Title of Invention

" A METHOD OF COMMUNICATION USING ORTHOGONAL FREQUENCY DIVISION MULTIPLEXIG ( 'OFDM' ) FROM A TRANSMITTER: A TRANSFORMER AND RECEIVER FOR USE THEREIN"

Abstract Multiple Transmit Multiple Receive Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing ('OFDM') comprising generating bit streams and corresponding sets of N frequency domain carrier amplitudes modulated as OFDM symbols subsequently to be transmitted from a transmitter, where k is the OFDM symbol number and j indicates the corresponding OFDM carrier number. Affix information is inserted at the transmitter into guard intervals between consecutive time domain OFDM symbols and are used at the receiver to estimate the Channel Impulse Response of the transmission channels, the estimated Channel Impulse Response being used to demodulate the bit streams in the signals received at the receiver. The affix information is known to the receiver as well as to the transmitter, and is mathematically equivalent to a vector (cD) that is common to the time domain OFDM symbols multiplied by at least first weighting factors (ak) that are different for one time domain OFDM symbol (k) than for another and second weighting factors that enable one of the transmit antenna means (i) to be distinguished from another.
Full Text A METHOD OF COMMUNICATION USING ORTHOGONAL FREQUENCY
DIVISION MULTIPLEXING ('OFDM') FROM A TRANSMITTER;
A TRANSMITTER AND RECEIVER FOR USE THEREIN
Description
Field of the invention
This invention relates to a method of communication using orthogonal
frequency division multiplexing ('OFDM') from a transmitter and a transmitter and
receiver for use therein. This invention relates generally to communication using
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing ('OFDM') and, more particularly, to
channel estimation and tracking in OFDM communication.
Background of the invention
OFDM communication has been chosen for most of the modern high-data
rate communication systems (Digital Audio Broadcast - DAB, Terrestrial Digital
Video Broadcast - DVB-T, and Broadband Radio Access Networks - BRAN such as
HIPERLAN/2, IEEE802.Ha/g, IEEE802.15.3a, for example, and is considered for
future wide-band telephony standards, referred to as "4G"). However, in most
cases the receiver needs an accurate estimate of the channel impulse response.
Also, in the context of wireless local area networks (WLANs'), current data rates
(54Mbps on top of the physical layer) are foreseen to be insufficient for very dense
urban deployment, such as for hot spot coverage. This is the motivation for IEEE to
propose and specify in the scope of the IEEE802.11n (the former High Throughput
Study Group) solutions for very high data rate WLANs (targeting at least 100Mbps
on top of the medium access control ('MAC') layer) in the 5GHz band. Another
area of investigation is that of higher frequency bands where more spectrum is
available such as the 60GHz band.
One way of achieving higher data rates is to provide the system with multiple
antennas both at the transmitter and at the receiver. By doing so, it is possible to
increase the quality of the communication link by exploiting the spatial diversity
dimension using for instance Space Time Block Codes ('STBC'), or to increase the
spectral efficiency of the system by transmitting simultaneously different streams
using Spatial Division Multiplexing. Therefore, Multiple Transmit Multiple Receive
(MTMR) antenna systems are strong candidates for next generation WLANs and
certain other OFDM communication systems.
In the so-called Cyclic Prefix OFDM (CP-OFDM) modulation scheme, each
OFDM symbol is preceded by a guard interval that is longer than the channel
impulse response (CIR) and a cyclic prefix or postfix, hereinafter referred to
collectively as a cyclic affix, is inserted at the transmitter in a guard interval
between consecutive OFDM symbols, the cyclic affix consisting of samples
circularly replicated from the useful OFDM symbol time domain samples. The cyclic
affix enables very simple calculation for the equalisation at the receiver, where the
cyclic affix is discarded and each truncated block is processed, for example using
Fourier Transform (usually Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)), to convert the
frequency-selective channel output into parallel flat-faded independent sub-channel
outputs, each corresponding to a respective sub-carrier. For equalisation purposes,
numerous strategies exist. Following the zero forcing approach, for example, each
sub-channel output is, unless it is zero, divided by the estimated channel
coefficient of the corresponding sub-carrier.
In the Zero Padded OFDM (ZP-OFDM) modulation scheme, as described for
example in the article by B. Muquet, Z. Wang, G. B. Giannakis, M. de Courville,
and P. Duhamel entitled "Cyclic Prefixing or Zero Padding for Wireless Multicarrier
Transmissions" IEEE Trans, on Communications, 2002, the cyclic affix is replaced
by null samples. This solution relying on a larger FFT demodulator, has the merit to
guarantee symbol recovery irrespective of channel null locations when the channel
is known.
However channel estimation and tracking remains an issue, especially in the
presence of high mobility or high frequency and data rates. Like other digital
communication systems, OFDM modulation encounters problems at high Doppler
spreads, which occur notably when the user is moving fast, for example in a car, or
even at pedestrian speeds when investigating the area of higher frequency bands
where more spectrum is available such as the 60GHz band. Accordingly, the
channel impulse response needs to be constantly tracked and updated, especially
in the presence of high Doppler spreads.
It would be desirable for the OFDM modulation system to keep all the
advantages of classic OFDM and additionally allow very simple and (semi-)blind
channel estimation at the receiver. Semi-blind channel estimation means that
substantially no additional redundancy is added to the system with respect to
classic CP-OFDM, and therefore no bandwidth for data transmission would be lost;
however, semi-blind channel estimation can be realized thanks to deterministic
sequences known at both the transmitter and the receiver sides, as long as there is
no substantial bandwidth loss for data transmission. Such a system would be
advantageous in low-mobility scenarios and would make OFDM systems applicable
to high-mobility scenarios as well.
Our co-pending European Patent Application EP 02 292 730.5 describes a
communication method in which the CP-OFDM time domain redundancy is
replaced by a pseudo-randomly weighted deterministic sequence which leads to
the so called Pseudo Random Postfix OFDM (PRP-OFDM). The advantages of
being able to use ZP-OFDM are preserved and low complexity channel estimation
at the receiver is made possible. Note that PRP-OFDM does not impact the
achieved useful data rate and spectral efficiency compared to the classical CP-
OFDM modulator, apart possibly from transmission of small amounts of data for
the calculation of pseudo random parameters, since the only modification is the
affix content, thus the low complexity channel estimation possible at the receiver
side is also semi-blind.
Our co-pending European Patent Application describes the application of
PRP-OFDM to single transmit antenna systems and it is desirable to apply
comparable techniques to MTMR systems, capable of using more than one
transmit and/or receive antenna.
US 2002/041635 A1 and WO 02/45329 describe OFDM systems in which
training symbols are inserted between CP-OFDM data symbols and do not append
known sequences to CP-OFDM data symbols. US 2002/041635 A1 describes the
use of preambles inserted between OFDM data symbols, where the preamble
includes training symbols. As such, said reference describes a system that
generates training symbols, which are distinct from the generated OFDM data
symbols, and does not describe the insertion of a deterministic sequence into a
guard interval between symbols.
WO 02/45329 describes the use of a known sequence p(n) that corresponds
to a training symbol that is used to create a CP-OFDM symbol by inserting a cyclic
prefix to the known sequence. Accordingly, WO 02/45329 also describes an OFDM
system in which separate OFDM training symbols are generated to be included
between OFDM data symbols. Said document does not describe the modifying of
CP OFDM symbols by using a deterministic sequence within the CP portion of a
CP OFDM data stream
Summary of the invention
The present invention provides a method of communication using
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing, a transmitter and a receiver as
described in the accompanying claims.
Brief description of the accompanying drawings
Figure 1 is a schematic block diagram of a transmitter in a communication
system in accordance with one embodiment of the invention, given by way of
example,
Figure 2 is a schematic block diagram of a receiver in the communication
system whose transmitter is shown in Figure 1,
Figure 3 is a diagram of signals appearing in operation of the modulator of
Figure 2, and
Figure 4 is a diagram of a moving average Doppler module for the
demodulator of Figure 1,
Detailed description of the preferred embodiments
Figure 1 and Figure 2 show an OFDM communication system in accordance
with one embodiment of the invention comprising a transmitter including an OFDM
modulator 1 and a receiver including an OFDM demodulator 2, the transmitter and
the receiver communicating over a communication channel 3.
The OFDM communication method of this embodiment of the present
invention enables estimation and tracking of the Multiple Input Multiple Output
('MIMO') channels in coherent multiple transmit antenna / multiple receive antenna
('MTMR') systems, without any specific limit to the number of transmit (TX) and
receive (RX) antennas and without imposing any particular Space-Time Code
(STC). Data and affix vectors are independently encoded by two STC and enable
a semi-blind estimation of all the MIMO channels exploiting only the order-one
statistics of the received signal.
In the following description, lower (upper) boldface symbols will be used for
column vectors (matrices) sometimes with subscripts N or P emphasizing their
sizes (for square matrices only); tilde ('~') will denote frequency domain quantities;
argument i will be used to index blocks of symbols; H (T) will denote Hermitian
(transpose) operations.
Figure 1 depicts the baseband discrete-time block equivalent model of an N-
carrier PRP-OFDM MTMR transceiver with Nt, transmit and Nr receive antennae.
The communication system is described with reference to Space-Time (ST) block
codes ("STBCs") but it will be appreciated that the invention is also applicable to
other code systems. In the transmitter, the Initial serial bit stream of constellation
symbols is converted to a set of vectors in a serial-to-
parallel converter (not shown); the fth Nx1 input digital vector is then
modulated by an Inverse Fast Fourier Transform ('IFFT) matrix FNN in a
transformer 4, where
The resulting Nx1 time domain vector s(j) is processed by a suitable ST
encoder matrix M in an encoder 10, as shown in Figure 1, creating outputs
is the block
number i is the number of the TX antenna and n=lM+k indexes the outputs in
Figure 1. It will be appreciated that, at least in the context of STBCs, M can differ
from Ni, In particular, the STBC may lead to rectangular S(i), that is to say that M>
Nt. For the sake of simplicity, we assume in the following description that M
operates on Ni; inputs (a(iN,),....,s(iN,+N,-1)). However, the Invention can be
straightforwardly applied to M with other numbers of inputs. In this embodiment of
the invention, the are linearly preceded in a precoder 11 by a zero-
padded OFDM ('ZP-OFDM') preceding matrix where and
The affix contents v,(n) are added to the data symbols
resulting in the output vectors qt(n). The output vectors
q,(n) are converted to a series signal by a parallel-to-series converter 6, a pseudo
random postfix being inserted in the signal into guard intervals between each
consecutive OFDM symbol to produce a series digital signal s1(n) on the fth TX
atenna. The series digital signal s1(n) is then converted to an analogue signal
s,(t) by a digital-to-analogue converter 7 and transmitted over the channel 3.
More particularly, in a preferred embodiment of the invention, the postfix that
is added in the guard interval comprises a pre-calculated suitable vector that is
independent of the data and that Is weighted by a first factor ak and a second
factor Wi(k). In one embodiment of the invention, the first factor ak is different from
one time-domain OFDM symbol to another and is known both to the transmitter 1
and to the receiver 2, so that any time domain (cyclo-)stationarity (leading to
strong undesired frequency contributions at the repetition frequency) is avoided. In
another embodiment of the invention, in which the symbols are coded in blocks,
the first factor ak is different from one time-domain OFDM symbol block to another
but is the same for each symbol of the same block. The second factor Wr(k)
enables one of the transmit antennas to be distinguished from another.
With an OFDM modulator in the transmitter functioning in this way, semi-blind
channel estimation in the receiver can be done simply and at low arithmetical
complexity, in particular, the receiver can constantly estimate and track the
channel impulse response without any loss of data bandwidth compared to CP-
OFDM, other than the transmission of PR-calculation parameters. Moreover, the
demodulator at the receiver can have advantageous characteristics, ranging from
very low arithmetical cost (at medium performance) to les low arithmetical cost
(with very good system performance).
As described in our copending European Patent Application referred to
above for the single antenna case, several choices for the first factor ak are
possible. It is possible to choose a, of any complex value. However, any ak with
|ak|#1 leads to performance degradation compared to preferred embodiments of
the invention.
It is possible to limit the choice of ak, somewhat less generally to a complex
value with |ak|=1. This choice usually leads to good system performance, but the
decoding process risks to be unnecessarily complex. Preferred values of the first
and second factors are described in more detail below.
Preferably, the first factor ak is pseudo-random. In one embodiment of the
present invention the first factor ak is deterministic and is calculated both by the
modulator 1 and the demodulator 2 using the same algorithm and parameters that
are stored in memory both in the transmitter and in the receiver. In another
embodiment of the present invention, initialisation parameters for the algorithm are
transmitted between the transmitter and the receiver to avoid systematically using
the same sequence for the first factor ak. In yet another embodiment of the
present invention, the first factor ak is communicated from the transmitter 1 to the
receiver 2, which still represents an acceptable overhead in certain circumstances.
In the embodiment of the present invention shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2,
the affix is deterministic and is a Dx1 postfix vector c treated in an encoder 12 by
a specific ST encoder matrix W which outputs the Dx1 vectors The
way in which W ensures identification of the complete MIMO channel is described
in more detail below. The postfix vectors are then linearly precoded
in a precoder 13 by a ZP-OFDM matrix Tr, where to produce
zero-padded postfix vectors as shown at 14 in Figure 3.
The resulting vectors vi(n) are finally added to the data symbols ut(n) by
adders to produce signals 16 for transmission.
The signals received at the receive antennas are the transmitted signals
multiplied by the Channel Impulse Response ('CIR") Hlm. and with the addition of
noise and interference nm(n). Let Hlm be a PxP drculant matrix whose first row is
given by is
the Px1 channel impulse response between the lth transmit and the mth receive
antennas; 0 is chosen such that D = L-1. Define HlmIST as the lower triangular part
of including the main diagonal which represents the Intra-Symbol-lnterference
(ISI), shall contain the upper triangular part of representing the Inter-
Block-Interference (IBI), such that Therefore, the received signal
vector on the mth antenna, 1= m = N, is, given by:
where nm(n) is an zero-mean additive white independent identically distributed
gaussian noise term.
As shown in Figure 2, The demodulator 2 at the receiver comprises an analogue-
to-digital converter 7 that converts the signals rm(t) received at the receive
antennas to digital signals, a serial-to-parallel converter 8, which converts the
received digital signals to received vectors rm(n), and a demodulator and equaliser
9 that uses decoding matrices corresponding to the encoding matrices W and M to
estimate the Channel Impulse Response CIR and demodulate the OFDM signals.
In the following description of the operation of the receiver, an order-one
channel estimation algorithm is described first, assuming the channel to be static.
Then, the effect of Doppler is introduced for the mobility case and the
corresponding channel estimator in the Minimum Mean Square Error (MMSE)
sense described.
First the received vector rm(n) is expressed in an exploitable form for
channel estimation. For that purpose, let hdlm be the DxD circulant matrix of first
row We define and such that
The signal rm(n), received during the nth OFDM symbol on
the /nth antenna, 1 = m = N, is equal to:
where are respectively the first D and last D
samples of and
Equation 1 indicates that a superimposition of the various postfixes
convolved by the corresponding channels is interfering with the useful data. An
easy independent retrieval of each of the channels based on the sole observation
of the postfix contributions is obtained through isolation of each postfix convolved
by its related channel. As detailed below, a way to achieve that condition is to
perform a Fast Fourier Transform on the postfixes in the demodulator and
equaliser 9 using a weighting ST block coding scheme W of the postfix c
according to the following postfix generation process:
where U is the Kronecker product and c, a(n) are respectively the deterministic
postfix and the pseudo-random weighting factors introduced in our co-pending
European Patent Application EP 02 292 730.5 for the single antenna case. The
pseudo-random weighting factors a(n) are used to convert the deterministic
postfix c into a pseudo-random one. Note that a new set of deterministic weighting
factors is introduced, and gathered in the MxN, matrix W corresponding to the
matrix W used for encoding the postfixes in the transmitter encoder, with
W is used to remove the interference
between all transmitted postfixes and thus is invertible in this embodiment of the
present invention: full column rank (rank(w)= N,). In the following description, we
choose W orthogonal for this embodiment of the present invention, such that

With the assumption of a static channel, an order-one channel estimator in
the demodulator and equaliser 9 functions as follows. The first and last D samples
of rm(n) are denoted respectively by rm.s(n) and rm,(n). By setting n=IMxk and
assuming the transmitted time domain signal to be zero mean for all l, we
use Equations 1 and 2 to compute for each k, 0 = k Next, is defined as the expectation of Due to the
deterministic nature of the postfixes, it can be verified from Equation 1 that:
Thus the MDx1 vector can be expressed for each
receive antenna as:
Since W is chosen orthogonal, multiplying each dM, 1= m= N, by
in the demodulator and equaliser 9 removes completely the
interference between channel contributions
Once the interference between channel contributions is removed the
estimation algorithms of the single-antenna case of our co-pending European
Patent Application EP 02 292 730.5 can be applied in the demodulator and
equaliser 9:
where CD is a DxD circulant matrix with the first row
represents the D first coefficients of Hence, the
estimate of the time domain channel impulse response in the demodulator
and equaliser 9 is obtained by multiplying
Note that is a diagonal matrix that is known to both the transmitter and
receiver and can thus be precalculated. Subsequently, is preferably
transformed to the Px1 frequency domain vector This MIMO
channel estimation (i.e. estimation of all channels between any transmit and any
receive antenna) is used to space-time decode and equalise the received data
signals, as described in more detail in examples below, such that the transmitted
data signals can be recovered.
The above channel estimator can be extended to further improve reception in
mobile environments by using any Doppler model, and by minimizing any
performance criterion. An example is now given, in a preferred embodiment of the
present invention based on the introduction of a Doppler model; the estimator aims
at minimizing the Mean Square Error (MSE).
The Doppler module shown in Figure 4 is introduced in the demodulator and
equaliser 9 to modify the order-one autoregressive model for the Channel Impulse
Response ('CIR') between transmit antenna / and receive antenna m separately:
is the Oth order Bessel function,
fD is the Doppler frequency, DT is tine MTMR PRP-OFDM block duration and
is zero-mean complex Gaussian of constant variance. The same CIR
correlations as the ones provided by the known Jakes model are obtained even in
the presence of large Doppler frequencies. This is achieved by forcing the
correlation This way the
approximation , inherent to the order-one
autoregressive estimation, is avoided. This modification leads to the following
moving average estimation:
As for the order-one autoregressive model, so-called process-noise vectors
are introduced assuming
being the CIR to be estimated. Assuming that CIR is estimated based on Z
noisy observations the expression
results from the convolution of the lth
block postfix by channel corrupted both by thermal noise and the OFDM
data symbols. The OFDM data symbols are assumed zero-mean and independent
of same variance as the postfix samples. contains
the received symbols after equalization of the pseudo random weighting factor of
the postfixes (Equation 3). Thus, (i) can be expressed as follows:
where a gathers the thermal noise and the interference from the OFDM data
symbols, in order to guarantee the unit variance of each channel realisation, the
norm of is chosen such that:
It can thus be verified that the optimum estimator of in the MMSE
sense is given from Equation 8 by:
and is the auto-correlation matrix of the vector a.
Since in practice the channel power profile is usually not known, in that case
the assumption is made that The real gain gn is
introduced for respecting the power constraints of Equation 9.
The above description presents generic channel estimation in the
demodulator and equaliser 9 in accordance with embodiments of the present
invention for both relatively static and high mobility environments. Their use for two
STBC systems will now be described.
The first embodiment of STBC is based on ZP-OFDM decoding. The system
includes modulators using pseudo-random postfixes at the transmitter and also
equalizer structures derived for the MTMR case from those described for the
Single Transmit Single Receive (STSR) case in our co-pending European Patent
Application EP 02 292 730.5 based on the transformation of the received PRP-
OFDM vector to the ZP-OFDM case. The system is described for the case of
Nt=2 transmit and Nr =1 receive antennas, although it will be appreciated that
the system is applicable to other numbers of antennas. The ST encoder operates
over Nt xM vectors with Nt = M = 2. Since Nt = 1, the subscript 1= m = Nr is not
used in the following analysis. Perfect knowledge of the channels ht, 1= l = Nt is
assumed but it will be appreciated that the system is capable of working with
imperfect channel knowledge.
At the transmitter, a 2x1 ZP-ST encoder M is used, which takes two
consecutive OFDM symbols S(2i) and S(2i+1) to form the following coded matrix:
where the permutation matrices are such that, for a J x 1
vectors
Since the channel has been estimated, as for the single antenna case
described in our co-pending European Patent Application, it is always possible to
retrieve the MTMR ZP-OFDM signals from Equation 1 by subtracting from the
received signal the known PRP contribution:
which leads to Note that i) no constraint has to be set on
W for the symbol recovery, ii) the PRP interference cancellation procedure
proposed is generic and can be applied to any suitable ST encoder M.
A suitable detection algorithm is applied to the signal described by Equation
12 by the demodulator and equaliser 9. Noticing that we denote
by then
if we switch to the frequency domain by computing and
exploiting the fact that we can
write:
where is an orthogonal channel matrix. Thus multiplying by
DH achieves the separation of the transmitted signals and it
can be shown that full transmit diversity is achieved. Note that the separation of
signals allows the same equalisation schemes to be used in this embodiment of
the present invention as in the single-antenna case described in our co-pending
European Patent Application EP 02 292 730.5.
The second embodiment of STBC system is based on equalization of the full
received block by diagonalisation of pseudo-circulant channel matrices. The ST
data encoder M used in the demodulator and equaliser 9 is based on a version of
the single antenna system described in our co-pending European Patent
Application EP 02 292 730.5 modified to enable the equalization structure that is
detailed below and outputs blocks of Ntx M vectors with N, =M = 2. M and W
are specified such that they generate the following matrix
at the antenna outputs:
being a permutation matrix defined as previously (Inversing the order of the
vector elements), a(i) is complex with being pseudo-random complex
weighting factors as defined in our co-pending European Patent Application for the
single antenna case with a(2(+l)=ß2(i)a(2i), and ß(i)=a(2i-2)/a(2i). Qß(i) is
defined as:
The D x1 postfix vector c is chosen such that it has Hermitian symmetry,
that is to say that the complex conjugate of the vector read backwards is equal to
the original c. As In our co-pending European Patent Application, the channels are
represented by Px P pseudo-circulant channel matrices These
are identical to standard circulant convolution matrices with the upper triangular
part multiplied by the scalar factor ß(i), In other words
With and the noise matrix
, the received signals over M = 2 symbol times are given
as follows:
With the following operations are performed at the
demodulator and equaliser 9 on the received vectors:
In this embodiment of STBC system, the data symbols are separated in the
demodulator and equaliser 9 by premultiplication of by the Hermitian of the
upper channel matrix WH(i):
with The equalisation based on pseudo
circulant channel matrices is then performed as presented in our co-pending
European Patent Application for the single channel case. The PRP-OFDM postfix
based blind channel estimation is performed based on R(i) as presented above.
WE CLAIM:
1. A method of communication using Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
('OFDM') from a transmitter comprising a plurality of transmit antenna means
and a receiver comprising at least one receive antenna means, the method
comprising generating bit streams and corresponding sets of N frequency
domain carrier amplitudes modulated as OFDM
symbols subsequently to be transmitted from a transmitter, where k is the
OFDM symbol number and j indicates the corresponding OFDM carrier
number, inserting affix information into guard intervals between consecutive
time domain OFDM symbols, transmitting said time domain OFDM symbols
including said affix information from said transmitter to said receiver, using said
affix information at the receiver to estimate the Channel Impulse Responses
between the lth transmit and mth receive antenna) of the transmission
channels between said transmitter and said receiver, and using the estimated
Channel Impulse Response between the lth transmit and mth receive
antenna) to demodulate said bit streams in the signals received at said
receiver,
characterised in that said affix information is known to said receiver as well as
to said transmitter, and is mathematically equivalent to a vector (cD) that is
common to said time domain OFDM symbols multiplied by at least first
weighting factors (ak) that are different for one time domain OFDM symbol (k)
than for another and second weighting factors (wi(k)) that enable one of said
transmit antenna means (i) to be distinguished from another.
2. A method of communication as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first weighting
factors (a*) have pseudo-random values.
3. A method of communication as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said first
weighting factors (ak) have complex values.
4. A method of communication as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein said
first weighting factors (ak) are deterministic and are known to said receiver as
well as to said transmitter independently of current communication between
said receiver and said transmitter.
5. A method of communication as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3, wherein said
first weighting factors (ak) are communicated from said transmitter to said
receiver.
6. A method of communication as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein said
transmitter uses Nt transmit antenna means and the receiver uses Nr receive
antenna means, M' consecutive time domain OFDM data symbols are
encoded by a specific space-time encoder M such that the encoder M
produces M time domain OFDM data signals outputs for each of the N,
transmit antenna means, and said vector (cD) is encoded by a specific space-
time encoder W such that the encoder W produces M affixes for each of the N,
transmit antenna means corresponding to said affix information weighted by
said first and second weighting factors (ak) and wi(k), the resulting affixes befog
inserted between time domain OFDM data symbols for each of the Nt transmit
antenna means.
7. A method of communication as claimed in claim 6, wherein all transmit
antenna outputs over M consecutive OFDM time domain symbols, including
time domain OFDM data symbols space-time encoded by M and pseudo-
random affixes space-time encoded by W, are grouped Into a btock S, for
which said first weighting factors (ak) are the same for OFDM symbols of the
same block S but are different for OFDM symbols of different block S.
8, A method of communication as claimed in claim 7, wherein said transmitted
affixes enable the separation at said receiver of the transmitted guard interval
affix information of said block S, and said second weighting factors (wi(k))
enable the separation and estimation at said receiver of the different physical
channels between said transmit antenna means and said at least one receive
antenna means.
9. A method of communication as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the
matrix W corresponding to M x N1 of said second weighting factors (wi(k)) for
a number M of consecutive symbols and for said Nt transmit antenna means
is an orthogonal matrix such that when multiplied by its complex (conjugate
transpose the result is the identity matrix (I), weighted by a gain factor
go having a non-zero real value
10. A method of communication as claimed in claim 9, wherein demodulating said
bit streams includes, for each said receive antenna means, multiplying a signal
derived from the received signal by the complex conjugate transpose of the
Kronecker product of said matrix of said second weighting factors (wi(k)) for
said transmit antenna means by the identity matrix and using
channel estimates derived form the results in demodulating said bit streams.
11. A method of communication as claimed in any of claims 6 to 8, wherein the
matrix of said second weighting factors for said transmit antenna means
and for a number NT of consecutive symbols equal to the number Nr of said
transmit antenna means is a non-orthogonal matrix (W) such that when
multiplied by its complex conjugate transpose the result is different
from the identity matrix (I), weighted by a gain factor g0 having a non-zero real
value
12. A method of communication as claimed in claim 10, wherein the matrix of said
second weighting factors for said transmit antenna means and for a
number Nt of consecutive symbols equal to the number Nt of said transmit
antenna means is a matrix (W) such that (W) alone is non-orthogonal, but (W)
combined with the corresponding pseudo-random factors (at) is orthogonal.
13. A method of communication as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein said
second weighting factors take different values for each of said transmit
antenna means so as to enable said physical channels to be distinguished.
14. A method of communication as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein
estimating the Channel Impulse Response of the transmission channels
between said transmitter and said receiver comprises a step of making a
moving average estimation over a plurality of symbol periods of channels
which are mathematically equivalent to the relationship:

where is the Oth order Bessei function. fD is the Doppler frequency,
is the MTMR PRP-OFDM block duration and is zero-mean complex
Gaussian of constant variance.
15. A transmitter for use in a method of communication as claimed in any
preceding claim and comprising generating means for generating said bit
streams modulated as OFDM symbols to be transmitted and for inserting said
affix information into said guard intervals between said OFDM symbols, said
guard interval affix information being deterministic and suitable to be known to
said receiver as well as to said transmitter and including said vector (cfl) that is
common to said time domain OFDM symbols multiplied by said first weighting
factors (a*) that are different for one time domain OFDM symbol (k) than for
another and said second weighting factors (m(k)) that enable one of said
transmit antenna means (/) to be distinguished from another.
16. A receiver for use In a method of communication as claimed in any of claims 1
to 13 and comprising demodulating means for receiving signals that comprise
said bit streams modulated as said OFDM symbols with said guard interval
affix information inserted between said OFDM symbols, said demodulating
means being arranged to use said affix information from said guard intervals to
estimate the Channel Impulse Response of the transmission channels and to
use the estimated Channel Impulse Response to demodulate said bit streams
in the signals received at said receiver, said guard interval affix information
being deterministic and being known to said receiver.
Multiple Transmit Multiple Receive Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing ('OFDM') comprising generating bit streams and corresponding sets
of N frequency domain carrier amplitudes modulated as
OFDM symbols subsequently to be transmitted from a transmitter, where k is the
OFDM symbol number and j indicates the corresponding OFDM carrier number.
Affix information is inserted at the transmitter into guard intervals between
consecutive time domain OFDM symbols and are used at the receiver to estimate
the Channel Impulse Response of the transmission channels, the estimated
Channel Impulse Response being used to demodulate the bit streams in the
signals received at the receiver. The affix information is known to the receiver as
well as to the transmitter, and is mathematically equivalent to a vector (cD) that is
common to the time domain OFDM symbols multiplied by at least first weighting
factors (ak) that are different for one time domain OFDM symbol (k) than for
another and second weighting factors that enable one of the transmit
antenna means (i) to be distinguished from another.

Documents:

156-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE-1.1.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE-1.2.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-FOR ALTERATION OF ENTRY.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-FORM-27.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-abstract.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-assignment.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-claims.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-correspondence.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-description (complete).pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-drawings.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-examination report.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-form 1.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-form 18.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-form 3.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-form 5.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-pa.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

156-kolnp-2006-granted-specification.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-OTHERS-1.1.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-PA-1.1.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-PA-1.2.pdf

156-KOLNP-2006-PA.pdf


Patent Number 222724
Indian Patent Application Number 156/KOLNP/2006
PG Journal Number 34/2008
Publication Date 22-Aug-2008
Grant Date 21-Aug-2008
Date of Filing 19-Jan-2006
Name of Patentee MOTOROLA, INC.
Applicant Address 1303, EAST ALGONQUIN ROAD, SCHAUMBURG, ILLINOIS
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 RIBEIRO DIAS, ALEXANDRE 37 AVENUE REILLE, F-75014, PARIS
2 DE COURVILLE, MARC 43 RUE DU MOULIN VERT, F-75014, PARIS
3 MUCK, MARKUS 67-69, RUE DE LA COLONIE F-75013, PARIS
PCT International Classification Number H04L 1/06
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2004/051643
PCT International Filing date 2004-07-28
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 03292120.7 2003-08-28 EUROPEAN UNION