L10b-OFDM
1. What is the
OFDM?
Each carrier has a very narrow bandwidth (i.e. 1
kHz)
Number of subcarriers: 100 - 8000
2. Why OFDM?
- Solves most of the problems with FDMA and TDMA
- Channel coding simplified: anti ICI and ISI scheme
in OFDM less complex, no equalizer needed (equalization much more complex in
CDMA)
Interleaving and error coding results in
robust performance
- Robust method against channel non-ideality
(multi-path, AWGN, in-band interference)
Each
carrier's symbol rate is low. ¡æ
A high tolerance to multipath delay spread.
The
delay spread must be very long to cause significant inter-symbol interference
(e.g. > 500 us)
- OFDM is mainly useful for communication over
multipath channels with long delay spread and at high SNR
For
such channels ISI becomes the major impairments.
- Problems with single-carrier signaling scheme:
For
heavily multi-path channel, a single carrier receiver requires a complicated
equalizer or special design (frequency domain equalizer)
Single
carrier design cannot achieve capacity with known equalizer implementation for
broadcasting channels.
- VSLI semiconductor advances ¡æ OFDM implementation economical
Simple
implementation using FFT
- High spectral efficiency: due to no guard bands
- Ideally suited to MIMO due to easy matching of
transmit signals to the uncorrelated RF channels
- Availability of OFDM in existing signal
processing/chipsets
- Easy combining it with OFDMA multiple access
scheme
- DSP advantage: OFDM uses IFFT/FFT ¡æ superior scalability over the
channel dispersion and data rate
3. Disadvantages
of the OFDM
- Requires highly linear amplifiers
Pure
OFDM creates high PAR: SC-FDMA is used in UL
- Sensitive to Doppler effect
which creates interference between subcarriers
- Guard-time introduces overhead
- More complex than CDMA for handling inter-cell
interference at cell edge
3. OFDM Trends
1) History
- An OFDM concept was proposed by Weinstein and
Ebert in 1971.
- OFDM already widely used in non-cellular
technologies
- Was considered by ETSI for UMTS in 1998. CDMA was
favored since OFDM requires large amounts of baseband processing which was not
available in late 1990s.
2
Mbps in 1997
11
Mbps in 1999
54
Mbps in 802.11a
- Popularity
Terrestrial
TV broadcasting in Japan and Europe: DVB-T
ADSL
high-speed modem
WLAN
(IEEE 802.11a/g/n)
WiMAX
(IEEE 802.16d/e)
- Data rates to 54 Mbps at 2.4 GHz WiFi
- Single international standard at 5GHz: 5 GHz IAG,
IEEE 802.11 5GSG
3. Pros and Cons of the OFDM
1) Pros
2) Cons
1. Why OFDM?
-
10.1.2 PAPR
(peak to average power ratio)
1) PAPR
- PAPR: The maximum power of a
sample in a given OFDM transmit symbol divided by the average power of that
OFDM symbol.
- PAPR occurs when in a multicarrier system the different sub-carriers are out of phase with each other. At each instant they are different with respect to each other at different phase values. When all the points achieve the maximum value simultaneously; this will cause the output envelope to suddenly shoot up which causes a ¡®peak¡¯ in the output envelope.
- Due to presence of large number of independently modulated subcarriers in an OFDM system, the peak value of the system can be very high as compared to the average of the whole system.
- In LTE system, OFDM signal PAPR is approx. 12dB.
2) Power amplifier (PA) backoff:
- PA back off:
Average
power: 40 dBm
PAPR:
12 dB
PA
saturation point: 52 dBm
PA
operating point: 40 dBm
PA
back off: 12 dB
- Large back off: low efficiency
3) CFR (crest factor reduction)
- CFR: Reducing PAPR
- CFR algorithms:
Clipping
and filtering (CF)
Peak
windowing (PW)
Peak
cancellation (PC)
Selective
mapping (SLM)
- After CFR, PAPA is reduced to 7.5
dB from 12 dB.
S : aggregator
DPD
(digital pre-distorter)
DAC
(digital to analog converter)
HPA
(high power amplifier)
- Selective mapping technique
Figure: OFDM procedure with
selective mapping
- Peak cancellation algorithm
- Peak windowing algorithm
10.1.3 OFDM
1) OFDM signal: Tx chain
2) OFDM signal: Rx chain
3) OFDM signal in time domain
4) OFDM signal in frequency domain
[Keywords
MCCDMA (Multi-carrier CDMA): OFDM + CDMA
DS-CDMA (direct sequence CDMA)
COFDM (coded OFDM): FEC applied before signal
transmission. In practice, every OFDM system is a COFDM system.
FDMA:
- Each user is allocated a single channel.
- Bandwidth of each channel is 10-30 kHz for voice
communication.
- Minimum bandwidth for speech is only 3 kHz.
- Channel separation: channel filtering, allowance
for Tx and Rx frequency
drifts.
- Almost 50% of the spectrum is wasted due to guard
bands
TDMA:
- Multiple users access the same channel by
transmitting in their data in time slots.
- Thus, many low data users can be combined together
to transmit in a single channel which has a bandwidth sufficient for a required
number of users.
- In this sense, the spectrum may be used
efficiently.
- As in FDMA, there should be some guard time slot
between allocating time slots for each users to allow
for propagation delay variations and synchronization errors.
- This results in a decrease in spectrum efficiency.
- The symbol rate of the channel is high resulting
in problems with multipath delay spread.
OFDM:
- OFDM splits the available bandwidth into many
narrow band channels (100 - 8000)
- Subcarriers are orthogonal to each other in
frequency domain allowing them to be spaced very close together.
- Each subcarrier has an integer number of cycles
over a symbol period.
- Each subcarrier in an OFDM signal has a very
narrow bandwidth (1 kHz) resulting in low symbol rate.
- This results in the signal having a high tolerance
to multipath delay spread, because in this case, the delay spread must be very
long to cause significant ISI (e.g. > 500 us)
- All the carriers must be carefully controlled to
maintain the orthogonality of the carriers.
[OFDM techniques
- Spectrum efficiency enhancement techniques
Bit
and power loading
Pulse
shaping
Channel
shortening
[OFDM in wireless communication
- Applications
802.11a/g WiFi
HiperLAN2
802.16 WiMAX
DAB in Europe, Asia, Australia
DVB-T in Europe, Asia, Australia
DSL
[OFDM for optical communication
CO-OFDM (coherent OFDM): coherent detection + OFDM modulation
resilient to fiber PMD
nonlinearity mitigation
dispersion
chromatic
PMD
(polarization mode dispersion)
MIMO-OFDM, 2x2 (by polarization
diversity?)
nonlinearity
in RF-to-optical up-converter
DSP, receiver-based
SPM (self-phase-modulation)
phase
noise, Gordon-Mollenauer
transmission
speed, 100 Gbps per channel
dynamically
reconfigurable network
OADM
(optical add/drop multiplexer)
fast link setup
dispersion
compensation
conventional meticulous per-span optical dispersion compensation
direct
up/down conversion: low cost high-speed circuit design possible
polarization
diversity detection
°øºÎÁß
http://sna.csie.ndhu.edu.tw/~cnyang/MCCDMA/sld007.htm
°è¼ÓÇÏ¿© ¿Ï¼º
Shieh, Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
for optical communications