The present invention concerns wireless communication and particularly, but not exclusively, wireless communication in a cellular network including one or more mobile terminals.
Technology, and standards and specifications defining technology, for mobile communications networks, undergo improvement and change over time. For the practical operability of a cellular network, it is important not only to meet new requirements and needs, but also to support existing (‘legacy’) systems. Such support should take account of legacy performance criteria such as ease of network access, physical level cell/sector identification, or fast handover between cells/sectors.
In a packet based communication network, in accordance with many communications standards, much of the structure of a packet is predetermined to enable receipt of a packet by a communication device in a predictable and practical manner. A preamble is positioned conceptually at the ‘front’ of a packet, and this usually equates to it being positioned at the start of a packet when considered in the time domain. A preamble has a structure which is known to a recipient device and so enables information concerning the packet to be conveyed to the recipient device with ease. The design of a preamble, and the nature of information conveyed in a preamble, is key to the support of easy deployment of a system. Preamble design is furthermore important in effecting fast network entry, including handover, accurate initial synchronisation and channel estimation. A downlink preamble should also meet other requirements, such as supporting higher system throughput, reliable cell (or sector) search performance, and so on. Such considerations will be evident to the skilled reader.
It might be straightforward to design a preamble for a newly specified communications system, based on new system requirements. However, support for legacy systems is important, particularly in the context of a considerable history of development in the field of mobile communications.
The present invention is herein described in the context of a WirelessMAN-OFDMA system for an advanced interface (IEEE 802.16m IMT-advanced) while fully supporting legacy systems. The 802.16m specification aims to meet IMT-advanced requirements for future mobile communication systems. However, it is a requirement of that specification that a system designed in accordance therewith must also support all of its legacy systems. This presents new challenges for system design and deployment in 802.16-WiMAX.
Even though legacy systems using such a specification are intended to support up to 20 MHz bandwidth (BW), in reality a legacy system might only support up to 10 MHz BW, in accordance with the current WiMAX profile. However, there is a need for a system to support up to 20 MHz BW to meet advanced performance requirements. A preamble should be designed for the 20 MHz BW, while also supporting the legacy 10 MHz BW. Most technical challenges associated with this need are presented on downlink transmission.
A system specified in accordance with WiMAX is required to support three sector antenna configurations. Therefore, the preamble defined for use by the system is required to provide three segments for sector transmissions. Each segment must cover full bandwidth for effective network initiation, synchronisation and channel estimation. Consequently, the downlink can be divided into a three segment structure, and includes a preamble which begins the transmission. The subcarriers used for the preamble are divided into three carrier sets. There are three possible groups, each consisting of one of the defined carrier sets, which may be used by any of the segments.
The first symbol of the downlink transmission is the preamble; there are three types of preamble carrier sets, which are defined by allocation of different subcarriers to each one of them. The subcarriers are modulated using a boosted BPSK modulation with a specific Pseudo-Noise (PN) code. Each segment uses a preamble composed of a carrier set out of the three available carrier sets. The preamble carrier sets can be defined as
PreambleCarrierSetn=n+3k (1)
where n is the number of the preamble carrier set index, and k is a running index.
Each segment uses a preamble composed of a carrier set selected from the three available carrier sets, on the basis of:
Therefore, each segment eventually modulates each third subcarrier. This is illustrated in
The architecture of a preamble in accordance with this, for an OFDMA system with 10 MHz bandwidth, is illustrated by way of example in
For a system to support a 20 MHz bandwidth and also to support the 10 MHz legacy system, it is desirable that:
One possible approach to this would be to concatenate two legacy preambles across the newly widened bandwidth. Such an arrangement is illustrated in
Similarly, as illustrated in
According to an aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of determining a preamble for use in a packet based communication system, on the basis of a preamble for use in a legacy packet based communication system, the method comprising extracting from said legacy preamble a pilot symbol sequence in frequency of said legacy preamble, replicating said pilot symbol sequence, and concatenating said pilot symbol sequence and said replicated pilot symbol sequence.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a preamble for use in a packet based communication system is defined on the basis of a preamble for use in a legacy packet based communication system. The preamble is constructed by extracting from the legacy preamble a pilot symbol sequence in frequency of the legacy preamble, replicating the pilot symbol sequence, and concatenating the pilot symbol sequence and the replicated pilot symbol sequence.
The invention will be further characterised, exemplified and explained, with the aid of the following description of specific embodiments, in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
With this design, the preamble in accordance with the specific embodiment maintains good correlation, and is capable of supporting both legacy systems and those in accordance with the specific embodiment of the invention, without a need for modification of such legacy systems. The resultant preamble is of a construction as shown in
To ensure that the preamble is of optimal effectiveness, PAPR should be considered. To this end, two windows are inserted, on each side of the abstracted preamble as shown in
The design of the PAPR control window or windows can use a search engine to identify a random sequence for minimising the value of PAPR of the preamble. The size of the control window or windows should be as small as possible in order that the randomisation property of the designed preamble is the same as for an existing/legacy preamble.
Considering the preamble designs set out above, the process set out in
Assuming the legacy preamble sequence (SL) can be expressed by
S
L
={G
l
, D
l,0, Dr, Gr} (2)
where
Gl, Gr represent left- and right-side guard subcarriers respectively;
Dl, Dr represent left- and right-side preamble data subcarriers respectively; and
DC: central zero ‘0’.
It is further assumed that the size of each of these is:
Then,
sz
gl
+sz
gr
+sz
dl
+sz
dr+1=szfft
Accordingly, for the preamble in accordance with the specific embodiment, and assuming that the reverse sequence of Dl and Dr are
S
D
={G
l
,
r
, C
W
, D
l,0, Dr, CW
where
Gl
CW
It is further assumed that the size of each of these is:
Then,
sz
gl
+sz
rdr
+sz
cwl
+sz
dl
+sz
dr
+sz
cwr
+sz
rdl
+sz
gr
+1=szfft
From the above expression, it can be seen that, if szrdr or szrdl is equivalent to szdl or szdr, the PAPR control window is feasible to design. However, if szrdr or szrdl is much greater than szdl or szdr, the control window size could be too large for randomisation without considering other preamble sequences. In this case, the present embodiment offers preamble sequences which are specific to a new communications system but have a legacy preamble embedded therein. This is more convenient for network operation.
The procedures set out in (2) and (3) above are also illustrated in
By inserting PAPR control windows, the resulting preamble should be inversely utilized to reassign the subcarriers to each segment. It is also practical to be used with a small bandwidth preamble embedded in a long preamble, as demonstrated in
In a cellular application, there might be many preambles for different cells, and/or different segments. Here, as an example, one set of legacy preambles in one cell for three segments, is presented as,
This is a preamble for OFDMA with FFT-size of 1024 (10 MHz BW). Based on this preamble and the subcarrier assignment described in
As described previously, the present preamble fully supports the legacy system and the system in accordance with the present embodiment with 20 MHz bandwidth as shown in
For channel estimation, the 10 MHz bandwidth utilises all available subcarriers: 852 subcarriers are used for legacy channel estimation. Because there are no guard subcarriers in the 10 MHz, the remaining subcarriers are employed for channel estimation in accordance with the present embodiment. Then, with a 20 MHz bandwidth with the present embodiment, it can be seen that the subcarriers are consistently span the whole band for channel estimation.
Regarding PAPR, the legacy preamble with FFT-size of 1024 has a 6.8610 dB low PAPR design. With the preamble as described herein, with FFT size of 2048 without PAPR control window insertion (referred to in
In another case, different from the scheme shown in the above table, adopting the preamble design described above to support two concatenated legacy systems as shown in
With the practical example presented here, it can be demonstrated that the proposed mechanism is capable of resulting in a preamble to meet requirements for both legacy and new systems in terms of channel estimation, timing synchronisation, frequency synchronisation and PAPR control.
While the invention has been described with reference to certain specific embodiments, the reader will appreciate that the invention is not limited thereto. In particular, the invention should be considered as being defined in the claims appended hereto, with reference to the aforementioned description (but not limited thereto) and accompanying drawings.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0804789.6 | Mar 2008 | GB | national |