WO2009108020A2 - 무선통신 시스템에서 ack/nack 신호 전송방법 - Google Patents
무선통신 시스템에서 ack/nack 신호 전송방법 Download PDFInfo
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- WO2009108020A2 WO2009108020A2 PCT/KR2009/000978 KR2009000978W WO2009108020A2 WO 2009108020 A2 WO2009108020 A2 WO 2009108020A2 KR 2009000978 W KR2009000978 W KR 2009000978W WO 2009108020 A2 WO2009108020 A2 WO 2009108020A2
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- ack
- ack channel
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- downlink
- resource unit
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/12—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel
- H04L1/16—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel in which the return channel carries supervisory signals, e.g. repetition request signals
- H04L1/1607—Details of the supervisory signal
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/12—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel
- H04L1/16—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using return channel in which the return channel carries supervisory signals, e.g. repetition request signals
- H04L1/18—Automatic repetition systems, e.g. Van Duuren systems
Definitions
- the present invention relates to wireless communication, and more particularly, to a method of transmitting an ACK / NACK signal.
- Error compensation techniques for securing communication reliability include a forward error correction (FEC) scheme and an automatic repeat request (ARQ) scheme.
- FEC forward error correction
- ARQ automatic repeat request
- FEC forward error correction
- ARQ automatic repeat request
- errors are corrected through data retransmission, and there are a stop and wait (SAW), a go-back-N (GBN), and a selective repeat (SR) scheme.
- SAW stop and wait
- GBN go-back-N
- SR selective repeat
- the SAW method is a method of transmitting the next frame after checking whether the transmitted frame is correctly received.
- the GBN method transmits N consecutive frames and retransmits all frames transmitted after the frame in which an error occurs if transmission is not successful.
- the SR method selectively retransmits only a frame in which an error occurs.
- the FEC method has a short time delay and does not require information to be exchanged between the transmitter and the receiver, but has a disadvantage in that the system efficiency is poor in a good channel environment.
- ARQ method can improve the transmission reliability, but it has the disadvantage of incurring time delay and inferior system efficiency in poor channel environment.
- HARQ hybrid automatic repeat request
- the HARQ-type receiver basically attempts error correction on received data and determines whether to retransmit using an error detection code.
- the error detection code may use a cyclic redundancy check (CRC).
- CRC cyclic redundancy check
- the receiver sends a non-acknowledgement (NACK) signal to the transmitter.
- the transmitter receiving the NACK signal transmits appropriate retransmission data according to the HARQ mode.
- the receiver receiving the retransmitted data improves the reception performance by combining and decoding the previous data and the retransmitted data.
- the mode of HARQ may be classified into chase combining and incremental redundancy (IR).
- Chase combining is a method of obtaining a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) gain by combining with retransmitted data without discarding the data where an error is detected.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- IR is a method in which additional redundant information is incrementally transmitted to retransmitted data, thereby reducing the burden of retransmission and obtaining a coding gain.
- HARQ may be classified into adaptive HARQ and non-adaptive HARQ according to transmission attributes such as resource allocation, modulation technique, transport block size, and the like.
- Adaptive HARQ is a method in which transmission attributes used for retransmission are changed in whole or in part compared to initial transmission according to a change in channel conditions.
- Non-adaptive HARQ is a method of continuously using the transmission attribute used for the initial transmission regardless of the change in channel conditions.
- the HARQ retransmission scheme can be divided into synchronous and asynchronous. Synchronous HARQ retransmits data at a time point known to both the transmitter and the receiver, thereby reducing signaling required for data transmission such as a HARQ processor number.
- Asynchronous HARQ is a method of allocating resources at random times for retransmission, and requires overhead for data transmission.
- the structure of radio resources has been further subdivided in the frequency domain or time domain, thereby increasing the transmission of ACK / NACK signals for data transmission. It should be possible to transmit a large number of ACK / NACK signals without delay by using the limited radio resources more efficiently.
- An object of the present invention is to provide a method for efficiently transmitting a plurality of ACK / NACK signals.
- a method for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal includes allocating a radio resource, and transmitting an ACK / NACK signal through an ACK channel at a position determined from an index for the radio resource.
- the wireless resource includes at least one resource unit which is a basic unit for resource allocation, wherein the resource unit includes a local resource unit including adjacent subcarriers in a frequency domain and a subcarrier distributed in a frequency domain. At least one of the resource units, the index of the local resource unit is mapped to the index of the ACK channel as it is, the index of the distributed resource unit is mapped to the index of the ACK channel in a permutation manner.
- a method for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal includes transmitting and receiving data through a radio resource, and receiving an ACK / NACK signal through an ACK channel indicated from index information of the radio resource.
- the wireless resource includes at least one resource unit which is a basic unit for resource allocation, wherein the resource unit includes a local resource unit including adjacent subcarriers in a frequency domain and a subcarrier distributed in a frequency domain. At least one of the enemy resource units, the index of the ACK channel is mapped as it is from the index of the local resource unit and mixed from the index of the distributed resource unit is mapped.
- a method for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal using a frame including a plurality of downlink subframes and a plurality of uplink subframes includes transmitting data through the uplink subframe And receiving an ACK / NACK signal for the data through an ACK channel included in the plurality of downlink subframes, wherein the ACK channel includes multiplexing ACK channels for a plurality of users.
- the ACK channel for the user of the UE is divided based on the resource block allocated by the user.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating a wireless communication system.
- FIG. 2 shows an example of a frame structure.
- FIG. 6 shows a control block based ACK / NACK linkage scheme according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 7 illustrates a resource unit based ACK / NACK linkage method according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG 8 illustrates mapping of a logical resource unit to an ACK channel index according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG 9 illustrates mapping of a local resource unit and a distributed resource unit to an ACK channel index according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 10 shows a process for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal of a multi-user according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 11 illustrates encoding of an ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 13 illustrates orthogonal sequence combining of ACK channel groups according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 14 illustrates an ACK channel allocated to a distributed resource unit according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 15 shows an ACK channel allocated to a distributed resource unit according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 16 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 17 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 18 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 19 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 20 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 21 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 22 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 23 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 24 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 25 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 26 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 27 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 28 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 29 shows resource allocation for HARQ mode based on CQI feedback according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 30 shows a configuration of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 31 shows a method of allocating a downlink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 32 shows a compression method for an ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG 33 shows a compression method for an ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 35 shows mapping of an ACK channel using control information according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 36 illustrates transmission of a sub MAP according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 37 is a graph comparing system performance according to a channel estimation method according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 39 is a graph comparing system performance according to a channel estimation method according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- CC Chose Combing
- IR Incmental Redundancy
- FIG. 41 is a graph comparing performance of a CC (Chase Combing) and an IR (Incremental Redundancy) mode according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 41 is a graph comparing performance of a CC (Chase Combing) and an IR (Incremental Redundancy) mode according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG 43 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 49 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 50 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 51 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 52 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 53 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 54 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 55 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 57 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 58 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 59 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 60 shows a frame structure capable of performing fast HARQ according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 61 shows a frame structure capable of performing fast HARQ according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- CDMA code division multiple access
- FDMA frequency division multiple access
- TDMA time division multiple access
- OFDMA orthogonal frequency division multiple access
- SC-FDMA single carrier frequency division multiple access
- CDMA may be implemented with a radio technology such as Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA) or CDMA2000.
- TDMA may be implemented with wireless technologies such as Global System for Mobile communications (GSM) / General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) / Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE).
- GSM Global System for Mobile communications
- GPRS General Packet Radio Service
- EDGE Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution
- OFDMA may be implemented in a wireless technology such as IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi), IEEE 802.16e (WiMAX), IEEE 802-20, Evolved UTRA (E-UTRA), and the like.
- UTRA is part of the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS).
- 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) long term evolution (LTE) is part of an Evolved UMTS (E-UMTS) using E-UTRA, and employs OFDMA in downlink and SC-FDMA in uplink.
- IEEE 802.16m is an evolution of IEEE 802.16e.
- 1 shows a wireless communication system.
- a wireless communication system includes at least one base station 20 (BS).
- Each base station 20 provides a communication service for a particular geographic area (generally called a cell).
- the cell can in turn be divided into a number of regions (called sectors).
- the user equipment (UE) 10 may be fixed or mobile, and may include a mobile station (MS), a user terminal (UT), a subscriber station (SS), a wireless device, a personal digital assistant (PDA), It may be called other terms such as a wireless modem and a handheld device.
- the base station 20 generally refers to a fixed station communicating with the terminal 10, and may be referred to as other terms such as an evolved-NodeB (eNB), a base transceiver system (BTS), and an access point. have.
- eNB evolved-NodeB
- BTS base transceiver system
- downlink means communication from the base station to the terminal
- uplink means communication from the terminal to the base station.
- a transmitter may be part of a base station and a receiver may be part of a terminal.
- a transmitter may be part of a terminal and a receiver may be part of a base station.
- FIG. 2 shows an example of a frame structure.
- a superframe includes a superframe header and four frames (frames, F0, F1, F2, and F3).
- the size of each superframe is 20ms and the size of each frame is illustrated as 5ms, but is not limited thereto.
- the superframe header may be placed at the front of the superframe, and a common control channel is assigned.
- the common control channel is a channel used for transmitting control information that can be commonly used by all terminals in a cell, such as information on frames or system information of a superframe.
- One frame includes eight subframes (Subframe, SF0, SF1, SF2, SF3, SF4, SF5, SF6, SF7).
- Each subframe may be used for uplink or downlink transmission.
- the subframe may consist of 6 or 7 OFDM symbols, but this is only an example.
- Time division duplexing (TDD) or frequency division duplexing (FDD) may be applied to the frame.
- TDD Time division duplexing
- FDD frequency division duplexing
- each subframe is used in uplink or downlink at different times at the same frequency. That is, subframes in the TDD frame are divided into an uplink subframe and a downlink subframe in the time domain.
- FDD frequency division duplexing
- each subframe is used as uplink or downlink on a different frequency at the same time. That is, subframes in the FDD frame are divided into an uplink subframe and a downlink subframe in the frequency domain.
- Uplink transmission and downlink transmission occupy different frequency bands and may be simultaneously
- the subframe includes at least one frequency partition.
- the frequency partition is composed of at least one Physical Resource Unit (PRU).
- PRU Physical Resource Unit
- the frequency partitions may include Localized PRUs and / or Distributed PRUs. Frequency partitioning may be used for other purposes such as Fractional Frequency Reuse (FFR) or Multicast and Broadcast Services (MBS).
- FFR Fractional Frequency Reuse
- MBS Multicast and Broadcast Services
- a PRU is defined as a basic physical unit for resource allocation that includes a plurality of consecutive OFDM symbols and a plurality of consecutive subcarriers.
- the number of OFDM symbols included in the PRU may be equal to the number of OFDM symbols included in one subframe. For example, when one subframe consists of 6 OFDM symbols, the PRU may be defined with 18 subcarriers and 6 OFDM symbols.
- Logical Resource Units are basic logical units for distributed resource allocation and localized resource allocation. The LRU is defined by a plurality of OFDM symbols and a plurality of subcarriers and includes pilots used in a PRU. Thus, the appropriate number of subcarriers in one LRU depends on the number of pilots assigned.
- DRUs Logical Distributed Resource Units
- the DRU includes subcarrier groups distributed in one frequency partition.
- the size of the DRU is equal to the size of the PRU.
- the smallest unit that forms a DRU is one subcarrier.
- Logical Contiguous Resource Units may be used to obtain frequency selective scheduling gains.
- the CRU includes a local subcarrier group.
- the size of the CRU is equal to the size of the PRU.
- a basic unit of a subchannel is a physical resource unit (PRU).
- PRU physical resource unit
- the subchannel may include at least one PRU.
- the subchannel may have a structure in which a band selection PRU and a diversity PRU are arranged to occupy different frequency domains in one subframe.
- a plurality of subcarriers on one OFDM symbol are divided into at least one PRU.
- Each PRU includes a pilot subcarrier and a data subcarrier.
- outer permutation is applied to the PRU.
- the external permutation is applied in at least one PRU unit. Direct mapping of external permutations is only supported by the CRU.
- the rearranged PRU is distributed into frequency partitions.
- the frequency partition is divided into CRUs and DRUs for each resource group.
- Sector Specific Permutation can be supported, and direct mapping of resources can be supported for local resources.
- the size of distributed / local resources can be set flexibly per sector.
- local and distributed groups are mapped to LRUs.
- Inner permutation defined for distributed resource allocation within one frequency partition allows the subcarrier of the DRU to spread across the entire distributed resource allocation.
- the granularity of the internal permutation is equal to the smallest unit that forms the DRU.
- P permutation sequences are provided.
- Subchannelization for distributed resources spreads the subcarriers of the LRU with the total available bandwidth of the distributed resources.
- PRUs map directly to CRUs within each frequency partition.
- the ACK channel is a channel for transmitting an acknowledgment (ACK) signal or a non-acknowledgement (NACK) signal.
- the ACK channel may carry at least one ACK / NACK signal, and the ACK channel includes at least one OFDM symbol in a time domain and at least one subcarrier in a frequency domain.
- a plurality of ACK / NACK signals may be multiplexed in one ACK channel by using frequency division multiplexing (FDM), time division multiplexing (TDM), or code division multiplex (CDM).
- FDM frequency division multiplexing
- TDM time division multiplexing
- CDM code division multiplex
- the IEEE 802.16m system is represented by '16m' and the IEEE 802.16e system is represented by '16e'.
- an ACK channel for an IEEE 802.16m system is represented by a 16m ACK channel
- an ACK channel for an IEEE 802.16e system is represented by a 16e ACK channel.
- the 16m system refers to a system supporting backward compatibility with the 16e system
- the 16e system refers to a legacy system before an evolved system.
- the inventive concept may be applied to an ACH channel in an existing system and an advanced system supporting backward support for the existing system.
- a time taken for transmitting one subframe is called a transmission time interval (TTI). That is, one TTI corresponds to one subframe.
- the transmitter Tx transmits data through one subframe, receives an ACK / NACK signal for the corresponding subframe from the receiver Rx, and is referred to as a round trip time (RTT).
- the RRT includes a processing delay, which is a time required for data processing at the transmitter Tx and the receiver Rx.
- a control channel for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal for uplink transmission in which a transmitter is a terminal and a receiver is called a downlink ACK channel, and a ACK / NACK signal for downlink transmission in which a transmitter is a base station and a receiver is a terminal.
- the control channel is called an uplink ACK channel.
- multiplexing capability and required target quality are considered. Accordingly, a multiplexing method, a modulation order, a spreading factor (SF) and a repetition rate of an orthogonal sequence are determined. A modulation scheme according to the number of users to be multiplexed, a multiplexing scheme according to the modulation scheme, and a repetition rate in radio resources allocated to the ACK channel are calculated.
- SF spreading factor
- a binary phase shift key (BPSK) may be used as a modulation scheme
- various orthogonal sequences such as Walsh codes, constant amplitude zero auto-correlation (CAZAC) sequences, discrete fourier transform (DFT) sequences, and the like may be used.
- the number of groups of ACK channels is determined as (total number of required ACK channels) / (number of multiplexed ACK channels).
- the number of tones required per group of ACK channels is determined as (total available tones) / (number of ACK channel groups).
- the repetition rate is determined by (the number of tones required per ACK channel group) / (the number of tones required for the corresponding modulation scheme (BPSK) and SF).
- the tone consists of one subcarrier and one OFDM symbol.
- K ACK channels may be multiplexed in a CDM or complex CDM / FDM scheme.
- the number of groups of ACK channels is determined as (total number of required ACK channels) / (number of multiplexed ACK channels).
- the number of tones required per ACK channel group is determined by (total available tones) / (number of ACK channel groups).
- the repetition rate is determined by (number of tones required per ACK channel group) / (SF / M) when M is the modulation order.
- An explicit mapping method and an implicit mapping method may be used as a method of indicating a structure in which an ACK / NACK signal is mapped to a downlink ACK channel.
- the explicit mapping method is a method of informing the position, size, etc. of the downlink ACK channel through a control signal.
- Implicit mapping is a method in which an ACK / NACK signal is transmitted through a downlink ACK channel at a location determined based on a UL MAP message or a resource block.
- the explicit mapping method and the implicit mapping method may also be applied to the index mapping method of the uplink ACK channel.
- a size of an ACK channel to which an ACK / NACK signal of a specific user is mapped is informed through a control signal.
- the information on the ACK channel to which the ACK / NACK signal is mapped is called ACK / NACK feedback information.
- the size of the user's ACK channel may be one of 0 to 48.
- one resource block may be allocated to one UE. In this case, the total number of required ACK channels may be 48.
- the ACK channel may be allocated by pre-reserving the number of ACK channels that can be allocated in the actual environment. For example, when 16 ACK channels are reserved, a control field indicating resource allocation information of 4 bits may be allocated to the common control channel region. Alternatively, a 5-bit control field may be allocated to the common control channel region to support 32 ACK channels. When a 6-bit control field for ACK channel allocation is allocated to the common control channel region, 48 of the control field values may indicate the size of the ACK channel and the remaining 16 may be used for other control channels.
- N ACK channels When N ACK channels are allocated, the location of ACK / NACK feedback information of the corresponding UE may be explicitly included (N is an integer greater than 0). In this case, the position of the ACK / NACK feedback information of the UE may be explicitly expressed through M bits of control fields of the N ACK channels (M is an integer greater than 0). For example, when 16 ACK channels are supported, ACK / NACK feedback information of a corresponding UE may be signaled through 4 bits. When 32 ACK channels are supported, ACK / NACK feedback information of a corresponding UE may be signaled through 5 bits. That is, when L ACK channels are supported, ACK / NACK feedback information of the corresponding UE may be signaled through the log2 L bit.
- the size information of the corresponding ACK / NACK channel may be signaled for the purpose of satisfying the transmission quality of the ACK / NACK channel required for each service provided.
- the size of the ACK / NACK channel is signaled by signaling the number of repetitions. Can be adjusted.
- the repetition rate for adjusting the size of the ACK channel may be applied in units of bits or in units of symbols.
- control channels include a broadcast channel (BCH), a primary broadcast channel (P-BCH), a secondary broadcast channel (S-BCH), or an additive broadcast channel (ABI).
- BCH broadcast channel
- P-BCH primary broadcast channel
- S-BCH secondary broadcast channel
- ABSI additive broadcast channel
- a method of implicitly notifying the mapping of the ACK / NACK signal (a) a method of mapping the ACK / NACK signal of the terminal based on the UL MAP message (or a control channel corresponding to the UL MAP message), (b) resource allocation There is a method of mapping the ACK / NACK signal on the basis of the resource block allocated by the terminal through.
- the ACK channel to which the ACK / NACK signal of the terminal is mapped may be implicitly indicated according to the position of the control channel allocated to the terminal.
- a method of mapping an ACK / NACK signal of a corresponding UE based on a UL MAP message is called a control block based linkage of ACK / NACK scheme, and maps an ACK / NACK signal based on a resource block. The method of doing this is called a RU based linkage of ACK / NACK.
- FIG. 6 shows a control block based ACK / NACK linkage scheme according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the control block based ACK / NACK linkage scheme is a scheme in which a downlink ACK channel of a terminal is mapped based on an uplink control block allocated to the terminal. That is, the information of the uplink control block allocated to the terminal indicates a downlink ACK channel of the corresponding terminal. Each terminal may find its own ACK channel in the downlink ACK channel by using information on the uplink control block allocated thereto.
- the information on the control block includes the index of the frame or subframe to which the control block belongs, the position index of the control block in the frame or subframe, the index of the resource unit (resource block) corresponding to the control block, and the tiles constituting the resource unit ( tile) location index.
- the downlink control block may also indicate the uplink ACK channel of the terminal in the uplink ACK channel.
- the control block-based ACK / NACK linkage scheme has a difficulty that is not supported in persistent scheduling in which control signals are not used, such as VoIP, and signaling overhead may increase because an additional control block is required for ACK / NACK linkage.
- FIG. 7 illustrates a resource unit based ACK / NACK linkage method according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the resource unit based ACK / NACK linkage scheme is a method in which a downlink ACK channel of a terminal is mapped based on an uplink or a downlink resource unit allocated to the terminal. That is, the information on the uplink or downlink resource unit allocated to the terminal indicates a downlink ACK channel of the corresponding terminal.
- the terminal may find its ACK channel in the downlink ACK channel using information on the uplink or downlink resource unit allocated to the terminal.
- the information on the uplink or downlink resource unit includes the index of the frame or subframe to which the resource unit allocated to the terminal belongs, the index of the resource unit or resource block allocated to the terminal in the frame or subframe, and the tile constituting the resource unit. (tile) may be a position index.
- ACK / NACK linkage may be performed by scheduling radio resources to the UE, and the resources of the ACK channel vary according to system parameters such as system bandwidth or the number of data streams in MU-MIMO. Can be decided.
- the ACK / NACK signal may be mapped using the UL MAP message, and when the MAP message is not transmitted, the ACK / NACK signal may be mapped based on the resource block.
- the present invention is not limited to this mapping scheme.
- Resource mapping in consideration of resource allocation of data may consider distributed resource unit (DRU) allocation, and frequency selective diversity gain may be obtained by a distributed resource unit allocation scheme.
- DRU distributed resource unit
- An internal permutation scheme may be applied to the downlink ACK channel.
- An internal permutation scheme may be applied to the configuration of the downlink ACK channel, and two tone pairing may be considered.
- FIG 8 illustrates mapping of a logical resource unit to an ACK channel index according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- a logical resource unit may be associated with an ACK channel index.
- the downlink ACK / NACK signal may be associated with the index of the logical resource unit allocated to the corresponding terminal.
- the index of the local resource unit (CRU) may be mapped directly to the index of the logical resource unit.
- Distributed resource units (DRUs) may be mixed according to a permutation scheme and mapped to indexes of logical resource units.
- the index of the logical resource unit may be mapped as it is to the index of the ACK channel.
- the index of the ACK channel may be associated with the indexes of the local resource unit and the distributed resource unit through the index of the logical resource unit.
- FIG 9 illustrates mapping of a local resource unit and a distributed resource unit to an ACK channel index according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- an index of a local resource unit may be directly mapped to an index of a corresponding physical resource unit.
- the index of the distributed resource unit may be allocated according to the index of the logical resource unit. Since the number of logical resource units and physical resource units is the same, the index of logical resource units associated with distributed resource units may be associated with the index of the remaining ACK channel after associating the index of the local resource unit with the index of the ACK channel. .
- the index of the ACK channel may be divided into an index associated with an index of a local resource unit and an index associated with an index of a distributed resource unit.
- the multiplexed ACK / NACK signal may be distributed to logical resource units and allocated.
- the resource element for the ACK / NACK signal may be based on 1/2 LRU.
- the downlink ACK channel may be multiplexed into a specific control channel and a frequency domain of another user in consideration of resource allocation or power control.
- 1/2 DRU or 1/2 LRU
- 1/2 DRU for a 5 MHz system bandwidth containing 24 ACK channels as a resource element for the ACK channel, and 1 DRU (or 1 LRU for a 10 MHz system bandwidth including 48 ACK channels
- 2 DRUs (or 2 LRUs) may be required.
- the resource element for the ACK channel required in the corresponding system bandwidth may be adjusted in size through the above-described control channels.
- the methods presented in the explicit linkage method of the ACK channel may be applied as it is.
- the ACK channel is effectively multiplexed with other control channels and data channels in an FDM manner.
- the ACK channel may be distributed and allocated in the entire frequency domain within the frequency partition.
- Frequency partitions may be specified by classifying according to frequency reuse N. The frequency division according to N does not limit the number.
- the ACK channel may be configured only within a specific frequency partition. Since ACK / NACK signals for multiple users are multiplexed and mapped and transmitted to the ACK channel, resource allocation and multiplexing schemes for the ACK channel should be determined to minimize interference with other cells.
- a plurality of users may be allocated the same resource.
- the same ACK channel index may be linked to two terminals. There is a need for a method capable of differently indicating an ACK channel index of paired terminals. Paying ACK channels of a plurality of terminals can reduce resources for the ACK channel.
- an ACK channel for a plurality of users may be divided based on a resource unit allocated by a user.
- the ACK / NACK signal of the corresponding terminal may be mapped to one of the ACK channels in the ACK channel group based on the first resource unit among the allocated resource units.
- the terminal may find an ACK channel in the ACK channel group to which it belongs through the index of the first resource unit, and may receive an ACK / NACK signal sent by the base station through the corresponding ACK channel.
- the resource unit serving as a reference is not limited to the first resource unit, and the terminal may find an ACK / NACK signal through the ACK channel in the ACK channel group based on any resource unit among the allocated resource units.
- an ACK / NACK signal is transmitted to a resourceable unit indicated based on a first resource unit or an arbitrary resource unit of an allocated resource unit. Can be mapped.
- the number of groups of ACK channels may be indicated via higher layer signaling or in an implicit manner.
- Paying UEs allocated with the same resource may classify ACK / NACK feedback information for UEs through a pattern index of pilot symbols allocated for uplink data transmission and a corresponding identifier, and may be allocated to ACK channels.
- ACK / NACK feedback information for UEs may be classified and allocated to ACK channels through a code division multiplexing sequence index allocated to uplink data transmission and an identifier corresponding thereto.
- FIG. 10 shows a process for transmitting an ACK / NACK signal of a multi-user according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- a repetition process is performed on each of ACK / NACK signals of a plurality of users (S110).
- the repetition rate of the repetition process may be determined according to the multiplexing performance of the ACK channel.
- the repetition rate may vary according to system requirements and service types, and how many repetitions to perform may be signaled through the control channel.
- the index of the downlink ACK channel is mapped to each resource unit assigned to the UE, the ACK / NACK feedback information through all the resource units may be enhanced by using soft combining.
- the modulation order can also change depending on the system requirements and service type. Determination of the modulation order can be indicated through implicit or explicit signaling.
- the ACK channel of a plurality of users constituting the downlink ACK channel may be jointly coded and transmitted.
- the ACK / NACK signal on which the repetition process is performed is arranged as a symbol representing a position on a signal constellation by applying a modulation method according to a channel state by a modulation mapper (S120).
- the modulation order may be determined according to the multiplexing capability of the ACK channel.
- the multiplexing rate of the ACK / NACK signal is K, that is, when K ACK / NACK bits are multiplexed by modulation mapping
- the repetition frequency may be determined as follows.
- the ACK channel may use a QPSK modulation scheme and a repetition rate of 2.
- the modulation scheme is not limited and may be m-Phase Shift Keying (m-PSK) or m-Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (m-QAM).
- m-PSK may be BPSK, QPSK or 8-PSK.
- m-QAM may be 16-QAM, 64-QAM or 256-QAM.
- the symbols of the modulated ACK / NACK signal are mapped to radio resources in the time domain and the frequency domain (S130).
- the downlink ACK channel may be related to the index of the resource unit indicated in the uplink radio resource allocation information. That is, the symbol of the modulated ACK / NACK signal may be mapped to a resource unit associated with the index of the uplink radio resource allocated to the terminal. For example, if the data allocated to the terminal is from resource unit index N to resource unit index M, the index of each resource unit may be associated with a downlink ACK channel index. If the resource granularity is one PRU (or LRU) and the bandwidth of the system is 5 MHz, 24 ACK channels are needed.
- the same radio resource may be paired and used by terminals.
- different ACK channels may be indicated through an uplink pilot pattern and an index of an orthogonal sequence.
- the resource amount of the downlink ACK channel may be determined as follows.
- Resource amount of downlink ACK channel (MU-MIMO data streams * 1/2 RU * k) / scheduling granularity
- the transmission bandwidth may be 5MHz
- multiplexing rate k 1.
- the minimum resource unit for the downlink ACK channel at 5 MHz bandwidth may correspond to 1/2 distributed resource unit.
- the resource unit may include 9 subcarriers and 6 OFDM symbols.
- Table 1 shows an example of a minimum resource unit of the ACK channel for the MU-MIMO data stream for each transmission bandwidth.
- the ACK channel can be dynamically allocated.
- the number of ACK channels multiplexed according to the amount of ACK / NACK signals allocated to the downlink data region may be adjusted and allocated to a resource unit corresponding to the downlink ACK channel.
- the number of ACK channels to be multiplexed may be known through higher layer signaling.
- the ACK channel may be allocated in consideration of power boosting.
- ACK / NACK-related feedback information may not be added to some channels of the configured ACK channel. .
- the power that these channels have may be added to channels to which actual ACK / NACK related feedback information is added.
- an ACK channel region may be shifted according to a cell ID in a subframe.
- the downlink ACK channel may be allocated in consideration of the frequency partition.
- the DL ACK channel may be divided and allocated for each frequency partition.
- all downlink ACK channels may be allocated to a specific frequency partition. For example, all downlink ACK channels are allocated to a region of frequency reuse 3, all downlink ACK channels are allocated to a region of frequency reuse 2, or all downlink ACK channels are allocated to a region of frequency reuse 1. Can be assigned.
- all or part of the downlink ACK channel is allocated to a specific frequency partition, this may be indicated by the base station through control signaling or implicitly indicated between the base station and the terminal.
- the size of the downlink ACK channel may be the same or different for each frequency section.
- the size of the downlink ACK channel for each frequency partition may be allocated by the base station through control signaling or implicitly indicated between the base station and the terminal. Control signaling may be transmitted through a common control channel, BCH, P-BCH or S-BCH.
- the symbol of the ACK / NACK signal mapped to the radio resource may be encoded according to the MIMO scheme (S140).
- FIG. 11 illustrates encoding of an ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- an ACK / NACK signal repeated according to a repetition rate may be carried on different frequency tones in a distributed resource unit. If the ACK / NACK signal is carried on different frequency tones in a distributed resource unit, a frequency diversity gain can be obtained. For example, when there are four ACK / NACK signals from m to m + 3, each ACK / NACK signal may be repeated according to repetition rate 2 to be carried on different frequency tones in a distributed resource unit.
- SFBC encoding may be performed on the ACK / NACK signal carried on the distributed resource unit. SFBC is suitable for obtaining spatial diversity gains. The SFBC can fully obtain diversity gain by paying two consecutive tones in a distributed resource unit.
- each ACK channel group Gr 0 to Gr 11 is composed of four ACK channels (ACK CH 0 to 3).
- the ACK channel group and the component ACK channel in the ACK channel group are indicated based on the first resource unit (RU).
- the ACK channel 3 of the ACK channel group index 0 is mapped to the terminal A according to a method of mapping the ACK / NACK signal based on the resource block.
- the terminal B is allocated resource units # 42 to # 45, the ACK channel 0 of the ACK channel group index 6 is mapped to the terminal B.
- the index of the ACK channel group, the component index within the ACK channel group, and the actual ACK channel index may be expressed as follows.
- ACK channel group index first resource unit index% ACK channel group number
- component index [floor (number of PRB index / ACK channel groups)]% number of ACK channels
- ACK channel index ACK channel group index + component index ⁇ number of ACK channel groups
- a resource block for mapping an ACK / NACK signal to a downlink ACK channel may be expressed as follows. (1) M x k / N, where M is the number of streams in the virtual MIMO, k is the number of resource units, and N is the resource allocation granularity. The number k of resource units may be 48 in a 16m system considering a 10 MHz transmission band, and may be 24 in consideration of a 5 MHz transmission band. (2) M ⁇ total number of RUs / N
- the downlink ACK channel is mapped to a distributed allocation resource unit to obtain frequency selective diversity. That is, the downlink ACK channel is mapped to subcarriers distributed in the frequency domain.
- Resource mapping of the downlink ACK channel is based on being mapped to a distributed resource unit (DRU) by FDM, but is not limited thereto.
- the downlink ACK channel may be mapped to a localized resource unit. It may be.
- resource mapping of the downlink ACK channel is configured in the TDM scheme, it may be distributed in any permutation pattern to obtain frequency diversity in n OFDM symbols.
- the downlink ACK channel of the 16m system includes a complex CDM / FDM scheme for repeatedly distributing small SFs in a frequency domain and an FDM scheme for obtaining frequency diversity.
- an ACK channel can be designed according to resource allocation of a 16m system, configuration of a resource unit, various cyclic prefix (CP) sizes, multicast and broadcast service (MBS) types, and multicarriers.
- the target required quality of the downlink ACK channel means a NACK error for the ACK signal and an ACK error for the NACK signal. Although 1e-4 may be a reference, any target request required by the system is required. Can be replaced by quality.
- FIG. 13 illustrates orthogonal sequence combining of ACK channel groups according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- each ACK channel group is combined in an orthogonal sequence.
- ACK channels for a plurality of users may be combined in an orthogonal sequence and multiplexed.
- Each ACK channel group may be generated with eight tones by an orthogonal sequence. Eight tones to which an ACK channel group is allocated may be allocated to a distributed resource unit (DRU).
- DRU distributed resource unit
- each ACK channel group is generated with eight tones through an orthogonal sequence, the sequence length may be determined differently according to the multiplexing performance, and the number of tones generated may also vary.
- FIG. 14 illustrates an ACK channel allocated to a distributed resource unit according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- each ACK channel group may be combined in an orthogonal sequence and allocated to distributed resource units (or logical resource units (LRUs)) through eight tones.
- Eight tones generated for each ACK channel group may be divided into 4 repeating units and may be arranged near pilots constituting distributed resource units.
- the other three ACK channel groups are allocated such that the reliability of all the ACK channel groups is the same.
- the arrangement of pilots is merely an example, and various pilot patterns may be applied. If a radio resource for the ACK channel is insufficient, some pilots may be punctured and used as an ACK channel.
- spreading factor SF 2 I / Q channel multiplexing, BPSK modulation scheme and repetition rate 4 are derived based on multiplexing performance 4.
- QPSK modulation method 2 / Q channel multiplexing
- the ACK channel parameters may be variously changed according to the determined multiplexing performance.
- the ACK channel can be dynamically allocated.
- the number of ACK channels multiplexed according to the amount of ACK / NACK signals allocated to the downlink data region may be adjusted and allocated to a resource unit corresponding to the downlink ACK channel.
- the repetition rate can be increased by adjusting the granularity of radio resources for the ACK channel, thereby improving the channel quality of the ACK channel.
- FIG. 15 shows an ACK channel allocated to a distributed resource unit according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- a modulation order and a repetition frequency are expressed as follows.
- the modulation order is the multiplexing rate K divided by the bits of the entire ACK / NACK signal.
- ACK / NACK signals may be multiplexed into 24 ACK / NACK signals using QPSK modulation.
- an ACK channel may be allocated to a logical resource unit (LRU) in a time domain to a frequency domain or a frequency domain to a time domain in the same manner as a downlink ACK channel configuration.
- LRU logical resource unit
- Each of the obtained repetition rate units may be arranged adjacent to the pilot from the first part of the ACK channel.
- the remaining portion of the ACK channel may be arranged in a distributed resource unit or a resource unit so that the reliability of channel estimation for each downlink ACK channel is averaged.
- two ACK / NACK signals are modulated by the QPSK modulation scheme and allocated to the ACK channel of the distributed resource unit.
- Two ACK / NACK signals are multiplexed over four tones, forming a total of 24 multiplexed ACK channels. This means that a total of four identical 24 multiplexed ACK channel units form one ACK channel group and are preferentially placed near the pilot.
- the remaining three ACK channel groups are allocated such that channel conditions are uniform according to channel estimation.
- the arrangement of the ACK channel is only an example, and the ACK channel may be variously distributed according to the permutation rule of the distributed resource unit structure of the 16m system.
- the ACK channel can be dynamically allocated.
- the repetition rate can be increased by adjusting the granularity of radio resources for the ACK channel, thereby improving the channel quality of the ACK channel.
- 16 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the downlink ACK / NACK signal for the data transmitted through the uplink subframe is transmitted after a predetermined delay time. That is, the downlink ACK channel is disposed in the downlink subframe after a predetermined delay time in the uplink subframe.
- the ACK channel may occupy some frequency bands in the downlink subframe. Alternatively, the ACK channel may occupy some OFDM symbols and all or some frequency bands in a downlink subframe.
- the location of the downlink ACK channel may be implicitly indicated in the resource unit having the smallest logical index in each subframe, and the downlink ACK channel may be allocated to the indicated resource unit.
- the location of the downlink ACK channel may be indicated by the first PRU in each subframe, and the downlink ACK channel may be allocated to the indicated resource unit.
- the location of the downlink ACK channel may be indicated in the first logical resource unit for each frequency partition, and the downlink ACK channel may be allocated to the indicated resource unit.
- the location of the downlink ACK channel may be indicated implicitly or explicitly through control signaling. In this case, the control signaling may be transmitted through a common control channel, P-BCH, S-BCH, BCH, and the like.
- an ACK / NACK signal corresponding to one, some, or all of the resource units allocated by the UE may be mapped to an input value of a Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT).
- the DFT size is a multiple of N (N is a multiple of 2 greater than 0).
- N may be 48 in consideration of the size of the ACK channel.
- FIG. 17 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- a delay time of a downlink ACK / NACK signal for data through an uplink subframe is set to 4 subframes.
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 1 (UL1) is transmitted through downlink subframe 2 (DL2)
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 2 (UL2) Is transmitted through downlink subframe 3 (DL3)
- an ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 3 (UL3) is transmitted through downlink subframe 4 (DL4).
- FIG. 18 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 1 is transmitted through downlink subframe 1 (DL1)
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 2 (UL2) Is transmitted through downlink subframe 2 (DL2)
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through uplink subframe 3 is transmitted through downlink subframe 3 (DL3)
- uplink subframe 4 DL4
- the ratio of the downlink subframe and the uplink subframe in the above-described TDD frame may be determined in various ways such as 7: 1, 6: 2, 5: 3, 4: 4, 3: 5, 2: 6, 1: 7, and the like.
- the ACK channel may be arranged in consideration of a delay time of an ACK / NACK signal which is predetermined in various frames.
- the predetermined delay time of the ACK / NACK signal may be a time previously known to the base station and the terminal or the base station may inform the terminal of the delay time of the ACK / NACK signal.
- Table 2 shows an example of a delay value of the ACK / NACK signal according to the configuration of the uplink frame and the downlink frame.
- Table 3 shows another example of a delay value of the ACK / NACK signal according to the configuration of the uplink frame and the downlink frame.
- 19 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 20 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 21 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 22 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the ACK channel may be arranged in consideration of the delay time of the ACK / NACK signal.
- the delay time of the ACK / NACK signal may be a time previously known to the base station and the terminal or the base station may inform the terminal of the delay time of the ACK / NACK signal.
- Table 4 shows an example of the number of HARQ channels according to the configuration of the downlink frame and the uplink frame.
- FIG. 23 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a downlink ACK channel is arranged in a frequency domain.
- a downlink ACK channel may be preferentially disposed in a frequency domain in a subframe.
- a sub-MAP may be allocated to the first OFDM symbol of the subframe.
- the sub MAP includes configuration information or allocation information of a resource unit included in the subframe.
- the sub MAP may occupy some or all frequency bands in the frequency domain.
- the downlink ACK channel may be arranged in the frequency domain subsequent to the sub MAP.
- the sub MAP may include allocation information of the ACK channel included in the subframe.
- allocation information of the ACK channel As a downlink ACK channel, information on an area allocated to the terminal, the number of terminals, and the like must be obtained so that the terminal can correctly receive its ACK / NACK signal. If there is no allocation information of the ACK channel, the UE may have difficulty in finding an area of the ACK channel allocated thereto.
- the allocation information of the ACK channel is included in the sub MAP. It is preferable that the region of the sub MAP and the region of the ACK channel do not overlap each other.
- the ACK channel may be implicitly mapped to a location known to the base station and the terminal.
- the radio resource allocation message may require additional signaling for indicating an ACK channel allocated to the terminal.
- FIG. 24 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a downlink ACK channel is arranged in a frequency domain.
- the downlink ACK channel may be preferentially disposed in the frequency domain subsequent to the sub MAP.
- the sub MAP includes information on the resource unit included in the subframe and information on the ACK channel.
- FIG. 25 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a downlink ACK channel is arranged in a time domain.
- the downlink ACK channel of a subframe may include at least one resource unit. That is, the downlink ACK channel may be allocated to at least one resource unit.
- the subframe may include a sub MAP, and location information of a downlink ACK channel region may be included in the sub MAP.
- the DL ACK channel may be allocated to any resource unit. Alternatively, the downlink ACK channel may be allocated to a predetermined resource unit. In this case, it is not necessary to indicate the location of the downlink ACK channel region through the sub MAP.
- 26 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a downlink ACK channel is arranged in a time domain.
- FIG. 26 it shows that a downlink ACK channel is allocated to a resource unit of a middle portion of a subframe.
- the downlink ACK channel When the downlink ACK channel is allocated to at least one resource unit, (1) the position of the ACK channel region can be implicitly indicated, (2) the data region and the control region can be configured separately, and (3) high reliability.
- An ACK channel can be allocated to a resource unit, and (4) there is an advantage of maintaining the same size of the resource unit.
- there is a disadvantage in that (1) the allocation gain of the ACK channel considering the processing delay of the terminal cannot be obtained and (2) the specific permutation scheme is limited.
- FIG. 27 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a resource unit is punctured and used as an ACK channel.
- a part of the tones included in the resource unit of the subframe may be punctured, and the logical downlink ACK channel may be mapped to the punctured tone.
- the punctured tone is used as the physical downlink ACK channel.
- Tones may be punctured on one OFDM symbol.
- a logical downlink ACK channel is configured to map components of the ACK channel to punctured tones on one OFDM symbol.
- the tone of the resource unit is punctured on one OFDM symbol and used as a downlink ACK channel, a disadvantage occurs in a configuration in which the downlink ACK channel is arranged in the frequency domain as illustrated in FIG. 23 or 24. Frequency selective diversity gain can be obtained and the size of the resource unit can be kept constant.
- FIG. 28 shows a structure of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention. This is a case where a resource unit is punctured and used as an ACK channel.
- a more reliable ACK channel may be configured through repetition of an ACK / NACK signal.
- the CDM scheme may be applied to improve the performance of the ACK channel resource. That is, the plurality of ACK / NACK signals may be divided into orthogonal sequences and mapped to physical ACK channels. Power boosting may be performed on the scalable sub MAP. More robustness can be provided for fast time selective channels.
- 29 shows resource allocation for HARQ mode based on CQI feedback according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the terminal may receive a downlink reference signal or a pilot to measure a downlink channel state.
- the terminal feeds back a channel quality indicator (CQI) indicating the measured channel state to the base station.
- CQI channel quality indicator
- the base station can determine the channel state through the CQI, and the code rate, modulation order, etc. are determined according to the channel state.
- Resource allocation for the HARQ mode may vary depending on the code rate, modulation order, and frame size. That is, the base station may determine the resource allocation for the HARQ mode based on the fed back CQI.
- a high code rate and a high modulation order are selected.
- the HARQ scheme of the IR mode is used which is more advantageous for high code rate and high modulation order.
- a subpacket ID (SPID) is changed during data retransmission.
- HARQ in enhanced IR mode may be supported.
- the good or bad of the channel state indicated by the CQI may be determined based on a predetermined CQI level, and the reference CQI level may be variously determined according to a system.
- a low code rate and a low modulation order are selected.
- the HARQ scheme of the CC mode is used, which is more advantageous for low code rate and low modulation order.
- the subpacket ID is fixed during data retransmission.
- HARQ of the enhanced CC mode may be supported.
- FIG. 30 shows a configuration of a downlink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- a frame includes five downlink subframes and three uplink subframes.
- Each downlink subframe may be assigned a sub MAP.
- Each subframe may include a plurality of resource blocks.
- Resource block means a minimum resource allocation unit.
- the resource block may correspond to a resource unit.
- the ACK channel may be allocated to any resource block of the downlink subframe.
- the ACK channel may be allocated for each downlink subframe or may be allocated to some downlink subframes.
- the downlink ACK channel When the downlink ACK channel is mapped to a physical resource block, information about the location of the mapped resource block of the downlink ACK channel, the location and size of the downlink ACK channel in the resource block, parameters for distinguishing the multiplexed ACK channel, etc. Is needed. Compression is a method of effectively informing the mapping information of the ACK channel.
- 31 shows a method of allocating a downlink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the compression method is a method of reducing and expressing an ACK / NACK signal for each of a plurality of resource blocks included in an uplink subframe. Persistent scheduling and dynamic scheduling can be distinguished to reduce an ACK / NACK signal for each of a plurality of resource blocks. In reducing the ACK / NACK signal, the CQI fed back from the UE may be considered.
- the ACK channel for each of the plurality of resource blocks of the uplink subframe is mapped to a downlink ACK channel occupying at least one resource block in the downlink subframe according to the compression method.
- 32 shows a compression method for an ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- Continuous scheduling is a method of continuously allocating a predetermined resource region to one user for a predetermined time
- dynamic scheduling is a method of variably allocating resource regions to a plurality of users through control information.
- persistent scheduling is performed for a user who uses a Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service (hereinafter, referred to as a VoIP user)
- dynamic scheduling is performed for a user who does not use a VoIP service (hereinafter, referred to as a non-VoIP user).
- Radio resources may be allocated to a user who uses a VoIP service and a user who does not use a VoIP service in one subframe. That is, persistent scheduling and dynamic scheduling can be performed in one subframe.
- VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol
- Compression-based grouping is performed by classifying resource blocks on which persistent scheduling is performed and resource blocks on which dynamic scheduling is performed.
- An ACK channel group for a resource block on which persistent scheduling is performed and an ACK channel group on a resource block on which dynamic scheduling is performed may be distinguished.
- one or more resource blocks are always allocated to VoIP users in time, and one ACK channel can be allocated to one or more resource blocks, thereby reducing overhead due to ACK / NACK signals. That is, the ACK / NACK signal for some subframes or all subframes may be omitted for the VoIP service performed through a plurality of subframes, thereby reducing overhead due to the ACK / NACK signal.
- a plurality of resource blocks may be allocated to a non-VoIP user in one subframe. Only the ACK / NACK signal for the first resource block can be sent for a plurality of resource blocks allocated to non-VoIP users, and whether the ACK / NACK signal for the first resource block implicitly ACK / NACK for the remaining resource blocks. Can be represented.
- the size of the resource block used for dynamic scheduling may be different from that of the resource block used for persistent scheduling to compress the ACK channel.
- a resource block used for persistent scheduling may include 12 subcarriers in the frequency domain
- a resource block used for dynamic scheduling may include 24 subcarriers in the frequency domain.
- the number of ACK channels decreases as the size of the resource block increases. According to the granularity of the resource block, the ACK channel can be compressed at a high rate. However, in terms of scheduling, there may be a limitation in adjusting the granularity of resource blocks.
- FIG 33 shows a compression method for an ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- Repetition rate can be determined.
- the ACK / NACK signal may be repeatedly mapped to ensure the reliability of the ACK channel. For example, if a CQI of a non-VoIP user allocated two resource blocks is less than or equal to a predetermined threshold, two ACK channels may be allocated to ACK / NACK signals repeatedly for reliability of the ACK channel.
- Compression-based grouping considering CQI may be effective when a resource allocation unit is predetermined.
- a resource allocation unit is predetermined.
- an uplink sub-MAP includes information on the size and location of radio resources allocated to a terminal in an uplink subframe or a downlink subframe.
- the ACK / NACK signal may be associated with each downlink sub-MAP from the size and location information of the radio resource allocated to the terminal. That is, an ACK / NACK signal for the corresponding terminal may be transmitted through the downlink sub MAP allocated to each terminal.
- the associated ACK / NACK signal for each uplink sub-MAP is mapped to a downlink ACK channel. Since the configuration of the downlink ACK channel is transmitted through the uplink sub-MAP for each UE, overhead due to the transmission of the ACK / NACK signal is reduced and an additional compression method may not be used.
- VoIP users who do not require control information on radio resources by applying persistent scheduling cannot apply the method of transmitting ACK / NACK signals through control information, and control is performed even in a system that does not use sub MAP. There is a difficulty in that a method of transmitting an ACK / NACK signal using information cannot be applied.
- 35 shows mapping of an ACK channel using control information according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- an ACK channel when using a method of transmitting an ACK / NACK signal using control information, an ACK channel may be configured by repeating the ACK / NACK signal by applying a CQI fed back by the terminal.
- the channel condition is not good, reliability of the ACK channel can be secured by repeatedly mapping the ACK / NACK signal to the ACK channel.
- 36 illustrates transmission of a sub MAP according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- an uplink sub-MAP for a non-VoIP user to which dynamic scheduling is applied is transmitted every frame in a superframe
- one uplink sub-MAP for a VoIP user to which persistent scheduling is applied is one in a superframe. It can be transmitted only through the frame of. For example, when four 5ms frames are included in a 20ms superframe, an uplink sub-MAP for a VoIP user may be transmitted through only the first frame, and an uplink sub-MAP for a non-VoIP user may be transmitted every 5ms frame. have. A plurality of subframes are included in the frame.
- the uplink sub-MAP may be included in any subframe in the frame or may be included in all subframes.
- 37 is a graph comparing system performance according to a channel estimation method according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 38 is a graph comparing system performance according to a channel estimation method according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 39 is a graph comparing system performance according to a channel estimation method according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 37 compares the channel estimation methods of Perfect and 2D Wiener according to the number of ACK channels at a movement speed of 30 km / h.
- FIG. 38 shows Perfect and 2D according to the number of ACK channels at a movement speed of 150 km / h. The channel estimation method of the Wiener is compared, and
- FIG. 39 compares the channel estimation methods of Perfect and 2D Wiener according to the number of ACK channels when the moving speed is 3 km / h.
- the downlink ACK channel Assuming that the transmission of the downlink ACK channel has a higher demand level than other user specific control channels such as resource allocation and power control, and has a lower demand level (1e- 2 FER) than the broadcast channel, the downlink ACK channel It can be seen that has a performance of 1e -4 to 1e -3 BER.
- the UE is allocated to one subframe based on VoIP user support.
- the maximum number is approximately 13.8. If the source bit rate is 12.2kbps and a 20ms encoder frame is considered, at least two resource units per terminal are required for VoIP resource allocation.
- FIG. 40 is a graph comparing the performance of the CC (Chase Combing) and IR (Incremental Redundancy) mode according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 41 is a graph comparing performance of a CC (Chase Combing) and an IR (Incremental Redundancy) mode according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 40 shows HARQ of CC mode and IR mode of 1/3 CTC (Convolutional Turbo Code) and 1/2 CTC when the moving speed is 30 km / h, the QPSK modulation method, and the frame size is 960 bits.
- FER Frame Error Rate
- SNR Signal to Noise Rate
- FIG. 41 shows FER for SNR in HARQ of CC mode and IR mode of 1/4 CTC, 1/2 CTC, and 3/4 CTC when the moving speed is 30 km / h, 16 QAM modulation, and Nep 2880 bits.
- Nep is the number of bits input to the CTC turbo encoder and is a parameter defined by the size of the encoded packet.
- the CC mode has a lower coding gain compared to the IR mode, but the need for buffer performance is minimized.
- the IR mode has a higher coding gain compared to the CC mode, while incurring high implementation overhead in terms of buffer management.
- Downlink HARQ is a method in which downlink data is transmitted from a base station, and an ACK / NACK signal thereof is transmitted in uplink.
- the set of downlink subframes is called a downlink region, and the set of uplink subframes is called an uplink region.
- the ratio of the downlink region and the uplink region in the frame is 5: 3.
- a BS processing delay which is a time required for the base station to process data
- a UE processing delay which is a time required for the UE to process data
- the additional delay may include a time taken for transmitting the ACK / NACK signal and may have a size of at least one subframe. Since the ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through the DL 2 subframe is transmitted through the UL 1 subframe, an additional delay of 2 subframes occurs, resulting in a total RTT of 7 TTIs. The ACK / NACK signal for data transmission on the DL 3 subframe is transmitted through the UL 1 subframe, and an additional delay of 1 subframe occurs, resulting in a total RTT of 6 TTIs. The ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through the DL 4 subframe is transmitted through the UL 2 subframe, and an additional delay of 1 subframe occurs, so that the total RTT becomes 6 TTI.
- the ACK / NACK signal for data transmission on the DL 5 subframe is transmitted through the UL 3 subframe, and an additional delay of 1 subframe occurs, so that the total RTT becomes 6 TTI. Therefore, the average RTT for downlink data transmission through DL 1 to 5 subframes is 6.6 TTI, and an uplink ACK channel for this may be configured in one frame.
- 1 TTI is 0.615 ms
- the size of the TTI is not limited and may be variously determined according to a system.
- FIG. 43 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- 44 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 43 and the ACK channel of FIG. 44 occupy different positions in the frequency domain.
- an uplink ACK channel may be configured as a time domain in an uplink radio resource.
- the uplink ACK channel includes three uplink subframes in the time domain and includes a frequency domain.
- One logical channel includes a plurality of subcarriers.
- the logical channel may include at least one logical resource unit.
- the logical channel may correspond to a PRU.
- the logical channel may include 18 subcarriers in the frequency domain.
- the uplink ACK channel may be allocated to any position in the logical frequency domain and may be mapped distributed or localized in the physical frequency domain.
- ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through a subframe may be transmitted in one frame. That is, one uplink ACK channel is configured in one frame, and all ACK / NACK signals for downlink data transmission can be transmitted through one uplink ACK channel. Since downlink data transmission and an ACK / NACK signal can be transmitted within one frame, transmission delay of the ACK / NACK signal can be minimized.
- the processing delay or additional delay of the terminal may vary according to the capability of the terminal or the position in the cell. By configuring the ACK channel in the time domain, a flexible ACK channel may be configured for the processing delay.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 45 and the ACK channel of FIG. 46 are composed of 16e ACK channels and 16m ACK channels having different ratios.
- the uplink ACK channel includes a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel.
- the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be divided into time domains.
- the 16e ACK channel is shown to be ahead of the 16m ACK channel in the time domain, the 16m ACK channel may be ahead of the 16e ACH channel in the time domain.
- the 16e ACK channel is ahead of the 16m ACK channel in consideration of the processing delay of the UE.
- the downlink subframe for 16m is earlier in the time domain than the downlink subframe for 16e, it is preferable that the 16m ACK channel is ahead of the 16e ACK channel in the time domain.
- the ratio of the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be adjusted according to the data transmission using HARQ in the 16e system and the 16m system and the number of ACK channels accordingly. For example, if the data for the terminal using the 16m system increases, the ratio of the 16m ACK channel increases as shown in FIG. 10.
- FIG. 47 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 48 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 47 and the ACK channel of FIG. 48 are located in the last subframe in the time domain and have different ranges in the frequency domain.
- an uplink ACK channel may be located in the last subframe of an uplink region.
- the uplink ACK channel may be allocated to the third subframe.
- the uplink ACK channel in the third subframe may include at least one OFDM symbol of the last part.
- an ACK / NACK signal for data transmission through the latest subframe in the downlink region may also be transmitted through the uplink ACK channel of the same frame. have.
- a maximum delay margin for the ACK channel processing time and generation time of the UE using HARQ may be provided.
- the ACK channel allocated to the last subframe may include the entire logical channel in the frequency domain as shown in FIG. 11 or some logical channel as shown in FIG. 12.
- the logical channel included in the ACK channel may be adjusted or predetermined according to the number of data channels using HARQ.
- 49 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 50 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 49 and the ACK channel of FIG. 50 are located in the last subframe in the time domain.
- the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel are divided into the time domain.
- the ACK channel of FIG. And 16m ACK channels are divided into frequency domains.
- an ACK channel located in the last subframe of the uplink region may include a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel.
- the 16e ACK channel may be identified in the time domain as shown in FIG. 49 and may be identified in the frequency domain as shown in FIG.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 51 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 52 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 51 includes a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel having a different ratio from that of FIG. 49.
- the ACK channel of FIG. 52 includes a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel having a different ratio from that of FIG. 50.
- the ACK channel is located in the last subframe of the uplink region, and may include a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel divided into time domains, and a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel.
- the ratio of can be adjusted in the time domain.
- the ACK channel is located in the last subframe of the uplink region, and may include and divide the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel into the frequency domain, and the ratio of the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be adjusted in the frequency domain. Can be.
- the ratio of the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be adjusted according to the data transmission using HARQ in the 16e system and the 16m system and the number of ACK channels accordingly.
- 53 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 54 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 55 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 56 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- 57 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- DL 1 to 5 subframes five downlink subframes (DL 1 to 5 subframes) are included in the downlink region, and three uplink subframes (UL 1 to 3 subframes) are included in the uplink region.
- DL 1 subframe is allocated for the 16e system
- DL 2 to 5 may be allocated for the 16m system.
- the 16e ACK channel may be allocated to a UL 1 subframe
- the 16m ACK channel may be allocated to a UL 2 and 3 subframe.
- the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may occupy all or part of a logical channel in the frequency domain.
- the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be allocated in each subframe as follows in the time domain.
- a 16e ACK channel and a 16m ACK channel may be allocated at the beginning of each subframe, in order to transmit an ACK / NACK signal faster.
- a 16e ACK channel may be allocated at the beginning of a subframe and a 16m ACK channel may be allocated at the rear of the subframe.
- the 16m ACK channel allocated to the rear of the subframe in the time domain may give the terminal using the 16m system a maximum delay margin for the ACK channel processing time and the generation time.
- the 16e ACK channel may be allocated at the beginning of the subframe, one of the 16m ACK channels may be allocated at the beginning of the subframe, and the other may be allocated at the rear of the subframe.
- the ACK channel may be located in a subframe in consideration of the processing delay of the UE in each subframe.
- the 16e ACK channel may be allocated at the beginning of the subframe, and the 16m ACK channel may be allocated at the middle of the subframe.
- the ACK channel may be located in a subframe in consideration of the processing delay of the UE in each subframe.
- the 16e ACK channel occupies some logical channel in the frequency domain and is allocated at the beginning of the subframe, and the 16m ACK channel is allocated at the beginning of the subframe, but is allocated to the 16e ACK channel of the UL 1 subframe. The remaining logical channels may be occupied further in the frequency domain.
- the configuration of the 16e ACK channel and the 16m ACK channel may be adjusted according to the ratio of subframes allocated to the 16e system and the 16m system and the processing delay of the UE in the downlink.
- FIG. 58 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- a logical channel having high channel reliability may be allocated to each uplink subframe as an uplink ACK channel.
- a logical channel with high channel reliability means a channel having a relatively good channel state of a corresponding physical channel.
- the ACK channel may use all OFDM symbols belonging to the subframe or some OFDM symbols.
- a logical channel with high channel reliability may be different for each uplink subframe, and thus an ACK channel may occupy a different frequency region for each uplink subframe. Accordingly, the ACK channel may vary in an uplink subframe according to the channel state, and the allocation information of the ACK channel may be transmitted through higher layer signaling.
- FIG. 59 shows a configuration of an uplink ACK channel according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- At least one OFDM symbol having high channel reliability may be allocated to each uplink subframe as an uplink ACK channel.
- the uplink ACK channel may include at least one OFDM symbol in the time domain and at least one logical channel in the frequency domain. That is, the uplink ACK channel may include all or part of the logical channel.
- the method in which the ACK channel is allocated to a logical channel or an OFDM symbol having high channel reliability may also be applied to the ACK channel configuration of FIGS. 43 to 57.
- the configuration of the uplink ACK channel in the time division duplex (TDD) frame in which the downlink region and the uplink region are divided in the time domain has been described.
- the above-described configuration and configuration of the uplink ACK channel is a downlink in the TDD frame.
- the same technical concept may be applied to the configuration of the ACK channel.
- an ACK channel may be configured to have a processing delay in time with the data transmission region, thereby applying the technical idea of the present invention. There will be.
- 60 shows a frame structure capable of performing fast HARQ according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- a frame includes five downlink subframes DL 1 to 5 and three uplink subframes UL 1 to 3.
- the uplink subframe and the downlink subframe It is possible to switch the position of. That is, positions of at least one downlink subframe of the plurality of uplink subframes may be disposed between the plurality of downlink subframes.
- uplink subframe 1 may be switched between downlink subframes 2 and 3.
- the ACK / NACK signal for downlink subframe 1 is transmitted through the ACK channel of uplink subframe 1
- the ACK / NACK signal for downlink subframes 2 and 3 is transmitted through the ACK channel of uplink subframe 2.
- the ACK / NACK signals for the downlink subframes 4 and 5 may be transmitted through the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 3.
- the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 1 may be located at the end of the uplink subframe 1 in time considering the processing delay of the UE.
- the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 2 Since the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 2 has a sufficient processing delay for the downlink subframes 2 and 3, it may be located in front of the uplink subframe 2 in time.
- the ACK channel of uplink subframe 3 may be located at the end of uplink subframe 3 in time considering the processing delay of the UE.
- the delay of the ACK / NACK signal for downlink data transmission can be reduced by switching the downlink subframe and the uplink subframe in the TDD frame.
- Information on the switching of the downlink subframe and the uplink subframe may be transmitted through system information or higher layer signaling about the frame configuration.
- downlink HARQ has been described herein, the delay of the ACK / NACK signal may be reduced by switching the downlink subframe and the uplink subframe in the same manner in the uplink HARQ.
- 61 shows a frame structure capable of performing fast HARQ according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- uplink subframe 1 is located between downlink subframes 3 and 4. It shows the structure to be switched.
- the ACK / NACK signal for downlink subframe 1 is transmitted through the ACK channel of uplink subframe 1, and the ACK / NACK signal for downlink subframes 2 and 3 is transmitted through the ACK channel of uplink subframe 2.
- the ACK / NACK signals for the downlink subframes 4 and 5 may be transmitted through the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 3.
- the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 1 has a sufficient processing delay, it may be located in front of the uplink subframe 1 in time.
- the ACK channel of the uplink subframe 2 has a sufficient processing delay for the downlink subframes 2 and 3, it may be located in front of the uplink subframe 2 in time.
- the ACK channel of uplink subframe 3 may be located at the end of uplink subframe 3 in time considering the processing delay of the UE.
- Switching between the downlink subframe and the uplink subframe for performing the fast HARQ may be variously performed according to the processing delay degree of the terminal, and the position at which the uplink subframe or the downlink subframe is switched is not limited.
- the configuration and the mapping method of the ACK channel are not limited to the uplink and the downlink, and the configuration and the mapping method of the uplink ACK channel are assigned to the downlink ACK channel.
- the configuration and mapping scheme of the downlink ACK channel may also be applied to the uplink ACK channel.
- a processor such as a microprocessor, a controller, a microcontroller, an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), or the like according to software or program code coded to perform the function.
- ASIC application specific integrated circuit
Abstract
Description
Tx BW | 5 MHz | 10 MHz | 20 MHz |
1 data stream | 1/2 DRU (LRU) | 1 DRU (LRU) | 2 DRU (LRU) |
2 data stream | 1 DRU (LRU) | 2 DRU (LRU) | 4 DRU (LRU) |
3 data stream | 1 1/2 DRU (LRU) | 3 DRU (LRU) | 6 DRU (LRU) |
4 data stream | 2 DRU (LRU) | 4 DRU (LRU) | 8 DRU (LRU) |
UL/DL Configuration | subframe M | |||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
4:4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | ||||
3:5 | 4 | 4 | 4 | |||||
2:6 | 4 | 4 |
UL/DL Configuration | subframe M | |||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
4:4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | ||||
3:5 | 3 | 3 | 3 | |||||
2:6 | 2 | 2 |
DL:UL ratio | 3:5 | 4:4 | 5:3 | 6:2 | 2:6 |
HARQ process | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 8 |
Parameters | Assumption |
Bandwidth | 10 MHz |
Number of subcarrier | 1024 |
Frame length | 5ms |
Channel estimation | Perfect, 2D Wiener |
Modulation | QPSK |
Repetition number | 1 |
MIMO configuration | Tx: 2, Rx:2 |
Tx Diversity scheme | SFBC |
Resource allocation | Distributed allocation |
Used Resource units | 1 DRU |
Channel model | PEDA, PEDB ,VEHA |
MS mobility | 3km/h, 30km/h, 150km/h |
Receiver type | Linear MMSE |
Claims (12)
- 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법에 있어서,무선자원을 할당하는 단계; 및상기 무선자원에 대한 인덱스로부터 정해지는 위치의 ACK 채널을 통하여 ACK/NACK 신호를 전송하는 단계를 포함하되,상기 무선자원은 자원할당을 위한 기본적인 단위인 자원유닛을 적어도 하나 포함하고, 상기 자원유닛은 주파수 영역에서 인접하는 부반송파를 포함하는 국부적 자원유닛 및 주파수 영역에서 분산되는 부반송파를 포함하는 분산적 자원유닛 중 적어도 어느 하나이며, 상기 국부적 자원유닛의 인덱스는 상기 ACK 채널의 인덱스로 그대로 맵핑되고, 상기 분산적 자원유닛의 인덱스는 순열 방식에 따라 상기 ACK 채널의 인덱스로 맵핑되는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제1 항에 있어서, 상기 국부적 자원유닛 및 상기 분산적 자원유닛은 논리적 자원유닛의 인덱스로 맵핑된 후 상기 ACK 채널의 인덱스로 맵핑되는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제1 항에 있어서, 상기 무선자원은 단말에게 할당되는 상향링크 또는 하향링크 자원유닛인 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제1 항에 있어서, 상기 무선자원은 단말에게 할당되는 상향링크 제어블록인 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법에 있어서,무선자원을 통하여 데이터를 송수신하는 단계; 및상기 무선자원의 인덱스 정보로부터 지시되는 ACK 채널을 통하여 ACK/NACK 신호를 수신하는 단계를 포함하되,상기 무선자원은 자원할당을 위한 기본적인 단위인 자원유닛을 적어도 하나 포함하고, 상기 자원유닛은 주파수 영역에서 인접하는 부반송파를 포함하는 국부적 자원유닛 및 주파수 영역에서 분산되는 부반송파를 포함하는 분산적 자원유닛 중 적어도 어느 하나이며, 상기 ACK 채널의 인덱스는 상기 국부적 자원유닛의 인덱스로부터 그대로 맵핑되고 상기 분산적 자원유닛의 인덱스로부터 섞여서 맵핑되는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제5 항에 있어서, 상기 ACK 채널을 통하여 복수의 사용자의 ACK/NACK 신호가 복합 CDM(code division multiplexing)/FDM(frequency division multiplexing) 방식으로 다중화되어 전송되는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제5 항에 있어서, 상기 ACK 채널을 통하여 복수의 사용자의 ACK/NACK 신호가 FDM(frequency division multiplexing) 방식으로 다중화되어 전송되는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 무선통신 시스템에서 복수의 하향링크 서브프레임 및 복수의 상향링크 서브프레임을 포함하는 프레임을 이용한 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법에 있어서,상기 상향링크 서브프레임을 통하여 데이터를 전송하는 단계; 및상기 데이터에 대한 ACK/NACK 신호를 상기 복수의 하향링크 서브프레임에 포함되는 ACK 채널을 통하여 수신하는 단계를 포함하되, 상기 ACK 채널은 복수의 사용자에 대한 ACK 채널을 다중화하여 포함하고, 상기 복수의 사용자에 대한 ACK 채널은 사용자가 할당받은 자원블록을 기준으로 구분되는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제8 항에 있어서, 상기 ACK 채널은 상기 복수의 사용자에 대한 ACK 채널을 복수개 포함하는 ACK 채널 그룹에 포함되는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제8 항에 있어서, 상기 ACK 채널은 주파수 영역에서 분산되는 부반송파에 맵핑되는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제8 항에 있어서, 상기 ACK 채널은 상기 복수의 사용자에 대한 ACK 채널을 직교 시퀀스로 결합하여 다중화하는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
- 제8 항에 있어서, 상기 하향링크 서브프레임은 상기 ACK 채널의 할당정보를 포함하는 서브 MAP을 포함하는 것을 특징으로 하는 무선통신 시스템에서 ACK/NACK 신호 전송방법.
Priority Applications (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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JP2010548624A JP2011517383A (ja) | 2008-02-29 | 2009-02-27 | 無線通信システムにおけるack/nack信号送信方法 |
US12/919,954 US20110002309A1 (en) | 2008-02-29 | 2009-02-27 | Method of transmitting ack/nack signal in wireless communication system |
CN2009801129553A CN101999220A (zh) | 2008-02-29 | 2009-02-27 | 在无线通信系统中发射ack/nack信号的方法 |
EP09714279A EP2249506A2 (en) | 2008-02-29 | 2009-02-27 | Method for transmitting ack/nack signal in wireless communication system |
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US3243008P | 2008-02-29 | 2008-02-29 | |
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EP (1) | EP2249506A2 (ko) |
JP (1) | JP2011517383A (ko) |
KR (1) | KR20090093800A (ko) |
CN (1) | CN101999220A (ko) |
WO (1) | WO2009108020A2 (ko) |
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JP2013524690A (ja) * | 2010-04-06 | 2013-06-17 | クゥアルコム・インコーポレイテッド | 遅延した自動再送要求(arq)の肯定応答 |
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JP2013533650A (ja) * | 2010-05-03 | 2013-08-22 | ノキア シーメンス ネットワークス オサケユキチュア | Pucchの空間周波数ブロック符号化 |
CN102948099A (zh) * | 2010-05-03 | 2013-02-27 | 诺基亚西门子通信公司 | 用于物理上行链路控制信道的空间频率分组编码 |
JPWO2013024570A1 (ja) * | 2011-08-12 | 2015-03-05 | パナソニック インテレクチュアル プロパティ コーポレーション オブアメリカPanasonic Intellectual Property Corporation of America | 通信装置及び再送制御方法 |
US9197390B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2015-11-24 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication device, and retransmission control method |
WO2013024570A1 (ja) * | 2011-08-12 | 2013-02-21 | パナソニック株式会社 | 通信装置及び再送制御方法 |
US9509474B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2016-11-29 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US9794042B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2017-10-17 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US10128997B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2018-11-13 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US10484155B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2019-11-19 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US10892869B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2021-01-12 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US11483114B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2022-10-25 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
US11791964B2 (en) | 2011-08-12 | 2023-10-17 | Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation Of America | Communication apparatus and retransmission control method |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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WO2009108020A3 (ko) | 2009-11-26 |
US20110002309A1 (en) | 2011-01-06 |
EP2249506A2 (en) | 2010-11-10 |
CN101999220A (zh) | 2011-03-30 |
JP2011517383A (ja) | 2011-06-02 |
KR20090093800A (ko) | 2009-09-02 |
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