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Course 11

This document provides an overview of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM). It discusses: 1. The history of multi-carrier modulation techniques and the need for OFDM to address issues with frequency selectivity in transmission channels. 2. The principles of OFDM including parallel transmission over multiple orthogonal carriers using an inverse fast Fourier transform modulator and cyclic prefix to combat inter-symbol interference. 3. Some drawbacks and challenges of OFDM as well as examples of its use in modern communication systems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views12 pages

Course 11

This document provides an overview of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM). It discusses: 1. The history of multi-carrier modulation techniques and the need for OFDM to address issues with frequency selectivity in transmission channels. 2. The principles of OFDM including parallel transmission over multiple orthogonal carriers using an inverse fast Fourier transform modulator and cyclic prefix to combat inter-symbol interference. 3. Some drawbacks and challenges of OFDM as well as examples of its use in modern communication systems.

Uploaded by

mohammed229
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Course 11: OFDM

Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing

Agenda

z History of multi-carrier modulations


z The need for OFDM
z OFDM principles (parallel transmission,
orthogonal carriers, IFFT modulator, cyclic
prefix)
z OFDM: drawbacks and challenges
z OFDM in real life

2
History

z FDM = Frequency Division Multiplexing: a way to share a single


transmission channel between several users
Ch.1 Ch.2 Ch.3 Ch.4 Ch.5 Ch.6 Ch.7 Ch.8 Ch.9 Ch.10

FDM Principle frequency

z Every user has a dedicated bandwidth, guard intervals required


z Rather a multiple access/multiplexing technique than a
modulation
z Used in PSTN, for the multiplexing of telephone calls
3

History of OFDM

The step towards OFDM

z Kineplex receiver
(1958): 20 orthogonal Ch.1 Ch.2 Ch.3 Ch.4 Ch.5 Ch.6 Ch.7 Ch.8 Ch.9 Ch.10

carriers are used to


simultaneously convey
data over a frequency
selective radio channel FDM frequency
z A single transmitter !!!
z Bandwidth saving Ch.1 Ch.3 Ch.5 Ch.7 Ch.9

achieved, but prohibitive Ch.2 Ch.4 Ch.6 Ch.8 Ch.10


Saving of bandwidth
complexity
z The orthogonal carriers 50% bandwidth saving
are very difficult to Orthogonal multicarriers frequency
generate by analog
circuits

4
The need for OFDM

z Most of the transmission channels are frequency-


selective
frequency components from the input signal affected
differently by the channel
meaning that the channels transfer function H(f) is not flat
over the bandwidth
this introduces Inter-Symbol interference (ISI)
ISI can be seen as a time-domain manifestation of the
frequency selectivity
z OFDM is exceptionally robust to IIS
z Well suited to all the dispersive channels, and
especially to the wireless channel

ISI: why so critical?

z In a large number of cases, the


IIS is the most annoying
phenomenon affecting the digital
transmission
z E.g.: in a radio channel, the
receiver gets multiple copies of
the transmitted signal, with
different delays and attenuations
(=> time spreading of the signal)
z Example: single-carrier
transmission at RS=10Mbps
z TS=1/RS=0.1s ISI for 100
z Multipath delay (time spreading): symbols !!!
10s*
6
OFDMs trick

z The symbol duration is increased, to be much longer


than the multi-path delay
z N low-rate parallel flows transmitted
(RP =1/(NTS) the data rate of each flow)
Symbol duration: T=1/NTS
The overall rate is preserved (like in the single carrier case):
RS=NRp
z Reminder: B1/TS
z E.g: if N=1000 and TS=0.1s, T=100 s

The transmitted symbol is ten times


longer than the multipath delay!!!
7

Parallel transmission on multiple


carriers

Longer
S(f)
z
s(t)
TS

symbol 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1

duration on t f

each parallel
B=1/T
s1(t)
S(f) S

carrier t
S1(f)
S2(f)
S3(f)
3TS
z The multiple s2(t)
t f
carriers must s3(t)
B=3/4TS

be t

orthogonal
Principle of the parallel transmission on multiple carriers

8
Comments on the previous slide

z The direct effect of increasing the symbol


duration is that its bandwidth decreases
correspondingly
z In OFDM, data is transmitted through a large
number of narrow-band streams Multiple channels
Single-carrier are narrowband
signal is
broadband

Frequency
9 Frequency

Orthogonal carriers
z The OFDM carriers are orthogonal, their
frequencies being f0, 2f0, 3f0 etc.
( k +1)T
2 1, if m = n
T sin(mf0t ) sin(nf0t ) dt =
0, if m n
(1)
kT

z Complex exponentials of limited duration


used in practice
Their duration equals OFDMs symbol time (T)
z The orthogonality is met if: f0=1/T

10
OFDM: the carriers and their spectra

1/T
1

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2
Amplitudine

-0.2

-0.4

-0.6

-0.8

-1
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3
timp
T
OFDMs carriers spectra.
11 OFDMs orthogonal carriers.

Comments on the previous slide

z In the time domain, every carrier covers an integer number of


cycles (periods) during the symbol time (T)
This is a condition for orthogonality
z The carriers are time-bounded by a rectangular window, giving
the symbol duration
z The sinc shape of the spectrum corresponds to a sine carrier
multiplied by a rectangular time window
z At the central frequency of each carrier, all the other carriers
cross zero
This is the orthogonality frequency view
Carriers must be separated by 1/T on the frequency axis

12
Modulaia multipurttoare cu purttoare sinusoidale

OFDM signal generation


z The signal corresponding to an OFDM symbol:
1 N 1
ss (t ) = An e j ( nt +n ), pentru t [kT ,(k + 1)T ] (2)
N n =0

z If ss(t) is sampled every TS seconds:

1 N 1
ss (kTS ) =
N n =0
An e j n e jnkTS , k = 0,..., N 1 (3)

z Inverse Fast Fourier Transform

1 N 1 n jn 2k / N
g (kTS ) = G e (4)
N n =0 NTS
13

Comments on the previous slide

z The data symbol to be transmitted (from eq. 2) is:X[n] = An ejn


This symbol corresponds to a certain modulation scheme
(e.g. BPSK, QPSK, QAM etc)
z The signal from (2) corresponds to a single OFDM
symbol (the time spanning is T)
z In equations (3) and (4), TS is the sampling time, and
it matches the duration of the serial symbol to be
transmitted
j n 2
z Eq. (3) and (4) are equivalent if: An e n = G( NT ) and = T
s
z The data symbols to be transmitted can be regarded
as complex valued frequency-domain samples
z Eq. 4 is very close to IFFTs formula
14
IFFT modulator
z A discrete version of the OFDM symbol is obtained
by applying IFFT to the data sequence to be
transmitted
IFFT
2
j0n
e N x[0]
2
X[0] X[1] . . . X[N-1] j1 n
e N x[1]

x [n ] =
N 1
X [k ] e
jk
2
N ,
n
(1.5)

k =0 2
j ( N 1) n x[N-1]
n = 0,..., N 1 e N

15

Comments on the previous slide

z FFT is a fast algorithm for the DFT implementation


z The orthogonal carriers are the complex 2
jk n
e N
exponentials
z Usage of IFFT cancels the need for analog
oscillators generating the orthogonal carriers
z N is the total number of (multiple) carriers used in
transmission
z Demodulator uses the direct transform (FFT)

OFDM signal is generated in the


16 baseband by signal processing only!!!
Cyclic prefix: why?

z If the channel is not ideal (is time-dispersive), the


successive OFDM blocks will interfere
z This happens because each symbol is dispersed in time
by the channel (see silde 6)
a)

Symbol i-1 Symbol i Symbol i+1 Channel

b)

i-1 i i+1

Interference Interference

The transmission of several OFDM symbol and their interference to the


receiver

z Inter-Block Interference (IBI) arises


Sometimes referred to as Inter-(OFDM)Symbol Interference
17

Modulaia multipurttoare cu purttoare sinusoidale

OFDMs cyclic prefix


z Sometimes referred to as guard time
z Cancels IBI
z Simplifies equalization
z Eases synchronization (a signal is always transmitted)
z Cyclic Prefix is removed by the demodulator

Symbol i Symbol i+1

Simbol i Simbol i+1

Symbol i Symbol i+1


Symbol i Symbol i+1
18
Comments on the cyclic prefix
z IBI cancellation
Occurs only if the CP is longer than the multipath delay
Longer CP duration means higher protection against ISI, but
smaller efficiency
z Synchronization is simpler if a signal is always transmitted
E.g. a peak in the autocorrelation of the OFDM symbol could
indicate the OFDM symbol start
z Equalization is simpler, because the linear convolution
(x[n]*h[n]) is transformed into a periodic one
This allows to use a very simple, one-tap, frequency domain
equalizer
Every received sample R[k], must be divided by H[k], the channels
response at the k-th frequency line

19

The transmitter
X0,k x0,k
serial-to- X1,k IDFT x1,k parallel-
dn parallel to-serial xn
(IFFT)
N data
symbols: XN,k xN,k
Base-band
(in frequency- signal
domain) (time-domain)
Xi,k z k is the index of the OFDM
Im symbol
z The base-band signal is
Re converted to an analog signal,
and modulates a high-frequency
carrier before being transmitted
z N is a power of 2 (256, 512 etc)
20
OFDM Block Diagram

I/Q I/Q
Channel Symbol OFDM Guard
Transmitter coding / mapping modulation interval
interleaving (modulation) (IFFT)

OFDM s pectrum for N = 128, N = 12, N = 24, overs am pling = 1


0110 010101001 FFT w in guard

power s pectrum m agnitude [dB ]


10
N symbols
0

-10
1 OFDM symbol
-20
Receiver -30

-40
FFT-part
-50
Decoding / symbol de- -60 -40OFDM -20 0 Guard
20 40 60
deinter- mapping demod. f [M Hz ] interval
tim e dom ain signal (baseband)
leaving (detection)0.2 (FFT) removal
Channel 0.1 I/Q I/Q
impulse est.
Channel response: Time sync. time
0

-0.1
Introductionim aginary
real
-0 2

OFDM: drawbacks and challenges

z High sensitivity to time and frequency


synchronization errors
The channel attacks the carriers orthogonality
z High value of Peak-to-Average-Power Ratio
(PAPR) (highly variable envelope)
z Overhead due to CP
z Insufficient out-of-band attenuation

22
OFDM in real world

z Most of the wireless transmission standards


WiMAX (IEEE 802.16), WiFi (IEEE 802.11), LTE
(3GPP release 8), DAVB
Proprietary solutions: Flash OFDM (Flarion)
z Wired broadband access
xDSL
z Data transmission through power line (PLC =
Power Line Communications)

23

Acknowledgement

Some of the pictures from this slide are


reproduced from the course slides published
on-line by Klaus Witrisal (Signal Processing
and Speech Communication Lab Technical
University Graz, Austria). The title of his
presentation is
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
(OFDM): Concept and System-Modeling

24

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