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Techniques to control noise and fading
Noise and fading are the primary sources of distortion in communication channels Techniques to reduce noise and fading are usually implemented at the receiver The most common mechanism is to have a receiver filter that can cancel the effects of noise and fading, at least partially Digital technology has made it possible to have adaptive filters
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Principle of Equalization
Equalization is the process of compensation at the receiver, to reduce noise effects The channel is treated as a filter with transfer function Equalization is the process of creating a filter with an inverse transfer function of the channel Since the channel is a varying filter, equalizer filter also has to change accordingly, hence the term adaptive.
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Equalization Model-Signal detection
Transmitter Receiver Front End Channel IF Stage Detector Carrier Message signal x(t) Detected signal y(t)
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Equalization model-Correction
Reconstructed Signal nb(t) Decision Maker Equalizer + Equivalent Noise
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Equalizer System Equations Detected signal Time domain:. y(t) = x(t)
Equalizer System Equations Detected signal Time domain: y(t) = x(t) * f(t) + nb(t) Frequency domain: Y(f) = X(f) F(f) + Nb(f) Output of the Equalizer ^ d(t) = y(t) * heq(t)
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Equalizer System Equations Desired output. ^
Equalizer System Equations Desired output ^ D(f) = Y(f) Heq(f) = X(f) => Heq(f) X(f) F(f) = X(f) => Heq(f) F(f) = 1 Heq(f) = 1/ F(f) => Inverse filter
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System Equations Error MSE Error =
Aim of equalizer: To minimize MSE error
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Equalizer Operating Modes
Training Tracking
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Training and Tracking functions
Training sequence is a known fixed bit pattern sent by the transmitter The user data is sent immediately after the training sequence The equalizer uses training sequence to adjust its frequency response Heq (f) and is optimally ready for data sequence Adjustment goes on dynamically, hence it is adaptive equalizer
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Block Diagram of Digital Equalizer
w0k w2k w1k wNk ∑ - + ∑ Adaptive Algorithm
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Digital Equalizer equations
Digital systems use time sampling: t = k T T is the sampling interval Equalizer output:
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The error signal updates the equalizer weights
Error minimization The adaptive algorithm minimizes error The error signal updates the equalizer weights The updating is continued until convergence
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Diversity techniques Diversity is a powerful communications technique for minimizing fading effects It provides wireless link improvement at relatively low cost Unlike equalization, diversity requires no training overhead Practical version is the popular Rake receiver
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Fading effects Small Scale fading causes rapid amplitude fluctuations in received wireless signal Fading results in signal loss and distortion
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Principle of diversity
If we space 2 antennas at 0.5 m, one may receive a null while the other receives a strong signal By selecting the best signal at all times, a receiver can mitigate or reduce small-scale fading. This concept is Space diversity or Antenna Diversity
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Space Diversity Concept of using more than one antenna (or branch )for reception Parameters gi = instantaneous SNR G = Average SNR g= Threshold SNR
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SNR Improvement Using Diversity
M diversity branches Probability [gi > g] Average SNR improvement
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Example : Assume that 5 antennas are used to provide space diversity. If average SNR is 20 dB, determine the probability that the instantaneous SNR will be 10 dB. Compare this with the case of a single receiver.
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Solution : = 20 dB => 100 Threshold g = 10 dB = 10
Prob [gi > g] = 1 – (1 – e – g/ )M For M = 5 branches, Prob = 1 – (1 – e – 0.1 )5 = For M = 1 branch (No Diversity), Prob = 1 – (1 – e – 0.1 ) = 0.905
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Maximal Ratio Combining (MRC)
MRC uses each of the M branches in co-phased and weighted manner such that highest achievable SNR is available If each branch has gain Gi, rM = total signal envelope =
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SNR Improvement with MRC
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Example : Repeat earlier problem for MRC case
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Types of diversity Space Diversity
Either at the mobile or base station Polarization Diversity Orthogonal Polarization to exploit diversity Frequency Diversity More than one carrier frequency is used Time Diversity : Information is sent at time spacings
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Practical diversity – Rake receiver
CDMA system uses RAKE Receiver to improve the signal to noise ratio at the receiver Generally CDMA systems do not require equalization due to multi-path resolution.
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Block Diagram Of Rake Receiver
α1 M1 M2 M α2 r(t) αM Z’ Z Correlator 1 ()dt Correlator 2 Σ Correlator M > < m’(t)
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Principle Of Operation
M correlators – correlator i is synchronized to strongest multi-path Mi The weights 1 , 2 ,……,M are based on SNR from each correlator output Demodulation and bit decisions are then based on the weighted outputs of M correlators
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