Spread spectrum receiver apparatus and method

A receiver (200) incorporates in parallel an adaptive minimum mean square error (MMSE) equalizer stage (202) and a matched filter stage (RAKE) (204). A selector (206) is utilized to accept data from one of the two stages based upon an operating condition of the receiver. The receiver may incorporate a single MMSE equalizer (202) for all channels in a spread spectrum communication channel.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This patent relates to receivers for use in a spread spectrum communication system.

BACKGROUND

In a spread spectrum communication system, downlink transmissions from a base station to a mobile station include a pilot channel and a plurality of traffic channels. The pilot channel is decoded by all users. Each traffic channel is intended for decoding by a single user. Therefore, each traffic channel is encoded using a code known by both the base station and the mobile station. The pilot channel is encoded using a code known by the base station and all mobile stations. Spread spectrum encoding of the pilot and traffic channels spreads the bandwidth of transmissions in the system.

One example of a spread spectrum communication system is a cellular radiotelephone system according to Telecommunications Industry Association/Electronic Industry Association (TIA/EIA) Interim Standard IS-95, “Mobile Station-Base Station Compatibility Standard for Dual-Mode Wideband Spread Spectrum Cellular System” (IS-95). Individual users in the system use the same frequency but are distinguishable from each other through the use of individual spreading codes. IS-95 is an example of a direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) communication system. In a DS-CDMA system, transmissions are spread by a pseudorandom noise (PN) code. Data is spread by chips, where the chip is the spread spectrum minimal-duration keying element.

Other spread spectrum systems include radiotelephone and data systems operating at various frequencies and utilizing various spreading techniques. Among these additional systems are third-generation spread spectrum communication systems (3G) and wideband code division multiple access systems (W-CDMA).

Mobile stations for use in spread spectrum communications systems have employed RAKE receivers. A RAKE receiver is a form of a matched filter receiver that includes one or more receiver fingers independently receiving radio frequency (RF) signals. Each finger despreads the traffic channel to form estimates of the traffic symbols. Each finger also despreads and filters the pilot channel to form estimates of the channel gain and phase corresponding to the finger. The traffic symbol estimates of the receiver fingers are combined to produce a received signal. A RAKE receiver combines multipath rays using the complex conjugate of the channel estimates and thereby exploits channel diversity. Generally, the RAKE receiver fingers are assigned to the strongest set of multipath rays.

A limitation on the performance of a RAKE receiver is multiple-access interference or noise at the receiver. Generally, there are two sources of multiple-access interference on the forward link, i.e., from the base station to the mobile station. The first source of interference, typically referred to as intra-cell interference, is the signal originating from the same sector of the same base station as the signal of interest, and results from multipath in the channel between the transmitter and the mobile. The multipath destroys the orthogonality of the transmitted signal, so that signals transmitted to other mobiles interfere with the signal of interest. The second source of multiple-access interference is interference from other sectors, both those sectors in soft-handoff with the mobile station and those not in soft-handoff with the mobile station. The signals transmitted from neighboring sectors are not orthogonal with the signal of interest, regardless of channel, so some multiple-access interference is always introduced at the receiver. Under these conditions, the RAKE receiver performance is limited by multiple access interference.

An alternative structure that may be used as a receiver in a DS-CDMA system is a minimum mean square error (MMSE) equalizer. A receiver based on an MMSE equalizer (MMSE receiver) is disclosed and described in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,175,588, the disclosure of which is hereby expressly incorporated herein by reference. A MMSE receiver can effectively suppress both intra-cell (Ior) and other-cell (Ioc) multiple-access interference on a DS-CDMA downlink. As a result, depending on the specific channels and on the ratio of Ioc/Ior, the performance of the MMSE receiver can be in excess of several decibels (dB) better than the RAKE receiver. In DS-CDMA systems gains are important because the link capacity scales with the inverse of the signal-to-noise ratio required to support the link.

A problem of the MMSE receiver is that adaptive implementations (least mean square “LMS”, recursive least square “RLS”, or multi-stage Wiener) have difficulty tracking high-speed Doppler. Furthermore, if the equalizer does not adequately track the channel, the performance of the equalizer can be worse than the performance of the RAKE receiver, which is very robust.

Thus, there is a need for a spread spectrum receiver that adapts the advantages of a RAKE receiver and an MMSE receiver in an efficient architecture.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A receiver incorporates in parallel an adaptive minimum mean square error (MMSE) equalizer stage and a matched filter stage (RAKE). A selector is utilized to accept data from one of the two stages based upon an operating condition of the receiver, such as the Doppler frequency of the channel fading process. The receiver may incorporate a single MMSE equalizer for all code channels in a spread spectrum communication channel.

In another embodiment, a receiver incorporates in parallel an adaptive MMSE equalizer stage and a RAKE stage. The MMSE equalizer stage and the RAKE stage share a shift register, utilize a common vector xkand train using a pilot channel.

The selector may use one or more of a number of criteria for selection of the MMSE equalizer stage output and the RAKE stage output. It may be possible to decode the output of both stages, in which case frame error rate estimates, bit error rate estimates or CRC's or a combination thereof may be used to select between the two stages. Alternatively, estimates of the signal-to-noise ratio at the output of the two stages may be used to select between the two stages. Still further, the Doppler frequency of the channel fading process may be estimated and compared to the maximum Doppler that can be tracked by adaptive (LMS, RLS, or multi-stage Weiner) MMSE receiver. Combinations of these methods may be used to select between the two stages.

Referring toFIG. 1a communication system100includes base stations102,104and106providing coverage areas108,110and112, respectively, and one or more mobile stations, one of which is shown as mobile station114. Base stations102,104and106include, among other things, a processor, a memory and a transceiver (not depicted) that transmits coded communication signals to and receives coded communication signals from (collectively coded communication signals118) the mobile station114via an antenna116. Each mobile station114also includes a processor and a memory and a transceiver (not depicted) for receiving coded communication signals from and transmitting coded communication signals to one or more of the base stations102,104and106. The coded communication signals118may be spread spectrum, direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) communication signals including a pilot signal and a traffic signal. As is well know for a communication system such as communication system100, each of the base stations102,104and106may be coupled to various network elements including without limitation a base station controller, a mobile switch, and a public switched telephone network (not depicted). The network elements may operate as circuit switched elements, as packet data elements or combinations thereof.

Referring toFIG. 2, a transceiver200includes a first stage202and a second stage204in parallel. The first stage202is an adaptive MMSE equalizer stage and includes an adaptive MMSE equalizer206coupled to a received signal input208. The received signal input208is a received RF signal that is preconditioned using suitable front-end processing such as intermediate frequency demodulation, analog automatic gain control (AGC), and analog-to-digital conversion (A/D). The MMSE equalizer206may be configured to maximize signal-to-noise ratio at the output of the demodulator for the channel or channels of interest. The despreader210despreads the output216of the MMSE equalizer based upon the spreading sequence218. The despread signal220is provided to a traffic channel demodulator222and to a pilot channel demodulator224. The traffic channel demodulator222includes a despreader226that despreads the signal220based upon the appropriate Walsh code for the traffic channel of interest, and the correlator228correlates the chips230over an interval, such as 64 chips, to produce demodulated traffic data232. The pilot channel demodulator224includes a despreader234that despreads the signal220based upon the pilot code, and the correlator236correlates the chips238over the interval to produce demodulated pilot channel data240. The pilot channel data240may be used to train the MMSE equalizer206by generating an error signal214, which is the sum produced by adding at adder212the pilot channel, i.e., all 1s.

The second stage204of the receiver200is a matched filter (RAKE) stage that operates in a well known manner. The second stage204includes a matched filter242, the output244of which is despread by despreader246based upon the spreading sequence and by despreader248based upon the Walsh code for the traffic and/or pilot channel. The summer250sums the chips over a suitable interval to provide demodulated data252.

The demodulated data232and252are coupled to a selector254. The selector operates to select one of the two streams of demodulated data for further processing consistent with operation of the communication system100. The selector254may use one or more of a number of criteria for selection of the demodulated data232and252. For example, the selector254may decode each of the demodulated date232and252and may estimate such values as frame error rate and bit error rate or may calculate a cyclical redundancy check (CRC), or may perform a combination thereof to select between the two. Alternatively, estimates of the signal-to-noise ratio at the output of the two stages may be used to select between the demodulated data of the two stages202and204.

The matched filter stage204may also be adapted with a pilot channel demodulator (not shown), similar in construction and operation as the pilot channel demodulator224. The quality of the pilot symbol estimates for the matched filter stage204can then be compared with the quality of the pilot symbol estimates for the MMSE stage202in order to choose between the MMSE stage202and matched filter stage204. In this particular embodiment, the pilot symbols estimates for the MMSE stage202and matched filter stage204would both be put into the selection box254. Alternatively, the pilot symbol estimates could be put into a SNR estimation box and SNR estimate produced by this box can be put into the section box254.

Still further, the Doppler frequency of the channel fading process may be estimated and compared to a threshold corresponding to the maximum Doppler which can be adequately tracked by the adaptive (least-mean squares, recursive least squares, or multi-stage Weiner filter) MMSE stage202. If the estimated Doppler frequency exceeds the threshold, the output of the RAKE (matched-filter) stage204is used; otherwise, the output of the MMSE stage202is used.

InFIG. 2, the two stages202and204are shown as discrete stages; however, they need not be. Referring toFIG. 3, a receiver300includes shift register302, correlator304, a filter306, a matched filter308, an adaptive MMSE equalizer310and an adaptation algorithm process312. A received, preconditioned signal314is sampled at a suitable integer multiple n of the chip rate, such as twice the chip rate, and shifted into the shift register302n samples at a time. Each of the n samples (not individually identified) from the shift register302is despread using the spreading sequence by a despreader316to provide n respective despread samples318. The despread samples are then respectively correlated within correlator304to provide a correlation vector xk, having elements xk1, xk2, . . . , xkL, where L is the number of equalizer taps. The correlation vector xkis provided to the adaptation algorithm312, which generates the coefficients fk, having elements fk1, fk2, . . . , fkL, for MMSE equalizer310. The coefficients fkmay be determined using a least mean square “LMS”, recursive least square “RLS”, or multi-stage Weiner adaptation, and as described in the afore-mentioned U.S. Pat. No. 6,175,588 they are a function of the correlation vector xkand the error signal ek, described below. The coefficients fkmay be updated every N chips, or as otherwise suitably determined. Other suitable adaptation algorithms may be employed depending on the desired output of the MMSE equalizer310. As noted above, one possible configuration for the MMSE equalizer minimizes the sum interference due to both intra-cell (Ior) and other-cell (Ioc) multiple access interference.

The correlation vector xkis further low pass filtered in filter306to generate the matched filter coefficients gkhaving elements gk1, gk2, . . . , gkL. A non-causal filter may be used to estimate gkThe matched filter coefficients may be updated every N chips, or as otherwise determined to be suitable.

The n samples from the shift register302are likewise coupled to the matched filter308and the MMSE equalizer310. The matched filter308provides a matched filter output320to at least one Walsh code correlator322to provide demodulated traffic channels (traffic channels 1-M)324as is well known. In other words, the matched filter308and the Walsh code correlator322operate as a RAKE receiver for demodulating one or more traffic channels324from the received signal314. The receiver300may be further adapted to demodulate the pilot channel data by adding a pilot channel correlator (not depicted) to the output of the matched filter output320. The quality (signal-to-noise ratio or signal-to-interference ratio) of the pilot symbol estimates at the output of the Rake (matched-filter) and MMSE receivers can be compared as part of the selection process between the MMSE and matched filter receiver outputs.

The output325of the MMSE equalizer310is despread based upon the spreading sequence by despreader327to provide an equalized despread signal326. Depending on the number of traffic channels, the equalized despread signal326is then despread based upon the respective Walsh traffic codes328-330by despreaders331-333to provide respective despread traffic signals334-336. The despread traffic signals334-336are then correlated using correlators337-340to provide corresponding traffic channel (for traffic channels 1-M) data341-343. The equalized despread signal326is further correlated incorrelator344and summed by summer346with the pilot code (all “1s”) to provide the error signal ek, which, as described, is used to determine the MMSE equalizer310coefficients.

Thus,FIG. 3illustrates an embodiment wherein a matched filter (RAKE) receiver and a MMSE equalizer receiver architecture are efficiently combined. The receiver300employs a common shift register to provide the correlation vector xk, which is used to determine both the MMSE equalizer coefficients fkand matched filter coefficients/channel estimate gk. Additionally, a single MMSE equalizer310is used in combination with parallel Walsh despreaders331-333and correlators337-340.

Referring toFIG. 4, a method400of providing demodulated data begins at step402with the step of receiving a radio frequency signal that includes data. At step404, the data is substantially simultaneously provided data to both a matched filter to provide matched filter data and a minimum mean squared error equalizer to provide minimum mean squared error equalized data. At step406, demodulated data is provided based on at least one of the matched filter data and the minimum mean squared error equalized data for decoding.

This patent describes several specific embodiments. However, one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that various modifications and changes can be made to these embodiments. Accordingly, the specification and drawings are to be regarded in an illustrative rather than restrictive sense, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the present patent.