Method and apparatus for transmitting and receiving signal using variable observation length in multicarrier system using non-orthogonal transmission signal
09871686 ยท 2018-01-16
Assignee
- Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (Suwon-Si, Gyeonggi-Do, KR)
- POSTECH ACADEMY-INDUSTRY FOUNDATION (Pohang-si, KR)
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04L27/26416
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04L5/12
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The present disclosure relates to a pre-5th-Generation (5G) or 5G communication system to be provided for supporting higher data rates Beyond 4th-Generation (4G) communication system such as Long Term Evolution (LTE). A method and apparatus for transmitting and receiving signals using a variable observation length in a multi-carrier system using the non-orthogonal transmission signal. A receiver performs fast Fourier transform on reception vectors contained in the signal, equalizes the fast Fourier transformed reception vectors by a 1-tap zero forcing equalizer, and applies a reception filter based on the observation length to the equalized reception vectors. A transmitter includes a transceiver configured to transmit and receive a signal, and a controller configured to cause the transceiver to transmit an indicator for a Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) level to a receiver based on a channel state, and transmit a signal applied with the MCS level to the receiver.
Claims
1. A method of receiving a signal that is non-orthogonal by a receiver in a filter bank multicarrier system, the method comprising: receiving the signal transmitted by a transmitter, wherein the signal includes at least one symbol; identifying an observation length based on at least one of information from the transmitter and a channel state, wherein the observation length is variable; and estimating the at least one symbol of the signal by applying the observation length to the signal.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the information is transmitted from the transmitter and includes an indicator associated with the observation length.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the estimating the at least one symbol of the signal further comprises: performing fast Fourier transform on reception vectors contained in the signal; equalizing the fast Fourier transformed reception vectors by a 1-tap zero forcing equalizer; and applying a reception filter based on the observation length to the equalized fast Fourier transformed reception vectors.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the reception filter is applied to equalized signals, a number of the equalized signals being equal to a number obtained by dividing the observation length by lengths of the reception vectors.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the equalized signals are generated based on the reception signal vectors, a number of the reception signal vectors being spaced apart therefrom by an overlapping factor L.
6. A receiver for receiving a signal, which is non-orthogonal, in a filter bank multicarrier system, the receiver comprising: a transceiver configured to transmit and receive signals; and a controller configured to control to receive the signal transmitted by a transmitter, wherein the signal includes at least one symbol; identify an observation length based on at least one of information from the transmitter and a channel state, wherein the observation length is variable; and estimate the at least one symbol of the signal by applying the observation length to the signal.
7. The receiver of claim 6, wherein the information is transmitted from the transmitter and includes an indicator associated with the observation length.
8. The receiver of claim 6, wherein the controller is further confiugred to perform fast Fourier transform on reception vectors included in the signal, to equalize the fast Fourier transformed reception vectors by a 1-tap zero forcing equalizer, and to apply a reception filter based on the observation length to the equalized fast Fourier transformed reception vectors.
9. The receiver of claim 8, wherein reception filter is applied to equalized signals, a number of the equalized signals being equal to a number obtained by dividing the observation length by lengths of the reception vectors.
10. The receiver of claim 9, wherein the equalized signals are generated based on the reception signal vectors, a number of the reception signal vectors being spaced apart therefrom by an overlapping factor L.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) For a more complete understanding of the present disclosure and its advantages, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals represent like parts:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(18) Further, the following detailed description of embodiments of the present disclosure is based on the FBMC transmission scheme as a main subject. However, the subject matter of the present disclosure is applicable to other communication systems having similar technical backgrounds and channel formation with small variations without largely departing from the scope of the present disclosure, and the variations may be made by determination of those skilled in the art to which the present disclosure pertains.
(19) The advantages and features of the present disclosure and ways to achieve them will be apparent by making reference to embodiments as described below in detail in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the embodiments set forth below, but may be implemented in various different forms. The following embodiments are provided only to completely disclose the present disclosure and inform those skilled in the art of the scope of the present disclosure, and the present disclosure is defined only by the scope of the appended claims. Throughout the specification, the same or like reference numerals designate the same or like elements.
(20) An Offset Quadrature Amplitude Modulation-FBMC (OQAM-FMBC) transmission technology among various schemes of the FBMC transmission technology has a great Signal-to-Interference Ratio (SIR) performance because an OQAM symbol in which orthogonality exists is used. However, complexity of the transceiver is high, compatibility with an existing system is low due to using the OQAM symbols, and application to a Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output (MIMO) system is difficult. In order to overcome this disadvantage, a Quadrature Amplitude Modulation-FBMC (QAM-FMBC) transmission technology may be used, and the QAM-FBMC has high compatibility with the existing system and can be easily extended under the MIMO system because the complexity of the transceiver is relatively low and a QAM symbol is used. However, the QAM-FBMC transmission technology has a low SIR performance in a situation in which there is a high Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR).
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(22) According to
(23) Specifically, when an overlapping factor is 4, FD localization is considered, and a low-order modulation scheme such as a QPSK is applied around 15-20 dB, the QAM-FBMC transmission scheme is operated without a problem in the performance. However, when a high-order modulation scheme such as the 64QM is applied because the SNR increases, the SIR performance becomes stagnant.
(24) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 SNR (dB) SIR (dB) SINR (dB) 25 20 18.8067 60 24.9986
(25) Table 1 shows an SNR performance according to a SIR performance in a case in which the SNR performance is same when the QAM-FBMC transmission scheme is used. The SINR is 18.8067 dB when the SIR is 20 dB, and the SINR is 24.9986 dB when the SIR is 60 dB. Accordingly, the SINR value may not be largely changed in comparison with the change of the SIR value.
(26) The QAM-FBMC uses a symbol which does not have orthogonality so that Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI) occurs in the receiver and an accordingly generated amount is very small. Therefore, the amount is insignificant in comparison with a noise when a modulation scheme of a low order is used, but a problem occurs because a noise ratio of an amount of ISI increases when a modulation scheme of a high order is used.
(27) Therefore, a method of resolving a problem of converging (bottlenecking) of the SINR value, which is a weak point of the QAM-FBMC transmission scheme, while maintaining a merit in that a QAM symbol is used and complexity of a transceiver is low.
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(29) When the observation length is lengthened, communication efficiency increases, and especially, high communication efficiency is shown in a section in which an SNR is high, but the complexity of the receiver largely increases. Therefore, when the receiver uses the variable observation length, the receiver can efficiently receive a signal transmitted by the transmitter in various communication environments. However, since complexity significantly increases in comparison with an efficiency increase in a case in which the observation length is lengthened when using the existing equalizer, the receiver could not receive a signal by lengthening the observation length.
(30) The present disclosure provides a new equalizer structure, and can apply a receiver and a reception method, which apply the variable observation length, to the QAM-FBMC system because the complexity does not significantly increase even though the observation length is lengthened when the equalizer of the present disclosure is applied. The equalizer provided in the present disclosure has characteristics in that the observation length can be extended as every integer multiple of the symbol length of N, a reception performance increases as the observation length increases, and a size of Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is constant as N without the observation length.
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(32) In is again converted into a data symbol
325 through a reception filter 324. In this event, the equalized reception signal passes through a corresponding reception filter as an observation length is changed to N, 2N, 3N, and 4N.
(33) An equalizer structure provided by the present disclosure is as follows.
(34) When an FBMC symbol length is N and an observation length is 3N, a reception signal model in a frequency band (domain) is shown in Equation 1 below.
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(36) refers to a reception signal, P refers to a transmission filter, refers to a channel, d refers to a data symbol, P.sub.i refers to Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI), refers to an additional channel, and P.sub.i,N.sub.
(37) In this event, a Linear Minimum Mean Square Error (LMMSE) equalizer satisfies Equation 2 below.
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(39) The present disclosure provides an equalizer as shown in Equation 3 for satisfying Equation 2.
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(41) The present disclosure includes an equalizer which is divided into two parts, and in Equation 3,
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refers to a reception filter for maximizing a SINR when the observation length is 3N, and
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refers to a channel ZF equalizer. The channel ZF equalizer can be expressed as
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(45) The channel ZF equalizer corresponds to a channel equalizer which is well known in the prior art, is used by being approximated by a diagonal matrix. In the present disclosure the channel ZF equalizer can be generalized as an integer multiple of the general observation length of N.
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(47) Referring to
(48) A reception filter for maximizing the SINR corresponds to a filter for maximizing the SINR in the same channel environment, and can be obtained from a QAM-FBMC reception vector model of an additive white Gaussian noise channel when the observation length is N. The n-th reception r.sub.n signal and a data symbol in the additive white Gaussian noise channel can be expressed as follows.
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For given P.sub.T,.sup.2 minimize MSE P.sub.R=minimize E[x.sub.n|.sup.2][Equation 5]
(50) A solution which can solve this problem is the same as Equation 6 below and the solution is a reception filter for maximizing the SINR with respect to the given SNR.
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(54) Referring to
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(56) A reception algorithm provided by the present disclosure will be described in more detail below.
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(59) Referring to =W.sub.N.sup.rn), as indicated by reference numeral 711, in an FFT unit 710, is equalized (
=diag{}.sup.1
), as indicated by reference numeral 721, in a channel ZF equalizer 720, passes through reception filtering P.sub.R,O in a reception filter 730, and then is converted into a data symbol
741. r.sub.1 610 and r.sub.2 620 after the reception signal vector r.sub.0 also pass through the same process.
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(61) Referring to 842 by being filtered with a signal vector (length of N) firstly received in the reception filter. Therefore, the receiver receives a signal using two reception signal vectors. A reception signal vector r.sub.2 620, which passes through FFT 813 and channel ZF equalization 824, is filtered, as indicated by reference numeral 833, in the reception filter together with the r.sub.0 600, which passes through the FFT 811 and the channel ZF equalization 822.
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(63) Referring to
(64) In this event, the reception signal vector r.sub.2,2N is FFTed, as indicated by reference numeral 911, in an FFT unit 910, is equalized, as indicated by reference numeral 921, in a channel ZF equalizer 920, and is filtered, as indicated by reference numeral 931, in a reception filter 930, and then is converted to a data symbol 941. There is a difference in that the FFT unit and channel ZF equalizer processes a reception signal vector of 2N size unlike
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(66) Referring to 1042. Therefore, the receiver receives a signal using three reception signal vectors.
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(68) Referring to
(69) In this event, the reception signal vector r.sub.2,3N is FFTed, as indicated by reference numeral 1111, in an FFT unit 1110, is channel ZF equalized, as indicated by reference numeral 1121, in a channel ZF equalizer 1120, and is filtered, as indicated by reference numeral 1131, in a reception filter 1130 to be converted to a data symbol 1141. There is a difference in that the FFT unit and channel ZF equalizer process a reception signal vector of a 3N size unlike
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(71) Referring to
(72) In the present disclosure, although an example, in which a firstly received reception signal vector is used when the observation length is 2N, has been described, a content of the present disclosure can be applied without any difference even if a lately received reception signal vector is used. However, when an observation length of an odd multiple such as 3N and 5N is used, the highest reception performance is shown in that a lengthened observation length is observed to be symmetrical with reference to an FBMC symbol from which a data symbol is obtained. When the observation length is an even multiple, such as 4N, of the symbol length, the performance can be optimized by observing the symbols as symmetrically as possible, like symbols including two forward symbols, one backward symbol or one forward symbol, and two backward symbols with reference to an FBMC symbol from which a data symbol is to be obtained.
(73) Further, when the observation length is lengthened, since in 1, 2, . . . , L1 th forward or backward symbols, a currently observed reception signal vector is overlapped with information which can be obtained, the present disclosure provides that the L-th forward symbol or the L-th backward symbol is observed together with original symbol. When the observation length is fixed, in a case in which the L-th forward symbol or the L-th backward symbol are observed, the most numerous pieces of information can be obtained.
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(75) Referring to
(76) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Existing 1 bit Actually used Modulation Coding Observation MCS level indicator MCS level order rate length Reception filter 0 0 0 QPSK 1/2 N P.sub.R, 0, 0 1 1 16QAM 1/2 3N [P.sub.R, 1, 1, 1P.sub.R, 1, 1, 0P.sub.R, 1, 1, 1] 1 0 1 16QAM 1/2 N P.sub.R, 0, 1 1 2 16QAM 3/4 3N [P.sub.R, 1, 2, 1P.sub.R, 1, 2, 0P.sub.R, 1, 2, 1]
(77) Table 2 is an example of an operation scheme in which a transceiver including an equalizer supporting a variable observation length notifies of a change of the MCS level to the indicator. When the transmitter instructs to raise the MCS level by 1 bit to the receiver, an MCS level used to transmit actual data according to an indicator based on the existing MCS level is determined, thereby determining an observation length of the receiver and the reception filter. In the reception filter P_R, i, j, k, i refers to a content of an indicator of 1 bit, j refers to an actually used MCS level, k refers to an index value of a reception signal vector when a reception signal vector (hereinafter, a reference reception signal vector) corresponding to a data symbol acquired through filtering of the filtered reception signal vector is 0. When k=0, this implies that k is fixed to 0 when i=0 from the start point of a decoded symbol. Therefore, when i=1, 0 among the values of k refers to a reception filter for a reference reception signal vector, 1 refers to a reception vector having a length of N of a section of (N to 0) before a reference reception signal vector start point, and 1 refers to a reception filter for a reception signal vector having a length of N of a section of (N+1 to 2N) after a reference reception signal vector start point.
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(79) Referring to
(80) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Obser- MCS Modulation Coding vation index order rate length Reception filter 0 QPSK 1/2 N P.sub.R, 0, 0 1 16QAM 1/2 2N [P.sub.R,1,1, P.sub.R, 1, 0] 2 64QAM 1/2 3N [P.sub.R, 2, 1, P.sub.R, 2, 0, P.sub.R, 2, 1] 3 64QAM 5/6 4N [P.sub.R, 3, 2P.sub.R, 3, 1P.sub.R, 3, 0P.sub.R, 3, 1]
(81) Table 3 is an example of an operation scheme in which an observation length is previously determined according to an MCS level in a transceiver including an equalizer supporting a variable observation length. A transmitter determines the MCS level according to a channel status, and a receiver receives data by applying the previously determined observation length and a reception filter. In the reception filter P_R, j, k, j refers to a filter length or an MCS index, and k refers to an index value of a reception signal vector when a reception signal vector (hereinafter, a reference reception signal vector) corresponding to a data symbol acquired through filtering of the filtered reception signal vector is 0. When k=0, this implies that k is fixed to 0 when i=0 from the start point of a decoded symbol. Therefore, when i=1, 0 among the values of k refers to a reception filter for a reference reception signal vector, 1 refers to a reception vector having a length of N of a section of (N to 0) before a reference reception signal vector start point, and 1 refers to a reception filter for a reception signal vector having a length of N of a section of (N+1 to 2N) after a reference reception signal vector start point.
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(83) Referring to
(84) A receiver 1530 includes a controller 1540 and a transceiver 1550. The transceiver transmits and receives a signal to and from a transmitter, and the controller makes a control to receive the signal transmitted by the transmitter by applying a variable observation length. Specifically, the controller fast Fourier transforms a reception vector included in the signal, equalizes the fast Fourier transformed reception vector by a 1-tap zero forcing equalizer, and applies, to a reception vector, a reception filter based on an observation length determined on the basis of the channel status and an indicator transmitted by the transmitter.
(85) Although the present disclosure has been described with an exemplary embodiment, various changes and modifications may be suggested to one skilled in the art. It is intended that the present disclosure encompass such changes and modifications as fall within the scope of the appended claims.