Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

doc.: IEEE <doc#>

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "doc.: IEEE <doc#>"— Presentation transcript:

1 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Proposed Code Sequences for IEEE a Alt-PHY] Date Submitted: [16 Jan 2005] Source: [Francois Chin, Sam Kwok, Xiaoming Peng, Kannan, Yong- Huat Chew, Chin-Choy Chai, Hongyi Fu, Manjeet, Tung-Chong Wong, T.T. Tjhung, Zhongding Lei, Rahim] Company: [Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore] Address: [21 Heng Mui Keng Terrace, Singapore ] Voice: [ ] FAX: [ ] Re: [Response to the call for proposal of IEEE a, Doc Number: a ] Abstract: [I2R’s Proposal to IEEE a Task Group] Purpose: [For presentation and consideration by the IEEE a committee] Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

2 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Proposed Code Sequences, Modulation & Coding for IEEE a Alt-PHY Francois Chin Institute for Infocomm Research Singapore Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

3 Jan 2005 Proposal Motivation To satisfy IEEE a technical requirements, low power consumption is crucial Conventional coherent UWB system based on correlator in the receiver can provide fairly good performance, but at the expense of implementation complexity, and consequently power consumption and system cost To meet low power and low cost requirement, UWB system with OOK (On-Off Keying) modulation and noncoherent detection is proposed In the proposed UWB OOK system, the signal demodulation is performed by simply integrating signal energy, thus omitting signal / pulse generator, significantly relieve the strict synchronization requirement and greatly simplify transceiver structure with the minimal power and cost demand However, some challenges of such OOK system are threshold setting, simultaneous operating piconets (SOP) & receiver timing sampling boundaries This proposal contains techniques that will overcome such limitation, and improve the overall system performance of the UWB OOK system Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

4 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Challenges for OOK systems Conventional OOK systems face challenges in Receiver On-Off threshold setting Chip period boundary determination Other piconet interference This proposal intend to overcome these issues with Despreading using soft decision chip values instead of hard thresholding to better suppress other piconet interference Oversampling, together with properly chosen orthogonal code sequences, to recover chip timing The success of this hinges on the choice of code sequence !! Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

5 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Features of Proposal Use soft chip values after energy integrator at receiver with oversampling will eliminate the need for On-Off threshold setting Chip period boundary determination Use chip sequences for symbol mapping to carry more energy per chip (which is essential for OOK systems) and to suppress Other piconet interference Chip repetition to provide data rate / baseband operation frequency / power scalability Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

6 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Proposed System Parameters Chip rate 22 Mcps ** # Pulse / Chip Period 1 Pulse Rep. Freq. 22 MHz # Chip / symbol (Code length) 32 Symbol Rate 22/32 MHz = kHz info. bit / sym (Mandatory Mode) 4 bit / symbol Mandatory bit rate 4 bit/sym x kHz = 2.75 Mbps #Code Sequences/ piconet 16 (4 bit/symbol) Code position modulation (CPM) Lower bit rate scalability Chip Repetition Modulation {+1,-1} bipolar pulse train OR {1,0} bipolar pulse train + pulse jittering OR Periodic On-Off Chaotic signaling Total # simultaneous piconets supported 6 Multple access for piconets Fixed sequence for each piconet Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

7 Modulation & Coding Bit to symbol mapping:
Jan 2005 Modulation & Coding Binary data From PPDU Bit-to- Symbol Symbol- to-Chip Chip Repetition On-Off control {0,1} Sequence Pulse Generator Bit to symbol mapping: group every 4 bits into a symbol (for Mandatory bit rate of 2.75MHz) Symbol-to-chip mapping: Each symbol is mapped to a 32-chip {0,1} sequence, according to Gray Coded Code Position Modulation (CPM) Chip Repetition & On Off Control 22Mcps / K): Depending on the type of devices… E.g. Factor of K=11 corresponds an On-off control output 2 MHz, giving 25 kbps During a wireless transmission from a FFD to RFD, FFD can run at 22 MHz with Chip repetition; RFD runs at 22MHz / K Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

8 Modulation & Coding Pulse Generator can be one of the following:
Jan 2005 Modulation & Coding Binary data From PPDU Bit-to- Symbol Symbol- to-Chip Chip Repetition On-Off control {0,1} Sequence Pulse Generator Pulse Generator can be one of the following: A. {+1,-1} bipolar RNS pulse 132 M pulse / sec (Mpps) B. {1,0} unipolar pulse sequence 132 M pulse / sec (Mpps) (with random pulse timing jittering) C. {1,0} unipolar chaotic signal generator with periodic on-off 22 MHz Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

9 Band Plan Proposed operating band : 3.1 ~ 5.1 GHz
Jan 2005 Band Plan Proposed operating band : 3.1 ~ 5.1 GHz To meet the FCC spectrum requirement for UWB systems To avoid Interferences from a,n and other sources Bands for the future : Approximately 6 ~ 10 GHz Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

10 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 UWB Pulse & Spectrum 1.5 ns rectified cosine shape ~1400 MHz 10-dB bandwidth Centre frequency ~4 GHz Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

11 Multiple access Multiple access within piconet: TDMA, same as 15.4.
Jan 2005 Multiple access Multiple access within piconet: TDMA, same as 15.4. Multiple access across piconets: CDM Different Piconet uses different Base Sequence Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

12 Jan 2005 The receiver LPF / integrator BPF ( )2 ADC Soft Despread Sample Rate 1/Tc Energy detection technique rather than coherent receiver, for low cost, low complexity Soft chip values gives best results Oversampling & sequence correlation is used to recovery chip timing recovery LPF / integrator and ADC sampling rate depends on types of devices 22MHz for high rate device 22MHz / K for low rate device (upto K = 55, for 5 kbps) Low rate device can truly run only slower clock (e.g. with transmit pulsing jitterling) Synchronization fully re-acquired for each new packet received (=> no very accurate timebase needed) Scalability Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R)

13 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Criteria of Code Sequences To minimise impact of DC noise effect on receiver For OOK signaling, the transmitter transmits {1,0} unipolar sequences Conventional receive code sequence – follows transmit sequence After the energy capture in the receiver, the noise has positive DC components in each chip; error occurs in thresholding, especially at lower SNR This will accumulate noise unevenly in symbol decision An ideal receive despreading chip sequence should then have bipolar chip values, preferrably with equal number of ‘+1 and ‘-1’ chips This, to certain extent, will nullify DC noise in symbol decision This, will also nullify unipolar signals from other interfering piconets Cyclic correlation of any antipodal sequence with its corresponding A good code set should, so that the DC noise effect in the receiver can be minimised This will also accumulate unipolar signals from other piconets Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

14 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Criteria of Code Sequences 2. The sequence should have orthogonal cross correlation properties to minimise symbol decision error Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

15 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Base Sequence Set Seq 1 Seq 2 Seq 3 Seq 4 Seq 5 Seq 6 31-chip M-Sequence set Only one sequence and one fixed band (no hopping) will be used by all devices in a piconet Logical channels for support of multiple piconets 6 sequences = 6 logical channels (e.g. overlapping piconets) The same base sequence will be used to construct the symbol-to-chip mapping table Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

16 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Symbol-to-Chip Mapping: Gray Coded Code Position Modulation (CPM) Symbol Cyclic shift to right by n chips, n= 32-Chip value 0000 0001 2 0011 4 0010 6 0110 8 0111 10 0101 12 0100 14 1100 15 1101 17 1111 19 1110 21 1010 23 1011 25 1001 27 1000 29 To obtain 32-chip per symbol, cyclic shift the Base Sequence first, then append a ‘0’-chip Base Sequence #1 Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

17 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Why M-Sequences? Cyclic auto-correlation of any bipolar sequence gives peak value of 31 and sidelobe value of -1 throughout Cyclic correlation of any bipolar sequence with its corresponding unipolar sequence give peak value of 16; and correlation with other 15 unipolar sequences with give zero sidelobe throughout i.e. Each transmit OOK sequence will give a peak correlator output at a correlator with its corresponding antipodal sequence & ZERO at other 15 correlators Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

18 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Zero Padding Chip To avoid / reduce inter-symbol interference in channels with excess delay spread To ensure same number of ‘+1’s and ‘-1’s in corresponding receive correlation sequences, and to remove uneven DC noise distribution across symbol decision matric in receiver Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

19 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Synchronisation Preamble Correlator output for synchronisation Code sequences has excellent autocorrelation properties Preamble is constructed by repeating ‘0000’ symbols Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

20 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Frame Format Octets: 2 1 0/4/8 n 2 MAC Sublayer Frame Cont. Data Payload Seq. # Address CRC MHR MSDU MFR Octets: TDB 1 1 Data: 32 (n=23) For ACK: 5 (n=0) PHY Layer Frame Length Preamble SFD MPDU SHR PHR PSDU PPDU Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

21 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 AWGN Performance Soft value depreading gives 2 ~ 3 dB gain over thresholding techniques Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

22 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Comparison with other Sequences M-Sequence has better single isolated piconet performance due to its excellent cross correlation between mapping sequences Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

23 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Inter-Piconet Interference Suppression Let investigate the false alarm probability in the presence of one & two overlapping piconets with asynchronous operation, all piconets using sequences from either M-Sequence Code Set or Gold Sequence Code Set Code Set for all piconets False Alarm Probability Interference suppression at corr output (1 interfering piconet) Interference suppression at corr. output (2 interfering piconets) M-Sequence 2.0x10-3% 15.0 dB 11.8 dB Gold sequence 1.2x10-2% 14.5 dB 11.4 dB M-Sequence Code Set gives lower false alarm probability and better suppression Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

24 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Inter-Piconet Interference Suppression Max Corr Value 2 interfering piconet 1 interfering piconet false alarm M-Sequence Code Set gives lower false alarm probability and better suppression Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>

25 doc.: IEEE 802.15-<doc#>
<month year> doc.: IEEE <doc#> Jan 2005 Inter-Piconet Interference Suppression Code Set for all piconets False Alarm Probability Interference suppression at corr output (1 interfering piconet) Interference suppression at corr. output (2 interfering piconets) M-Sequence 1.8x10-3% 15.0 dB 11.8 dB Gold sequence 1.2x10-2% 14.5 dB 11.4 dB M-Sequence Code Set gives lower false alarm probability and better suppression Francois Chin, Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) <author>, <company>


Download ppt "doc.: IEEE <doc#>"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google