• DocumentCode
    1525729
  • Title

    Iterative multiuser detection for turbo-coded FHMA communications

  • Author

    Liang, Paul C P ; Stark, Wayne E.

  • Author_Institution
    Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
  • Volume
    19
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    9/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    1810
  • Lastpage
    1819
  • Abstract
    An iterative receiver structure Is proposed for turbo-coded frequency-hop multiple access (FHMA) systems. In FHMA systems, the adjacent channel interference (ACI) is the major contributor of multiple access interference (MAI) if orthogonal hopping patterns are used. The ACI is a function of the tone spacings of the adjacent subchannels and the rolloff factor of the pulse-shaping filter. The calculation of the ACI for a square-root raised-cosine pulse-shaping filter in an FHMA system is presented in this paper. In addition, a low complexity iterative multiuser detector is developed to mitigate the degradation caused by ACI in the FHMA systems. The iterative receiver structure is based on a modified turbo decoding algorithm which makes use of the a posteriori log-likelihood ratio (LLR) information of the systematic bits to obtain the a posteriori information of the turbo-encoded parity bits. Iterations of the receiver/decoder are used as the mechanism to estimate and mitigate the MAI in the FHMA system. The properties of both soft and hard interference suppressors based on the modified turbo decoding algorithm are examined and an efficient recursive implementation is derived. Compared to maximum-likelihood multiuser detection, the proposed system is more practical and its complexity is only a linear function of the number of users. Simulation results show that the proposed iterative receiver structure offers significant performance gain in bandwidth efficiency and the required signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for a target bit-error rate (BER) over the noniterative receiver structure. Moreover, the single user performance can be achieved when imperfect power control exists
  • Keywords
    adjacent channel interference; concatenated codes; convolutional codes; data communication; decoding; error statistics; frequency hop communication; interference suppression; maximum likelihood detection; multi-access systems; multiuser channels; packet radio networks; pulse shaping; radio receivers; signal detection; turbo codes; BER; SNR; a posteriori log-likelihood ratio; adjacent channel interference; bandwidth efficiency; bit-error rate; concatenated codes; efficient recursive implementation; frequency-hop multiple access; hard interference suppressor; imperfect power control; iterative multiuser detection; iterative receiver; iterative receiver structure; linear function; low complexity iterative multiuser detector; maximum-likelihood multiuser detection; modified turbo decoding algorithm; multiple access interference; noniterative receiver structure; orthogonal hopping patterns; packet-oriented data communications; pulse-shaping filter; receiver/decoder; recursive systematic convolutional codes; rolloff factor; signal-to-noise ratio; simulation results; single user performance; soft interference suppressor; square-root raised-cosine pulse-shaping filter; tone spacings; turbo-coded FHMA communications; turbo-encoded parity bits; Bit error rate; Filters; Frequency; Interchannel interference; Iterative algorithms; Iterative decoding; Maximum likelihood decoding; Multiple access interference; Multiuser detection; Turbo codes;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8716
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/49.947045
  • Filename
    947045