Abstract

This paper considers the design of signature waveforms for successive-decoding-type multiuser receivers (including the optimum successive decoder (OSD)) in a correlated-waveform multiple-access channel. The problem is to obtain signature waveforms that require as little bandwidth as possible while allowing the receiver to meet a given set of quality-of-service (QoS) objectives. The QoS objectives are specified for each user in terms of capacity, or equivalently, the signal-to-interference ratio. A (generally unachievable) lower bound is obtained on the minimum bandwidth required to achieve these QoS constraints. Moreover, a simple algorithm is proposed for obtaining signal sets that meet the QoS constraints when used with the OSD, and which, while not optimal, require a bandwidth that can be very close to the minimum required bandwidth. It is also shown that such signal sets allow for a significantly more efficient use of bandwidth than do orthogonal signals used in time- or frequency-division multiple access (TDMA/FDMA). Based on our signal design approach, we propose a new multiple-access strategy that we refer to as bandwidth-efficient multiple access (BEMA). While BEMA is more bandwidth efficient than TDMA or FDMA, it retains their desirable feature of needing only single-user coding (and decoding) for each user.

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