Shingo SUWA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper elucidates the optimum bandwidth per sub-carrier in the reverse link for multicarrier (MC)/DS-CDMA using a 10 to 80-MHz bandwidth in a multipath fading channel with numerous resolved multipaths, taking into account all major effects, i.e., the improvement in the Rake time diversity effect and the degradation in the path search and the channel estimation due to multipath interference (MPI). In the paper, we assume a broadband channel model with the maximum delay time of up to approximately 1 µsec simulating a microcell with the radius of less than 1 km in an urban area. The simulation results clarify that the improvement in the radio link performance is almost saturated at a bandwidth greater than approximately 40 MHz when the spreading factor of the channel is SF=32, and the best performance is achieved at the bandwidth of approximately 20-40 MHz when SF=4, employing two-branch antenna diversity reception (an average equal power delay profile and an exponential decay power delay profile are assumed, where the number of multipaths is changed from 12 to 48 for both profiles). This is generated by the tradeoff between the improvement in the Rake time diversity effect and the increased MPI in addition to the degradation in accuracy of the path search and channel estimation associated with a lower average received signal-to-interference plus background noise power ratio. Therefore, we conclude that MC/DS-CDMA, where each sub-carrier has the bandwidth of approximately 20-40 MHz, is one of the most promising candidates for broadband packet wireless access in the reverse link.
Kouta KINOSHITA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Yoshihiro ISHIKAWA Seizo ONOE Yoshinobu NAKAMURA Masao NAKAGAWA
While higher chip rate can provide better performance for Direct Sequence/Code Division Multiple Access (DS/CDMA) systems due to larger process gain, it may also induce spectrum emission to adjacent channels, i. e. , adjacent channel interference. Especially, if different operators use adjacent channels in the same area with uncoordinated power levels, such interference becomes large, and excessively higher chip rate will decrease the efficiency of a system. In this context, this paper evaluates the relation between chip rate and capacity in DS/CDMA cellular communication systems considering adjacent channel interference from other systems. First, the classification of adjacent channel interference between two independent DS/CDMA systems is described, and the concrete interference levels are calculated for several chip rates. Then, by using computer simulation, the system CDMA capacity is evaluated under adjacent channel interference. From these results, we can find that the excessively higher chip rate can not always provide the larger system CDMA capacity in spite of the larger process gain, and there exists the appropriate chip rate for a certain given bandwidth.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper proposes Variable Spreading Factor-Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (VSF-OFCDM) as the most promising forward link wireless access method in broadband packet wireless transmission using an approximate 50 to 100 MHz bandwidth. The proposed OFCDM employing VSF can flexibly realize near optimum wireless access satisfying higher radio link capacity both in isolated cell environments such as hot-spot areas and indoor offices and in multi-cell environments such as cellular systems by adaptively changing the appropriate spreading factor, SF, in the frequency domain based on the cell structure, radio link conditions such as the delay spread, and major radio link parameters such as the data modulation scheme and channel coding rate. Furthermore, by establishing SF=1, i.e., no spreading mode, VSF-OFCDM can be used as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). Computer simulation results demonstrate that, while SF=1 (OFDM) achieves higher link capacity than SF>1 in an isolated-cell environment, OFCDM with the optimized SF value over 1 achieves approximately 1.4 times higher capacity compared with OFDM in a multi-cell environment associated with the advantageous one-cell frequency reuse. Consequently, VSF-OFCDM can provide seamless deployment of broadband packet wireless access with higher radio link capacity, that is, OFDM in an isolated-cell environment, and OFCDM with the adaptively optimized SF value over 1 in a multi-cell environment according to the major radio link conditions and radio link parameters, by only changing the spreading factor.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Masao NAKAGAWA
A computational cost reduction scheme for a post-distortion type nonlinear distortion compensator of OFDM signals is proposed, and compared with the conventional sub-optimum detection scheme. The proposed scheme utilizes the principle that a complex OFDM signal can be demodulated with not only both I-phase (real part) and Q-phase (imaginary part) components, but also either of them. Usually each phase of an OFDM signal exhibits different signal envelope and they are distorted differently by the nonlinearity of a power amplifier. Consequently, three output sequence patterns can be obtained at the receiver. By comparing these outputs, we can know the erroneous positions of these sequences to some extent. By the aid of this comparison, we need to evaluate only a limited number of replicas for the compensation process of the post-distortion type nonlinear distortion compensator, which results in the computational cost reduction. We have proposed four new compensation schemes based on this idea and derived their performance in terms of the bit error rate and the average number of calculations.
Sadayuki ABETA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI Fumiyuki ADACHI
This paper compares the packet error rate (PER) performance of three access schemes, i.e., single-carrier (SC)/DS-CDMA, multi-carrier (MC)/DS-CDMA, and MC-CDMA assuming an 80-MHz bandwidth in order to achieve an optimum broadband packet wireless access scheme. In a broadband propagation channel, severe multipath interference degrades the accuracy of timing detection of multipath components (path search) and channel estimation required for coherent detection. Computer simulation results show that, in the reverse link, SC/DS-CDMA achieves better performance than MC/DS-CDMA because the pilot signal power in one sub-carrier required for path search and channel estimation decreases as the number of sub-carriers increases. The superiority of MC-CDMA to MC (SC)/DS-CDMA in the forward link is also demonstrated, because frequency diversity is effectively utilized in association with the mitigation of a much longer symbol duration than the delay spread in MC-CDMA, meanwhile a higher degree of multipath interference offsets the Rake time diversity in MC (SC)/DS-CDMA in a broadband multipath fading channel.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper evaluates high-speed broadband packet wireless access in the forward link using coherent Time Division-Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (TD-OFCDM) by applying time-multiplexed pilot symbol assisted channel estimation and integrating efficient multi-level modulation, hybrid automatic repeat request (ARQ), and code-multiplexing over a 50-100 MHz bandwidth. Computer simulation results first clarify that the common time-multiplexed pilot symbols with the transmit power of 6 dB higher than that of data symbols should be placed at both the beginning and end of a packet, and that the optimum averaging interval of channel estimates in the frequency domain is different according to the delay spread of a channel. Based on these optimized parameters for packet transmission, we show that the orthogonality among the code-multiplexed channels is destroyed due to severe frequency selective (multipath) fading and the accumulation of spread signals using equal gain combining (EGC) in the frequency domain. This degrades the achievable throughput performance especially when employing multi-level modulation and a high coding rate. Consequently, coherent TD-OFCDM with 8PSK data modulation and the convolutional coding of rate R = 2/3 employing sixteen-code multiplexing (spreading factor (SF) is 16) achieves the highest throughput of approximately 105 Mbps at the average received Eb/N0 (signal energy per bit-to-noise power spectrum density ratio) of approximately 24 dB in a 3-path Rayleigh fading channel (rms delay spread, σ= 0.1 µsec). Furthermore, in coherent TD-OFCDM with QPSK and R = 4/5 or 8PSK and R = 1/2, throughput performance greater than 80 Mbps is achieved at the average received Eb/N0 of approximately 20 dB even in a 24-path Rayleigh fading channel (σ= 0.2 µsec).
Nobuhiko MIKI Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper elucidates the most appropriate hybrid automatic-repeat-request (ARQ) scheme, i.e., which can achieve the highest throughput, for high-speed packet transmission in the W-CDMA forward link by comparing the throughput performance of three types of hybrid ARQ schemes: type-I hybrid ARQ with packet combining (PC), type-II hybrid ARQ, and basic type-I hybrid ARQ as a reference. Moreover, from the viewpoint of maximum throughput, the respective optimum roles of ARQ and channel coding in hybrid ARQ are also clarified, such as the optimum coding rate and the packet length related to the interleaving effect. The simulation results reveal that the type-II scheme exhibits the best throughput performance, and the required received signal energy per chip-to-background noise spectral density ratio (Ec/N0) at the throughput efficiency of 0.2/0.4/0.6 is improved by 0.7/0.3/0.1 dB and 3.9/1.8/0.5 dB, respectively, compared to the type-I scheme with and without PC in a 2-path Rayleigh fading channel with the average equal power at the maximum Doppler frequency of 5 Hz and the packet length of 4 slots (= 0.667 4 = 2.667 msec). However, the improvement of the type-II scheme compared to the type-I scheme with PC is small or the achievable throughput is almost identical in the high-received Ec/N0 region. On the other hand, the type-I scheme with PC is much less complex and thus preferable, while maintaining almost the same throughput performance or allowing very minor degradation compared to that with type-II. The results also elucidate that, while the optimum coding rate depends on the required throughput in the basic type-I and type-I with PC schemes, it is around between 3/4 and 8/9 in type-II, resulting in a higher throughput efficiency. In addition, for high-speed packet transmission employing a hybrid ARQ scheme, a shorter retransmission unit size is preferable such as 1 slot, and the fast transmit power control is effective only under conditions such as a low maximum Doppler frequency and a high transmit Ec/N0 region.
Nobuhiko MIKI Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper compares the throughput performance employing hybrid automatic repeat request (ARQ) packet combining, i.e., Chase combining, and Incremental redundancy, considering the frequency diversity effect in the broadband forward-link channel for Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (OFCDM) packet wireless access achieving a peak throughput above 100 Mbps. Simulation results show that the achievable throughput at the average received signal energy per symbol-to-background noise power spectrum density ratio (Es/N0) of 0 and 6 dB employing Incremental redundancy is increased by approximately 35 and 30% compared to that using Chase combining for QPSK and 16QAM data modulation schemes with the coding rate of R = 1/2, respectively, considering a large frequency diversity effect in a 12-path exponential decayed Rayleigh fading channel, since the reduced variations in the received signal level in a broadband channel bring about a larger coding gain in Incremental redundancy. We also show that when adaptive modulation and channel coding (AMC) is applied, Incremental redundancy is superior to Chase combining since the large coding gain is effective in achieving a large time diversity gain for a low number of retransmissions such as M = 1 or 2 for a maximum Doppler frequency up to fD = 400 Hz. It is demonstrated, nevertheless, that the total throughput when employing Incremental redundancy associated with a near optimum MCS set according to the channel conditions becomes almost identical to that using Chase combining when a large number of retransmissions, M, is allowed, such as M = 10, owing to time diversity along with frequency diversity.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Masao NAKAGAWA
Partial capture effect for multi-carrier radio packet communication network is evaluated in frequency selective fading channel. In multi-carrier modulation (MCM) network where each terminal uses several sub-carriers for transmission,the terminals have different instantaneous frequency responses because of its location, fading pattern, and other various factors. This generates the difference of received power in frequency domain, then partial capture effect can be considered at each sub-carrier. Moreover these partially captured packets are not damaged by inter symbol interference (ISI) caused by frequency selective fading, which seriously degrades single-carrier modulation (SCM) network. From this point of view we present the partial capture effect for the MCM network in the frequency selective fading environment. The results show that the MCM network with partial capture has more advantages than the MCM network without partial capture in terms of the throughput and the average number of transmissions.
Nobuhiko MIKI Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper presents a comparison of the throughput performance employing hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ) with packet combining, such as Type-I with packet combining (simply Chase combining hereafter) and Type-II (Incremental redundancy hereafter), using turbo coding in a multipath fading channel in high speed downlink packet access (HSDPA). We apply a multipath interference canceller (MPIC) to remove the influence of severe multipath interference. Link level simulation results show that the maximum throughput using Incremental redundancy with 64QAM is improved by approximately 5-8% compared to that using Chase combining, and that the required average received signal energy of 12 code channels per chip-to-background noise spectrum density (Ec/N0) at the throughput of 4 Mbps with Incremental redundancy is decreased by approximately 1.0 dB rather than that with Chase combining when the vehicular speed is higher than approximately 30 km/h. Furthermore, we elucidate based on the system level simulation that although no improvement is obtained in a slow mobility environment such as the average vehicular speed of 3 km/h, the achieved throughput of Incremental redundancy is increased by approximately 5-6% and 13% for the average vehicular speed of 30 km/h and 120 km/h, respectively, compared to that with Chase combining.
Nobuhiko MIKI Hiroyuki ATARASHI Kenichi HIGUCHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI Masao NAKAGAWA
This paper presents experimental evaluations of the effect of time diversity obtained by hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ) with soft combining in space and path diversity schemes on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)-based packet radio access in a downlink broadband multipath fading channel. The effect of HARQ is analyzed through laboratory experiments employing fading simulators and field experiments conducted in downtown Yokosuka near Tokyo. After confirming the validity of experimental results based on numerical analysis of the time diversity gain in HARQ, we show by the experimental results that, for a fixed modulation and channel coding scheme (MCS), time diversity obtained by HARQ is effective in reducing the required received signal-to-interference plus noise power ratio (SINR) according to an increase in the number of transmissions, K, up to 10, even when the diversity effects are obtained through two-branch antenna diversity reception and path diversity using a number of multipaths greater than 12 observed in a real fading channel. Meanwhile, in combined use with the adaptive modulation and channel coding (AMC) scheme associated with space and path diversity, we clarify that the gain obtained by time diversity is almost saturated at the maximum number of transmissions in HARQ, K ' = 4 in Chase combining and K ' = 2 in Incremental redundancy, since the improvement in the residual packet error rate (PER) obtained through time diversity becomes small owing to the low PER in the initial packet transmission arising from appropriately selecting the optimum MCS in AMC. However, the experimental results elucidate that the time diversity in HARQ with soft combining associated with antenna diversity reception is effective in improving the throughput even in a broadband multipath channel with sufficient path diversity.
Daisuke TAKEDA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Masao NAKAGAWA
In this paper, Orthogonal Multicode OFDM-DS/CDMA system using Partial Bandwidth Transmission is proposed. By using the flexible carrier allocation of OFDM, Partial Bandwidth Transmission is considered for high quality communication. Furthermore, multicode packet data transmission is presented. Multicode packet data transmission is very effective to handle variable data. Since the proposed system can detect the header information without complex control, it is also suitable for packet data transmission. The computer simulation results show that the BER performance of the proposed system with the ideal channel estimation is improved compared with the case of the conventional Orthogonal Multicode DS/CDMA system with ideal RAKE receivers. Moreover the proposed system with the channel estimation by MLS algorithm also shows the good BER performance. In packet data transmission, the delay and throughput performances are also improved in the proposed system.
Motohiro TANNO Hiroyuki ATARASHI Kenichi HIGUCHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper proposes a new cell-specific scrambling code (CSSC) assignment method and a fast cell search algorithm in the forward link for Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (OFCDM) wireless access that are suitable for a system incorporating coexisting isolated and cellular cells. In the proposed method, one or some CSSC groups and thereby the CSSCs belonging to the CSSC groups are exclusively assigned to isolated cells. By detecting the best CSSC assigned to an isolated cell with higher priority than the cellular cells, the best cell including the isolated cell obtaining the minimum path loss can be detected far faster than by using the conventional cell search method, which employs uniform CSSC assignment. Computer simulation results show that by using the proposed cell search method together with the exclusive CSSC assignment to the isolated cells, the isolated-cell detection probability of approximately 90% is achieved at the cell boundary after the cell search time of 10 msec, while corresponding detection probability using conventional CSSC assignment is approximately 80% without notifying the user equipment of the cell type and its CSSC information of the surrounding cells via the broadcast channel, at the average received signal energy per bit-to-noise power spectrum density ratio (Eb/N0) of 10 dB for the common pilot channel (CPICH) in the cellular cells, when the transmission power ratio of the CPICH to the packet data channel (PDCH) for a one-code channel is RCPICH = 9 dB in a 20-cell layout model.
Yoshikazu GOTO Teruo KAWAMURA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper proposes Variable Spreading and Chip Repetition Factors (VSCRF)-Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) broadband packet wireless access in the reverse link, which flexibly supports employing the same air interface in various radio environments such as a cellular system with a multi-cell configuration and local areas such as very-small cell, indoor, and isolated-cell environments. In VSCRF-CDMA, we propose two schemes: the first is a combination of time-domain spreading with an orthogonal code and chip repetition that achieves orthogonal multiple access in the frequency domain by utilizing a comb-shaped frequency spectrum, and the other is adaptive control of the spreading factor and chip repetition factor according to the cell configurations, number of simultaneously accessing users, propagation channel conditions, and major radio link parameters. Simulation results show that the proposed VSCRF-CDMA associated with the combination of the spreading factor, SFD, of four and the chip repetition factor, CRF, of four improves the required average received signal energy per bit-to-noise power spectrum density ratio (Eb/N0) for the average packet error rate of 10-2 by approximately 2.0 dB compared to DS-CDMA only employing SFD = 16 assuming four simultaneously accessing users in an exponentially decaying six-path Rayleigh fading channel with two-branch diversity reception.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Riaz ESMAILZADEH Masao NAKAGAWA
To support high bit rate and high quality indoor radio communication systems, we have to solve intersymbol interference (ISI) problem caused by frequency-selective fading. Recently multi-carrier modulation technique is considered to be one of the effective methods for this problem. In this paper we propose Partial Frequency ARQ (Automatic Repeat reQuest) system which can achieve effective ARQ scheme for multi-carrier packet communication. This system operates partial retransmission of erroneous power faded packets, and it is superior to the traditional ARQ systems. Furthermore two different protocols are examined for this system: Static Carrier Assignment (SCA) and Dynamic Carrier Assignment (DCA). By computer simulation we found that DCA method can achieve better performance than SCA in terms of both throughput and packet transmission delay.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Masao NAKAGAWA
An efficient ARQ scheme based on the packet combining technique is investigated for multi-carrier modulation systems. In multi-carrier modulation systems, several sub-carriers are used for high data rate transmission and their individual received signal quality becomes different from one sub-carrier to others in a frequency selective fading channel. Therefore by changing the assignment of data to the sub-carriers in the retransmission packets, the distortion between the previous transmitted packet and the newly retransmitted one will be different. This is the principle of the proposed adaptive data order rearrangement for a packet combining ARQ scheme, which can achieve more diversity gain in packet combining and improve the ARQ performance. From the results of the theoretical analysis and the computer simulation, it is confirmed that the proposed packet combining ARQ with the proposed operation can achieve the better performance in terms of the average packet transmission success probability. In addition, this proposed scheme is also compared with the conventional multi-carrier modulation ARQ scheme based on the partial retransmission of a packet. The computer simulation results demonstrate that the proposed scheme has also advantage against the latter one, and it is considered to be as a more efficient ARQ scheme for multi-carrier modulation systems.
Satoshi NAGATA Noriyuki MAEDA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper proposes an accurate Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) window timing detection method based on the maximum signal-to-interference power ratio (SIR) criterion taking into account the received signal and inter-symbol interference power according to different detected FFT window timings in Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (OFCDM) wireless access. In the proposed method, the SIR of the received signal is estimated using the desired signal power and inter-symbol interference power calculated based on the power delay profile, which is measured by the cross-correlation between the pilot symbol replica and the received signal. Furthermore, since the SIR is calculated only for the received path timing of the first path and those paths exceeding the guard interval duration, the computational complexity of the proposed method is low. Computer simulation results show that the proposed scheme reduces the required average received signal energy per symbol-to-noise power spectrum density ratio (Es/N0) for achieving the average packet error rate of 10-2 by approximately 1.0 dB compared to the conventional method, which detects the forward path timing of the power delay profile (16QAM data modulation, six-path Rayleigh fading channel, and the maximum delay time of 3 µsec (root mean squared (r.m.s.) delay spread of 0.86 µsec)).
Yoshihisa KISHIYAMA Noriyuki MAEDA Kenichi HIGUCHI Hiroyuki ATARASHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper presents throughput performance along with power profiles in the time and frequency domains over 100 Mbps based on field experiments using the implemented Variable Spreading Factor-Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (VSF-OFCDM) transceiver with a 100-MHz bandwidth in a real multipath fading channel. We conducted field experiments in which a base station (BS) employs a 120-degree sectored beam antenna with the antenna height of 50 m and a van equipped with a mobile station (MS) is driven at the average speed of 30 km/h along measurement courses that are approximately 800 to 1000 m away from the BS, where most of the locations along the courses are under non-line-of-sight conditions. Field experimental results show that, by applying 16QAM data modulation and Turbo coding with the coding rate of R = 1/2 to a shared data channel together with two-branch antenna diversity reception, throughput over 100 and 200 Mbps is achieved when the average received signal-to-interference plus noise power ratio (SINR) is approximately 6.0 and 14.0 dB, respectively in a broadband channel bandwidth where a large number of paths such as more than 20 are observed. Furthermore, the location probability for achieving throughput over 100 and 200 Mbps becomes approximately 90 and 20% in these measurement courses, which experience a large number of paths, when the transmission power of the BS is 10 W with a 120-degree sectored beam transmission.
Noriyuki MAEDA Hiroyuki ATARASHI Sadayuki ABETA Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper proposes a pilot channel assisted minimum mean square error (MMSE) combining scheme in orthogonal frequency and code division multiplexing (OFCDM) based on actual signal-to-interference power ratio (SIR) estimation, and investigates the throughput performance in a broadband channel with a near 100-MHz bandwidth. In the proposed MMSE combining scheme, the combining weight of each sub-carrier component is accurately estimated from the channel gain, noise power, and transmission power ratio of all the code-multiplexed channels to the desired one, by exploiting the time-multiplexed common pilot channel in addition to the coded data channel. Simulation results elucidate that the required average received signal energy per bit-to-noise spectrum density ratio (Eb/N0) for the average packet error rate (PER) = 10-2 is improved by 0.6 and 1.2 dB by using the proposed MMSE combining instead of the conventional equal gain combining (EGC) in a 24-path Rayleigh fading channel (exponential decay path model, maximum delay time is approximately 1 µsec) in an isolated cell environment, when the number of multiplexed codes = 8 and 32, respectively, with the spreading factor of 32. Furthermore, when the average received Eb/N0 = 10 dB, the achievable throughput, i.e., the number of simultaneously multiplexed codes for the average PER = 10-2 in the proposed MMSE combining, is increased by approximately 1.3 fold that of the conventional EGC.
Hiroyuki ATARASHI Mamoru SAWAHASHI
This paper investigates the impact of inter-carrier interference (ICI) due to Doppler spread on the packet error rate (PER) performance in Orthogonal Frequency and Code Division Multiplexing (OFCDM) packet wireless access employing turbo coding in a multipath fading channel, and describes the optimization of the sub-carrier spacing, Δ f, i.e., the number of sub-carriers, Nc, with an approximate 50-100 MHz bandwidth. Simulation results show that although the uncoded OFCDM in a 1-path flat Rayleigh fading channel is affected by the ICI caused by the Doppler spread when the maximum Doppler frequency, fD, becomes more than 5% of Δ f, OFCDM employing turbo coding in a 24-path Rayleigh fading channel is robust against Doppler spread and the degradation is not apparent until fD reaches more than 10% of Δ f. This is because the turbo coding gain and the frequency diversity effect compensate for the degradation due to ICI. Meanwhile, the PER performance with a larger Nc is degraded, since the effect of the error correction capability becomes smaller due to the larger variance of the despread OFCDM symbols associated with the narrower spreading bandwidth in the frequency domain. Consequently, along with the packet frame efficiency for accommodating the guard interval to compensate for the maximum multipath delay time of 1 µsec, we clarify that the optimum number of sub-carriers is approximately 512-1024 (the corresponding Δ f becomes 156.3-78.1 kHz) for broadband OFCDM packet wireless access assuming a 50-100 MHz bandwidth.