Orthogonal

Frequency Division Multiplexing

Term Paper submitted by

Hrushikesh Vasuki in November, 2005,

In partial fulfillment of the requirements for completion of the course, ESE 505 (Traffic Performance Analysis of Mobile, Wireless &

Personal Communication Systems),

Offered by the Department of Electrical Engineering at the

State University of New York, Stony Brook

Declaration

I declare that this term paper, titled, Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing, is my own work and has not been submitted in any other form for another degree or diploma at any university or other institution for tertiary education. Information derived from published or unpublished work of others has been acknowledged in the text and a list of references is given.

Hrushikesh Vasuki 11/30/1999

Contents

1.  Introduction...... … 2

  1. OFDM – Basic Principles...... … 3
  2. Other OFDM Systems...... 10.
  3. Benefits of OFDM and Performance Criteria...... 12
  4. Digital Audio Broadcasting – An Application of OFDM ...... …... 17
  5. Other Developments ...... …....20
  6. References ...... …... 21
Introduction

Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a multicarrier transmission technique used in applications catering to both Wired and Wireless Communications. However, in the wired case, the usage of the term Discrete Multi-Tone is more appropriate. The OFDM technique divides the frequency spectrum available into many closely spaced carriers, which are individually modulated by low-rate data streams. In this sense, OFDM is similar to FDMA (The bandwidth is divided into many channels, so that, in a multi-user environment, each channel is allocated to a user). However, the difference lies in the fact that the carriers chosen in OFDM are much more closely spaced than in FDMA (1kHz in OFDM as opposed to about 30kHz in FDMA), thereby increasing its spectral usage efficiency. The orthogonality between the carriers is what facilitates the close spacing of carriers.

The orthogonality principle essentially implies that each carrier has a null at the center frequency of each of the other carriers in the system while also maintaining an integer number of cycles over a symbol period.

The motivation for using OFDM techniques over TDMA techniques is twofold. First, TDMA limits the total number of users that can be sent efficiently over a channel. In addition, since the symbol rate of each channel is high, problems with multipath delay spread invariably occur. In stark contrast, each carrier in an OFDM signal has a very narrow bandwidth (i.e. 1 kHz); thus the resulting symbol rate is low. This results in the signal having a high degree of tolerance to multipath delay spread, as the delay spread must be very log to cause significant inter-symbol interference (e.g. > 500usec).

OFDM – Basic Principles

Orthogonality


To generate OFDM signals successfully the relationship between all carriers must be carefully controlled in order to maintain orthogonality. Shown below is the frequency spectrum depicting the various carriers/channels (used interchangeably). Rectangular windowing of transmitted pulses results in a sinc-shaped frequency response for each channel. As can be seen, whenever any particular carrier frequency attains peak amplitude, the remaining carriers have a null point.

Fig. Frequency spectrum showing N channels for an OFDM system with N carriers over a bandwidth W

OFDM Generation

The spectrum required is first chosen based on the input data and the modulation scheme used (typically Differential BPSK, QPSK or QAM). Data to be transmitted is assigned to each carrier that is to be produced. Amplitudes and phases of the carriers are calculated based on the chosen scheme of modulation. The required spectrum is then converted back to its time domain signal by employing Inverse Fourier Transform algorithms like the Inverse Fast Fourier Transform (Cooley-Tukey Algorithm)

The next step is that of adding a guard period to the symbol to be transmitted. This ensures robustness against multipath delay spread. This step can be achieved by having a long symbol period, which minimizes intersymbol interference. The level of robustness can be further increased by the addition of a guard period between successive symbols. The most popular and effective method of doing this, is the addition of a cyclic prefix. A cyclic prefix is a copy of the last part of the OFDM symbol, which is prepended to the transmitted symbol. This makes the transmitted signal periodic and does not affect the orthogonality of the carriers. Further, this also plays a decisive role in avoiding inter-symbol and inter-carrier interference.

Fig. The Cyclic Prefix is a copy of the last part of the OFDM signal

A cyclic prefix does however introduce a loss in the signal-to-noise ratio, but this effect is usually negligible as compared to its effect on mitigating interference.

A schematic diagram is shown next and a mathematical model of a base band OFDM system is now developed.

Continuous-Time Model

Fig. Base band OFDM system Model

Since the first OFDM systems did not use digital modulation and demodulation schemes, the continuous-time OFDM model shown above can be considered as the ideal OFDM system. To build the mathematical model, we start with the waveforms used in the transmitter and proceed all the way to the receiver.

Transmitter

We assume an OFDM system with N carriers, a bandwidth of W Hz and a symbol length of T seconds, of which Tcp seconds is the length of the cyclic prefix. The transmitter uses the following waveforms:

= 0 otherwise ……….Eqn. 1

where T = (N/W) + Tcp .

A note must also be made of the fact that fk(t) = fk(t + N/W) when t is within the cyclic prefix. Since fk(t) is a rectangular pulse modulated on the carrier frequency kW/N, the common interpretation of OFDM is that it uses N carriers, each carrying a low bit-rate. The waveforms fk(t) are used in the modulation and the transmitted base band signal for OFDM symbol number l is

……..Eqn. 2

where x0,l, x1,l……,xN-1,l are complex numbers obtained from a set of signal constellation points. When an infinite sequence of OFDM symbols is transmitted, the output from the transmitter is a juxtaposition of individual OFDM symbols:

………Eqn.3

The Physical Channel

An important assumption is that the effect of the impulse response of the physical channel (which may or may not be time invariant), is restricted to the time period

t Î [0,Tcp], i.e. to the length of the cyclic prefix. The received signal then becomes :


...... Eqn. 4

where n(t) is additive, white and complex Gaussian noise.

We now move on to the receiver.

Receiver

A filter bank, matched to the last part [Tcp,T] of the transmitter waveforms Φk(t), i.e. ,

...... Eqn. 5

= 0 otherwise

This operation effectively removes the cyclic prefix in the receiver stage of the system. All the ISI is contained in the Cyclic Prefix and does not manifest itself in the sampled output obtained at the receiver filterbank. We can now remove the time index, l, when calculating the sampled output at the kth matched filter.

...... Eqn.6

Considering the channel to be fixed over the OFDM symbol interval and denoting it by g(τ), Eqn.6, after simplification gives us the following result:

...... Eqn.7

where G(f) is the Fourier transform of g(τ) and n’k is additive white Gaussian noise.

We move on next to the Discrete –Time Model for the OFDM system

Discrete-Time Model

The modulation and demodulation (with Φk(t) & ψk(t)) in the continuous-time model are replaced by the Inverse Discrete Fourier Transform and the Discrete Fourier transform respectively while the channel is a Discrete-Time convolution. The Cyclic Prefix operates in the same way in this system and calculations are essentially performed in the same fashion. As in all other cases, the integrals are changed to summations when in the Discrete-Time domain. An end-to-end discrete-time model is shown below:

Fig. Discrete-Time OFDM System

The employment of a cyclic prefix longer in duration than the channel, transforms the linear convolution into a cyclic convolution, when seen from the receiver end of the system. Denoting the cyclic convolution by * , we can depict the whole OFDM system by the following equation :

yl = DFT(IDFT(xl) * gl + nl) = DFT(IDFT(xl) * gl) + n’l ...... Eqn.8

where yl contains the N received data points, xl the N transmitted constellation points, g, the channel impulse response (padded with zeroes to obtain a length, N) and nl, the channel noise. Since the channel noise is assumed to be white and Gaussian, the term, n’l=DFT(nl) represents uncorrelated Gaussian noise. Using the result that the DFT of two cyclically convolved signals is equivalent to the product of their individual DFT’s, we obtain

yl = xl . DFT(gl) + n’l = xl . hl + n’l ...... Eqn.9

where the symbol “.” denotes element-by-element multiplication.

Other OFDM Systems

While describing OFDM systems in the previous sections certain assumptions were made. These have been listed below:

§  A Cyclic Prefix is used

§  The impulse response of the channel is shorter than the Cyclic Prefix

§  Since fading effects are slow enough, the channel is considered time-invariant over the symbol interval

§  Rectangular Windowing of the transmitted pulses

§  Transmitter and Receiver are in perfect synchronism

§  Channel noise is additive, white, and complex Gaussian

Also worth mentioning is the fact that the transmitted energy increases with an increase in the duration of the Cyclic Prefix, while the expressions for received and sampled signals stay the same. The transmitted energy per carrier is given by

.....Eqn.10

and the SNR loss because of the discarded Cyclic Prefix in the receiver becomes

SNRloss = -10 log10(1- γ) .....Eqn.11

where γ = Tcp/T is the relative length of the Cyclic Prefix. Therefore, a longer Cyclic Prefix would mean a higher SNR loss. Typically, the relative length of the Cyclic Prefix is small and the ICI- and ISI- free transmission motivates the usage of OFDM , the SNR loss being less than 1 dB for γ<0.2.

Depending on the channel characteristics and desired complexity of the synchronization circuitry in the receiver we could design certain other OFDM systems.

Case 1 : If the Channel response is bad and increasing the length of the Cyclic Prefix makes the SNR loss a substantial quantity, we can resort to adding a guard time interval between symbols. The Guard Period is characterised by a zero transmission, i.e., transmitting silence. This scheme also has another advantage. It might help simplifying synchronization circuitry. Simple envelope detection might be enough because of the presence of the guard period

Case 2 : The power spectrum of the OFDM system decays as f-2 since we were using a rectangular window for the transmitted pulses. In certain cases, this may not be good enough and methods have been proposed to shape the spectrum. Shown below is the spectrum where a raised –cosine pulse is used. In this case the roll off region also acts as a guard space. If the flat part is the OFDM symbol, including the cyclic prefix, both ICI and ISI are avoided. The spectrum with this kind of pulse shaping is shown further below, where it is compared with a rectangular pulse. It is easily seen that this kind of spectrum falls much more quickly and reduces the interference to adjacent bands.

Other types of pulse shaping such as overlapped and well-localized pulses have also been investigated.

Amplitude

time

Fig. Puldse Shaping using Raised Cosine Fig. Normalised Spectrum with Rectangular

Grey indicates the part including CP and signal -pulse(solid) and raised-cosine(dashed)

Benefits of OFDM and Performance Criteria

The four main criteria for evaluating the performance of the OFDM system are tolerance to multipath delay spread, peak power clipping, channel noise and time synchronization errors. The performance of different OFDM systems under varied channel conditions, keeping in mind the above criteria is now discussed.

Multipath delay Spread Immunity

In a MATLAB simulation of a practical OFDM system modeled by Eric Lawrey [2], the following assumptions were made:

Carrier Modulation Used: DBPSK, DQPSK or D16PSK

FFT Size : 2048

Number of Carriers Used : 800

Guard Time: 512 samples (25%)

Guard Period Type: Half Zero, Half a cyclic extension of the symbol

Note: A point to note here would be that most OFDM systems in effect are COFDM (C=Coded), meaning, Forward Error Correction is applied to the OFDM signal. Typically, an 800 carrier system would allow a maximum of 100 users to operate. Each user is allocated 8 carriers so that even if some carriers are lost due to frequency selective fading, the rest will allow the lost data to be recvered using the error correction scheme.

It was found that a delay spread of 256 samples (corresponding to approximately 80milliseconds) occurred only if it was assumed that a reflection that traveled 24km extra path length suffered only a 3dB attenuation. As can be seen from the BER v/s Multipath Delay Spread curve, there is little or no delay associated with reflections that reached the receiver within the lifetime of the guard period. The Delay Spread increases rapidly only after the guard period has ended (due to ISI). However, if a signal is attenuated by more than the noise tolerance of the OFDM signal, no significant effect will occur on the BER.

The maximum BER occurs when the delay spread is longer than the symbol interval itself. Such a case would definitely increase the Inter Symbol Interference.

Peak Power Clipping:

The OFDM signal showed high degrees of tolerance (BER is not affected adversely) even if it was heavily clipped. The clipping distortions mostly arise from the Power Amplifier transmitting the signal. The signal can be clipped by as high as 9dB without a significant effect on the BER. This could be used to our advantage, meaning, the OFDM signal could be clipped by up to 6dB so that the Peak-to-RMS ratio can be reduced, thus alowing an increased transmitted power.