ITSPITMar 13

Turbo Receiver Design for Differentially Encoded PSK in Bursty Impulsive Noise Channels

arXiv:2412.0791127.1
Predicted impact top 49% in IT · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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This work addresses performance degradation in wireless communication systems due to impulsive noise, offering incremental improvements for specific receiver designs.

The paper tackles the challenge of impulsive noise in wireless receivers by proposing an optimal turbo-differentially encoded PSK receiver design, achieving a 4.5 dB gain over conventional methods and closing the gap to theoretical bounds by about 1 dB.

It has been recognized that the impulsive noise (IN) generated by power devices poses significant challenges to wireless receivers. In this paper, we comprehensively assess the achievable information rate (AIR) for the well-established Markov-Middleton IN model with a phase-shift keying (PSK) input sequence across various channel conditions, including matched and mismatched decoding scenarios. Upon determining information-theoretic bounds, we propose an optimal turbo-differentially encoded (DE)-PSK-IN receiver design based on a commonly used commercial transmission setup consisting of a convolutional encoder, bit-level interleaver, and a DE-PSK symbol mapper. We show that by incorporating the differential decoder into the maximum a-posteriori-based (MAP) IN detector, we can significantly enhance the receiver performance with a 4.5 dB gain compared to the conventional MAP-based turbo-PSK-IN receiver and a gap of around 1 dB to the theoretical bounds. We also propose a suboptimal separate receiver design that can be implemented with half the complexity of the joint design and near-optimal performance. We have evaluated the performance of the proposed receiver designs through extensive simulations, demonstrating their effectiveness in real-world scenarios with limited interleaver depth and mismatched state implementation.

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