Li, Li (2013) Advanced Channel Estimation and Detection Techniques for MIMO and OFDM Systems. PhD thesis, University of York.
Abstract
Multi-input and multi-output (MIMO) and orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
(OFDM) have attracted significant attention, and become promising techniques for high
data rate wireless communication systems. They have been widely studied and employed
for 4G systems such as WiFi, DVB-T, WiMAX and LTE-A. Hence, the performances of
such systems are critical to practical applications including online gaming, files transfer
and high quality video streaming et al.. The thesis have studied low-complexity channel
estimation and detection techniques to improve the reliability of the wireless links or
increase the spectral efficiency at low cost as follows.
(1) MIMO-OFDM systems over slowly varying channels. Conventional comb-type
uniform pilot allocation (UPA) for MIMO-OFDM systems employed by many standards
obtains reliable channel estimates in the sense that the pilots occupy the subcarriers only
for channel estimation without any further benefit. To make better use of pilots for MIMO-
OFDM systems to acquire an additional performance gain, a novel receiver based dy-
namic pilot allocation (DPA) scheme is proposed with the aid of a feedback link. The
DPA inserts pilots into most faded subcarriers at expense of moderate MSE performance
degradation in channel estimation.
(2) Narrow band MIMO systems. High spectral efficiency can be achieved by a large
size of transmit and receive antennas, but the BER performance of conventional linear
and successive interference cancellation (SIC) receivers cannot be comparable to max-
imum likelihood (ML) receivers. Although one alternative method (real-valued sphere
decoder) can approach the performance of ML receivers with near SIC complexity at
high SNR, it cannot efficiently process phase shift keying (PSK) modulation. On the
other hand, the complex-valued sphere decoder can process PSK, but with complicated enumeration. Hence, a SIC based complex-valued sphere decoder is proposed with prob-
abilistic tree pruning. The proposed complex-valued SD can reduce the tree span and
save the complexity induced by enumeration schemes. Additionally, the basic principles
of complex-valued sphere decoder can be naturally extended to an instantaneous union
bound estimation for ML receivers. Its complexity is significantly reduced. However, the
initial radius and candidates bound for the union bound estimation have not been studied,
which have significant influences on the search complexity. Hence, a channel statistics
based initial radius is derived based on the Rayleigh-Ritz theorem and the probability den-
sity function (PDF) of the channel matrix. The candidates bound can also be computed
by the initial radius or the updated radius to reduce the tree span as the sphere decoder
does.
(3) OFDM systems over rapidly time-varying channels. Inter-carrier interference (ICI)
becomes the bottleneck for the OFDM systems over rapidly time-varying channels. The
complexity of equalization for such scenarios will be high if a full matrix inversion is em-
ployed in the receivers, because the number of subcarriers for existing standards is beyond
several hundred. To avoid a full matrix inversion, two novel matched filter (MF) based
ICI cancellation algorithms have been proposed to mitigate the dominating ICI coeffi-
cients inside the banded channel matrix. In addition, a multi-segmental iterative channel
estimation technique splits one OFDM symbol into several small segments by partial fast
Fourier transform (PFFT), and obtains the channel impulse response estimates for seg-
ments. One can linearly interpolates the time-varying channels between segments with
low complexity. It is found that the MF based ICI cancellation algorithms, incorporating
multi-segmental iterative channel estimation are robust to the time variation.
Metadata
Supervisors: | Burr, Alister and de Lamare, Rodrigo |
---|---|
Keywords: | Detection, Estimation, OFDM, MIMO |
Awarding institution: | University of York |
Academic Units: | The University of York > School of Physics, Engineering and Technology (York) |
Academic unit: | Electronics |
Identification Number/EthosID: | uk.bl.ethos.581663 |
Depositing User: | MR Li Li |
Date Deposited: | 25 Sep 2013 08:29 |
Last Modified: | 21 Mar 2024 14:35 |
Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:4483 |
Download
Thesis_ll550
Filename: Thesis_ll550.pdf
Licence:
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License
Export
Statistics
You do not need to contact us to get a copy of this thesis. Please use the 'Download' link(s) above to get a copy.
You can contact us about this thesis. If you need to make a general enquiry, please see the Contact us page.