Abstract

Noise in Power Line Communications is typically impulsive, with impulses being a fraction of the OFDM symbol length. Because of their large duration the impulse can also be called bursts. The short duration of the burst compared with the OFDM symbol length implies that there is a strong correlation between the noise at different carriers, given a determined burst position. The position can be determined using an estimate of the noise after a first demodulation. The high correlation is used to develop demodulators with a reduced bit error rate in comparison with conventional demodulators, so increasing the capacity. The demodulators use a smoothed estimate of the noise signal or a new metric for the distance based on the new correlation matrix. About half of the bit errors can be corrected in this way, corresponding to a 1 dB improvement in Signal Noise Ratio (SNR). How to split the OFDM symbol without increasing the overhead due to the circular prefix is also shown. Noise measurements in power lines are presented. These measurements are used in the simulations.

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