|
In recent years, wireless communication devices have become more and more popular. However, at the same time, the design of faster,
more reliable, and power-efficient wireless communication systems has become evermore difficult. Wireless channels, as
opposed to wireline channels, exhibit highly irregular amplitude behavior due to what is known as fading. The fading,
essentially caused by the reception of multiple reflections of the transmitted signal (illustrated in Figure 1), is a key
inherent problem of wireless channels, which, unfortunately, cannot be avoided. Fading causes the received signal power to
change rapidly in time, making the task of information extraction from the received signal a fairly complicated endeavor.
Furthermore, once the information is extracted, its reliability, manifested through error probability, is often poor.
In this paper, we demonstrate how by exploiting the spatial diversity, namely, using multiple antennas, one can improve reliability,
increase transmission throughput, and reduce transmission power. We also briefly discuss the benefits of using MIMO architecture
along with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) modulation, and low-density parity check (LDPC) coding.
First, we consider the reliability issue. We present a basic model for the wireless single-input single-output (SISO,
single transmit antenna, single receive antenna) channel, and show how the corresponding error probability is critically damaged
by fading. We then consider the single-input multiple-output (SIMO, single transmit antenna, multiple receive antennas) channel and describe the concept of maximal
ratio combining (MRC) as a way to exploit the receive diversity offered by this type of channel. We calculate the error
probability achieved by the MRC, showing it to be much smaller than the one corresponding to the SISO channel, in which no
spatial diversity exists. Next, we consider the multiple-input single-output (MISO, multiple transmit antennas, single
receive antenna) channel, and we present some mechanisms that exploit the transmit diversity offered by this channel.
Specifically, the beamforming technique and Alamouti’s [3] scheme are analyzed. Bringing together transmit and receive
diversity, the MIMO channel is introduced. The beamforming technique and Alamouti-based scheme are shown to achieve full
diversity, i.e., they take full advantage of both transmit and receive diversity provided by the MIMO channel. We discuss the
performance of the aforementioned spatial diversity techniques, and we draw some conclusions as to when one should be preferred
over the other.

Figure 1: Wireless channel-fading problem due to multiple reflections
click image for larger view
Improved reliability is not the only outcome of using multiple antennas. About ten years ago, a remarkable theoretical result
regarding the capacity of MIMO channels [1] suggested that the transmission rate over wireless channels can be dramatically
increased when using multiple antennas. It turns out that the ability to transmit and receive through multiple antennas does not
only reject fading; better yet, it actually harnesses the fading itself in favor of increased throughput. We present the
capacity of wireless MIMO channels, showing it to be greater than that of the wireline SISO channel. Moreover, the capacity
formula is used to demonstrate how one can reduce transmission power by using multiple antenna systems.
Finally, we briefly explain how, in principal, integration between MIMO architecture, OFDM modulation, and LDPC coding (essentially
the basic building blocks for the most advanced wireless communication standards, e.g., 802.11n, 802.16), can give rise to a
superior wireless communication system.
The outline of the paper is as follows. We first present a basic model for the wireless SISO channel. We then consider the MRC
technique, the beamforming technique, and Alamouti’s scheme. After that, we present the capacity of MIMO channels and then
discuss the benefits of using MIMO architecture along with OFDM modulation and LDPC coding. We conclude with some remarks on the
performance of MIMO architecture and how the Intel® Centrino® mobile technology benefits by embracing it.
|