Title :
Multiple Access Demodulation in the Lifted Signal Graph With Spatial Coupling
Author :
Schlegel, Christian ; Truhachev, Dmitry
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Dalhousie Univ., Halifax, NS, Canada
Abstract :
Demodulation in a random multiple access channel is considered where the signals are chosen uniformly randomly with unit energy. It is shown that by lifting (replicating) the graph of this system and randomizing the graph connections, a simple iterative cancellation demodulator achieves the same performance as an optimal symbol-by-symbol detector of the original system. The iterative detector has a complexity that is linear in the number of users, while the direct optimal approach is known to be NP-hard. However, the maximal system load of this lifted graph is limited to α <; 2.07, even for large signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs)-the system is interference limited. Spatial coupling between subsequent lifted graphs is introduced, and anchoring the initial graphs, the achievable system load α can go to infinity as the SNR goes to infinity. Our results apply to several well-documented system proposals, such as interleave-division multiple access, partitioned spreading, and certain forms of multiple-input multiple-output communications.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; computational complexity; demodulation; graph theory; iterative methods; multi-access systems; optimisation; radiofrequency interference; random processes; signal detection; wireless channels; NP-hard problem; SNR; direct optimal approach; interference limited system; interleave-division multiple access; iterative detector; lifted signal graph connection; multiple-input multiple-output communication; optimal symbol-by-symbol detector; partitioned spreading; random multiple access channel demodulation; signal-to-noise ratio; simple iterative cancellation demodulator; spatial coupling; Complexity theory; Demodulation; Detectors; Iterative decoding; Iterative methods; Multiaccess communication; Signal to noise ratio; Iterative decoding; optimal joint detection; random signaling; spatial coupling;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2012.2232965