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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Design of programmable multi-standard baseband processors

Nilsson, Anders January 2007 (has links)
Efficient programmable baseband processors are important to enable true multi-standard radio platforms as convergence of mobile communication devices and systems requires multi-standard processing devices. The processors do not only need the capability to handle differences in a single standard, often there is a great need to cover several completely different modulation methods such as OFDM and CDMA with the same processing device. Programmability can also be used to quickly adapt to new and updated standards within the ever changing wireless communication industry since a pure ASIC solution will not be flexible enough. ASIC solutions for multi-standard baseband processing are also less area efficient than their programmable counterparts since processing resources cannot be efficiently shared between different operations. However, as baseband processing is computationally demanding, traditional DSP architectures cannot be used due to their limited computing capacity. Instead VLIW- and SIMD-based processors are used to provide sufficient computing capacity for baseband applications. The drawback of VLIW-based DSPs is their low power efficiency due to the wide instructions that need to be fetched every clock cycle and their control-path overhead. On the other hand, pure SIMD-based DSPs lack the possibility to perform different concurrent operations. Since memory access power is the dominating part of the power consumption in a processor, other alternatives should be investigated. In this dissertation a new and unique type of processor architecture has been designed that instead of using the traditional architectures has started from the application requirements with efficiency in mind. The architecture is named ``Single Instruction stream Multiple Tasks'', SIMT in short. The SIMT architecture uses the vector nature of most baseband programs to provide a good trade-off between the flexibility of a VLIW processor and the processing efficiency of a SIMD processor. The contributions of this project are the design and research of key architectural components in the SIMT architecture as well as development of design methodologies. Methodologies for accelerator selection are also presented. Furthermore data dependency control and memory management are studied. Architecture and performance characteristics have also been compared between the SIMT and more traditional processor architectures. A complete system is demonstrated by the BBP2 baseband processor that has been designed using SIMT technology. The SIMT principle has previously been proven in a small scale in silicon in the BBP1 processor implementing a Wireless LAN transceiver. The second demonstrator chip (BBP2) was manufactured early 2007 and implements a full scale system with multiple SIMD clusters and a controller core supporting multiple threads. It includes enough memory to run symbol processing of DVB-H/T, WiMAX, IEEE 802.11a/b/g and WCDMA, and the silicon area is 11 mm2 in a 0.12 um CMOS technology.
2

Design of an OFDM Baseband Processor and Synchronization Circuits for IEEE802.11a Wireless LAN Standard

Ho, Tsung-Che 28 August 2004 (has links)
OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) technology, due to its longer symbol duration that decease the amount of dispersion in time caused by multipath delay spread, has been widely used in many advanced digital communication systems such as DVB (Digital Video Broadcast), WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network), and UWB (Ultra Wide Band). How to realize efficient OFDM systems has been a very important issue for either academic or industry fields in recent years. This thesis aims to explore the VLSI implementation of the OFDM system targeted on its application on the wildly popular IEEE802.11a WLAN systems. An efficient OFDM architecture design involves the algorithm exploration and the tradeoff between the algorithm performance and hardware implementation. Therefore, in this thesis, a Matlab simulation platform for the IEEE802.11a baseband receiver is first built to refine several key synchronization algorithms including frame detection, timing recovery, carrier frequency offset, channel estimation as well as phase tracking under some given channel models. An excellent frame detection and timing recovery method is adopted such that nearly perfect synchronization can be achieved at SNR> 3. Furthermore, area-efficient architecture suitable for VLSI implementation for each synchronization module has also been proposed. In summary, 4 complex multipliers with 388 shift registers are required in our synchronization circuits. These modules are integrated with a core single-path radix-23 IFFT (Inverse Fast Fourier Transform) block to build a highly efficient WLAN baseband.
3

Baseband Processing in Analog Combining MIMO Systems: From Theoretical Design to FPGA Implementation

Elvira Arregui, Víctor 21 July 2011 (has links)
In this thesis, we consider an analog antenna combining architecture for a MIMO wireless transceiver, while pointing out its advantages with respect to the traditional MIMO architectures. In the first part of this work, we focus on the transceiver design, especially the calculation of the beamformers that must be applied at the RF. This analysis is performed in an OFDM system under different assumptions on the channel state information. As a result, several criteria and algorithms for the selection of the beamformers are proposed. In the second part, we address the FPGA design and implementation of a baseband processor for this architecture. This baseband processor is based on the standard IEEE 802.11a. Finally, some real-time tests of the implemented baseband processor are carried out both in stand-alone configuration and also with the whole physical layer setup. / En esta tesis consideramos una arquitectura de combinación analógica de antenas para una estación inalámbrica MIMO, señalando las ventajas de ésta con respecto a la arquitectura tradicional MIMO. En la primera parte de este trabajo analizamos el cálculo de los pesos que se deben aplicar en RF. Este análisis es realizado para un sistema OFDM bajo diferentes suposiciones sobre el conocimiento del canal en el transmisor. Como resultado, se ofrecen varios criterios y algoritmos para el cálculo de los pesos. La segunda parte se centra en el diseño y la implementación FPGA de un procesador banda base para esta arquitectura. Este procesador está basando en el estándar IEEE 802.11a. Finalmente se llevan a cabo algunos experimentos en tiempo-real del procesador banda base. Estos experimentos se han realizado tanto con el procesador aislado como integrado en el resto de la capa física del sistema.

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