Super-Orthogonal Space-Time Turbo Transmit Diversity for CDMA
Author(s) -
D.J. van Wyk,
L.P. Linde,
P.G.W. van Rooyen
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
eurasip journal on advances in signal processing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.317
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1687-6180
pISSN - 1687-6172
DOI - 10.1155/asp.2005.861
Subject(s) - transmit diversity , computer science , code division multiple access , fading , telecommunications link , electronic engineering , turbo code , antenna diversity , mimo , rayleigh fading , rake receiver , diversity scheme , antenna (radio) , telecommunications , channel (broadcasting) , decoding methods , engineering
Studies have shown that transmit and receive diversity employing a combination of multiple transmit-receive antennas (given ideal channel state information (CSI) and independent fading between antenna pairs) will potentially yield maximum achievable system capacity. In this paper, the concept of a layered super-orthogonal turbo transmit diversity (SOTTD) for downlink direct-sequence code-division multiple-access (CDMA) systems is explored. This open-loop transmit diversity technique improves the downlink performance by using a small number of antenna elements at the base station and a single antenna at the handset. In the proposed technique, low-rate super-orthogonal code-spread CDMA is married with code-division transmit diversity (CDTD). At the mobile receiver, space-time (ST) RAKE CDTD processing is combined with iterative turbo code-spread decoding to yield large ST gains. The performance of the SOTTD system is compared with single- and multiantenna turbo-coded (TC) CDTD systems evaluated over a frequency-selective Rayleigh fading channel. The evaluation is done both by means of analysis and computer simulations. The performance results illustrate the superior performance of SOTTD compared to TC CDTD systems over practically the complete useful capacity range of CDMA. It is shown that the performance degradation characteristic of TC CDTD at low system loads (due to the inherent TC error floor) is alleviated by the SOTTD system
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