Abstract

OFDM in 5G wireless communication networks has the advantages of a high transmission volume and data rate. However, the problem of a high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) of OFDM signals may lead to serious performance degradation and distortion in the high-power amplifier at the transmitter. In this paper, with the clipping process, the self-adjustment gain (SAG) method is proposed, to tune up the positions of the clipped signals, for reducing the PAPR of OFDM signals without increasing the error probability. The distance between the estimated and clipped signal points in the signal space is measured. An updated process is developed to produce the new signal points based on the measured distance and the self-adjustment gain that is obtained from the clipping noise power and measurement power. The simulation results show that for QPSK/OFDM, SAG reduces up to 2 dB and 0.7 dB more PAPR than ACE with one and three iterations, respectively. For 16QAM/OFDM, SAG reduces up to 1.3 dB and 0.5 dB more PAPR than ACE with one and three iterations, respectively. SAG also outperforms the active constellation extension, with the projection onto convex sets (ACE-POCS) and gradient project (SGP) methods in first two iterations. Hence, the proposed method really reduces the PAPR value more effectively, within an acceptable error probability, and its computational complexity is also much lower in comparison with those methods based on the active constellation extension (ACE) with iterations.

Highlights

  • The mobile communication system has been evolved to the 5th generation (5G), whereOFDM is its main multiplexing modulation technology [1,2,3,4]; the advantages of OFDM meet 5G’s requirements in the high transmission volume and data rate

  • Both the selected mapping (SLM) and partial transmit sequence (PTS) techniques provide significantly improved peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) statistics, but involve high computational complexity of a bank of inverse discrete Fourier transforms; besides, side information is required as the indicator of the sequence that is selected for the transmitter

  • Computer simulations are performed in order to compare the performance of the proposed self-adjustment gain (SAG) method with the other method, in PAPR reduction in OFDM

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The mobile communication system has been evolved to the 5th generation (5G), whereOFDM is its main multiplexing modulation technology [1,2,3,4]; the advantages of OFDM meet 5G’s requirements in the high transmission volume and data rate. For the partial transmit sequence (PTS) scheme [14,15,16,17,18,19,20], the subblocks of the original data signals are optimally combined at the transmitter, for generating a transmission signal of low PAPR. Both the SLM and PTS techniques provide significantly improved PAPR statistics, but involve high computational complexity of a bank of inverse discrete Fourier transforms; besides, side information is required as the indicator of the sequence that is selected for the transmitter. The method of tone reservation (TR) [26,27,28,29,30]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call