DocumentCode
771819
Title
Frequency-Selective Fading Effects in Digital Mobile Radio with Diversity Combining
Author
Glance, Bernard ; Greenstein, Larry J.
Author_Institution
AT&T Bell Labs.,Crawford Hill Lab., Holmdel, NJ, USA
Volume
31
Issue
9
fYear
1983
fDate
9/1/1983 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1085
Lastpage
1094
Abstract
we analyze the effects of frequency-selective fading in a cellular mobile radio system that uses 1) phase-shift keying (PSK) with cosine rolloff pulses, and 2) space diversity with maximal-radio combining. The distorting phenomena with which we deal are multipath fading (which produces the frequency selectivity), shadow fading, and cochannel interference. The relevant quality measure is defined to be the bit error rate averaged over the multipath fading, denoted by (BER). The relevant system performance characteristic is defined to be the probability distribution for (BER), taken over the ensemble of shadow fadings and locations of the desired and interfering mobiles. To obtain numerical results, we use a combination of analysis and Monte Carlo simulation, invoke widely accepted models for the multipath and shadow fadings, and assume a cellular system with seven channel sets and centrally located base stations. The outcome is a set of performance curves that reveal the influences of various system and channel parameters. These include: the number of modulation levels (two or four), the diversity order, the shape of the multipath delay spectrum, and the standard deviation (or delay spread, τ0 ) of the multipath delay spectrum. Practical factors accounted for in these assessments include fading- and interference-related timing recovery errors and combiner imperfections. Our results highlight the importance of the ratio
, where
is the digital symbol period. They show that the delay spectrum shape is of no importance for
, but can have a profound influence for
. We also find that using 4-PSK leads to better detection performance, in certain cases, than using 2-PSK.
, where
is the digital symbol period. They show that the delay spectrum shape is of no importance for
, but can have a profound influence for
. We also find that using 4-PSK leads to better detection performance, in certain cases, than using 2-PSK.Keywords
Communication systems performance; Land mobile radio diversity systems; Phase-shift keying; Bit error rate; Delay; Distortion measurement; Diversity reception; Fading; Frequency diversity; Interchannel interference; Land mobile radio; Phase shift keying; Shape;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0090-6778
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCOM.1983.1095939
Filename
1095939
Link To Document