Author_Institution :
CEDRIC Lab., CNAM, Paris, France
Abstract :
Orthogonal space-time block codes (STBC), and the Alamouti scheme in particular, are of particular interest in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems since they achieve full spatial diversity over fading channels and are decoded from linear processing at the receiver. Nevertheless, due to the expensive spectral resource, increasing network capacity requires the development of interference cancellation (IC) techniques allowing several users to share the same spectral resources without impacting the transmission quality. In this context several IC schemes have been developed during this last decade, where each user is equipped with multiple antennas and employs STBC at transmission. However, these IC techniques require multiple antennas at reception, which remains a challenge at the handset level due to cost and size limitations. For this reason, low complexity single antenna interference cancellation (SAIC) techniques, currently operational in GSM handsets, have been developed recently for single antenna users using real-valued modulations or complex filtering of real-valued modulations, by using a widely linear (WL) filtering at reception. Extension to multiple antennas at reception is called multiple antenna interference cancellation (MAIC) technique. The purpose of this paper is to extend the SAIC/MAIC technology to users using both real-valued constellations, such as amplitude shift keying (ASK) constellations, and the Alamouti scheme at transmission. A WL minimum mean square error (MMSE) receiver, completely new for IC purposes in the context of radio communications systems using the Alamouti scheme, is proposed and analyzed. This receiver, which corresponds to the maximum likelihood (ML) receiver for synchronous intranetwork interferences, is able to separate up to 2 N Alamouti users from N antennas at reception, hence SAIC capability for N = 1.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; antennas; fading channels; interference (signal); least mean squares methods; maximum likelihood estimation; radio receivers; space-time block codes; Alamouti-SAIC/MAIC concept; GSM handsets; MIMO systems; MMSE receiver; fading channels; maximum likelihood receiver; minimum mean square error; multiple antenna interference cancellation; multiple-input multiple-output systems; orthogonal space-time block codes; real-valued constellations; single antenna interference cancellation; widely linear Alamouti receiver; widely linear filtering; Amplitude shift keying; Integrated circuits; MIMO; OFDM; Receiving antennas; Transmitting antennas; Alamouti scheme; Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO); amplitude shift keying (ASK); interferences; maximum likelihood; minimum mean square error (MMSE); multiple antenna interference cancellation (MAIC); noncircular; real-valued; single antenna interference cancellation (SAIC); spatio-temporal block coding (STBC); widely linear;