Return to search

Balanced codes

Balanced codes, in which each codeword contains equally many 1's and 0's, are useful
in such applications as in optical transmission and optical recording. When balanced codes
are used, the same number of 1's and 0's pass through the channel after the transmission of
every word, so the channel is in a dc-null state. Optical channels require this property
because they employ AC-coupled devices. Line codes, in which codewords may not be
balanced, are also used as dc-free codes in such channels.
In this thesis we present the research that leads to the following results:
1- Balanced codes These have higher information rate than existing codes yet
maintain similar encoding and decoding complexities.
2- Error-correcting balanced codes In many cases, these give higher information
rates and more efficient encoding and decoding algorithms than the best-known
equivalent codes.
3- DC-Free coset codes A new technique to design dc-free coset codes was
developed. These codes have better properties than existing ones.
4- Generalization of balanced codes -- Balanced codes are generalized in three ways
among which the first is the most significant:
a) Balanced codes with low dc level These codes are designed based on the
combined techniques used in (1) and (3) above. A lower dc-level and higher
transitions density is achieved at the cost of one extra check bit. These codes are
much more attractive, to optical transmission, than the bare-bone balanced codes.
b) Non-Binary Balanced Codes Balanced codes over a non-binary alphabet.
c) Semi-Balanced Codes -- Codes in which the number of 1's and 0's in every
code word differs by at most a certain value.
5- t-EC/AUED coset codes These are t error correcting/all unidirectional error
detecting codes. Again the technique in (3) above is used to design t-EC/AUED
coset codes. These codes obtain higher information rate than the best-known
equivalent codes and yet maintain the same encoding/decoding complexity. / Graduation date: 1990

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ORGSU/oai:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:1957/38194
Date04 January 1990
CreatorsAl-Bassam, Sulaiman
ContributorsBose, Bella
Source SetsOregon State University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

Page generated in 0.0017 seconds