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Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering Editorial Board Ozgur Akan Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey Paolo Bellavista University of Bologna, Italy Jiannong Cao Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong Falko Dressler University of Erlangen, Germany Domenico Ferrari Università Cattolica Piacenza, Italy Mario Gerla UCLA, USA Hisashi Kobayashi Princeton University, USA Sergio Palazzo University of Catania, Italy Sartaj Sahni University of Florida, USA Xuemin (Sherman) Shen University of Waterloo, Canada Mircea Stan University of Virginia, USA Jia Xiaohua City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Albert Zomaya University of Sydney, Australia Geoffrey Coulson Lancaster University, UK 37 Xiao Jun Hei Lawrence Cheung (Eds.) Access Networks 4th International Conference, AccessNets 2009 Hong Kong, China, November 1-3, 2009 Revised Selected Papers 13 Volume Editors Xiao Jun Hei Huazhong University of Science and Technology 1037 Luoyu Road, Wuhan, China E-mail: heixj@hust.edu.cn Lawrence Cheung Hong Kong Polytechnic University Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China E-mail: lawrencecccheung@yahoo.com.hk Library of Congress Control Number: 2009943508 CR Subject Classification (1998): C.2, K.4.4, K.6.5, D.4.6 ISSN ISBN-10 ISBN-13 1867-8211 3-642-11663-9 Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York 978-3-642-11663-6 Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York This work is subject to copyright All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, re-use of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other way, and storage in data banks Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9, 1965, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer Violations are liable to prosecution under the German Copyright Law springer.com © ICST Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering 2010 Printed in Germany Typesetting: Camera-ready by author, data conversion by Scientific Publishing Services, Chennai, India Printed on acid-free paper SPIN: 12840373 06/3180 543210 Preface With the rapid growth of the Internet as well as the increasing demand for broadband services, access networks have been receiving growing investments in recent years This has led to a massive network deployment with the goal of eliminating the bandwidth bottleneck between end-users and the network core Today many diverse technologies are being used to provide broadband access to end users The architecture and performance of the access segment (local loop, wired and wireless access networks, and even home networks) are getting increasing attention for ensuring quality of service of diverse broadband applications Moreover, most access lines will no longer terminate on a single device, thus leading to the necessity of having a home network designed for applications that transcend simple Internet access sharing among multiple personal computers and enable multimedia support Therefore, the access network and its home portion have become a hot investment pool from both a financial as well as a research perspective The aim of the annual International Conference on Access Networks (AccessNets) is to provide a forum that brings together scientists and researchers from academia as well as managers and engineers from the industry and government organizations to meet and exchange ideas and recent work on all aspects of access networks and how they integrate with their in-home counterparts After Athens in 2006, Ottawa in 2007, and Las Vegas in 2008, this year AccessNets moved to Asia for the first time AccessNets 2009 was the fourth edition of this exciting event, which was held in Hong Kong, China, during November 1–3, 2009 The conference program started with the International Workshop on Advanced Wireless Access Technologies for IMT-A (IWATA) comprising seven papers organized in two technical sessions in the afternoon of November The technical program of AccessNets 2009 consisted of seven technical sessions distributed over the next two days on November and in a singletrack format The first talk of each day was delivered by an invited keynote speaker from either industry or academia The conference received approximately 22 submissions from different countries After a thorough review process, 11 papers were accepted from the open call for presentation The overall paper acceptance rate is 50% In addition, several distinguished researchers were invited to contribute to the conference program The IWATA workshop started with the first talk by Yiqing Zhou of the Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Institute on the topic of recent standardization development on IMT-A The keynote speaker of the first day of the conference was Jeffrey Yuen from PCCW and the title of his talk was “From Quad Play to Connected Living.” The keynote speaker of the second day was Joseph Hui from Arizona State University and his topic was on “Beyond Access for Virtualization and Cloud Computing.” The conference participants were from different countries including Norway, Spain, Belgium, Canada, USA, Korea, Japan, China, and Hong Kong VI Preface We would like to express our sincere gratitude to all the authors and the invited speakers for their valuable contributions We would also like to thank all members of the AccessNets 2009 Organizing Committee and Technical Program Committee in organizing the conference and putting together an excellent conference program In addition, we would also like to thank all the reviewers for their efforts to accurately review the papers on time Finally, we would like to thank the staff of ICST for their support in making AccessNets 2009 successful In particular, we would also like to thank Eszter Hajdu, Maria Morozova, and Diana Dobak for taking care of the conference preparation especially in the final stage Danny H.K Tsang Nirwan Ansari Pin-Han Ho Vincent K.N Lau Organization ACCESSNETS 2009 Committee Steering Committee Imrich Chlamtac (Chair) Jun Zheng Nirwan Ansari Create-Net Research Italy Southeast University China New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA General Chair Danny H.K Tsang Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, China TPC Co-chairs Nirwan Ansari Pin-Han Ho Vincent K.N Lau New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA University of Waterloo, Canada Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, China Workshop Co-chairs Chonggang Wang Nei Kato NEC Laboratories America, Inc., USA Tohoku University, Japan Panel Co-chairs Martin Maier Qinqing Zhang INRS, Canada Johns Hopkins University, USA Publication Co-chairs Lawrence Cheung Xiaojun Hei Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China Web Chair Xiaojun Hei Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China VIII Organization Publicity Co-chairs Chadi Assi Rong Zhao Concordia University, Canada Detecon International GmbH, Bonn, Germany Industry Sponsorship Chair Carlson Chu PCCW, Hong Kong, China Conference Coordinator Maria Morozova ICST Local Arrangements Chair Wilson Chu Open University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China Technical Program Committee Gee-Kung Chang Ruiran Chang Lin Dai Maurice GAGNAIRE Paolo Giacomazzi Zhen Guo Kaibin Huang David K Hunter Raj Jain Meilong Jiang Ken Kerpez Polychronis Koutsakis Chang-Hee Lee Helen-C Leligou Kejie Lu Martin Maier John Mitchell Enzo Mingozzi Djafar Mynbaev Sagar Naik Qiang Ni Martin Reisslein Djamel Sadok Gangxiang Shen Driton Statovci Scott A Valcourt Athanasios Vasilakos Wei Wei Georgia Institue of Technology, USA Northeastern University, China City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong ENST (TELECOM ParisTech), France Politecnico di Milano, Italy Innovative Wireless Technologies, USA Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong ESE Department, University of Essex, UK University of Washington in St Louis, USA NEC Laboratories America, USA Telcordia Technologies Technical University of Crete, Greece KAIST, Korea Technological Educational Institute of Chalkis, Greece University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez INRS Energie, Materiaux et Telecommunications University College London, UK University of Pisa, Italy New York City College of Technology, USA University of Waterloo, Canada Brunel University, UK Arizona State University, USA Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE), Brazil Ciena Corporation, USA Telecommunications Research Center Vienna, Austria University of New Hampshire, USA University of Western Macedonia, Greece NEC Laboratories America, USA Organization Gaoxi Xiao Wei Yan Kun Yang Panlong Yang Angela Zhang Dustin Zhang Hong Zhao Rong Zhao SiQing Zheng Hua Zhu IX Nangyang Technological University, Singapore Trend Micro, USA University of Essex, UK Nanjing Institute of Communications Engineering, China The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University of California, Irvine, USA Fairleigh Dickinson University, USA Detecon International GmbH, Bonn, Germany University of Texas at Dallas, USA San Diego Research Center, USA IWATA Workshop 2009 Committee Workshop Co-chairs Tung-Sang Ng Jiangzhou Wang Yiqing Zhou University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University of Kent, UK Applied Science and Technology Research Institute Company, Hong Kong Technical Program Committee Heung-Gyoon Ryu Kai-kit Wong Lin Tian Shaodan Ma Wei Peng Wen Chen Xiangyang Wang Xiaohui Lin Xiaolong Zhu Xiaoying Gan Yafeng Wang Yonghong Zeng Zaichen Zhang Zhengang Pan Zhen Kong Zhendong Zhou Chungbuk National University, Korea University College London, UK Institute of Computing Technology, China Academy of Science, China University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Tohoku University, Japan Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China Southeast University, China Shenzhen University, China Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell Co., Ltd., China University of California, San Diego, USA Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, China Agency for Science Technology and Research, Singapore Southeast University, China Applied Science and Technology Research Institute Company, Hong Kong Colorado State University, USA University of Sydney, Australia This page intentionally left blank 262 E Chiu and V.K.N Lau Sidiropoulos, N.D., Davidson, T.N., Luo, Z.-Q.: Transmit beamforming for physical-layer multicasting IEEE Trans Signal Process 54, 2239–2251 (2006) Karipidis, E., Sidiropoulos, N.D., Luo, Z.-Q.: Far-field multicast beamforming for uniform linear antenna arrays IEEE Trans Signal Process 55, 4916–4927 (2007) Karipidis, E., Sidiropoulos, N.D., Luo, Z.-Q.: Quality of service and max-min fair transmit beamforming to multiple cochannel multicast groups IEEE Trans Signal Process 56, 1268–1279 (2008) Phany, K.T., Vorobyov, S.A., Sidiropoulos, N.D., Tellambura, C.: Spectrum sharing in wireless networks: A qos-aware secondary multicast approach with worst user performance optimization In: Proc IEEE SAM 2008, July 2008, pp 23–27 (2008) Wajid, I., Gershman, A.B., Vowbyov, S.A., Karanouh, Y.A.: Robust multi-antenna broadcasting with imperfect channel state information In: Proc IEEE CAMPSAP 2007, December 2007, pp 213–216 (2007) Narula, A., Lopez, M.J., Trott, M.D., Wornell, G.W.: Efficient use of side information in multiple-antenna data transmission over fading channels IEEE J Sel Areas Commun 16, 1423–1436 (1998) Luo, Z.-Q., Sidiropoulous, N.D., Tseng, P., Zhang, S.: Approximation bounds for quadratic optimization with homogeneous quadratic constraints SIAM J Optim 18, 1–28 (2007) 10 IEEE 802.16m evaluation methodology document IEEE 802.16m-08/004r2, http://www.ieee802.org/16/tgm/ 11 Thomas, T.A., Baum, K.L., Sartori, P.: Obtaining channel knowledge for closedloop multi-stream broadband MIMO-OFDM communications using direct channel feedback In: Proc IEEE GLOBECOM 2005, December 2005, pp 3907–3911 (2005) 12 Lau, V., Liu, Y., Chen, T.-A.: On the design of mimo block-fading channels with feedback-link capacity constraint IEEE Trans Commun 52, 62–70 (2004) 13 Love, D.J., Heath, J.R.W., Strohmer, T.: Grassmannian beamforming for multipleinput multiple-output wireless systems IEEE Trans Inf Theory 49, 2735–2747 (2003) 14 Huang, K., Heath, R.W., Andrews, J.G.: Space division multiple access with a sum feedback rate constraint IEEE Trans Signal Process 55, 3879–3891 (2007) 15 Yoo, T., Jindal, N., Goldsmith, A.: Multi-antenna downlink channels with limited feedback and user selection IEEE J Sel Areas Commun 25, 1478–1491 (2007) 16 Boyd, S., Vandenberghe, L.: Convex Optimization Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2004) 17 Jindal, N., Luo, Z.-Q.: Capacity limits of multiple antenna multicast In: Proc IEEE ISIT 2006, July 2006, pp 1841–(1845) 18 David, H.A.: Order Statistics, 2nd edn Wiley, New York (1981) 19 Au-Yeung, C.K., Love, D.J.: On the performance of random vector quantization limited feedback beamforming in a MISO system IEEE Trans Wireless Commun 6, 458–462 (2007) 20 Mukkavilli, K.K., Sabharwal, A., Erkip, E., Aazhang, B.: On beamforming with finite rate feedback in multiple-antenna systems IEEE Trans Inf Theory 49, 2562– 2579 (2003) A Linear Precoding Design for MBS with Limited Feedback 263 Appendix I: Proof of Lemma Inverse CDF of η(k) As per (7), it can be shown that η(k) decreases with increasing θ(k) , which is the angle between the channel direction vector g(k) and the quantized channel direction vector g(k) obtained via limited feedback We are interested in obtaining the system performance lower bound, and we assume an upper bound model for θ(k) where g(k) is obtained using a random codebook [19] From [19, (11)], the CDF of cos2 (θ(k) ) = v(k) is given by Fv (v) = − (1 − v) 2b N −1 , v ∈ [0, 1] , (31) and the CDF of θ(k) is given by Fθ (θ) = Pr v ≥ cos2 (θ) = 1− 1−sin2(N −1) (θ) θ ∈ 0, π It can be shown that η(k) ≈ e by Fη (η) = Pr θ ≥ − ln(η) = −3θ(k) 2b , , so the CDF of η(k) is given 1−sin2(N −1) − ln(η) 2b , η ∈ [0, 1), and the inverse CDF of η(k) is given by Fη−1 (q) = exp −3 arcsin − q 2b 2N −1 , q= For sufficiently large K, − q 2b approaches Recall that the Maclaurin series of arcsin (x) ≈ x for small x, and so K+1 2N −1 Fη−1 (q) = O exp −3 − q 2b , where q = K +1 Inverse CDF of ζ(k) The channel gain ζ(k) is χ2 distributed with 2N DOF, so its CDF is given by Fζ (ζ) = − e−ζ N −1 n=0 ∞ ζn n=0 n! , Since eζ = ζn , ζ ∈ [0, ∞) n! (32) (32) can be rewritten as Fζ (ζ) = − e−ζ ∞ eζ − n=N ζn n! = e−ζ ∞ n=N ζn n! (33) For small ζ, we can neglect the higher order terms in (33) to get Fζ (ζ) = O (cf [20, (50)]) Let Fζ (ζ) = O N! K+1 N K+1 and for sufficiently large K, Fζ−1 K+1 ζN N! = Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink Young Ju Kim and Xun Li Chungbuk National University Cheongju, Chungbuk, Republic of Korea {yjkim,xunli}@cbnu.ac.kr Abstract Long term evolution (LTE) standard for uplink transmission is based on single carrier frequency division multiple access (SC-FDMA) to maintain low peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR), which is very valuable for the practical handset design Recently the usage of codebookbased precoding is thoroughly discussed for the LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) uplink Among the various precoding schemes, equal gain transmission (EGT) is proposed in this paper because it does not increase any PAPR Especially, considering nonlinear transmit power amplifier model in uplink, EGT is superior to any other precoding schemes Theoretical analysis of precoding schemes’ PAPR is presented under quasistatic flat fading channel, and link-level bit error rate (BER) is simulated to corroborate the anticipated results Keywords: SC-FDMA, LTE-A, uplink, MIMO Introduction 3rd generation partnership project (3GPP) release standardization, which is called LTE, adopts quite different modulation and multiple access techniques from 3GPP’s previous versions such as wideband code division multiple access (WCDMA) and high speed packet access (HSPA) [1][2][3] Orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) and SC-FDMA are employed as downlink and uplink multiple access techniques respectively [4] Also the notable thing is the fact that SC-FDMA has lower PAPR than OFDMA, which make a small and low cost handset design possible Meanwhile, the 1st workshop of LTE-A held in Shenzhen, April 2008, proposed advanced key techniques for higher average throughput, cell-edge throughput, and spectrum efficiency, compared to LTE Then 3GPP approved LTE-A study from June 2008 [5]-[11] One of the key techniques for LTE-A is applying multi-input multi-output (MIMO) technique for uplink which is a promising technique with many benefits [12][14][15] When user equipment (UE) moves at a low speed less than 60 km/hr, codebookbased closed-loop MIMO can enhance uplink performances Conventionally, “This work was supported by the grant of the Korean Ministry of Education, Science and Technology” (The Regional Core Research Program/Chungbuk BIT ResearchOriented University Consortium) X Jun Hei and L Cheung (Eds.): AccessNets 2009, LNICST 37, pp 264–275, 2010 c Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering 2010 Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink 265 Fig Block diagram of precoding and combining method in MIMO systems various codebook design employ maximum ratio transmission (MRT) technique because it shows the optimum received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) [16] But in terms of uplink transmission, it can deteriorate PAPR So in this paper quantized equal gain transmission (EGT) is newly considered for LTE-A uplink because of its perfect PAPR property [17] Moreover, non-linear transmit power amplifier model is also considered to verify the effect of PAPR in the link-level BER simulations It can be expected that because MRT-based codebook make the transmit signal level fluctuate, EGT-based codebook outperforms MRT codebook in nonlinear power amplifier channel model This paper is organized as follows: Section makes a brief overview of codebookbased precoding scheme Section describes the precoding method for SC-FDMA system Section investigates how the PAPR can be obtained in SC-FDMA in quasistatic flat fading channel In Section 5, we exhibit BER simulation results considering nonlinear transmit amplifier model Finally, our conclusions are provided in Section Overview of Codebook-Based Precoding This paper treats closed-loop precoding showing better performance than openloop precoding in pedestrian channel environment Closed-loop schemes include explicite and implicit channel state information (CSI) feedback The explicit CSI feedback is that the quantized channel information is directly delivered to the transmitter by receiver, while implicit one is that the receiver determines and delivers the proper index among the weighting vectors of the codebook which is known by both transmitter and receiver In WiMAX, multi-rank MRTbased codebooks are proposed when the numbers of transmit antennas are 2, 266 Y.J Kim and X Li and [18] [19] LTE release also has MRT-based codebooks for downlink And codebooks were proposed by some companies for LTE-A uplink [7] In [17], EGT is also precisely studied by David Love and the generation of EGT-based codebook is also detailed in six steps Fig shows how CSI feedback is performed in precoded MIMO systems Mt and Mr is the number of transmit antennas and receive antennas, respectively w is precoding vector, l(1 ≤ l ≤ Mt ) is transmit antenna index, while k(1 ≤ k ≤ Mr ) is receive antenna index The received signal yk could be expressed as the following [16] [17]: Mt yk = hk,l wl s + nk , (1) l=1 where hk,l is memoryless fading channel and nk is AWGN noise at kth receive antenna The data received by the kth receive antenna, yk , is multiplied by zk The weighted output of each of the Mr receive antennas is then combined This formulation allows the equivalent system to be written in matrix form as the following [17]: s = z H Hw s + z H n, (2) where w = [w1 , w2 , · · · , wMt ]T , z = [z1 , z2 , · · · , zMr ]T , n = [n1 , n2 , · · · , nMr ]T and H denotes the Mr ×Mt matrix having coordinate (k, l), which is equal to hk,l Furthermore, [·]T and [·]H represent transposition and conjugate transposition, respectively For the sake of achieving optimum performances, w and z should be chosen as a function of the channel estimate to maximize the receive Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) [16],[20] The receiver can estimate and send back CSI to the transmitter But due to a limited feedback channel capacity, it is impossible to send back high precision CSI to the transmitter in most systems Only quantized CSI or well designed codebook’s index within L bits can be sent back In multiple-input single-output (MISO) system, which can be more easily understood than MIMO, the optimal precoding vector with MRT scheme wMRT is given by [16]: wMRT = Mt hH h F , (3) where h = [h1 , h2 , · · · , hMt ] and · 2F represents the Frobenius norm In case of EGT scheme, the optimal precoding vector wEGT is given by [17]: wEGT = √ ejθ , Mt (4) θ ∈ arg max Hejϑ (5) where ϑ∈[0,2π) Texas instruments proposed a Householder-based codebook with potential complexity reduction in [13], whose codebook for Rank transmission with bits feedback is generated by following Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink V21 (θ, ϕ) = cos(θ) sin(θ) exp(jϕ) 267 (6) where θ = tan−1 {1/3, 3, 3/4, 3/4, 3/4, 4/3, 4/3, 4/3,}, and ϕ = {0, 0, 0, π/3, 2π/3, π, 4π/3, 5π/3} The upper bound of system performance is achievable if z = Hw/ Hw In codebook based precoding system with codebook size 2L , the codebook index k could be determined by following equation k = arg max |Hw(k)|1 (7) 1≤k≤2L The codebook search algorithm and performance comparison between MRT and EGT with codebook is studied by the authors in [21] Precoding Methods for SC-FDMA Uplink The basic idea of SC-FDMA could be regarded as discrete fourier transform (DFT)-spread OFDMA, where time domain data symbols are transformed to frequency domain by M -point DFT operation and subcarrier mapping has to be done before going through N -point OFDM modulator, where N is much larger than M When Q = N/M , Q denotes band spreading factor Users of SC-FDMA system occupy different subcarriers in frequency domain Thus the overall transmit signal performs like a single carrier signal, PAPR is inherently low at each user equipment compare to the case of OFDMA Let {xm : m = 0, 1, · · · , M −1} be data symbols to be modulated Then, {Xk : k = 0, 1, · · · , M − 1} are frequency domain DFT processed samples and {yn : n = 0, 1, · · · , M − 1} represents the OFDM modulated time domain samples They could be expressed as M−1 Xk = m xm e−j2π M k (8) m=0 yn = N N −1 n Yl ej2π N l , (9) l=1 where {Yl : l = 0, 1, · · · , N − 1} is the frequency domain samples after subcarrier mapping Interleaved FDMA (IFDMA) and localized FDMA (LFDMA) subcarrier mapping schemes are under consideration as the uplink communications in this paper, which were illustrated in [22] In IFDMA, DFT transformed signals are allocated over the entire bandwidth with equidistance between occupied subcarriers, whereas consecutive subcarriers are occupied by the DFT outputs in LFDMA At each user equipment, zeros are occupied in unused subcarriers as the block diagram is shown in Fig For IFDMA, Yl = Xl/Q , l = Q · k(0 ≤ k ≤ M − 1) 0, otherwise (10) 268 Y.J Kim and X Li (a) (b) Fig Block diagram of a spatial multiplexing SC-FDMA MIMO system: (a) Precoding in frequency domain, (b) Precoding in time domain (a) (b) Fig Subcarrier mapping modes: (a) Localized FDMA, (b) Interleaved FDMA and for LFDMA, Yl = Xl , ≤ l ≤ M − , 0, M ≤ l ≤ N − (11) We have two schemes to implement the precoding operation, precoding in frequency domain as shown in Fig 2(a), and precoding in timedomain as shown in Fig 2(b) Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink 269 In case of precoding in frequency domain, {Xl : l = 0, 1, · · · , M − 1} in (11) are frequency domain precoded samples, and precoding vector {Wk : k = 0, 1, · · · , M − 1} should be determined according to the channel frequency response, Xk = Wk · Xk The transmit samples are OFDM modulated samples y n = yn If the precoding operation is implemented in time domain, Xl = Xl The precoding vector {wn : n = 0, 1, · · · , N − 1} should be determined according channel impulse response, and the transmit samples after precoding operation becomes yn = wn · yn These two precoding implementations could obtain the same performance if we assume the CSI is perfectly known by the receiver, and ignore the equalization complexity difference between in frequency domain and in time domain Finally, the transmit samples in time domain could be expressed as the following by substituting (10) and (11) to (9): ⎧ ⎪ ⎪ ⎨ yˆn,LF DMA = yˆn,IF DMA = N −1 n Wl Xl ej2π N l , FD − precoding l=1 N −1 n ⎪ ⎪ ⎩ wn N1 Xl ej2π N l , TD − precoding l=0 ⎧ ⎪ ⎪ ⎨ N1 N N −1 l=1 ⎪ ⎪ ⎩ wn N1 (12) n Wl/Q Xl/Q ej2π N l , FD − precoding N −1 l=0 Xl/Q e n j2π N l (13) , TD − precoding PAPR of SC-FDMA in Quasistatic Flat Fading Channels The PAPR of precoded SC-FDMA is analyzed under the quasistatic flat fading channel Since quasistatic channel means the fading coefficient is constant over a OFDM symbole period, precoded weighting vector is also constant under the period The PAPR of transmit signal could be expressed as 2 P AP R = max |yn | = E |yn |2 max Wn Xn E (14) Wn Xn Considering flat fading channel, the precoding vector for each subcarrier is equivalent in one OFDM symbol due to the channel is frequency non-selective Therefore, (13) could be rewritten as P AP R = max W Xn E W Xn = |W | · max Xn |W | · E Xn (15) 270 Y.J Kim and X Li Fig CCDF curve of PAPR for the obervation window size L From (14), we could know that it is meaningless to calculate the PAPR in one OFDM symbol However, it is meaningful to calculate PAPR with several symbols we set the observation windows size to be L, the new PAPR represents as the following: max P AP R = 0≤l≤L−1,0≤n≤N −1 L · N Wl XN l+n L−1 N −1 l=0 n=0 (16) Wl XN l+n Fig shows the complementary cululative distribution function (CCDF) result of PAPR with various windows size L using Monte Carlo simulation The CCDF is the probability that PAPR is higher than a certain PAPR value P AP Ro The souce samples are modulated by QPSK and mapped with LFDMA scheme The codebook is WiMAX rank codebok which designed for transmit antenna and single user The observation windows size is increase from to 10 In this simulation, the P AP Ro is determined by the probability is 97-percentage Another simulation shows the P AP Ro which is determined by the probability is 99.9-percentage in Table Therefore, L = 10 would be approprate to reflect the impact of precoding to PAPR of SC-FDMA system With this consideration, Fig shows the CCDF comparison of IFDMA and LFDMA with different codebook, including EGT codebook, MRT codebook (WiMAX), LTE Release downlink codebook, and TI codebook which was proposed by TI company for LTE-A Raised cosine filter is used at the transmitter for pulse shaping, with over sampling factor is and roll-off factor is 0.5 Fig shows that SC-FDMA has lowest PAPR with EGT codebook for precoding, and IFDMA mapping scheme outperforms LFDMA mapping scheme Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink 271 Table 99.9-percentile PAPR for the observation window size L L 99.9% PAPR for LFDMA (dB) 8.262 9.122 9.347 9.465 10 9.471 Fig CCDFs of IFDMA and LFDMA with Raised-cosine roll-off factor α = 0.5 System Parameters and BER Simulation Results For this section, we simulated the average probability of bit error with varous codebook Jakes’ model is used as wireless channel with 3km/h and 60km/h of UE’s velocity Perfect channel estimation and ideal synchronization at the receiver is considered, and there is no correlation between transmit antennas and receive antennas since enough antenna space is assumed The system carrier frequency is 2.0 GHz, symbol rate is 7.68 million symbols/sec which is usually used in LTE-A PMI related parameters are error-free precoding matrix indicator (PMI) with 1ms delay We considered Mr = Mt = We let the bandwidth expansion factor Q = 4, and M = 512 and N = 2048 Raised-cosine filter is used for pulse shaping with 8x oversampling More details about simulation parameter are listed in Table 272 Y.J Kim and X Li Table Simulation parameters for PAPR and BER Bandwidth 5MHz Carrier frequency 2GHz Data rate 7.68Mbps Channel for PAPR Quasistatic Rayleigh fading Channel for BER Jakes’ model Tx antenna Modulation QPSK Channel estimation Ideal DFT size (M ) 16/512 (PAPR/BER) IFFT size (N ) 512/2048 (PAPR/BER) Precoding codebook EGT/WiMAX/LTE/TI Oversampling factor Pulse shaping Raised cosine filter To approximate the effect of nonlinear power amplifier in the transmitter, we adopt Rapp’s model for amplitude conversion which could be represent as g(A) = A 1/(2p) (1 + A2p ) (17) Fig illustrate the relation between amplitude of the normalized input signal A and amplitude of output signal g(A) when the nonlinear characteristic factor p = The phase conversion of the power amplifier is neglected in this paper Fig Input-output relation curve of the Rapp’s model when p = Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink 273 Fig BER performance of LFDMA with QPSK, velocity is 3km/h Fig BER performance of LFDMA with QPSK, velocity is 60km/h Fig illustrates the BER performances of LFDMA with different precoding schemes At the receiver, maximal ratio combining (MRC) scheme is used who provids upper bound receive diversity Although, when the linear amplifier is considered at the transmitter, EGT scheme performs worse than other codebook almost 1dB But when the nonlinear amplifier is under consideration, it outperforms other schemes by almost 3dB at a 10−3 BER, while other scheme’s signal suffering nonlinear power distortion much more seriously Fig shows 274 Y.J Kim and X Li the BER comparison of SC-FDMA system with UE’s velocity is 60km/h Due to feedbacked daley, all BER performances are degraded with high velocity of UEs However, the performance based on EGT codebook still outperforms other scheme when nonlinear power amplifier is under consideration Conclusions In this paper, we have investigated how the precoding schemes impact on the PAPR of SC-FDMA system Conventional MRT-based methods and newly proposed EGT-based method were carefuly examined We showed that precoding schemes could increase the PAPR for SC-FDMA signals but EGT does not cause any signal variations In the BER simulations including non-linear transmit power amplifier model, EGT-based precoding scheme outperforms any other MRT-based ones In order to maintain the low PAPR advantages of SC-FDMA compared to OFDMA, precoding schems should be cautiously designed, and EGT can be a good technique for LTE-A uplink employing MIMO SC-FDMA References Toskala, A., Holma, H., Pajukoski, K., et al.: UTRAN long term evolution in 3GPP In: Proc International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC) 2006, Helsinki, Finland (September 2006) 3rd Generation Partnership Project, http://www.3gpp.org 3rd Generation Partnership Project, 3GPP TS 36.211 - Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network; Evolved Unversal Terrestrial Radio Access (EUTRA); Physical Channels and Modulation (Release 8) (March 2009) Myung, H.G., Lim, J., Goodman, D.J.: Single Carrier FDMA for Uplink Wireless Transmission IEEE Vehicular Technology Mag 1(3), 30–38 (2006) 3GPP TSGRAN1 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multiple-input multiple-output wireless systems IEEE Trans Commun 51(7) (July 2003) Quantized Beamforming Technique for LTE-Advanced Uplink 275 18 IEEE802.16e, Air interface for broadband wireless access systems (June 2008) 19 WiMAX Forum, Mobile WiMAX - Part I: A technical overview and performance evaluation 20 Paulraj, A., Nabar, R., Gore, D.: Introduction to space time wireless communications, pp 95–96 Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2003) 21 Park, N.Y., Kim, Y.J., Li, X., Lee, K.S.: A fast index search algorithm for codebook based equal gain transmission beamforming system In: VTC 2009 (Spring, April 2009) 22 Myung, H.G., Goodman, D.J.: Single Carrier FDMA Wiley, Chichester (2008) 23 Han, S.H., Lee, J.H.: An overview of peak-to-average power ratio reduction techniques for multicarrier transmission IEEE Wireless Commun (April 2005) Author Index Long, Guozhu 192 Lorenzo, Rub´en M Abril, Evaristo J Aguado, Juan C Ansari, Nirwan 14 Bruyne, Jeffrey De Cendrillon, Raphael Chiu, Eddy 248 Chou, James 192 Colle, Didier 52 52 192 Ma, Miao 149 Martens, Luc 52 Matsuda, Kazumasa 232 Merayo, Noem´ı Miguel, Ignacio de Morino, Hiroaki 121 Nakayama, Hidehisa Demeester, Piet 52 Du, Yinggang 80 Dur´ an, Ram´ on J Fern´ andez, Patricia Ohnishi, Masaaki 121 Ooteghem, Jan Van 52 Gong, Ming 103 Gonz´ alez, Rub´en Pickavet, Mario 52 Qiao, Chunming 89 Ryu, Heung-Gyoon Hamagami, Tomoki 179 Ho, Pin-Han 67, 103 Hua, Bei 89 Huang, Caishi 25 Hung, Patrick 103 Inoue, Masugi 232 121 Jain, Raj 40 Jim´enez, Tamara Joseph, Wout 52 Kato, Nei 232 Kim, Young Ju 264 Lang, Ke 133 Lannoo, Bart 52 Lau, Vincent K.N 248 Lea, Chin-Tau 25 Li, Shiliang 89 Li, Xun 264 Liew, Soung Chang 219 Liming, Fang 192 Lin, Bin 103 Lin, Xiaohui 219 Liu, Sheng 80 204 Sanefuji, Tohru 121 She, James 67 Shi, Hongbo 179 Shihada, Basem 67 Skeie, Tor 164 So-In, Chakchai 40 Tamimi, Abdel-Karim Al 40 Tanghe, Emmeric 52 Tong, Jianfei 80 Tsang, Danny H.K 133, 149 Wang, Hui 219 Wang, Jianping 89 Wei, Dong 192 Wong, Albert Kai-Sun Wu, Yuan 133 Xiang, Jie Zhang, Zhang, Zhang, Zhang, Zhang, 164 Jing 80 Jingjing 14 Shengli 219 Xiupei 204 Yan 164 25 ... Printed on acid-free paper SPIN: 1284 037 3 06 /31 80 5 432 10 Preface With the rapid growth of the Internet as well as the increasing demand for broadband services, access networks have been receiving growing... + ε, x2 , x3 ) ≤ fi,j (x1 , x2 , x3 ), ∀ε > ⎪ fi,j (x1 , x2 + ε, x3 ) ≤ fi,j (x1 , x2 , x3 ), ∀ε > ⎪ ⎩ fi,j (x1 , x2 , x3 + ε) ≤ fi,j (x1 , x2 , x3 ), ∀ε > where fi,j (x1 , x2 , x3 ) is the application... University, UK 37 Xiao Jun Hei Lawrence Cheung (Eds.) Access Networks 4th International Conference, AccessNets 2009 Hong Kong, China, November 1 -3, 2009 Revised Selected Papers 13 Volume Editors

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