Title: Comparison of MultiCarrier Modulation Techniques
1Comparison of Multi-Carrier Modulation Techniques
Center for Wireless COMMUNICATIONS
- Andrew S. Ling, Graduate Student
(asling_at_ucsd.edu) - Laurence B. Milstein, Professor
(milstein_at_ece.ucsd.edu)
Abstract
Scenario 2
Scenario 2 MC-CDMA
- Same equations as for MC-DS-CDMA in Scenario 1
(perfect and imperfect CSI), but with R1 replaced
by R2 and (K-1)/N replaced by (K-1).
Much research has been done on systems, such as
multi-carrier CDMA, which transmit data over
several carrier frequencies to achieve frequency
diversity. While most of the existing research
focuses on only one system at a time, this work
performs a side-by-side comparison between two
multi-carrier schemes which have equal bandwidth,
information rate, and transmit power. One system
uses many narrow sub-bands, while the other uses
fewer relatively-wide sub-bands. Closed-form
expressions for the average bit error probability
(BEP) are derived for both systems under two
different cases for the coherence bandwidth of
the channel, assuming the availability of perfect
channel state information (CSI) at the receiver.
The same analysis is repeated for the case of
imperfect CSI, where channel estimates are
obtained via pilot symbols embedded within the
data. The trade-offs between the two systems are
investigated under different values for the
information rate, number of users in the system,
and number of pilot symbols used in the estimate.
- MC-CDMA Frequency non-selective (flat) fading
in each sub-band independent fading between
different sub-bands - MC-DS-CDMA Frequency selective fading in each
sub-band - ( of resolvable paths L N)
Overview
Frequency Diversity
Scenario 2 MC-DS-CDMA vs. MC-CDMA
Scenario 1 MC-DS-CDMA
- MC-CDMA potentially has greater frequency
diversity - MC-CDMA can be more susceptible to channel
estimation errors and Doppler effects - MC-CDMA will also have a higher peak-to-average
power ratio
We would like to find closed-form expressions for
the average bit error probability of each of the
two systems, assuming the following
- Equal information rate, bandwidth, and transmit
power - Maximal-ratio combining
- Waveform shaping (raised-cosine filter),
resulting in non-overlapping sub-bands - Rayleigh fading
- Long spreading sequences (spreading sequences of
the interfering users are modeled as independent,
random binary sequences) - No narrow-band interference
- Ignore Doppler effects for now
- No error-correction coding (aside from repetition
coding)
The analysis will be repeated for two cases
- The receiver has perfect knowledge of the channel
state information (CSI) - The receiver has to estimate the channel via
pilot symbols sent along with the data
Scenario 1 MC-DS-CDMA vs. MC-CDMA
Parameters
Scenario 2 MC-DS-CDMA
- MC-DS-CDMA
- M of bits transmitted in parallel per use
of the channel - R1 of repetitions per bit
- N processing gain per sub-band
- K of users
- MC-CDMA
- M of bits transmitted in parallel per use
of the channel - R2 of repetitions per bit
- K of users
Same equations and results as for MC-CDMA in
Scenario 2 (perfect and imperfect CSI).
It can be shown that R2 NR1.
- Channel estimation (sample average)
- Q of time slots per frame
- Qe of pilot symbols per frame
Partial-fraction expansion
For now, assume that the channel remains constant
over the duration of a frame.
Conclusions
Scenario 1
- The effects of channel estimation errors dominate
at lower values of (Eb/h0), while the effects of
diversity dominate at higher values of (Eb/h0). - Scenario 1
- For M gt 1, we have R1 lt MR2/N. MC-DS-CDMA
outperforms MC-CDMA at lower (Eb/h0) values,
while MC-CDMA fares better at higher (Eb/h0)
values. - For M 1, we have R1 MR2/N, and MC-DS-CDMA
outperforms MC-CDMA at all values of (Eb/h0). - Scenario 2
- Rectangular MIP Both systems have equivalent
performance. - Exponential MIP MC-CDMA performs better at all
values of (Eb/h0).
Scenario 1 MC-CDMA
Future Work
- MC-DS-CDMA Frequency non-selective (flat)
fading in each sub-band independent fading
between different sub-bands - MC-CDMA Correlated block fading (perfect
correlation within each block)
- Use a more realistic channel that varies from bit
to bit, instead of from frame to frame. - Incorporate Doppler effects into the channel
model. This will lead to inter-carrier
interference, and we expect this to have a
greater impact on MC-CDMA because of its narrower
sub-bands.
Partial-fraction expansions
Acknowledgments
This project is partially funded by the Center
for Wireless Communications (CWC) at UCSD and by
the UC Discovery Program.