4rth Lecture
4rth Lecture
4rth Lecture
where si is the complex symbol associated with the ith subcarrier and φi is the phase offset of
the ith carrier.
In particular, the total required bandwidth for nonoverlapping subchannels is:
where β is the rolloff factor of the pulse shape, Let ε/TN denote the additional bandwidth
required due to time limiting of these pulse shapes.
Multicarrier Modulation Receiver
In this case nearideal (and hence expensive) lowpass filters will be required to maintain the
orthogonality of the subcarriers at the receiver. Perhaps most importantly, this scheme requires N
independent modulators and demodulators, which entails significant expense, size, and power
consumption.
Example
Consider a multicarrier system with a total passband bandwidth of 1 MHz. Suppose the system
operates in a city with channel delay spread Tm = 20 µs. How many subchannels are needed to
obtain approximately flat fading in each subchannel
To ensure flat fading on each subchannel, we take BN = B/N = .1Bc << Bc. Thus, N = B/.1Bc =
1000000/5000 = 200 subchannels are needed to ensure flat fading on each subchannel.
In discrete implementations of multicarrier modulation, N must be a power of 2 for the DFT
(discrete Fourier transform) and IDFT (inverse DFT) operations, in which case N = 256 for this
set of parameter
Multicarrier Modulation with Overlapping Subchannels
We can improve on the spectral efficiency of multicarrier modulation by overlapping the subchannels.
The subcarriers must still be orthogonal so that they can be separated out by the demodulator in the
receiver. The subcarriers {cos(2π(f0 + i/TN)t + φi), i = 0, 1, 2, ...} form a set of (approximately)
orthogonal basis functions on the interval [0, TN ] for any set of subcarrier phase offsets {φi}, since
This implies that the minimum frequency separation required for subcarriers to remain orthogonal
over the symbol interval [0, TN ] is 1/TN .
Multicarrier Modulation with Overlapping Subchannels
Excess bandwidth due to time windowing will increase the subcarrier bandwidth by an additional ε/TN .
However, β and ε do not affect the total system bandwidth resulting from the subchannel overlap except
in the first and last subchannels:
In the prior example TN = .2 ms, N = 128, β = 1, and ε = .1. With overlapping subchannels,
we have: