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Journal ArticleDOI

Towards Systems Beyond 3G Based on Adaptive OFDMA Transmission

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TLDR
This work provides a systematic overview of the design problems, such as the dimensioning of the allocated time-frequency resources, the influence of duplexing schemes, adaptation control issues for downlinks and uplinks, timing issues, and their relation to the required performance of channel predictors.
Abstract
High data rates, high spectral efficiency, flexibility, and low delays over the air interface will be important features in next-generation wireless systems. The overall challenge will be packet scheduling and adaptive radio transmission for multiple users, via multiple antennas and over frequency-selective wideband channels. This problem needs to be structured to obtain feasible solutions. The basic simplifying assumptions used here are clustering of antennas into cells, orthogonal transmission by use of cyclic-prefix orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) and a time-scale separation view of the total link adaptation, scheduling and intercell coordination problem. Based on these assumptions, we survey techniques that adapt the transmission to the temporal, frequency, and spatial channel properties. We provide a systematic overview of the design problems, such as the dimensioning of the allocated time-frequency resources, the influence of duplexing schemes, adaptation control issues for downlinks and uplinks, timing issues, and their relation to the required performance of channel predictors. Specific design choices are illustrated by recent research within the Swedish Wireless IP program and the EU IST-WINNER project. The presented results indicate that high-performance adaptive OFDM transmission systems are indeed feasible, also for challenging scenarios that involve vehicular velocities, high carrier frequencies, and high bandwidths.

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Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of limited feedback in wireless communication systems

TL;DR: This tutorial provides a broad look at the field of limited feedback wireless communications, and reviews work in systems using various combinations of single antenna, multiple antenna, narrowband, broadband, single-user, and multiuser technology.

IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks Part 16: Air Interface for Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Systems Draft Amendment: Management Information Base Extensions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide updates to IEEE 802.16's MIB for the MAC, PHY and asso-ciated management procedures in order to accommodate recent extensions to the standard.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single Carrier Modulation With Nonlinear Frequency Domain Equalization: An Idea Whose Time Has Come—Again

TL;DR: This tutorial paper aims at providing an overview of nonlinear equalization methods as a key ingredient in receivers of SCM for wideband transmission, and reviews both hybrid (with filters implemented both in time and frequency domain) and all-frequency-domain iterative structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radio Resource Allocation Algorithms for the Downlink of Multiuser OFDM Communication Systems

TL;DR: No matter which optimization method is used, in both classes, the overall performance is improved with the increase in the number of users, due to multiuser diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Robust Transmit Power Control for Cognitive Radio

TL;DR: The focus of this paper is the transmit-power control in cognitive radio networks, considering a noncooperative framework, and tools from control theory are used to study both the equilibrium and transient behaviors of the network under dynamically varying conditions.
References
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Book

Wireless Communications

Proceedings Article

Wireless communications

TL;DR: This book aims to provide a chronology of key events and individuals involved in the development of microelectronics technology over the past 50 years and some of the individuals involved have been identified and named.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multicarrier modulation for data transmission: an idea whose time has come

TL;DR: The general technique of parallel transmission on many carriers, called multicarrier modulation (MCM), is explained, and the performance that can be achieved on an undistorted channel and algorithms for achieving that performance are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A generalized processor sharing approach to flow control in integrated services networks: the multiple node case

TL;DR: Worst-case bounds on delay and backlog are derived for leaky bucket constrained sessions in arbitrary topology networks of generalized processor sharing (GPS) servers and the effectiveness of PGPS in guaranteeing worst-case session delay is demonstrated under certain assignments.