DocumentCode
1846880
Title
Adaptive beamforming techniques for a frequency-hopped QAM receiver
Author
Lee, Jind-Yeh ; Samueli, Henry
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume
3
fYear
1996
fDate
28 Apr-1 May 1996
Firstpage
1700
Abstract
Adaptive beamforming (ABF) provides wireless communication systems with larger service capacity and higher link quality through frequency reuse and co-channel-interference rejection. The issues of realizing ABF on a frequency-hopped (FH) QAM portable receiver in PCS applications are investigated. Considerations include the complexity of the receiver hardware, processing speed and power consumption for VLSI implementation. A possible single-chip structure with the capability of real-time tracking is selected from several structures. Also, we propose that by adding memory in the beamformer to store and restore the converged beamforming weights in each FH period, the system is able to improve the system performance and reduce the hardware complexity. The simulation results show that in an environment which contains 12 interferers with a signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) of -14.31 dB, the proposed system can produce an output of SINR of 20.75 dB with 5 array elements. It is concluded that the combined techniques of ABF and FH can provide effective jamming or co-channel-interference protection in wireless communications
Keywords
VLSI; array signal processing; cochannel interference; frequency hop communication; interference suppression; jamming; land mobile radio; mobile radio; personal communication networks; quadrature amplitude modulation; radio receivers; radiofrequency interference; FH QAM portable receiver; PCS applications; SINR; VLSI implementation; adaptive beamforming; cochannel interference rejection; converged beamforming weights; frequency hopped QAM receiver; frequency reuse; jamming; link quality; memory; power consumption; processing speed; real time tracking; receiver hardware complexity; service capacity; signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio; simulation results; single-chip structure; system performance; wireless communication systems; Array signal processing; Energy consumption; Frequency; Hardware; Personal communication networks; Power system restoration; Quadrature amplitude modulation; Signal to noise ratio; Very large scale integration; Wireless communication;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Vehicular Technology Conference, 1996. Mobile Technology for the Human Race., IEEE 46th
Conference_Location
Atlanta, GA
ISSN
1090-3038
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3157-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VETEC.1996.504048
Filename
504048
Link To Document