Abstract
Indoor broadband power-line communications is a suitable technology for home networking applications. In this context, orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is the most widespread modulation technique. It has recently been adopted by the ITU-T Recommendation G.9960 and is also used by most of the commercial systems, whose number of carriers has gone from about 100 to a few thousands in less than a decade. However, indoor power-line channels are frequency-selective and exhibit periodic time variations. Hence, increasing the number of carriers does not always improves the performance, since it reduces the distortion because of the frequency selectivity, but increases the one caused by the channel time variation. In addition, the long impulse response of power-line channels obliges to use an insufficient cyclic prefix. Increasing its value reduces the distortion, but also the symbol rate. Therefore, there are optimum values for both modulation parameters. This article evaluates the performance of an OFDM system as a function of the number of carriers and the cyclic prefix length, determining their most appropriate values for the indoor power-line scenario. This task must be accomplished by means of time-consuming simulations employing a linear time-varying filtering, since no consensus on a tractable statistical channel model has been reached yet. However, this study presents a simpler procedure in which the distortion because of the frequency selectivity is computed using a time-invariant channel response, and an analytical expression is derived for the one caused by the channel time variation.
Highlights
The increasing demand for home networking capabilities has attracted considerable interest to high-speed indoor power-line communications (PLC)
We evaluate the performance of broadband orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) systems on indoor power-line channels as a function of the number of carriers and the cyclic prefix length
This article has presented a new method to compute the distortion suffered by OFDM signals on indoor broadband power-line channels
Summary
The increasing demand for home networking capabilities has attracted considerable interest to high-speed indoor power-line communications (PLC). Despite this technology is able to provide the data rates required by the most common in-home applications, the lack of an international technical standard has traditionally restrained its deployment. Several telecom operators are using PLC devices to carry the signals of their tripleplay services from the gateway to the set-top box. At this moment, the available bandwidth for broadband indoor PLC applications extends up to 30 MHz [3]. Communication channels in this band are frequency and time-selective, with remarkable disparity even
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