Abstract

The intersymbol interference (ISI) caused by multipath propagation becomes the major challenge for designing efficient equalization methods for underwater acoustic communications. Even at moderate bit-rates, the computational complexity of adaptive equalizers is high enough to challenge their realtime implementation. Hence, reducing their complexity by either low-complexity algorithms or efficient receiver structures is of paramount importance. In this work, we revisit the idea of joint subband equalization [9] and propose new receivers with reduced computational complexity that can cope with variable platform mobility within a signal packet, track rapid multipath fluctuations and maintain robustness under impulsive noise environments. The proposed subband equalizers are successfully tested in two experimental shallow water links by detecting quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) signals. In addition, results based on their performance-complexity tradeoffs are reported.

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