Abstract

Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) signal is a superior dual-functional waveform for the integration of radar sensing and communication in intelligent transportation. But the sensitivity to phase noise is a serious issue introducing interference and causing performance degradation during demodulation. In this paper, we explore the essential mechanism of the action and generation of phase noise through theoretical analysis, where the OFDM demodulation process and power spectrum density (PSD) of phase noise is discussed in the frequency domain, and draw the conclusion that high-speed phase jitter will cause unrecoverable deterioration of OFDM demodulation. Therefore, a photonics-aided radar and communication integrated system based on Optoelectronic oscillator (OEO) is proposed. The positive feedback oscillation with long energy storage time make the phase noise pattern of OEO just suitable to against the phase noise sensitivity of OFDM. A proof-of-concept experiment is demonstrated at 24 GHz with 2 GHz bandwidth to verify the radar sensing and communication function. A two-dimensional radar imaging with a range resolution of 0.075 m and velocity resolution of 4.4 km/h, a communication capacity of 6.4 Gbps is obtained. A quantitative performance comparison is also carried out. By using an ordinary microwave source and OEO separately, the demodulation constellation and error vector magnitude (EVM) under different subcarrier spacing is measured and compared. The result is corresponding to our analysis with the EVM decreasing from 12.5% to 4.7% under subcarrier spacing of 125 kHz.

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