Title :
Performance enhancement through joint detection of cochannel signals using diversity arrays
Author :
Grant, Stephen J. ; Cavers, James K.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Eng. Sci., Simon Fraser Univ., Burnaby, BC, Canada
fDate :
8/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Joint detection based on exploiting differences among the channels employed by several users allows a receiver to distinguish cochannel signals without reliance on spectrum spreading. This paper makes a number of new contributions to the topic; it provides an analytical expression for the union bound on the average symbol-error rate for an arbitrary number of users and diversity antennas in a fading environment, for both perfect and imperfect channel state information (CSI), and it compares the performance of joint detection with diversity antennas against classical minimum-mean-square-error (MMSE) combining. The performance is remarkable. With accurate CSI, several users can experience good performance with only a single antenna; moreover, for perfect CSI, only a 2-dB penalty is incurred for each additional user. With several antennas, many more users than the number of antennas may be supported with a slow degradation in performance for each additional user. Furthermore, high accuracy is not required from the channel estimation process. In all cases, the performance of joint detection exceeds that of MMSE combining by orders of magnitude
Keywords :
antenna arrays; array signal processing; cochannel interference; direction-of-arrival estimation; diversity reception; error statistics; fading; interference suppression; maximum likelihood detection; radio receivers; BER; MMSE combining; PSK signals; average symbol-error rate; bit-error rate; channel estimation; cochannel interference; cochannel signals; diversity antennas; diversity arrays; fading environment; imperfect channel state information; maximum-likelihood joint detection receiver; minimum-mean-square-error combining; perfect channel state information; performance enhancement; union bound; Channel estimation; Channel state information; Computational complexity; Diversity reception; Fading; Frequency; Information analysis; Interchannel interference; Multiaccess communication; Signal detection;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on