• DocumentCode
    847601
  • Title

    Distributed QAM-Based Space-Time Block Codes for Efficient Cooperative Multiple-Access Communication

  • Author

    Dayal, Pranav ; Varanasi, Mahesh K.

  • Author_Institution
    Qualcomm Inc., San Diego, CA
  • Volume
    54
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2008
  • Firstpage
    4342
  • Lastpage
    4354
  • Abstract
    Distributed space-time block coding schemes based on quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) symbols are introduced that enable users in a wireless multiple-access relay channel to cooperate with each other in order to improve the reliability of their information in a fair, rate-efficient manner. The distributed coding schemes are designed for a system that consists of m users that need to send their information to a common destination. Each user is equipped with only one antenna and a half-duplex transceiver so that it can transmit to the destination or any other user at one time and also receive signals from any other user at another time. The destination is equipped with one or more receive antennas. The goal is to design cooperative schemes which achieve the maximum diversity order (which is equal to the diversity order of the outage probability) while being fair to the users in terms of rate allocation. Two cooperative coding schemes are proposed that meet these requirements-a two-phase cooperative scheme and a single-phase self-information canceling linear (SCL) scheme. The two-phase scheme is of lower decoding complexity and it requires the users to only transmit QAM symbols. The SCL scheme is of higher complexity with the users transmitting linear combination of QAM symbols but it also achieves better performance. Both schemes incorporate new classes of cooperation rules for deciding whether or not a user acts as a relay for another user. The usual "outage-based" cooperation rule, whereby a user cooperates with another user provided the mutual information of the channel between them is greater than the rate, is sufficient for deriving information-theoretic limits but it cannot be used directly for analysis of a particular coding scheme. Even though the decoder used by the destination in the proposed coding schemes assumes that the inter-user communication is always successful, our performance analysis does not make this assumption. In fact, it rigorously accou- - nts for the decoding errors arising from the information exchange between users. Consequently, it sheds light on precisely what cooperation rules (among the class of rules analyzed) lead to maximal diversity.
  • Keywords
    block codes; fading channels; information theory; quadrature amplitude modulation; space-time codes; telecommunication network reliability; wireless channels; cooperative multiple-access communication; decoding complexity; decoding errors; distributed QAM; distributed coding; information theory; quadrature amplitude modulation; rate allocation; reliability; single-phase self-information canceling linear; space-time block codes; two-phase cooperative scheme; wireless multiple-access relay channel; Block codes; Decoding; Information analysis; Mutual information; Performance analysis; Quadrature amplitude modulation; Receiving antennas; Relays; Transceivers; Transmitting antennas; Algebraic number theory; Rayleigh fading; cooperative communication; cooperative diversity; diversity methods; multiple-access; space–time codes; space–time modulation; sphere decoding;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9448
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TIT.2008.928252
  • Filename
    4608965