Toru NAKURA Shingo MANDAI Makoto IKEDA Kunihiro ASADA
This paper presents a Time Difference Amplifier (TDA) that amplifies the input time difference into the output time difference. Cross coupled chains of variable delay cells with the same number of stages are applicable for TDA, and the gain is adjusted via the closed-loop control. The TDA was fabricated using 65 nm CMOS and the measurement results show that the time difference gain is 4.78 at a nominal power supply while the designed gain is 4.0. The gain is stable enough to be less than 1.4% gain shift under 10% power supply voltage fluctuation.
Chao ZHANG Xiaokang LIN Mitsutoshi HATORI
Multi-Carrier CDMA (MC-CDMA) has been considered as a combination of the techniques of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) and Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex (OFDM). However, even until now, the efficient MC-CDMA scheme is still under study because of the inherent bugs in OFDM, such as the troubles caused by Multiple Access Interference (MAI) and Peak to Average Power Ratio (PAPR). In this paper, we present a novel two-dimensional spreading sequence named "Two Dimensional Combined Complementary Sequence" (TDC). If we take this kind of sequences as spreading codes, several prominent advantages can be achieved compared with traditional MC-CDMA. First, it can achieve MAI free in the multi-path transmission both in uplink and downlink. Second, it offers low PAPR value within 3 dB with a quite simple architecture. The last but not the least, the proposed MC-CDMA scheme turns out to be an efficient approach with high bandwidth efficiency, high spreading efficiency and flexible transmission rate enriched by a special shift-and-add modulation. Meanwhile, an algorithm that constructs TDC sequences is discussed in details. Based on above results, we can get the conclusion that the novel TDC sequences and corresponding MC-CDMA architecture have great potential for applications in next generation wireless mobile communications, which require high transmission rate in hostile and complicated channels.