WO2006076648A2 - Communication system overlap-and-add operation - Google Patents
Communication system overlap-and-add operation Download PDFInfo
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- WO2006076648A2 WO2006076648A2 PCT/US2006/001350 US2006001350W WO2006076648A2 WO 2006076648 A2 WO2006076648 A2 WO 2006076648A2 US 2006001350 W US2006001350 W US 2006001350W WO 2006076648 A2 WO2006076648 A2 WO 2006076648A2
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- information symbol
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L27/00—Modulated-carrier systems
- H04L27/26—Systems using multi-frequency codes
- H04L27/2601—Multicarrier modulation systems
- H04L27/2602—Signal structure
- H04L27/2605—Symbol extensions, e.g. Zero Tail, Unique Word [UW]
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L27/00—Modulated-carrier systems
- H04L27/26—Systems using multi-frequency codes
- H04L27/2601—Multicarrier modulation systems
- H04L27/2647—Arrangements specific to the receiver only
- H04L27/2649—Demodulators
- H04L27/26524—Fast Fourier transform [FFT] or discrete Fourier transform [DFT] demodulators in combination with other circuits for demodulation
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L25/00—Baseband systems
- H04L25/02—Details ; arrangements for supplying electrical power along data transmission lines
- H04L25/0202—Channel estimation
Definitions
- Frequency division multiplexing or frequency division modulation is a technology that transmits multiple signals simultaneously over a single transmission path, such as a cable or wireless system. Each signal travels within its own unique frequency range (carrier), which is modulated by data (for example, text, voice, video, etc.).
- Orthogonal FDM distributes the data over a large number of carriers that are spaced apart at precise frequencies.
- some wired and wireless protocols define a guard interval that is placed as a prefix before transmitted information symbols.
- Other protocols define a guard interval that is placed as a suffix after transmitted information symbols (for example, a zero-padded suffix or "ZPS"). In either case, the guard interval reduces interference between information symbols by providing time for multi-path reflections to attenuate.
- a receiving device may use an "overlap-and-add" operation to add samples of the ZPS to samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS.
- the overlap-and-add operation may combine the "N" samples of the ZPS with the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS.
- the entire symbol preceding the ZPS is buffered and the Fourier Transform logic of the receiving device is prevented from processing samples of the symbol until after the overlap-and-add begins. Accordingly, the overlap-and-add operation introduces undesirable latency at the receiving device.
- a system comprises a first device that transmits an information symbol with a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) and a second device that receives the information symbol with the zero-padded suffix.
- the second device performs a Fourier transform on at least one sample of the information symbol before a ZPS sample is overlapped- and-added to another sample of the information symbol.
- ZPS zero-padded suffix
- a receiver includes overlap-and-add logic and Fourier transform logic coupled to the overlap-and-add logic.
- the overlap-and-add logic outputs a cyclically shifted information symbol that is received by the Fourier transform logic.
- a method includes storing an amount of information symbol samples for an overlap-and-add operation.
- the amount of information symbol samples is less than a total length of the information symbol.
- the method also includes forwarding at least one remaining information symbol sample for Fourier transform processing before forwarding an overlapped-and-added sample for Fourier transform processing.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless system in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure
- FIG. 2A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure
- FIG. 2B illustrates a block diagram of embodiments of the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 2A
- FIG. 3 illustrates example timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 2B
- FIG. 4A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure
- FIG. 4B illustrates a block diagram of embodiments of the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 4A
- FIG. 5 illustrates example timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 4B
- FIG. 6 illustrates a method in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure
- FIG. 7 illustrates another method in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure.
- FIG. 8 illustrates another method in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure. DETAILED DESCRIPTION
- Electronic devices that communicate wirelessly implement a variety of techniques to prepare, send, receive, and recover data.
- data preparation techniques may include data scrambling, error correction coding, interleaving, data packet formatting, and/or other techniques.
- the data to be transmitted is converted into blocks of data (that is, bits) transmitted as information symbols. Each information symbol is associated with a constellation of complex amplitudes.
- one or more antennas receive the wireless signal, after which data is recovered by sampling the received signal and decoding each information symbol.
- a receiving device may implement techniques such as signal amplification, digitization, sample rate conversion, equalization, demodulation, de-interleaving, de-coding, and/or de-scrambling.
- a zero-padded suffix follows each information symbol.
- Embodiments of the disclosure illustrate methods and systems that reduce latency introduced when an overlap-and-add operation is used with a ZPS. In at least some embodiments, this latency is reduced by cyclically shifting the order of samples input to a receiver's Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) logic (that is, the FFT logic begins to receive some samples of the symbol preceding a ZPS before symbol samples are added to ZPS samples for the overlap-and-add operation).
- FFT Fast Fourier Transform
- the ZPS corresponds to "N" samples
- only the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation.
- the remaining samples of the symbol are input to the receiver's FFT logic before ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples.
- the N samples corresponding to the ZPS are then overlapped-and-added to the first N samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a system 100 in accordance with an embodiment of the disclosure.
- the system 100 comprises the devices HOA and HOB.
- the device HOA includes a transceiver 112A having a data link layer 114A and a PHY layer 116A.
- the device HOB includes a transceiver 112B having a data link layer 114B and a PHY layer 116B.
- the data link layers and the PHY layers function according to a standardized communication protocol such as an 802.11 protocol.
- a standardized communication protocol such as an 802.11 protocol.
- the PHY layer 116A and the data link layer 114A perform several functions such as preparing, transmitting, receiving, and decoding wireless signals.
- the PHY layer 116A implements a physical layer convergence procedure (PLCP) sub-layer, a physical medium dependent (PMD) sub-layer and overlap-and-add logic 118A.
- PLCP physical layer convergence procedure
- PMD physical medium dependent
- the PLCP sub-layer of the device 11OA enables carrier sense and clear channel assessment (CCA) signals to be provided to the data link layer 114A (indicating when the PHY layer 116A is in use).
- CCA carrier sense and clear channel assessment
- the PMD sub-layer of the PHY layer 116A provides encoding, decoding, modulation, and/or demodulation of information symbols for the device 11 OA.
- the PMD sub-layer of the PHY layer 116A permits the device 11 OA to implement modulation techniques such as Multi-band OFDM.
- the PMD sub-layer also may provide functions such as analog-to-digital and/or digital-to-analog data conversion.
- the data link layer 114A implements a logical link control (LLC) and a medium access control (MAC).
- LLC logical link control
- MAC medium access control
- the LLC assembles data frames with address and cyclic redundancy check (CRC) fields.
- CRC cyclic redundancy check
- the LLC disassembles data frames, performs address recognition, and performs CRC validation.
- the MAC functions, at least in part, to coordinate transmission of data between the electronic device HOA and other devices (for example, the device 110B).
- FIG. 2 A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver 200 in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- the receiver 200 may be part of the PHY layer 116A previously described.
- the PHY layer 116A may be compatible with a multi-band OFDM physical layer specification.
- the receiver 200 is not limited to a particular protocol and may be part of any wired or wireless system that receives information symbols followed by a ZPS.
- the ZPS provides a mechanism to mitigate multi-path energy and enables a transmitter and receiver to switch between different frequency bands.
- the receiver 200 comprises overlap-and-add logic 202 that receives samples of an incoming signal.
- the overlap-and-add logic 202 selectively performs overlap-and-add operations and provides either the original (unmodified) incoming samples or the overlapped-and-added (modified) samples to the FFT logic 204.
- the overlap-and-add operations are part of a convolution process that uses the extra samples of the ZPS to form the desired output.
- the FFT logic 204 receives at least some unmodified samples of the information symbol preceding a ZPS before any buffered symbol samples are added to the ZPS samples.
- the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation.
- the remaining samples of the symbol are input tolhe receiver's FFT logic 204 before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples.
- N ZPS samples are overlapped-and-added to the first N samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and- added samples are input to the FFT logic 204.
- N samples are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation before the FFT logic 204 begins receiving information symbol samples from the overlap-and-add logic 202.
- This overlap-and-add method reduces latency and buffer size compared to overlap-and-add methods that buffer an entire information symbol before forwarding samples to a receiver's FFT logic.
- a symbol corresponds to 128 samples and a ZPS corresponds to 32 samples
- the latency of the overlap-and-add operation described in Figs. 2A-2B is 32 clock cycles rather than 128 clock cycles (a reduction of 96 clock cycles).
- the FFT logic 204 extracts frequency spectrum data from the incoming signal samples and outputs the frequency spectrum data to a frequency equalizer 208.
- the frequency equalizer 208 removes the frequency shaping caused by the communication channel and outputs "equalized" frequency spectrum data to a constellation de-mapper 210. If an information symbol's samples are cyclically shifted by the overlap-and-add logic 202 (that is, if overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic 204 after the symbol's other samples), the frequency equalizer 208 compensates for this cyclic shift as if it were part of the communication channel frequency shape.
- the output of the frequency equalizer 208 is received by the constellation de-mapper 210, which converts the equalized frequency spectrum data to information symbols that can be decoded by a decoder.
- FIG. 2B illustrates a block diagram of the overlap-and-add logic 202 of FIG. 2A in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- the overlap-and-add logic 202 comprises a demultiplexer 220 which may be a 1x2 demultiplexer (that is, a single input is selectively routed to one of two possible output locations).
- the top output of the demultiplexer 220 is received by adding logic 226 after passing through phase de-rotation logic 236.
- the top output of the demultiplexer 220 is also received by a multiplexer (“multiplexer") 228, which may be a 2x1 multiplexer (that is, one of two possible inputs is selectively routed as the multiplexer output).
- the bottom output of the demultiplexer 220 is received by an N-sample buffer 222, which may be a first-in-first-out (FIFO) buffer.
- FIFO first-in-first-out
- FFT logic for example, FFT logic 204
- the control logic 224 provides a demultiplexer control signal 232 to the demultiplexer 220, a buffer clock control signal 230 to the N-sample buffer 222 and a multiplexer control signal 234 the multiplexer 228.
- the demultiplexer control signal 232, the buffer clock control signal 230, and the multiplexer control signal 234 are shown in greater detail in FIG. 3.
- FIG. 3 illustrates timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic 202 of FIG. 2B in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- timing diagrams are provided for a clock signal 302, the demultiplexer control signal 232, the buffer clock control signal 230 and the multiplexer control signal 234.
- the timing diagrams are divided into three time segments referred to as "TIMEl", “TIME2" and “TIME3” and illustrate embodiments in which a ZPS corresponds to N samples. As shown, the information symbol preceding the ZPS corresponds to 128 samples. Embodiments, however, are not limited to information symbols corresponding to 128 samples.
- the clock signal 302 may be set at a fixed frequency (for example, 132 MHz) throughout the time periods (for example, TIMEl, TIME2, and TIME3) of an overlap-and-add operation.
- Each element of the overlap-and-add logic 202 (for example, the demultiplexer 220, the N-sample buffer 222, the control logic 224, the adding, logic 226, the phase de-rotation logic 236, and the multiplexer 228) processes samples based on the frequency of the clock signal 302.
- the control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass N samples to the N-sample buffer 222 by asserting the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "1".
- the control logic 224 also activates the buffer clock control signal 230 so that the N samples are stored in the buffer 222.
- the N samples correspond to the first N samples of an information symbol.
- the multiplexer control signal 234 prevents the multiplexer 228 from forwarding samples to the FFT logic 204 or the FFT logic 204 is otherwise prevented from processing samples.
- the control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass the remaining samples of the information symbol (128 — N remaining samples) to both the multiplexer 228 and the phase de-rotation logic 236 by de-asserting the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "0".
- the phase de-rotation logic 236 removes (or reduces) the affect of the phase offset between the samples to be added by the adding logic 226 (for example, the samples to be added are separated by 128 samples in this case). This phase offset arises due to a frequency offset between the transmitting device and the receiving device.
- the control logic 224 also causes the N-sample buffer 222 to hold the N samples that were buffered during TIMEl by idling the buffer clock control signal 230. Finally, the control logic 224 causes the multiplexer 228 to pass the symbol samples received from the demultiplexer 220 during TIME2 to the FFT logic 204 by de-asserting the multiplexer control signal 234 to a logical "0".
- control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass ZPS samples to the multiplexer 228 and to the phase de-rotation logic 236 by continuing to de-assert the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "0".
- the control logic 224 also directs the N-sample buffer 222 to pass or "flush out" the buffered samples to the adding logic 226 by activating the buffer clock control signal 230.
- the control logic 224 directs the multiplexer 228 to pass the overlapped-and-added samples from the adding logic 226 to the FFT logic 204 by asserting the multiplexer control signal 234 to a logical
- FIG. 4A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver 400 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure.
- the receiver 400 may be part of the PHY layer 116A previously described.
- the PHY layer 116A may be compatible with a multi-band OFDM physical layer specification.
- the receiver 200 is not limited to a particular protocol and may be part of any wired or wireless system that receives information symbols followed by a ZPS.
- the receiver 400 is similar to the receiver 200 previously described in FIG. 2A, but illustrates an embodiment that selects the number of samples that are buffered and added in the overlap-and-add operation according to an estimated channel impulse response (CIR) size rather than a ZPS size.
- the receiver 400 dynamically estimates a CIR and adjusts the number of samples that are buffered and added in each overlap-and-add " operation accordingly (for example, the number of samples that are buffered may be a function of the estimated CIR).
- the receiver 400 comprises overlap-and-add logic 402 that receives samples of an incoming signal.
- the overlap-and-add logic 402 selectively performs overlap- and-add operations and provides either the original (unmodified) samples or the overlapped-and- added (modified) samples to the FFT logic 404.
- the FFT logic 404 receives at least some unmodified samples of the information symbol preceding a ZPS before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples by the overlap-and-add logic 402.
- an estimated CIR corresponds to "M" samples
- the first M samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation.
- the value of M is simply a function of the estimated CIR and need not be exactly equal to the estimated CIR length.
- the remaining samples of the symbol are input to the receiver's FFT logic 404 before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples.
- M ZPS samples are overlapped-and-added to the first M samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic 404.
- the latency of the overlap-and-add operation of Figs. 4A-4B (that is, the number of clock cycles that the FFT logic 404 is idle per overlap-and-add operation) would be 26 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the CIR size) rather than 32 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the ZPS size) or 128 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the information symbol size).
- the CIR corresponds to 26 samples
- the buffer size may still be based on the ZPS size, which would represent the maximum CIR that the receiver 400 can account for.
- the FFT logic 404 extracts frequency spectrum data from the incoming signal samples and outputs the frequency spectrum data to channel estimation logic 406.
- the channel estimation logic 406 estimates a channel impulse response (CIR) that represents the effect a communication channel has on a signal transmitted through the channel.
- CIR channel impulse response
- the channel estimation logic 406 provides an overlap adjust signal 412 to the overlap-and-add logic 402, which may include the CIR or CIR-related information.
- the overlap adjust signal 412 enables the overlap-and-add logic 402 to adjust the number of samples that are buffered and added in each overlap-and-add operation based on the estimated CIR or a function of the estimated CIR.
- the CIR and, thus, the overlap adjust signal 412 would direct the overlap-and-add logic 402 to decrease the number of samples that are buffered and added (reducing latency) for an overlap-and-add operation.
- the CIR and, thus, the overlap adjust signal 412 would direct the overlap- and-add logic 402 to increase the number of samples that are buffered and added (increasing latency) for an overlap-and-add operation.
- the channel estimation logic 406 forwards the frequency spectrum data received from the FFT logic 404 to the frequency equalizer 408.
- the frequency equalizer 408 removes frequency response caused by the communication channel and outputs "equalized" frequency spectrum data to the constellation de- mapper 410. If an information symbol's samples are cyclically shifted by the overlap-and-add logic 402, the frequency equalizer 408 compensates for this cyclic shift as if it were part of the communication channel response.
- the output of the frequency equalizer 408 is received by a constellation de-mapper 410, which converts the equalized frequency spectrum data to information symbols that can be decoded by a decoder.
- FIG. 4B illustrates a block diagram of the overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4A in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- the overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4B functions similarly to the overlap-and-add logic 202 described in FIG. 2B, but performs the overlap-and-add operation as a function of the CIR size rather than the ZPS size.
- the overlap-and-add logic 402 comprises a demultiplexer 420 which may be a 1 x 2 demultiplexer (that is, a single input is selectively routed to one of two possible output locations).
- the top output of the demultiplexer 420 is received by adding logic 426 after passing through phase de-rotation logic 436.
- the top output of the demultiplexer 420 is also received by a multiplexer 428, which may be a 2 x 1 multiplexer (that is, one of two possible inputs is selectively routed as the multiplexer output).
- the bottom output of the demultiplexer 420 is received by an N- sample buffer 422, which may be a first-in-first-out (FIFO) buffer.
- the size of the N-sample buffer 422 corresponds to the size of the ZPS, which would represent the maximum CIR that the receiver 400 can account for.
- the buffered samples are provided to the adding logic 426 for the overlap-and-add operation and the output of the adding logic 426 is input to the multiplexer 428.
- the multiplexer 428 provides either the output of the demultiplexer 420 or the output of the adding logic 426 to FFT logic (for example, FFT logic 404).
- the control logic 224 provides a demultiplexer control signal 432 to the demultiplexer 420, a buffer clock control signal 430 to the N-sample buffer 422 and a multiplexer control signal 434 the multiplexer 428.
- the control logic 224 dynamically adjusts the timing of the demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430, and the multiplexer control signal 434 based on the overlap adjust signal 412.
- the overlap adjust signal 412 causes the overlap-and-add logic 402 to select an amount ("M") of symbol samples to buffer as a function of the estimated CIR.
- the demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430, and the multiplexer control signal 434 are shown in greater detail in FIG. 5.
- FIG. 5 illustrates timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4B in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- timing diagrams are provided for a clock signal 502, the demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430 and the multiplexer control signal 434.
- the timing diagrams are divided into three time segments referred to as "TIMEl", “TIME2” and “TIME3” and illustrate embodiments in which a CIR or CIR-based function corresponds to M samples and the information symbol preceding a ZPS corresponds to 128 samples. Embodiments, however, are not limited to information symbols corresponding to 128 samples.
- the clock signal 502 may be set at a fixed frequency (for example, 132 MHz) throughout the time periods (for example, TIMEl, TIME2, and TIME3) of an overlap-and-add operation.
- Each element of the overlap-and-add logic 402 processes samples based on the frequency of the clock signal 402.
- the control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass M samples to the N-sample buffer 422 by asserting the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "1".
- the control logic 424 also activates the buffer clock control signal 430 so that the M samples are stored in the buffer 422.
- the M samples correspond to the first M samples of an information symbol.
- the multiplexer control signal 434 prevents the multiplexer 428 from forwarding samples to the FFT logic 404 or the FFT logic 404 is otherwise prevented from processing samples.
- the control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass the remaining samples of the information symbol (128 - M remaining samples) to both the multiplexer 428 and the phase de-rotation logic 436 by de-asserting the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "0".
- the phase de-rotation logic 436 removes (or reduces) the affect of the phase offset between the samples to be added by the adding logic 426 (for example, the samples to be added are separated by 128 samples in this case). Again, this phase offset arises due to a frequency offset between the transmitting device and the receiving device.
- the control logic 424 also causes the N- sample buffer 422 to store an additional N-M samples by clocking for N-M cycles, then idling the buffer clock control signal 430 until TIME 3. In this manner, the first M samples are ready to be flushed out. Finally, the control logic 424 causes the multiplexer 428 to pass the symbol samples received from the demultiplexer 420 during TIME2 to the FFT logic 404 by de-asserting the multiplexer control signal 434 to a logical "0".
- control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass ZPS samples to the multiplexer 428 and to the phase de-rotation logic 236 by continuing to de-assert the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "0".
- the control logic 424 also directs the N-sample buffer 422 to pass or "flush out" the M samples to the adding logic 426 by activating the buffer clock control signal 430.
- the control logic 424 directs the multiplexer 428 to pass the overlapped-and-added samples from the adding logic 426 to the FFT logic 404 by asserting the multiplexer control signal 434 to a logical "1".
- FIG. 6 illustrates a method 600 in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure.
- the method 600 comprises storing the first N samples of a symbol based on the size of a ZPS (block 602).
- the remaining samples of the symbol are passed to FFT logic.
- the first N samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples (block 606).
- the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 608).
- FIG. 7 illustrates a method 700 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure.
- the method 700 comprises selecting a buffer size of a buffer used in an overlap-and-add operation based on a ZPS size (block 702).
- the buffer is used to store the first N samples of a symbol.
- the remaining samples of the symbol are then passed to FFT logic (block 706).
- the first N samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples.
- the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 710).
- FIG. 8 illustrates a method 800 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure.
- the method 800 comprises estimating a channel impulse response (CIR) (block 802).
- CIR channel impulse response
- the first M samples of a symbol are stored based on the estimated CIR or a CIR-based function.
- the remaining samples of the symbol are passed to FFT logic (block 806).
- the first M samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples.
- the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 810).
- the embodiments herein could be implemented with a buffer that is based on the symbol size (for example, a 128-sample buffer) rather than a buffer based on the ZPS size (for example, a 32-sample buffer).
- the buffer would be clocked appropriately so that the first N samples or first M samples are ready to be provided to adding logic during TIME 3.
- a 128-sample buffer could be clocked N times during TIME 1 and 128-N times during TIME 2 so that the first N samples are appropriately provided to the adding logic during TIME 3.
- a 128-sample buffer could be clocked M times during TIME 1 and 128-M times during TIME 2 so that the first M samples are appropriately provided to the adding logic during TIME 3.
- the values for N and M would still be determined as previously described.
- various elements can be separated into discrete parts or integrated within combined elements.
- items illustrated as directly coupled or communicating with each other may be indirectly coupled or communicated through some interface or other intermediate device.
- the present examples should be considered as illustrative and not restrictive.
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Abstract
A communication system has a first device HOA that transmits an information symbol with a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) and a second device HOB that receives the information symbol with the zero-padded suffix. The second device HOB performs a Fourier transform on at least one sample of the information symbol before a ZPS sample is overlapped-and-added to another sample of the information symbol.
Description
COMMUNICATION SYSTEM OVERLAP-AND-ADD OPERATION
This is directed to communication systems; and, more particularly, to communication systems that overlap-and-add samples of an information symbol with samples of a zero-padded suffix. BACKGROUND
In order for electronic devices to communicate, a wireless or wired protocol or standard defines hardware and software parameters that enable the devices to send, receive, and interpret data. Frequency division multiplexing or frequency division modulation (FDM) is a technology that transmits multiple signals simultaneously over a single transmission path, such as a cable or wireless system. Each signal travels within its own unique frequency range (carrier), which is modulated by data (for example, text, voice, video, etc.).
Orthogonal FDM (OFDM) distributes the data over a large number of carriers that are spaced apart at precise frequencies. To mitigate multi-path energy and to enable a transmitter and receiver to switch between different frequency bands, some wired and wireless protocols define a guard interval that is placed as a prefix before transmitted information symbols. Other protocols define a guard interval that is placed as a suffix after transmitted information symbols (for example, a zero-padded suffix or "ZPS"). In either case, the guard interval reduces interference between information symbols by providing time for multi-path reflections to attenuate.
When a ZPS is used (as, for example, in a Multi-Band Orthogonal Frequency Division Modulation system), a receiving device may use an "overlap-and-add" operation to add samples of the ZPS to samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS. For example, the overlap-and-add operation may combine the "N" samples of the ZPS with the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS. In some overlap-and-add operations, the entire symbol preceding the ZPS is buffered and the Fourier Transform logic of the receiving device is prevented from processing samples of the symbol until after the overlap-and-add begins. Accordingly, the overlap-and-add operation introduces undesirable latency at the receiving device. SUMMARY
In at least some embodiments, a system according comprises a first device that transmits an information symbol with a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) and a second device that receives the information symbol with the zero-padded suffix. The second device performs a Fourier
transform on at least one sample of the information symbol before a ZPS sample is overlapped- and-added to another sample of the information symbol.
According to another embodiment, a receiver is provided that includes overlap-and-add logic and Fourier transform logic coupled to the overlap-and-add logic. The overlap-and-add logic outputs a cyclically shifted information symbol that is received by the Fourier transform logic.
According to other embodiments, a method is provided that includes storing an amount of information symbol samples for an overlap-and-add operation. The amount of information symbol samples is less than a total length of the information symbol. The method also includes forwarding at least one remaining information symbol sample for Fourier transform processing before forwarding an overlapped-and-added sample for Fourier transform processing. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless system in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure;
FIG. 2A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure;
FIG. 2B illustrates a block diagram of embodiments of the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 2A;
FIG. 3 illustrates example timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 2B;
FIG. 4A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure;
FIG. 4B illustrates a block diagram of embodiments of the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 4A;
FIG. 5 illustrates example timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic of FIG. 4B;
FIG. 6 illustrates a method in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure;
FIG. 7 illustrates another method in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure; and
FIG. 8 illustrates another method in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Electronic devices that communicate wirelessly (or via a wired connection) implement a variety of techniques to prepare, send, receive, and recover data. For example, data preparation techniques may include data scrambling, error correction coding, interleaving, data packet formatting, and/or other techniques. The data to be transmitted is converted into blocks of data (that is, bits) transmitted as information symbols. Each information symbol is associated with a constellation of complex amplitudes.
If data communication is wireless, one or more antennas receive the wireless signal, after which data is recovered by sampling the received signal and decoding each information symbol. To recover data, a receiving device may implement techniques such as signal amplification, digitization, sample rate conversion, equalization, demodulation, de-interleaving, de-coding, and/or de-scrambling.
In some communication systems such as a Multi-Band Orthogonal Frequency Division Modulation (OFDM) system, a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) follows each information symbol. Embodiments of the disclosure illustrate methods and systems that reduce latency introduced when an overlap-and-add operation is used with a ZPS. In at least some embodiments, this latency is reduced by cyclically shifting the order of samples input to a receiver's Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) logic (that is, the FFT logic begins to receive some samples of the symbol preceding a ZPS before symbol samples are added to ZPS samples for the overlap-and-add operation). For example, in some embodiments, if the ZPS corresponds to "N" samples, only the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation. The remaining samples of the symbol are input to the receiver's FFT logic before ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples. The N samples corresponding to the ZPS are then overlapped-and-added to the first N samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic.
Cyclically shifting symbols in the time-domain results in a linear phase shift in the frequency-domain. At the receiver, such a phase shift can be incorporated into the communication channel estimate and is compensated for by a receiver's frequency-domain equalizer. Accordingly, the cyclic shift enables a latency of the overlap-and-add operation to be reduced without affecting the performance of other system components.
FIG. 1 illustrates a system 100 in accordance with an embodiment of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 1, the system 100 comprises the devices HOA and HOB. The device HOA includes a transceiver 112A having a data link layer 114A and a PHY layer 116A. Similarly, the device HOB includes a transceiver 112B having a data link layer 114B and a PHY layer 116B. In at least some embodiments, the data link layers and the PHY layers function according to a standardized communication protocol such as an 802.11 protocol. For clarity, only the components of the device HOA are described in greater detail. However, the same discussion would apply to the components of the device HOB.
In order for the device 11OA to communicate wirelessly, the PHY layer 116A and the data link layer 114A perform several functions such as preparing, transmitting, receiving, and decoding wireless signals. In some embodiments, the PHY layer 116A implements a physical layer convergence procedure (PLCP) sub-layer, a physical medium dependent (PMD) sub-layer and overlap-and-add logic 118A.
The PLCP sub-layer of the device 11OA enables carrier sense and clear channel assessment (CCA) signals to be provided to the data link layer 114A (indicating when the PHY layer 116A is in use). The PMD sub-layer of the PHY layer 116A provides encoding, decoding, modulation, and/or demodulation of information symbols for the device 11 OA. In some embodiments, the PMD sub-layer of the PHY layer 116A permits the device 11 OA to implement modulation techniques such as Multi-band OFDM. The PMD sub-layer also may provide functions such as analog-to-digital and/or digital-to-analog data conversion.
As shown, the data link layer 114A implements a logical link control (LLC) and a medium access control (MAC). During transmission of data, the LLC assembles data frames with address and cyclic redundancy check (CRC) fields. During reception of data, the LLC disassembles data frames, performs address recognition, and performs CRC validation. The MAC functions, at least in part, to coordinate transmission of data between the electronic device HOA and other devices (for example, the device 110B).
The overlap-and-add logic 118A shown in FIG. 1 enables overlap-and-add operations to be performed. For example, in embodiments that implement Multi-band OFDM, overlap-and-add operations are performed (when data is received) to overlap-and-add samples of a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) and samples of an information symbol preceding the ZPS.
FIG. 2 A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver 200 in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. The receiver 200, for example, may be part of the PHY layer 116A previously described. As previously mentioned, the PHY layer 116A may be compatible with a multi-band OFDM physical layer specification. However, the receiver 200 is not limited to a particular protocol and may be part of any wired or wireless system that receives information symbols followed by a ZPS. The ZPS provides a mechanism to mitigate multi-path energy and enables a transmitter and receiver to switch between different frequency bands. As shown in FIG. 2 A, the receiver 200 comprises overlap-and-add logic 202 that receives samples of an incoming signal. The overlap-and-add logic 202 selectively performs overlap-and-add operations and provides either the original (unmodified) incoming samples or the overlapped-and-added (modified) samples to the FFT logic 204. The overlap-and-add operations are part of a convolution process that uses the extra samples of the ZPS to form the desired output. In some embodiments, the FFT logic 204 receives at least some unmodified samples of the information symbol preceding a ZPS before any buffered symbol samples are added to the ZPS samples.
For example, if the ZPS corresponds to "N" samples, the first N samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation. The remaining samples of the symbol (up to the ZPS) are input tolhe receiver's FFT logic 204 before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples. Thereafter, N ZPS samples are overlapped-and-added to the first N samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and- added samples are input to the FFT logic 204. In the above illustration, only N samples (corresponding to the size of the ZPS) are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation before the FFT logic 204 begins receiving information symbol samples from the overlap-and-add logic 202. This overlap-and-add method reduces latency and buffer size compared to overlap-and-add methods that buffer an entire information symbol before forwarding samples to a receiver's FFT logic. As an example, if a symbol corresponds to 128 samples and a ZPS corresponds to 32 samples, the latency of the overlap-and-add operation described in Figs. 2A-2B (that is, the number of clock cycles that the FFT logic 204 would be idle) is 32 clock cycles rather than 128 clock cycles (a reduction of 96 clock cycles).
The FFT logic 204 extracts frequency spectrum data from the incoming signal samples and outputs the frequency spectrum data to a frequency equalizer 208. The frequency equalizer 208 removes the frequency shaping caused by the communication channel and outputs "equalized"
frequency spectrum data to a constellation de-mapper 210. If an information symbol's samples are cyclically shifted by the overlap-and-add logic 202 (that is, if overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic 204 after the symbol's other samples), the frequency equalizer 208 compensates for this cyclic shift as if it were part of the communication channel frequency shape. The output of the frequency equalizer 208 is received by the constellation de-mapper 210, which converts the equalized frequency spectrum data to information symbols that can be decoded by a decoder.
FIG. 2B illustrates a block diagram of the overlap-and-add logic 202 of FIG. 2A in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 2B, the overlap-and-add logic 202 comprises a demultiplexer 220 which may be a 1x2 demultiplexer (that is, a single input is selectively routed to one of two possible output locations). The top output of the demultiplexer 220 is received by adding logic 226 after passing through phase de-rotation logic 236. The top output of the demultiplexer 220 is also received by a multiplexer ("multiplexer") 228, which may be a 2x1 multiplexer (that is, one of two possible inputs is selectively routed as the multiplexer output). The bottom output of the demultiplexer 220 is received by an N-sample buffer 222, which may be a first-in-first-out (FIFO) buffer.
In at least some embodiments, the size of the N-sample buffer 222-corresponds to the size of the ZPS. For example, if the ZPS is known to correspond to 32 complex samples (having I and Q components) and 8-bit samples are assumed for each sample component, an appropriate size for the N-sample buffer 222 would be 64 bytes (that is, 32 x 2 x 8 = 64 bytes). Regardless of the buffer size, the buffered samples are provided to the adding logic 226 for the overlap-and-add operation and the output of the adding logic 226 is input to the multiplexer 228. The multiplexer 228 provides either the output of the demultiplexer 220 or the output of the adding logic 226 to FFT logic (for example, FFT logic 204).
To perform overlap-and-add operations, the control logic 224 provides a demultiplexer control signal 232 to the demultiplexer 220, a buffer clock control signal 230 to the N-sample buffer 222 and a multiplexer control signal 234 the multiplexer 228. The demultiplexer control signal 232, the buffer clock control signal 230, and the multiplexer control signal 234 are shown in greater detail in FIG. 3.
FIG. 3 illustrates timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic 202 of FIG. 2B in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. In FIG. 3, timing diagrams are provided for
a clock signal 302, the demultiplexer control signal 232, the buffer clock control signal 230 and the multiplexer control signal 234. The timing diagrams are divided into three time segments referred to as "TIMEl", "TIME2" and "TIME3" and illustrate embodiments in which a ZPS corresponds to N samples. As shown, the information symbol preceding the ZPS corresponds to 128 samples. Embodiments, however, are not limited to information symbols corresponding to 128 samples.
As shown, the clock signal 302 may be set at a fixed frequency (for example, 132 MHz) throughout the time periods (for example, TIMEl, TIME2, and TIME3) of an overlap-and-add operation. Each element of the overlap-and-add logic 202 (for example, the demultiplexer 220, the N-sample buffer 222, the control logic 224, the adding, logic 226, the phase de-rotation logic 236, and the multiplexer 228) processes samples based on the frequency of the clock signal 302.
During TIMEl, the control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass N samples to the N-sample buffer 222 by asserting the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "1". The control logic 224 also activates the buffer clock control signal 230 so that the N samples are stored in the buffer 222. The N samples correspond to the first N samples of an information symbol. While the N samples are being buffered, the multiplexer control signal 234 prevents the multiplexer 228 from forwarding samples to the FFT logic 204 or the FFT logic 204 is otherwise prevented from processing samples.
During TIME2, the control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass the remaining samples of the information symbol (128 — N remaining samples) to both the multiplexer 228 and the phase de-rotation logic 236 by de-asserting the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "0". The phase de-rotation logic 236 removes (or reduces) the affect of the phase offset between the samples to be added by the adding logic 226 (for example, the samples to be added are separated by 128 samples in this case). This phase offset arises due to a frequency offset between the transmitting device and the receiving device. The control logic 224 also causes the N-sample buffer 222 to hold the N samples that were buffered during TIMEl by idling the buffer clock control signal 230. Finally, the control logic 224 causes the multiplexer 228 to pass the symbol samples received from the demultiplexer 220 during TIME2 to the FFT logic 204 by de-asserting the multiplexer control signal 234 to a logical "0".
During TIME3, the control logic 224 directs the demultiplexer 220 to pass ZPS samples to the multiplexer 228 and to the phase de-rotation logic 236 by continuing to de-assert the demultiplexer control signal 232 to a logical "0". The control logic 224 also directs the N-sample
buffer 222 to pass or "flush out" the buffered samples to the adding logic 226 by activating the buffer clock control signal 230. By providing the phase de-rotated ZPS samples and the buffered symbol samples to the adding logic 226, the overlap-and-add operation is performed. Finally, the control logic 224 directs the multiplexer 228 to pass the overlapped-and-added samples from the adding logic 226 to the FFT logic 204 by asserting the multiplexer control signal 234 to a logical
FIG. 4A illustrates a block diagram of a receiver 400 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure. The receiver 400, for example, may be part of the PHY layer 116A previously described. As previously mentioned, the PHY layer 116A may be compatible with a multi-band OFDM physical layer specification. However, the receiver 200 is not limited to a particular protocol and may be part of any wired or wireless system that receives information symbols followed by a ZPS. The receiver 400 is similar to the receiver 200 previously described in FIG. 2A, but illustrates an embodiment that selects the number of samples that are buffered and added in the overlap-and-add operation according to an estimated channel impulse response (CIR) size rather than a ZPS size. In some embodiments, the receiver 400 dynamically estimates a CIR and adjusts the number of samples that are buffered and added in each overlap-and-add "operation accordingly (for example, the number of samples that are buffered may be a function of the estimated CIR).
As shown in FIG. 4A, the receiver 400 comprises overlap-and-add logic 402 that receives samples of an incoming signal. The overlap-and-add logic 402 selectively performs overlap- and-add operations and provides either the original (unmodified) samples or the overlapped-and- added (modified) samples to the FFT logic 404. In some embodiments, the FFT logic 404 receives at least some unmodified samples of the information symbol preceding a ZPS before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples by the overlap-and-add logic 402.
For example, if an estimated CIR corresponds to "M" samples, the first M samples of the symbol preceding the ZPS are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation. Alternatively, the value of M is simply a function of the estimated CIR and need not be exactly equal to the estimated CIR length. The remaining samples of the symbol (up to the ZPS) are input to the receiver's FFT logic 404 before the ZPS samples are added to the buffered samples. Thereafter, M ZPS samples are overlapped-and-added to the first M samples (the buffered samples) of the symbol preceding the ZPS and the overlapped-and-added samples are input to the FFT logic 404.
In the above illustration, only M samples (corresponding to the size of the CIR or corresponding to some function based on the CIR size) are buffered for the overlap-and-add operation before the FFT logic 404 begins receiving information symbol samples from the overlap-and-add logic 402. Thus, the overlap-and-add latency is reduced compared to overlap-and-add methods that buffer all symbol samples for an overlap-and-add operation before forwarding samples to FFT logic. Assuming the CIR size is less than the ZPS size (that is, the value of "M" is less than the value of "N"), the method of FIGS. 4A-4B also reduces overlap-and-add latency compared to the embodiments described in FIGS. 2A-2B.
As an example, if an information symbol corresponds to 128 samples, a ZPS corresponds to 32 samples, and a CIR corresponds to 26 samples, the latency of the overlap-and-add operation of Figs. 4A-4B (that is, the number of clock cycles that the FFT logic 404 is idle per overlap-and-add operation) would be 26 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the CIR size) rather than 32 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the ZPS size) or 128 clock cycles (if buffering is based on the information symbol size). Alternatively, if the CIR corresponds to 26 samples, the latency of the overlap-and-add operation of Figs. 4A-4B could be 28 clock cycles (based on a function that takes the CIR length into account, but does not buffer the exact number of samples corresponding to the CIR length). If the overlap-and-add operation is a function of the CIR size as in the embodiments of Figs. 4A-4B, the buffer size may still be based on the ZPS size, which would represent the maximum CIR that the receiver 400 can account for.
In Fig. 4A, the FFT logic 404 extracts frequency spectrum data from the incoming signal samples and outputs the frequency spectrum data to channel estimation logic 406. The channel estimation logic 406 estimates a channel impulse response (CIR) that represents the effect a communication channel has on a signal transmitted through the channel.
In addition to estimating the CIR, the channel estimation logic 406 provides an overlap adjust signal 412 to the overlap-and-add logic 402, which may include the CIR or CIR-related information. The overlap adjust signal 412 enables the overlap-and-add logic 402 to adjust the number of samples that are buffered and added in each overlap-and-add operation based on the estimated CIR or a function of the estimated CIR. As channel span decreases, the CIR and, thus, the overlap adjust signal 412 would direct the overlap-and-add logic 402 to decrease the number of samples that are buffered and added (reducing latency) for an overlap-and-add operation. As channel span increases, the CIR and, thus, the overlap adjust signal 412 would direct the overlap-
and-add logic 402 to increase the number of samples that are buffered and added (increasing latency) for an overlap-and-add operation.
In addition to estimating the CIR and providing the overlap adjust signal 412, the channel estimation logic 406 forwards the frequency spectrum data received from the FFT logic 404 to the frequency equalizer 408. The frequency equalizer 408 removes frequency response caused by the communication channel and outputs "equalized" frequency spectrum data to the constellation de- mapper 410. If an information symbol's samples are cyclically shifted by the overlap-and-add logic 402, the frequency equalizer 408 compensates for this cyclic shift as if it were part of the communication channel response. The output of the frequency equalizer 408 is received by a constellation de-mapper 410, which converts the equalized frequency spectrum data to information symbols that can be decoded by a decoder.
FIG. 4B illustrates a block diagram of the overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4A in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. The overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4B functions similarly to the overlap-and-add logic 202 described in FIG. 2B, but performs the overlap-and-add operation as a function of the CIR size rather than the ZPS size. As shown in FIG. 4B, the overlap-and-add logic 402 comprises a demultiplexer 420 which may be a 1 x 2 demultiplexer (that is, a single input is selectively routed to one of two possible output locations). The top output of the demultiplexer 420 is received by adding logic 426 after passing through phase de-rotation logic 436. The top output of the demultiplexer 420 is also received by a multiplexer 428, which may be a 2 x 1 multiplexer (that is, one of two possible inputs is selectively routed as the multiplexer output). The bottom output of the demultiplexer 420 is received by an N- sample buffer 422, which may be a first-in-first-out (FIFO) buffer.
In at least some embodiments, the size of the N-sample buffer 422 corresponds to the size of the ZPS, which would represent the maximum CIR that the receiver 400 can account for. For example, if the ZPS is known to correspond to 32 complex samples (having I and Q components) and 8-bit samples are assumed for each sample component, an appropriate size for the N-sample buffer 422 would be 64 bytes (that is, 32 x 2 x 8 = 64 bytes). Regardless of the buffer size, the buffered samples are provided to the adding logic 426 for the overlap-and-add operation and the output of the adding logic 426 is input to the multiplexer 428. The multiplexer 428 provides either the output of the demultiplexer 420 or the output of the adding logic 426 to FFT logic (for example, FFT logic 404).
To perform overlap-and-add operations, the control logic 224 provides a demultiplexer control signal 432 to the demultiplexer 420, a buffer clock control signal 430 to the N-sample buffer 422 and a multiplexer control signal 434 the multiplexer 428. In at least some embodiments, the control logic 224 dynamically adjusts the timing of the demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430, and the multiplexer control signal 434 based on the overlap adjust signal 412. In other words, the overlap adjust signal 412 causes the overlap-and-add logic 402 to select an amount ("M") of symbol samples to buffer as a function of the estimated CIR. The demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430, and the multiplexer control signal 434 are shown in greater detail in FIG. 5.
FIG. 5 illustrates timing diagrams associated with the overlap-and-add logic 402 of FIG. 4B in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. In FIG. 5, timing diagrams are provided for a clock signal 502, the demultiplexer control signal 432, the buffer clock control signal 430 and the multiplexer control signal 434. The timing diagrams are divided into three time segments referred to as "TIMEl", "TIME2" and "TIME3" and illustrate embodiments in which a CIR or CIR-based function corresponds to M samples and the information symbol preceding a ZPS corresponds to 128 samples. Embodiments, however, are not limited to information symbols corresponding to 128 samples.
As shown, the clock signal 502 may be set at a fixed frequency (for example, 132 MHz) throughout the time periods (for example, TIMEl, TIME2, and TIME3) of an overlap-and-add operation. Each element of the overlap-and-add logic 402 (for example, the demultiplexer 420, the N-sample buffer 422, the control logic 424, the adding logic 426, the phase derotation logic 436, and the multiplexer 428) processes samples based on the frequency of the clock signal 402.
During TIMEl, the control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass M samples to the N-sample buffer 422 by asserting the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "1". The control logic 424 also activates the buffer clock control signal 430 so that the M samples are stored in the buffer 422. The M samples correspond to the first M samples of an information symbol. While the M samples are being buffered, the multiplexer control signal 434 prevents the multiplexer 428 from forwarding samples to the FFT logic 404 or the FFT logic 404 is otherwise prevented from processing samples.
During TIME2, the control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass the remaining samples of the information symbol (128 - M remaining samples) to both the multiplexer 428 and
the phase de-rotation logic 436 by de-asserting the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "0". The phase de-rotation logic 436 removes (or reduces) the affect of the phase offset between the samples to be added by the adding logic 426 (for example, the samples to be added are separated by 128 samples in this case). Again, this phase offset arises due to a frequency offset between the transmitting device and the receiving device. The control logic 424 also causes the N- sample buffer 422 to store an additional N-M samples by clocking for N-M cycles, then idling the buffer clock control signal 430 until TIME 3. In this manner, the first M samples are ready to be flushed out. Finally, the control logic 424 causes the multiplexer 428 to pass the symbol samples received from the demultiplexer 420 during TIME2 to the FFT logic 404 by de-asserting the multiplexer control signal 434 to a logical "0".
During TIME3, the control logic 424 directs the demultiplexer 420 to pass ZPS samples to the multiplexer 428 and to the phase de-rotation logic 236 by continuing to de-assert the demultiplexer control signal 432 to a logical "0". The control logic 424 also directs the N-sample buffer 422 to pass or "flush out" the M samples to the adding logic 426 by activating the buffer clock control signal 430. By providing the phase de-rotated ZPS samples and the buffered symbol samples to the adding logic 426, the overlap-and-add operation is performed. Finally, the control logic 424 directs the multiplexer 428 to pass the overlapped-and-added samples from the adding logic 426 to the FFT logic 404 by asserting the multiplexer control signal 434 to a logical "1".
FIG. 6 illustrates a method 600 in accordance with embodiments of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 6, the method 600 comprises storing the first N samples of a symbol based on the size of a ZPS (block 602). At block 604, the remaining samples of the symbol are passed to FFT logic. The first N samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples (block 606). Finally, the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 608).
FIG. 7 illustrates a method 700 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 7, the method 700 comprises selecting a buffer size of a buffer used in an overlap-and-add operation based on a ZPS size (block 702). At block 704, the buffer is used to store the first N samples of a symbol. The remaining samples of the symbol are then passed to FFT logic (block 706). At block 708, the first N samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples. Finally, the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 710).
FIG. 8 illustrates a method 800 in accordance with alternative embodiments of the disclosure. As shown in FIG. 8, the method 800 comprises estimating a channel impulse response (CIR) (block 802). At block 804, the first M samples of a symbol are stored based on the estimated CIR or a CIR-based function. The remaining samples of the symbol are passed to FFT logic (block 806). At block 808, the first M samples of the symbol are overlapped-and-added with ZPS samples. Finally, the overlapped-and-added samples are passed to FFT logic (block 810).
While several embodiments have been provided in the present disclosure, those skilled in the art to which the invention relates will appreciate that various additions, deletions, substitutions and modifications can be made to the described embodiments, without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, the embodiments herein could be implemented with a buffer that is based on the symbol size (for example, a 128-sample buffer) rather than a buffer based on the ZPS size (for example, a 32-sample buffer). In such case, the buffer would be clocked appropriately so that the first N samples or first M samples are ready to be provided to adding logic during TIME 3. For example, a 128-sample buffer could be clocked N times during TIME 1 and 128-N times during TIME 2 so that the first N samples are appropriately provided to the adding logic during TIME 3. Likewise, a 128-sample buffer could be clocked M times during TIME 1 and 128-M times during TIME 2 so that the first M samples are appropriately provided to the adding logic during TIME 3. The values for N and M would still be determined as previously described. It will also be appreciated that various elements can be separated into discrete parts or integrated within combined elements. Moreover, items illustrated as directly coupled or communicating with each other may be indirectly coupled or communicated through some interface or other intermediate device. Thus, the present examples should be considered as illustrative and not restrictive.
Claims
1. A method, comprising: storing an amount of information symbol samples for an overlap-and-add operation, where the amount of information symbol samples is less than a total length of the information symbol; and forwarding at least one remaining information symbol sample for Fourier transform processing before forwarding an overlapped-and-added sample for Fourier transform processing.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the amount of information symbol samples corresponds to a size of a zero-padded suffix (ZPS) that follows the infoπnation symbol.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the amount of information symbol samples is a function of an estimated channel impulse response size.
4. The method of any of claims 1 - 3, further comprising selecting a buffer size of a buffer used for the overlap-and-add operation based on a size of a zero-padded suffix.
5. The method of any of claims 1 - 4, further comprising estimating a channel impulse response for use with the overlap-and-add operation.
6. The method of any of claims 1 - 5, further comprising dynamically selecting the amount of information symbol samples stored for each of a plurality of information symbols based on the estimated channel impulse response.
7. The method of any of claims 1 - 6, wherein forwarding at least one remaining sample of the information symbol for Fourier transform processing before forwarding an overlapped-and- added sample for Fourier transform processing comprises directing a demultiplexer control signal, a buffer clock control signal, and a multiplexer control signal.
8. A system comprising: a first device that transmits an information symbol with a zero-padded suffix (ZPS); and a second device that receives the information symbol with the zero-padded suffix, wherein the second device performs a Fourier transform on at least one sample of the information symbol before a ZPS sample is overlapped-and-added to another sample of the information symbol.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein the second device comprises overlap-and-add logic and Fourier transform logic; wherein the overlap-and-add logic cyclically shifts samples of an information symbol provided to the Fourier transform logic.
10. A receiver, comprising overlap-and-add logic and Fourier transform logic coupled to the overlap-and-add logic; wherein the overlap-and-add logic outputs a cyclically shifted information symbol that is received by the Fourier transform logic.
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- 2006-01-13 WO PCT/US2006/001350 patent/WO2006076648A2/en active Application Filing
- 2006-01-13 US US11/331,463 patent/US7668247B2/en active Active
- 2006-01-13 EP EP06718428.3A patent/EP1842349B1/en not_active Ceased
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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US7668247B2 (en) | 2010-02-23 |
WO2006076648A3 (en) | 2007-02-01 |
EP1842349B1 (en) | 2020-04-08 |
EP1842349A2 (en) | 2007-10-10 |
US20060159189A1 (en) | 2006-07-20 |
EP1842349A4 (en) | 2013-11-13 |
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