DocumentCode
1653244
Title
Reducing dynamic power consumption in next generation DS-CDMA mobile communication receivers
Author
Chandrasekhar, Vikram ; Livingston, Frank ; Cavallaro, Joseph
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
fYear
2003
Firstpage
260
Lastpage
270
Abstract
Reduction of the power consumption in portable wireless receivers is an important consideration for next-generation cellular systems specified by standards such as the UMTS, IMT2000. We explore the architectural design-space and methodologies for reducing the dynamic power dissipation in the direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) downlink RAKE receiver. Starting with a reference implementation of the DS-CDMA RAKE receiver, we demonstrate design methodologies for achieving significant power reduction, while highlighting the corresponding performance trade-offs. At the algorithm level, we investigate the tradeoffs of reduced precision and arithmetic complexity on the receiver performance. We then present two architectures for implementing the reference and reduced complexity receivers, and analyze these architectures with respect to their dynamic power dissipation. Our findings report that reduction in precision from a 16 bit to a 10 bit data-path is found to yield significant power savings of 25.6% in the reference RAKE receiver architecture, with a performance loss of less than 1 dB. Further, a power reduction of up to 24.65% is achieved in a 16 bit data-path for the reduced complexity RAKE receiver compared to the reference architecture, with a performance loss of less than 2 dB. Although there is a tradeoff in performance, adaptive power saving is very important for mobile wireless terminals. The combined effect of reduced precision and complexity reduction leads to a 37.44% savings in baseband processing power.
Keywords
code division multiple access; computational complexity; mobile communication; power consumption; radio receivers; DS-CDMA RAKE receiver architecture; adaptive power saving; arithmetic complexity; direct sequence code division multiple access; dynamic power consumption reduction; dynamic power dissipation; next generation DS-CDMA mobile communication receivers; next-generation cellular system; portable wireless receiver; 3G mobile communication; Design methodology; Energy consumption; Fading; Mobile communication; Multiaccess communication; Multipath channels; Performance loss; Power dissipation; RAKE receivers;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Application-Specific Systems, Architectures, and Processors, 2003. Proceedings. IEEE International Conference on
ISSN
2160-0511
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1992-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ASAP.2003.1212850
Filename
1212850
Link To Document