Full length article: Orthogonal bi-pulse UWB: Timing and (de)modulation

  • Authors:
  • Mourad Ouertani;Huilin Xu;Hichem Besbes;Liuqing Yang;Ammar BouallèGue

  • Affiliations:
  • Institut Supérieur d'Informatique, ISI, Tunisia and Laboratoire SysCom, Ecole Nationale d'Ingénieurs de Tunis, ENIT, Tunisia;Department of Electrical & Computer Engr., University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32601, United States;Research Unit TECHTRA, Ecole Supérieure des Communications de Tunis, Sup'Com, Tunisia;Department of Electrical & Computer Engr., University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32601, United States;Laboratoire SysCom, Ecole Nationale d'Ingénieurs de Tunis, ENIT, Tunisia

  • Venue:
  • Physical Communication
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

In this paper, we propose a novel orthogonal bi-pulse ultra-wideband (UWB) system, which uses an even pulse and an odd pulse to convey information symbols in an alternating manner. Due to the orthogonality of these pulses, their corresponding received waveforms remain orthogonal after propagating through multipath channels. Then we consider two major challenges in the realization of our proposed UWB system: timing synchronization and symbol demodulation. In particular, the idea of timing with dirty template (TDT) in [L. Yang, G.B. Giannakis, Timing Ultra-Wideband signals with dirty templates, IEEE Trans. on Commun. 53 (11) (2005) 1952-1963] is employed for timing synchronization and the noncoherent scheme in [L. Yang, G.B. Giannakis, A. Swami, Noncoherent Ultra-Wideband (de)modulation, IEEE Trans. Commun. 55 (4) (2007) 810-819] is used to bypass channel estimation. Both of these techniques are characterized by correlating adjacent waveform segments. In the implementation of these techniques, we will gradually reveal the advantages of our proposed system. The correlation of adjacent waveform segments only contains the information of a single symbol. This enables a significant enhancement of the synchronization speed of TDT when no training sequence is transmitted. For the same reason, our demodulation approach completely mitigates the inter-symbol interference (ISI) in the second paper referred to, above, and entails a simple demodulator even in the presence of unknown timing errors. Simulations are also carried out to corroborate our analysis.