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Preamble-Based Estimation of Highly Frequency Selective Channels in FBMC/OQAM Systems.

Authors :
Kofidis, Eleftherios
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing. Apr2017, Vol. 65 Issue 7, p1855-1868. 14p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Channel estimation in multicarrier systems employing filter banks with offset quadrature amplitude modulation (FBMC/OQAM) is far less easy compared to orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). Challenges come from the interference effect, inherent in this type of FBMC systems, and the (generally) nonnegligible frequency selectivity of their subchannels, due to the nature of this modulation and the cyclic prefix (CP)-free transmission. Most of the FBMC/OQAM channel estimation methods rely on the assumption of a low frequency selective channel (thus implying (almost) flat subchannels) in order to more easily (i.e., in a manner analogous to CP-OFDM) tackle this problem. However, they perform quite poorly when applied in more demanding propagation conditions. Others, more recent ones, relax the assumption of low frequency selectivity but they either depend on a parametric model for the channel or they concentrate on persubchannel estimation and often require long training sequences. This paper revisits this problem through a formulation that does not rely on any simplifying assumption about the channel. This gives rise to a new estimation method, applicable to channels of any frequency selectivity, which relies on a very short preamble for training. The latter is optimized with respect to the channel estimation mean squared error and is shown to result in a very significant simplification of the estimation procedure. Both full (block-type) and sparse (comb-type) preambles are considered. Applying these results in low-dispersion channels yields, as special cases, existing and new preamble-based estimation schemes for such scenarios. The superiority of the proposed method over classical ones is demonstrated via simulation results for both mildly and highly frequency selective channels. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1053587X
Volume :
65
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124145992
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TSP.2016.2639465