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Cross layer hybrid ARQ2 : cooperative diversity.

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Date

2008

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Abstract

Cooperative communication allows for single users in multi user wireless network to share their antennas and achieve virtual antenna transmitters, which leads to transmit diversity. Coded Cooperation introduced channel coding into cooperative diversity over traditional pioneer cooperative diversity methods which were based on a user repeating its partner's transmitted signals in a multi-path fading channel environment in order to improve Bit Error Rate (BER) performance.. In this dissertation the Coded Cooperation is simulated and the analytical bounds are evaluated in order to understand basic cooperation principles. This is done using Rate Compatible Punctured Convolutional Codes (RCPC). Based on the understanding of these principles a new protocol called Cross Layer Hybrid Automatic Repeat reQuest (ARQ) 2 Cooperative Diversity is developed to allow for improvements in BER and throughput. In Cross Layer Hybrid ARQ 2 Cooperation, Hybrid ARQ 2 (at the data-link layer) is combined with cooperative diversity (at the physical layer), in a cross layer design manner, to improve the BER and throughput based on feedback from the base station on the user's initial transmissions. This is done using RCPC codes which partitions a full rate code into sub code words that are transmitted as incremental packets in an effort to only transmit as much parity as is required by the base station for correct decoding of a user's information bits. This allows for cooperation to occur only when it is necessary unlike with the conventional Coded Cooperation, where bandwidth is wasted cooperating when the base station has already decoded a user's information bits. The performance of Cross Layer Hybrid ARQ 2 Cooperation is quantised by BER and throughput. BER bounds of Cross Layer Hybrid ARQ 2 Cooperation are derived based on the Pairwise Error Probability (PEP) of the uplink channels as well as the different inter-user and base station Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) states. The BER is also simulated and confirmed using the derived bound. The throughput of this new scheme is also simulated and confirmed via analytical throughput bounds. This scheme maintains BER and throughput gains over the conventional Coded Cooperation even under the worst inter-user channel conditions.

Description

Thesis (M.Sc.Eng.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.

Keywords

Wireless networks., Wireless communication systems., Theses--Electronic engineering.

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