Abstract

Successive cancellation flip decoding requires a large number of extra successive cancellation decoding attempts at low signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), resulting in high decoding complexity. In addition, it has a long decoding latency. Although modifications have been proposed in successive cancellation flip decoding, these still have high computational complexity at low SNRs due to a huge number of additional successive cancellation decoding attempts. It is desirable to detect the unsuccessful successive cancellation decoding process at an early stage in the additional successive cancellation flip attempts and stop it that can reduce the decoding complexity. This paper combines the parity-check-CRC concatenated polar codes with the low-latency simplified successive cancellation decoding and proposes a parity-check-CRC concatenated polar codes simplified successive cancellation flip (PC-CRC-SSCFlip) decoder. It further employs the parity-check vector to identify the unsuccessful simplified successive cancellation flip decoding at an early stage and terminates so that it can minimize the decoding complexity on average. Additionally, this work proposes an error-prone flipping list by incorporating the empirically observed indices based on channel-induced error distribution along with the first bit of each Rate-1 node. The proposed technique can identify more than one error-prone bit through a flipping list and correct them. In addition, the parity-check vector further narrows down the search space for the identification of erroneous decisions. Simulation results show that 60% of unsuccessful additional successive cancellation decoding attempts terminate early rather than decode the whole codeword. The proposed PC-CRC-SSCFlip decoder has approximately 0.7 dB and 0.3 dB gains over successive cancellation and successive cancellation flip decoders, respectively, at a fixed block error rate (BLER) = 10−3. Additionally, it reduces the average computational complexity and decoding latency of the successive cancellation flip decoder at low-to-medium SNRs while approaching successive cancellation decoding complexity at medium-to-high SNRs.

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