enabling modems on substantially longer wires to transmit at higher bit rates.
Said relatively short wires may be less than 1,000 meters long and said substantially longer wires are more than 1,000 meters long.
At least some of said modems may have control means adapted to distribute power over an available frequency band so that said target bit rate is achieved.
Said VDSL system may be adapted to modulate transmitted data using DMT.
The control means, associated with a given modem connected to a given wire, may be adapted to produce an energy loading for the kth sub-carrier given by:
where nk is the background noise on sub-carrier k, Fk is the FEXT transfer function for said given wire and λ is a constant, λ being adjusted so that
where Fextk is the FEXT from other VDSL modems, Γ is the SNR-gap, Γm is the system margin and R is the target bit rate per DMT frame.
Said FEXT transfer function may be given by:
Fk=K|Hk|2fk2d
where Hk is the transfer function for the given wire, fk is the frequency for subcarrier k, d is the length of the wire and K is a constant.
Ek may always be less than a maximal allowable PSD-level, PSDmax, for said VDSL system.
Ek may be given by:
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a modem for use with a VDSL transmission system having a plurality of modems operating on an access network in which at least some of said modems operate on wires of different lengths, said modem having a target bit rate, characterised in that said modem has control means for reducing its transmit power so that FEXT produced by said modem is reduced.
Said control means may be adapted to distribute power over an available frequency band so that said target bit rate is achieved.
Said modem may be adapted to modulate transmitted data using DMT.
Said modem may be connected to a wire, and said control means may be adapted to produce an energy loading for the kth sub-carrier given by:
where nk is the background noise on sub-carrier k, Fk is the FEXT transfer function for said wire and λ is a constant, λ being adjusted so that
where Fextk is the FEXT from other VDSL modems, Γ is the SNR-gap, Γm is the system margin and R is the target bit rate per DMT frame.
Said FEXT transfer function may be given by:
Fk=K|Hk|2fk2d
where Hk is the transfer function for the given wire, fk is the frequency for subcarrier k, d is the length of the wire and K is a constant.
Ek may always be less than a maximal allowable PSD-level for VDSL.
Ek may be given by:
According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided, in a VDSL transmission system having a plurality of modems operating on an access network in which at least some of said modems operate on wires of different lengths and in which there is a target bit rate for each modem, a method of performing power back-off, characterised by reducing the transmit power of modems on relatively short wires so that FEXT produced by said modems is reduced enabling modems on substantially longer wires to transmit at higher bit rates.
Said relatively short wires may be less than 1,000 meters long and said substantially longer wires may be more than 1000 meters long.
Power may be distributed over an available frequency band so that said target bit rate is achieved.
Transmitted data may be modulated using DMT.
An energy loading for the kth sub-carrier given by:
where nk is the background noise on sub-carrier k, Fk is the FEXT transfer function for said given wire and λ is a constant which is adjusted so that
where Fextk is the FEXT from other VDSL modems, Γ is the SNR-gap, Γm is the system margin and R is the target bit rate per DMT frame, may be produced.
Said FEXT transfer function may be given by:
Fk=K|Hk|2fk2d
where Hk is the transfer function for the given wire, fk is the frequency for sub-carrier k, d is the length of the wire and K is a constant.
Ek may always be less than a maximal allowable PSD-level, PSDmax, for said VDSL system.
Ek may be given by:
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A glossary of the abbreviations used in this patent specification is set out below to aid the reader:
A typical telephone access network, suitable for use with a VDSL transmission system is shown in
The present invention provides a method of performing power back-off in a VDSL modem, which may be located in any of the network terminals shown in
Consider, as an example, a VDSL system employing DMT and let Ek denote the transmit energy or energy loading to be used on sub-carrier k. If a target bit rate of R bits per DMT frame is to be achieved, the following constraint on the energies Ek exist:
where nk is the background noise on sub-carrier k, Fextk is the FEXT from other VDSL modems, Γ is the SNR-gap (=9.8 dB), Γm is the system margin (typically 3–6 dB). To maximise the bit rate for the other VDSL modems, the energy on the kth sub-carrier should be:
where λ is a constant that is adjusted so that equation (1) is fulfilled, and Fk is the FEXT transfer function for the wire under consideration. The FEXT transfer function can be calculated from:
Fk=K|Hk|2fk2d (3)
where Hk is the transfer function for the given wire, fk is the frequency for subcarrier k, d is the length of the wire and K is a constant. K and d are of no great importance since they are subsumed in λ. By using equation (2) to set the energy distribution, the FEXT will be spectrally shaped in the same way as the background noise.
Another constraint, that must always be applied, is that Ek must never exceed the maximum allowable PSD-level for VDSL, i.e. PSDmax. This means that equation (2) can be rewritten as:
If too large a value of R is chosen, then it may happen that Ek=PSDmax for all k without achieving the target bit rate.
Having thus described at least one illustrative embodiment of the invention, various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description is by way of example only and is not intended as limiting. The invention is limited only as defined in the following claims and the equivalents thereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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9804021 | Nov 1998 | SE | national |
9900788 | Mar 1999 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE33/02116 | 11/18/1999 | WO | 00 | 5/21/2001 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO00/31890 | 6/2/2000 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5887032 | Cioffi | Mar 1999 | A |
6647058 | Bremer et al. | Nov 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 9923764 | May 1999 | WO |