Feedback based on codebook subset
10277294 ยท 2019-04-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B7/0456
ELECTRICITY
H04B7/0478
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/03828
ELECTRICITY
H04B7/0469
ELECTRICITY
H04B7/0639
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B7/0456
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/03
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The present invention provides for an improved application of signal strength weightings in a SDMA sectorized cellular network. The improved signal strength weightings application is conducted through the improved selection of weightings from a new codebook subset or by the selection of weightings from a larger codebook subset. In a further embodiment, an antenna beam index or bit map can be used to select the best beam(s) in a SDMA sectorized cellular network. In another embodiment, a field or factor in an uplink or downlink transmission packet can designate which directional transmission beam is best suited for the transmission or when the directional transmission beam should be activated.
Claims
1. A method for operating a user equipment (UE) device, the method comprising: transmitting PMI feedback to a base station serving a sector of a cellular network, wherein the PMI feedback refers to a codeword from within a first subset consisting of six constant modulus codewords, wherein the first subset of six constant modulus codewords is a subset of a precoding codebook, wherein the precoding codebook consists of said first subset of six constant modulus codewords and a second subset of one or more antenna selection codewords, wherein the one or more antenna selection codewords include the codeword given by
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the PMI feedback is a 2-bit index.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the first subset is configured via RRC signaling.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the precoding codebook includes six rows and two columns, wherein a first of the columns includes the following codewords for single-layer transmission:
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the first or second subset is configured for the UE device from one or more designated codebook subsets based on channel condition information, wherein the channel condition information includes location information and error indicators for the UE device.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the received downlink signals and downlink signals directed to a plurality of other UE devices are weighted using weighting factors of respective precoding codewords making it less likely that the downlink signals will interfere with each other.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving a field in the downlink signals that identifies said precoding codeword.
8. A user equipment (UE) device, comprising: digital circuitry configured to: transmit PMI feedback to a base station serving a sector of a cellular network, wherein the PMI feedback refers to a codeword from within a first subset consisting of six constant modulus codewords, wherein the first subset of six constant modulus codewords is a subset of a precoding codebook, wherein the precoding codebook consists of said first subset of six constant modulus codewords and a second subset of one or more antenna selection codewords, wherein the one or more antenna selection codewords include the codeword given by
9. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the PMI feedback is a 2-bit index.
10. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the first subset is configured via RRC signaling.
11. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the precoding codebook includes six rows and two columns, wherein a first of the columns includes the following codewords for single-layer transmission:
12. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the first or second subset is configured for the UE device from one or more designated codebook subsets based on channel condition information, wherein the channel condition information includes location information and error indicators for the UE device.
13. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the received downlink signals and downlink signals directed to a plurality of other UE devices are weighted using weighting factors of respective precoding codewords making it less likely that the downlink signals will interfere with each other.
14. The UE device of claim 8, wherein the digital circuitry is further configured to: receive a field in the downlink signals that identifies said precoding codeword.
15. A non-transitory computer-readable memory medium storing software instructions that, when executed by a processor of a user equipment (UE) device, cause the UE device to: receive PMI feedback to a base station serving a sector of a cellular network, wherein the PMI feedback refers to a codeword from within a first subset consisting of six constant modulus codewords, wherein the first subset of six constant modulus codewords is a subset of a precoding codebook, wherein the precoding codebook consists of said first subset of six constant modulus codewords and a second subset of one or more antenna selection codewords, wherein the one or more antenna selection codewords include the codeword given by
16. The non-transitory computer-readable memory medium of claim 15, wherein the PMI feedback is a 2-bit index.
17. The non-transitory computer-readable memory medium of claim 15, wherein the first subset is configured via RRC signaling.
18. The non-transitory computer-readable memory medium of claim 15, wherein the precoding codebook includes six rows and two columns, wherein a first of the columns includes the following codewords for single-layer transmission:
19. The non-transitory computer-readable memory medium of claim 15, wherein the first or second subset is configured for the UE device from one or more designated codebook subsets based on channel condition information, wherein the channel condition information includes location information and error indicators for the UE device.
20. The non-transitory computer-readable memory medium of claim 15, wherein the received downlink signals and downlink signals directed to a plurality of other UE devices are weighted using weighting factors of respective precoding codewords making it less likely that the downlink signals will interfere with each other.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The objects and features of the invention will become more readily understood from the following detailed description and appended claims when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like numerals represent like elements and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(13) In
(14) Multiple antennas 145, 147 and 148 are shown in the architecture 140, wherein each antenna is directed toward a different region of the cellular network shown by the directional transmission 175 for coverage area 150, transmission 190 for coverage area 157, and directional transmission 180 for coverage area 155. In this context, it is possible for system capacity to be improved by the sectorized architecture.
(15) By weighting the various transmission signals, additional efficiencies and reduced interferences can be achieved as shown in
(16) In
(17) The selection of specific codes to be used in the precoding component 321 to provide appropriate weightings for the signal strength are shown in several tables documented in
(18) There are two possible configurations for the codebook selection using the codebooks at
(19) In a second configuration, the user equipment can select the appropriate codebook subset to be used in
(20) As an alternative, the codebook shown in
(21) In one configuration, the attachment point (base station/antenna) may select one of the two subsets shown in
(22) In a second configuration, the user equipment can select the appropriate codebook subset to be used in either
(23) Further, the attachment point may also use a larger codebook subset table as shown in
(24) The application of the signal strength weightings can also be optimized using an antenna beam indicator. The indicator may be a field in the uplink or downlink transmission packets. The length (number of bits) for such an indicator will depend on the number of available antennas in the network location. One bit length is sufficient for two antenna architectures, while 2 bits is sufficient to designate up to four antennas. The antenna beam indicator can also be designated according to a bit map with each bit identifying one of the available beams that can be used to communicate with the user equipment.
(25) Based on the specific beam location, the user equipment will provide an indicator bit value or bit map value indicating which beam can provide the best coverage for that user equipment. The use of that antenna beam indicator over a specific period of time will depend on the user equipment mobility, with the indicator being valid longer for slower moving user equipment and being valid for a shorter period of time for faster moving user equipment. Thus, the antenna beam indication needs to be updated with a periodicity corresponding to the changes.
(26) The use of an antenna beam indicator is made possible through the estimation of the uplink transmission condition, such as an analysis of the sounding, random access, or other types of uplink transmissions from the user equipment. The access point may also use a direction-finding algorithm to determine the beam index for user equipment using the SDMA protocols. The CQI index can be used to provide selection information to the access point, which can also analyze the signal-to-interference and noise ratio and identification of the serving beam for the user equipment.
(27) In systems with switching beams or opportunistic beams (e.g. OSTMA), the user equipment provides a CQI index when it is within the coverage area of a beam that has been switched (powered) on. Based on the time when the CQI is received by the access point, the beam index can be implicitly determined because the beam pattern is known by the access point.
(28) The technology as described above allows the configuration of additional codebooks for UE feedback in closed-loop operations, so that a more appropriate codebook can be used to support different antenna configurations, e.g. correlated, uncorrelated or cross-polarized antenna systems. To allow the support of various antenna configurations that would be favorable for different deployment scenarios, e.g., correlated, uncorrelated or cross-polarized antenna systems, LTE-Advanced may support additional codebooks to be used for UE feedback in closed-loop operations. For backward compatibility, higher-layer (RRC) signaling can be used to configure the use of a different codebook by some or all of the UEs conveniently, depending on the UE capability, e.g., Rel-8 UEs or LTE-A UEs, and the deployment configuration, e.g., correlated, uncorrelated or cross-polarized antenna systems. As the codebook is configurable, the larger UE-specific codebook can be configured when a higher capacity is required in the deployed system. Otherwise, the smaller codebook can be used to minimize UE complexity.
(29) While the foregoing has been with reference to a particular embodiment of the invention, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes in this embodiment may be made without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined by the appended claims.