For the unlicensed frequency bands, long-range wide-area networks (LoRaWAN) is a widespread solution for low-power wide-area networks. The physical layer of LoRaWAN is long range (LoRa) which uses a combination of chirp spread spectrum (CSS) and M-ary frequency-shift keying (M-FSK) for transmission. LoRa is known to be highly robust and well-suited for low-complexity implementation, but the weak aspect is its low spectral efficiency. Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing M-FSK (OFDM-MFSK) is a technique which combines M-FSK with OFDM. The bandwidth is divided into several parallel M-FSK transmissions, i.e., more than one sub-carrier is active at a time. This leads to an increased peak-to-average power ratio of the transmit signal. On the other hand, it allows to combine OFDM-MFSK with differential phase-shift keying (DPSK) to increase the data rate and thus the spectral efficiency. The reception of OFDM-MFSK as well as the DPSK demodulation can be done non-coherently. Therefore, they hold many similar design principles as LoRa. We propose a combination of OFDM-MFSK with differentially encoded phase and CSS. Simulation results show, that LoRa and OFDM-MFSK with CSS show similar performance with respect to power and bandwidth efficiency. Adding DPSK leads to an improved spectral as well as power efficiency.
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