Title :
On chip-matched filtering and discrete sufficient statistics for asynchronous band-limited CDMA systems
Author :
Mantravadi, Ashok ; Veeravalli, Venugopal V.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. Eng., Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY, USA
fDate :
8/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The problem of generating discrete sufficient statistics for signal processing in code-division multiple-access (CDMA) systems is considered in the context of underlying channel bandwidth restrictions. Discretization schemes are identified for (approximately) bandlimited CDMA systems, and a notion of approximate sufficiency is introduced. The role of chip-matched filtering in generating accurate discrete statistics is explored. The impact of approximate sufficiency on performance is studied in three cases: conventional matched filter (MF) detection, minimum mean-squared-error detection, and delay acquisition. It is shown that for waveforms limited to a chip interval, sampling the chip-MF output at the chip rate can lead to a significant degradation in performance. Then, with equal bandwidth and equal rate constraints, the performance with different chip waveforms is compared. In all three cases above, it is demonstrated that multichip waveforms that approximate Nyquist sine pulses achieve the best performance, with the commonly used rectangular chip pulse being severely inferior. However, the results also indicate that it is possible to approach the best performance with well-designed chip waveforms limited to a chip interval, as long as the chip-MF output is sampled above the Nyquist rate
Keywords :
bandlimited communication; code division multiple access; least mean squares methods; matched filters; signal detection; signal sampling; statistical analysis; Nyquist sine pulses; approximate sufficiency; asynchronous band-limited CDMA systems; chip waveforms; chip-matched filtering; code-division multiple-access; delay acquisition; discrete sufficient statistics; discretization; matched filter detection; minimum mean-squared-error detection; performance; sampling; signal processing; underlying channel bandwidth restrictions; Bandwidth; Degradation; Delay; Filtering; Matched filters; Multiaccess communication; Sampling methods; Signal generators; Signal processing; Statistics;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on