Single-carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA) is a frequency-division multiple access scheme. Originally known as Carrier Interferometry, it is also called linearly precoded OFDMA (LP-OFDMA). Like other multiple access schemes (TDMA, FDMA, CDMA, OFDMA), it deals with the assignment of multiple users to a shared communication resource. SC-FDMA can be interpreted as a linearly precoded OFDMA scheme, in the sense that it has an additional DFT processing step preceding the conventional OFDMA processing.

SC-FDMA has drawn great attention as an attractive alternative to OFDMA, especially in the uplink communications where lower peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) greatly benefits the mobile terminal in terms of transmit power efficiency and reduced cost of the power amplifier. It has been adopted as the uplink multiple access scheme in 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE), or Evolved UTRA (E-UTRA).[1][2][3]

The performance of SC-FDMA in relation to OFDMA has been the subject of various studies.[4][5][6] Although the performance gap is small, SC-FDMA's advantage of low PAPR makes it desirable for uplink wireless transmission in mobile communication systems, where transmitter power efficiency is of paramount importance.

Transmitter and receiver structure

The transmission processing of SC-FDMA is very similar to that of OFDMA. For each user, the sequence of bits transmitted is mapped to a complex constellation of symbols (BPSK, QPSK, or M-QAM). Then different transmitters (users) are assigned different Fourier coefficients. This assignment is carried out in the mapping and demapping blocks. The receiver side includes one demapping block, one IDFT block, and one detection block for each user signal to be received. Just like in OFDM, guard intervals (called cyclic prefixes) with cyclic repetition are introduced between blocks of symbols in view to efficiently eliminate inter-symbol interference from time spreading (caused by multi-path propagation) among the blocks.

In SC-FDMA, multiple access among users is made possible by assigning different users different sets of non-overlapping Fourier coefficients (sub-carriers). This is achieved at the transmitter by inserting (prior to IDFT) silent Fourier coefficients (at positions assigned to other users), and removing them on the receiver side after the DFT.

Localized and distributed mapping

The distinguishing feature of SC-FDMA is that it leads to a single-carrier transmit signal, in contrast to OFDMA which is a multi-carrier transmission scheme. Subcarrier mapping can be classified into two types: localized mapping and distributed mapping. In localized mapping, the DFT outputs are mapped to a subset of consecutive subcarriers, thereby confining them to only a fraction of the system bandwidth. In distributed mapping, the DFT outputs of the input data are assigned to subcarriers over the entire bandwidth non-continuously, resulting in zero amplitude for the remaining subcarriers. A special case of distributed SC-FDMA is called interleaved SC-FDMA (IFDMA), where the occupied subcarriers are equally spaced over the entire bandwidth.[7]

Owing to its inherent single carrier structure, a prominent advantage of SC-FDMA over OFDM and OFDMA is that its transmit signal has a lower peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR), resulting in relaxed design parameters in the transmit path of a subscriber unit. Intuitively, the reason lies in the fact that where OFDM transmit symbols directly modulate multiple sub-carriers, SC-FDMA transmit symbols are first processed by an N-point DFT block.[8]

In OFDM, as well as SC-FDMA, equalization is achieved on the receiver side, after the DFT calculation, by multiplying each Fourier coefficient by a complex number. Thus, frequency-selective fading and phase distortion can be easily counteracted. The advantage is that frequency domain equalization using FFTs requires less computation than conventional time-domain equalization, which require multi-tap FIR or IIR-filters. Less computations result in less compounded round-off error, which can be viewed as numerical noise.

A related concept is the combination of a single carrier transmission with the single-carrier frequency-domain-equalization (SC-FDE) scheme.[9] The single carrier transmission, unlike SC-FDMA and OFDM, employs no IDFT or DFT at the transmitter, but introduces the cyclic prefix to transform the linear channel convolution into a circular one. After removing the cyclic prefix at the receiver, a DFT is applied to arrive in the frequency domain, where a simple single-carrier frequency-domain-equalization (SC-FDE) scheme can be employed, followed by the IDFT operation.

Useful properties

  1. Low PAPR (crest factor)
  2. Low sensitivity to carrier frequency offset
  3. Less sensitive to non-linear distortion and hence, it allows the use of low-cost power amplifiers
  4. Greater robustness against spectral nulls

See also

References

  1. Myung, Hyung; Lim, Junsung; Goodman, David (2006). "Single carrier FDMA for uplink wireless transmission" (PDF). IEEE Vehicular Technology Magazine. 1 (3): 30–38. doi:10.1109/MVT.2006.307304. S2CID 12743526.
  2. Ekstrom, H.; Furuskar, A.; Karlsson, J.; Meyer, M.; Parkvall, S.; Torsner, J.; Wahlqvist, M. (2006). "Technical solutions for the 3G long-term evolution". IEEE Communications Magazine. 44 (3): 38–45. doi:10.1109/MCOM.2006.1607864. S2CID 1168131.
  3. "Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network; Physical Layer Aspects for Evolved UTRA". 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
  4. Nisar, Muhammad Danish; Nottensteiner, Hans; Hindelang, Thomas (2007). "On Performance Limits of DFT Spread OFDM Systems". 2007 16th IST Mobile and Wireless Communications Summit (PDF). pp. 1–4. doi:10.1109/ISTMWC.2007.4299159. ISBN 978-1-4244-1662-2. S2CID 6077115.
  5. Priyanto, Basuki E.; Codina, Humbert; Rene, Sergi; Sorensen, Troels B.; Mogensen, Preben (2007). "Initial Performance Evaluation of DFT-Spread OFDM Based SC-FDMA for UTRA LTE Uplink". 2007 IEEE 65th Vehicular Technology Conference - VTC2007-Spring. pp. 3175–3179. doi:10.1109/VETECS.2007.650. ISBN 978-1-4244-0266-3. S2CID 206836778.
  6. Benvenuto, N.; Tomasin, S. (2002). "On the comparison between OFDM and single carrier modulation with a DFE using a frequency-domain feedforward filter". IEEE Transactions on Communications. 50 (6): 947–955. doi:10.1109/TCOMM.2002.1010614.
  7. "SC-FDMA Single Carrier FDMA in LTE" (PDF). Ixia.
  8. Myung, Hyung; Lim, Junsung; Goodman, David (2006). "Peak-To-Average Power Ratio of Single Carrier FDMA Signals with Pulse Shaping". 2006 IEEE 17th International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1109/PIMRC.2006.254407. ISBN 1-4244-0329-4. S2CID 7457641.
  9. Falconer, D.; Ariyavisitakul, S.L.; Benyamin-Seeyar, A.; Eidson, B. (2002). "Frequency domain equalization for single-carrier broadband wireless systems". IEEE Communications Magazine. 40 (4): 58–66. doi:10.1109/35.995852.
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