Spectrum Sharing by Space-Time Waveform Shaping
By: Hatef Nouri , George Sklivanitis , Dimitris A. Pados and more
Potential Business Impact:
New radios share airwaves without causing problems.
In this paper, we consider the task of introducing a new wireless data link over a given occupied frequency band using a multi-antenna transmitter and receiver. We design formally a dynamic multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) wireless link that can coexist in the fixed congested frequency band by (a) optimally avoiding sensed interference in the joint space-time domain, and (b) protecting existing links by minimizing its own transmitted power in the band. In particular, the transmit beam weight vector and time domain pulse code sequence are jointly optimized to minimize the transmit energy per bit per antenna, while maintaining a pre-defined signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) at the output of the joint space-time maximum SINR receiver filter. Extensive numerical studies are carried out to demonstrate the derived algorithmic solution in light and heavily congested band scenarios with non-cooperative co-channel links. We show that the proposed autonomously reconfigurable 4x4 MIMO link outperforms a non-adaptive transceiver and other forms of waveform shaping in terms of the pre-detection SINR performance and the capability to protect ongoing non-cooperative links by not occupying the band with redundant transmissions.
Similar Papers
Joint Transmit Waveform and Receive Filter Design for ISAC System with Jamming
Signal Processing
Clears radio signals for better communication and sensing.
Learning-Based Multiuser Scheduling in MIMO-OFDM Systems with Hybrid Beamforming
Information Theory
Makes phone signals faster for many people.
Probabilistic Shaping in MIMO: Going Beyond 1.53dB AWGN Gain With the Non-Linear Demapper
Information Theory
Boosts wireless signals, even with interference.