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Space-Time Coding and Space-Time Channel Modelling for Wireless Communications

In this thesis we investigate the effects of the physical
constraints such as antenna aperture size, antenna geometry and
non-isotropic scattering distribution parameters (angle of
arrival/departure and angular spread) on the performance of coherent
and non-coherent space-time coded wireless communication systems.
First, we derive analytical expressions for the exact pairwise error
probability (PEP) and PEP upper-bound of coherent and non-coherent
space-time coded systems operating over spatially correlated fading
channels using a moment-generating function-based approach. These
analytical expressions account for antenna spacing, antenna
geometries and scattering distribution models. Using these new PEP
expressions, the degree of the effect of antenna spacing, antenna
geometry and angular spread is quantified on the diversity advantage
(robustness) given by a space-time code. It is shown that the number
of antennas that can be employed in a fixed antenna aperture without
diminishing the diversity advantage of a space-time code is
determined by the size of the antenna aperture, antenna geometry and
the richness of the scattering environment.


In realistic channel environments the performance of space-time
coded multiple-input multiple output (MIMO) systems is significantly
reduced due to non-ideal antenna placement and non-isotropic
scattering. In this thesis, by exploiting the spatial dimension of a
MIMO channel we introduce the novel use of linear spatial precoding
(or power-loading) based on fixed and known parameters of MIMO
channels to ameliorate the effects of non-ideal antenna placement on
the performance of coherent and non-coherent space-time codes. The
spatial precoder virtually arranges the antennas into an optimal
configuration so that the spatial correlation between all antenna
elements is minimum. With this design, the precoder is fixed for
fixed antenna placement and the transmitter does not require any
feedback of channel state information (partial or full) from the
receiver. We also derive precoding schemes to exploit non-isotropic
scattering distribution parameters of the scattering channel to
improve the performance of space-time codes applied on MIMO systems
in non-isotropic scattering environments. However, these schemes
require the receiver to estimate the non-isotropic parameters and
feed them back to the transmitter.


The idea of precoding based on fixed parameters of MIMO channels is
extended to maximize the capacity of spatially constrained dense
antenna arrays. It is shown that the theoretical maximum capacity
available from a fixed region of space can be achieved by power
loading based on previously unutilized channel state information
contained in the antenna locations. We analyzed the correlation
between different modal orders generated at the transmitter region
due to spatially constrained antenna arrays in non-isotropic
scattering environments, and showed that adjacent modes contribute
to higher correlation at the transmitter region. Based on this
result, a power loading scheme is proposed which reduces the effects
of correlation between adjacent modes at the transmitter region by
nulling power onto adjacent transmit modes.


Furthermore, in this thesis a general space-time channel model for
down-link transmission in a mobile multiple antenna communication
system is developed. The model incorporates deterministic
quantities such as physical antenna positions and the motion of the
mobile unit (velocity and the direction), and random quantities to
capture random scattering environment modeled using a bi-angular
power distribution and, in the simplest case, the covariance between
transmit and receive angles which captures statistical
interdependency. The Kronecker model is shown to be a special case
when the power distribution is separable and is shown to
overestimate MIMO system performance whenever there is more than one
scattering cluster. Expressions for space-time cross correlations
and space-frequency cross spectra are given for a number of
scattering distributions using Gaussian and Morgenstern's family of
multivariate distributions. These new expressions extend the
classical Jake's and Clarke's correlation models to general
non-isotropic scattering environments.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/216858
Date January 2007
CreatorsLamahewa, Tharaka Anuradha, tharaka.lamahewa@anu.edu.au
PublisherThe Australian National University. Research School of Information Sciences and Engineering
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Rightshttp://www.anu.edu.au/legal/copyrit.html), Copyright Tharaka Anuradha Lamahewa

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