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Design and Analysis of Chirp-Layered Superposition Coding for LoRa

arXiv:2604.0603313.0
Predicted impact top 75% in NI · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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This work addresses spectral efficiency for LoRa communication systems, representing an incremental improvement through a novel superposition method.

The paper tackles the problem of low spectral efficiency in LoRa-based links by proposing a chirp-layered superposition coding scheme, where a high-SF LoRa waveform is superposed on a low-SF signal to convey an additional BPSK stream, resulting in improved spectral efficiency with minimal impact on standard demodulation, as validated by analytical error-rate expressions and Monte Carlo simulations.

This paper investigates the design of chirp-layered superposition coding for LoRa, where an additional waveform is linearly superposed on a standard LoRa transmission with minimal impact on the LoRa demodulation process. We first show that any non-zero superposed signal perturbs the output of the standard dechirp-and-DFT demodulator, and then characterize the class of superposed waveforms that minimize this degradation under a given power budget. In particular, we show that a high spreading factor (high-SF) LoRa waveform superposed on a low-SF signal (e.g., SF12 on SF7) can be designed so that its impact on the standard LoRa demodulation remains small. As a result, within each low-SF symbol interval, the high-SF segment can be treated as a quasi-narrowband carrier that conveys an additional BPSK stream. We derive analytical error-rate expressions for both the low-SF LoRa layer and the superposed high-SF layer, and validate them through Monte Carlo simulations. The proposed chirp-layered superposition coding scheme improves the spectral efficiency of LoRa-based links and uses a relatively simple transceiver architecture.

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