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[Keyword] interference rejection combining(7hit)

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  • Performance of Interference Rejection Combining Receiver Employing Minimum Mean Square Error Filter for Licensed-Assisted Access

    Jumpei YAMAMOTO  Shunichi BUSHISUE  Nobuhiko MIKI  

     
    PAPER-Fundamental Theories for Communications

      Pubricized:
    2017/07/13
      Vol:
    E101-B No:1
      Page(s):
    137-145

    To support the rapid increase of mobile traffic, the LTE-based air interface is expected to be employed in the unlicensed spectrum known as “Licensed-Assisted Access (LAA).” The LAA terminal, which employs an LTE-based air interface, suffers from interference from WiFi access points as well as the LAA base station. The interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver, which employs a linear minimum mean square error (MMSE) filter, can suppress this interference from WiFi access points in addition to that of the LAA base station. The IRC receiver is effective, since it requires no knowledge of the interference, which is generally difficult to obtain for different systems. In this paper, we use a link-level simulation to evaluate the performance of the IRC receiver in suppressing the interference from WiFi access points, and show that the IRC receiver can effectively cancel the interference from WiFi systems as well as LTE systems, although we observed a slight performance degradation due to the covariance matrix estimation error caused by the WiFi interference fluctuation in the frequency-domain.

  • A 60 GHz Hybrid Analog/Digital Beamforming Receiver with Interference Suppression for Multiuser Gigabit/s Radio Access

    Koji TAKINAMI  Hiroyuki MOTOZUKA  Tomoya URUSHIHARA  Masashi KOBAYASHI  Hiroshi TAKAHASHI  Masataka IRIE  Takenori SAKAMOTO  Yohei MORISHITA  Kenji MIYANAGA  Takayuki TSUKIZAWA  Noriaki SAITO  Naganori SHIRAKATA  

     
    PAPER-Microwaves, Millimeter-Waves

      Vol:
    E99-C No:7
      Page(s):
    856-865

    This paper presents a 60 GHz analog/digital beamforming receiver that effectively suppresses interference signals, targeting the IEEE 802.11ad/WiGig standard. Combining two-stream analog frontends with interference rejection digital signal processing, the analog beamforming steers the antenna beam to the desired direction while the digital beamforming provides gain suppression in the interference direction. A prototype has been built with 40 nm CMOS analog frontends as well as offline baseband digital signal processing. Measurements show a 3.1 dB EVM advantage over conventional two-stream diversity during a packet collision situation.

  • An Interference Rejection Combining Technique for an SFBC-OFDM System with Multiple Carrier Frequency Offsets

    Mina LEE  Rothna PEC  Kyu Seok KIM  Chang Hwan PARK  Yong Soo CHO  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Vol:
    E99-B No:2
      Page(s):
    481-487

    In this paper, an interference rejection combining (IRC) technique is proposed for SFBC-OFDM cellular systems that exhibit multiple carrier frequency offsets (CFOs). The IRC weight and the corresponding value for CFO compensation in the proposed technique are obtained by maximizing the post-SINR, i.e., minimizing both the interference signal and inter-channel interference (ICI) terms caused by multiple CFOs. The performance of the conventional IRC and proposed IRC techniques is evaluated by computer simulation for an SFBC-OFDM cellular system with multiple CFOs.

  • Performance Evaluation of Interference Rejection Combining Receiver in Heterogeneous Networks for LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Yusuke OHWATARI  Akihito MORIMOTO  Nobuhiko MIKI  Yukihiko OKUMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E96-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1265-1276

    The interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver effectively improves the cell-edge user throughput by suppressing interference from the surrounding cells. The work item (WI) for the specification of the IRC receiver is now ongoing for Release 11 Long-Term Evolution (LTE)-Advanced. Furthermore, heterogeneous networks where low power nodes such as picocells are overlaid onto macrocells are important to further improve the system throughput per unit area. In heterogeneous networks, to achieve an offloading gain from macrocells to picocells, cell range expansion (CRE) is applied. Additionally, inter-cell interference coordination (ICIC) is applied to reduce the severe inter-cell interference imposed from the macrocells onto the sets of user equipment (UEs) connected to picocells. In such cases, the interference statistics are completely different from traditional well-planned macrocell deployments, which have been investigated for the IRC receiver. This paper clarifies the effect of the IRC receiver in a heterogeneous network employing CRE and ICIC. Simulation results show that when both CRE and ICIC are applied, the effect of the IRC receiver becomes small due to a reduction in the severe inter-cell interference from ICIC. However, we clarify that the user throughput gain at the cumulative distribution function of 5% from the IRC receiver exceeding 10% is achieved compared to the conventional minimum mean square error (MMSE) receiver in a heterogeneous network regardless of the usage of ICIC. Furthermore, in heterogeneous networks employing CRE and ICIC, we clarify that an average user throughput gain exceeding 5% is achieved from the IRC receiver and the improvement in the average user throughput is high especially for the UEs connected to picocells compared to UEs connected to macrocells.

  • Impact on Inter-Cell Interference of Reference Signal for Interference Rejection Combining Receiver in LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Yousuke SANO  Yusuke OHWATARI  Nobuhiko MIKI  Yuta SAGAE  Yukihiko OKUMURA  Yasutaka OGAWA  Takeo OHGANE  Toshihiko NISHIMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E95-B No:12
      Page(s):
    3728-3738

    This paper investigates the dominant impact on the interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver due to the downlink reference signal (RS) based covariance matrix estimation scheme. When the transmission modes using the cell-specific RS (CRS) in LTE/LTE-Advanced are assumed, the property of the non-precoded CRS is different from that of the data signals. This difference poses two problems to the IRC receiver. First, it results in different levels of accuracy for the RS based covariance matrix estimation. Second, assuming the case where the CRS from the interfering cell collides with the desired data signals of the serving cell, the IRC receiver cannot perfectly suppress this CRS interference. The results of simulations assuming two transmitter and receiver antenna branches show that the impact of the CRS-to-CRS collision among cells is greater than that for the CRS interference on the desired data signals especially in closed-loop multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems, from the viewpoint of the output signal-to-interference-plus-noise power ratio (SINR). However, the IRC receiver improves the user throughput by more than 20% compared to the conventional maximal ratio combining (MRC) receiver under the simulation assumptions made in this paper even when the CRS-to-CRS collision is assumed. Furthermore, the results verify the observations made in regard to the impact of inter-cell interference of the CRS for various average received signal-to-noise power ratio (SNR) and signal-to-interference power ratio (SIR) environments.

  • Link Performance Modeling of Interference Rejection Combining Receiver in System Level Evaluation for LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Yousuke SANO  Yusuke OHWATARI  Nobuhiko MIKI  Akihito MORIMOTO  Yukihiko OKUMURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E95-B No:12
      Page(s):
    3739-3751

    The interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver, which can suppress inter-cell interference, is effective in improving the cell-edge user throughput. The IRC receiver is typically based on the minimum mean square error (MMSE) criteria, and requires a covariance matrix including the interference signals, in addition to a channel matrix from the serving cell. Therefore, in order to clarify the gain from the IRC receiver, the actual estimation error of these matrices should be taken into account. In a system performance evaluation, the link performance modeling of the IRC receiver, i.e., the output signal-to-interference-plus-noise power ratio (SINR) after IRC reception including the estimation errors, is very important in evaluating the actual performance of the IRC receiver in system level simulations. This is because these errors affect the suppression of the interference signals for the IRC receiver. Therefore, this paper investigates and proposes IRC receiver modeling schemes for the covariance matrix and channel estimation errors. As the modeling scheme for the covariance matrix, we propose a scheme that averages the conventional approximation using the complex Wishart distribution in the frequency domain to address issues that arise in a frequency selective fading channel. Furthermore, we propose a modeling scheme for the channel estimation error according to the ideal channel response of all cells and a channel estimation filter to address channel fading fluctuations. The results of simulations assuming the LTE/LTE-Advanced downlink with two transmitter and receiver antenna branches show that the proposed modeling scheme for the covariance matrix estimation error accurately approximates the performance of a realistic IRC receiver, which estimates the covariance matrix and channel matrix of the serving cell based on the demodulation reference signal (DM-RS), even in a frequency selective fading channel. The results also show that the proposed modeling scheme for the channel estimation error is a robust scheme in terms of the r.m.s. delay spread of a channel model compared to the scheme using the mean square error (MSE) statistic of the estimated channel coefficients based on a channel estimation filter.

  • Performance of Interference Rejection Combining Receiver to Suppress Inter-Cell Interference in LTE-Advanced Downlink

    Yusuke OHWATARI  Nobuhiko MIKI  Takahiro ASAI  Tetsushi ABE  Hidekazu TAOKA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E94-B No:12
      Page(s):
    3362-3369

    The interference rejection combining (IRC) receiver, which can suppress inter-cell interference, is effective in improving the cell-edge user throughput. The IRC receiver is typically based on the minimum mean square error (MMSE) criteria, which requires highly accurate channel estimation and covariance matrix estimation that includes the inter-cell interference. This paper investigates the gain from the IRC receiver in terms of the downlink user throughput performance in a multi-cell environment. In the evaluation, to assess the actual gain, the inter-cell interference signals including reference signals from the surrounding 56 cells are generated in the same way as the desired signals, and the channel propagation from all of the cells is explicitly taken into account considering pathloss, shadowing, and multipath fading. The results of simulations that assume the inter-site distance of 500 m, the spatial correlation at the transmitter and the receiver of 0.5, and the numbers of transmitter and receiver antennas of 2 and 2, respectively, show that the IRC receiver improves the cell-edge user throughput (defined as the 5% value in the cumulative distribution function) by approximately 15% compared to the simplified MMSE receiver that approximates the inter-cell interference as AWGN, at the cost of a drop in the average user throughput due to less accurate channel and covariance matrices. Furthermore, we consider dynamic switching between the IRC receiver and the simplified MMSE receiver according to the number of streams and modulation and coding scheme levels. The results show that with dynamic switching, both the cell-edge throughput and average user throughput are improved to the same level as that for the IRC receiver and the simplified MMSE receiver, respectively. Therefore, the best performance can be achieved by employing the dynamic switching in all throughput regions.

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