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Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing

In telecommunications, orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is a type of digital transmission used in digital modulation for encoding digital (binary) data on multiple carrier frequencies. OFDM has developed into a popular scheme for wideband digital communication, used in applications such as digital television and audio broadcasting, DSL internet access, wireless networks, power line networks, and 4G/5G mobile communications.[1]

OFDM is a frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) scheme that was introduced by Robert W. Chang of Bell Labs in 1966.[2][3][4] In OFDM, the incoming bitstream representing the data to be sent is divided into multiple streams. Multiple closely spaced orthogonal subcarrier signals with overlapping spectra are transmitted, with each carrier modulated with bits from the incoming stream so multiple bits are being transmitted in parallel.[5] Demodulation is based on fast Fourier transform algorithms. OFDM was improved by Weinstein and Ebert in 1971 with the introduction of a guard interval, providing better orthogonality in transmission channels affected by multipath propagation.[6] Each subcarrier (signal) is modulated with a conventional modulation scheme (such as quadrature amplitude modulation or phase-shift keying) at a low symbol rate. This maintains total data rates similar to conventional single-carrier modulation schemes in the same bandwidth.[7]

Consecutive raised-cosine impulses, demonstrating zero-ISI property; these closely resemble OFDM power spectrum (frequency domain).

The main advantage of OFDM over single-carrier schemes is its ability to cope with severe channel conditions (for example, attenuation of high frequencies in a long copper wire, narrowband interference and frequency-selective fading due to multipath) without the need for complex equalization filters. Channel equalization is simplified because OFDM may be viewed as using many slowly modulated narrowband signals rather than one rapidly modulated wideband signal. The low symbol rate makes the use of a guard interval between symbols affordable, making it possible to eliminate intersymbol interference (ISI) and use echoes and time-spreading (in analog television visible as ghosting and blurring, respectively) to achieve a diversity gain, i.e. a signal-to-noise ratio improvement. This mechanism also facilitates the design of single frequency networks (SFNs) where several adjacent transmitters send the same signal simultaneously at the same frequency, as the signals from multiple distant transmitters may be re-combined constructively, sparing interference of a traditional single-carrier system.

In coded orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (COFDM), forward error correction (convolutional coding) and time/frequency interleaving are applied to the signal being transmitted. This is done to overcome errors in mobile communication channels affected by multipath propagation and Doppler effects. COFDM was introduced by Alard in 1986[8][9][10] for Digital Audio Broadcasting for Eureka Project 147. In practice, OFDM has become used in combination with such coding and interleaving, so that the terms COFDM and OFDM co-apply to common applications.[11][12]

Example of applications edit

The following list is a summary of existing OFDM-based standards and products. For further details, see the Usage section at the end of the article.

Wired version mostly known as Discrete Multi-tone Transmission (DMT) edit

Wireless edit

The OFDM-based multiple access technology OFDMA is also used in several 4G and pre-4G cellular networks, mobile broadband standards, the next generation WLAN and the wired portion of Hybrid fiber-coaxial networks:[citation needed]

Key features edit

The advantages and disadvantages listed below are further discussed in the Characteristics and principles of operation section below.

Summary of advantages edit

Summary of disadvantages edit

Characteristics and principles of operation edit

Orthogonality edit

Conceptually, OFDM is a specialized frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) method, with the additional constraint that all subcarrier signals within a communication channel are orthogonal to one another.

In OFDM, the subcarrier frequencies are chosen so that the subcarriers are orthogonal to each other, meaning that crosstalk between the sub-channels is eliminated and inter-carrier guard bands are not required. This greatly simplifies the design of both the transmitter and the receiver; unlike conventional FDM, a separate filter for each sub-channel is not required.

The orthogonality requires that the subcarrier spacing is   Hertz, where TU seconds is the useful symbol duration (the receiver-side window size), and k is a positive integer, typically equal to 1. This stipulates that each carrier frequency undergoes k more complete cycles per symbol period than the previous carrier. Therefore, with N subcarriers, the total passband bandwidth will be BN·Δf (Hz).

The orthogonality also allows high spectral efficiency, with a total symbol rate near the Nyquist rate for the equivalent baseband signal (i.e., near half the Nyquist rate for the double-side band physical passband signal). Almost the whole available frequency band can be used. OFDM generally has a nearly 'white' spectrum, giving it benign electromagnetic interference properties with respect to other co-channel users.

A simple example: A useful symbol duration TU = 1 ms would require a subcarrier spacing of   (or an integer multiple of that) for orthogonality. N = 1,000 subcarriers would result in a total passband bandwidth of NΔf = 1 MHz. For this symbol time, the required bandwidth in theory according to Nyquist is   (half of the achieved bandwidth required by our scheme), where R is the bit rate and where N = 1,000 samples per symbol by FFT. If a guard interval is applied (see below), Nyquist bandwidth requirement would be even lower. The FFT would result in N = 1,000 samples per symbol. If no guard interval was applied, this would result in a base band complex valued signal with a sample rate of 1 MHz, which would require a baseband bandwidth of 0.5 MHz according to Nyquist. However, the passband RF signal is produced by multiplying the baseband signal with a carrier waveform (i.e., double-sideband quadrature amplitude-modulation) resulting in a passband bandwidth of 1 MHz. A single-side band (SSB) or vestigial sideband (VSB) modulation scheme would achieve almost half that bandwidth for the same symbol rate (i.e., twice as high spectral efficiency for the same symbol alphabet length). It is however more sensitive to multipath interference.

OFDM requires very accurate frequency synchronization between the receiver and the transmitter; with frequency deviation the subcarriers will no longer be orthogonal, causing inter-carrier interference (ICI) (i.e., cross-talk between the subcarriers). Frequency offsets are typically caused by mismatched transmitter and receiver oscillators, or by Doppler shift due to movement. While Doppler shift alone may be compensated for by the receiver, the situation is worsened when combined with multipath, as reflections will appear at various frequency offsets, which is much harder to correct. This effect typically worsens as speed increases,[15] and is an important factor limiting the use of OFDM in high-speed vehicles. In order to mitigate ICI in such scenarios, one can shape each subcarrier in order to minimize the interference resulting in a non-orthogonal subcarriers overlapping.[16] For example, a low-complexity scheme referred to as WCP-OFDM (Weighted Cyclic Prefix Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing) consists of using short filters at the transmitter output in order to perform a potentially non-rectangular pulse shaping and a near perfect reconstruction using a single-tap per subcarrier equalization.[17] Other ICI suppression techniques usually drastically increase the receiver complexity.[18]

Implementation using the FFT algorithm edit

The orthogonality allows for efficient modulator and demodulator implementation using the FFT algorithm on the receiver side, and inverse FFT on the sender side. Although the principles and some of the benefits have been known since the 1960s, OFDM is popular for wideband communications today by way of low-cost digital signal processing components that can efficiently calculate the FFT.

The time to compute the inverse-FFT or FFT has to take less than the time for each symbol,[19]: 84  which for example for DVB-T (FFT 8k) means the computation has to be done in 896 µs or less.

For an 8192-point FFT this may be approximated to:[19][clarification needed]

 

The computational demand approximately scales linearly with FFT size so a double size FFT needs double the amount of time and vice versa.[19]: 83  As a comparison an Intel Pentium III CPU at 1.266 GHz is able to calculate a 8192 point FFT in 576 µs using FFTW.[20] Intel Pentium M at 1.6 GHz does it in 387 µs.[21] Intel Core Duo at 3.0 GHz does it in 96.8 µs.[22]

Guard interval for elimination of intersymbol interference edit

One key principle of OFDM is that since low symbol rate modulation schemes (i.e., where the symbols are relatively long compared to the channel time characteristics) suffer less from intersymbol interference caused by multipath propagation, it is advantageous to transmit a number of low-rate streams in parallel instead of a single high-rate stream. Since the duration of each symbol is long, it is feasible to insert a guard interval between the OFDM symbols, thus eliminating the intersymbol interference.

The guard interval also eliminates the need for a pulse-shaping filter, and it reduces the sensitivity to time synchronization problems.

A simple example: If one sends a million symbols per second using conventional single-carrier modulation over a wireless channel, then the duration of each symbol would be one microsecond or less. This imposes severe constraints on synchronization and necessitates the removal of multipath interference. If the same million symbols per second are spread among one thousand sub-channels, the duration of each symbol can be longer by a factor of a thousand (i.e., one millisecond) for orthogonality with approximately the same bandwidth. Assume that a guard interval of 1/8 of the symbol length is inserted between each symbol. Intersymbol interference can be avoided if the multipath time-spreading (the time between the reception of the first and the last echo) is shorter than the guard interval (i.e., 125 microseconds). This corresponds to a maximum difference of 37.5 kilometers between the lengths of the paths.

The cyclic prefix, which is transmitted during the guard interval, consists of the end of the OFDM symbol copied into the guard interval, and the guard interval is transmitted followed by the OFDM symbol. The reason that the guard interval consists of a copy of the end of the OFDM symbol is so that the receiver will integrate over an integer number of sinusoid cycles for each of the multipaths when it performs OFDM demodulation with the FFT.

 

In some standards such as Ultrawideband, in the interest of transmitted power, cyclic prefix is skipped and nothing is sent during the guard interval. The receiver will then have to mimic the cyclic prefix functionality by copying the end part of the OFDM symbol and adding it to the beginning portion.

Simplified equalization edit

The effects of frequency-selective channel conditions, for example fading caused by multipath propagation, can be considered as constant (flat) over an OFDM sub-channel if the sub-channel is sufficiently narrow-banded (i.e., if the number of sub-channels is sufficiently large). This makes frequency domain equalization possible at the receiver, which is far simpler than the time-domain equalization used in conventional single-carrier modulation. In OFDM, the equalizer only has to multiply each detected subcarrier (each Fourier coefficient) in each OFDM symbol by a constant complex number, or a rarely changed value. On a fundamental level, simpler digital equalizers are better because they require fewer operations, which translates to fewer round-off errors in the equalizer. Those round-off errors can be viewed as numerical noise and are inevitable.

Our example: The OFDM equalization in the above numerical example would require one complex valued multiplication per subcarrier and symbol (i.e.,   complex multiplications per OFDM symbol; i.e., one million multiplications per second, at the receiver). The FFT algorithm requires   [this is imprecise: over half of these complex multiplications are trivial, i.e. = to 1 and are not implemented in software or HW]. complex-valued multiplications per OFDM symbol (i.e., 10 million multiplications per second), at both the receiver and transmitter side. This should be compared with the corresponding one million symbols/second single-carrier modulation case mentioned in the example, where the equalization of 125 microseconds time-spreading using a FIR filter would require, in a naive implementation, 125 multiplications per symbol (i.e., 125 million multiplications per second). FFT techniques can be used to reduce the number of multiplications for an FIR filter-based time-domain equalizer to a number comparable with OFDM, at the cost of delay between reception and decoding which also becomes comparable with OFDM.

If differential modulation such as DPSK or DQPSK is applied to each subcarrier, equalization can be completely omitted, since these non-coherent schemes are insensitive to slowly changing amplitude and phase distortion.

In a sense, improvements in FIR equalization using FFTs or partial FFTs leads mathematically closer to OFDM,[citation needed] but the OFDM technique is easier to understand and implement, and the sub-channels can be independently adapted in other ways than varying equalization coefficients, such as switching between different QAM constellation patterns and error-correction schemes to match individual sub-channel noise and interference characteristics.[clarification needed]

Some of the subcarriers in some of the OFDM symbols may carry pilot signals for measurement of the channel conditions[23][24] (i.e., the equalizer gain and phase shift for each subcarrier). Pilot signals and training symbols (preambles) may also be used for time synchronization (to avoid intersymbol interference, ISI) and frequency synchronization (to avoid inter-carrier interference, ICI, caused by Doppler shift).

OFDM was initially used for wired and stationary wireless communications. However, with an increasing number of applications operating in highly mobile environments, the effect of dispersive fading caused by a combination of multi-path propagation and doppler shift is more significant. Over the last decade, research has been done on how to equalize OFDM transmission over doubly selective channels.[25][26][27]

Channel coding and interleaving edit

OFDM is invariably used in conjunction with channel coding (forward error correction), and almost always uses frequency and/or time interleaving.

Frequency (subcarrier) interleaving increases resistance to frequency-selective channel conditions such as fading. For example, when a part of the channel bandwidth fades, frequency interleaving ensures that the bit errors that would result from those subcarriers in the faded part of the bandwidth are spread out in the bit-stream rather than being concentrated. Similarly, time interleaving ensures that bits that are originally close together in the bit-stream are transmitted far apart in time, thus mitigating against severe fading as would happen when travelling at high speed.

However, time interleaving is of little benefit in slowly fading channels, such as for stationary reception, and frequency interleaving offers little to no benefit for narrowband channels that suffer from flat-fading (where the whole channel bandwidth fades at the same time).

The reason why interleaving is used on OFDM is to attempt to spread the errors out in the bit-stream that is presented to the error correction decoder, because when such decoders are presented with a high concentration of errors the decoder is unable to correct all the bit errors, and a burst of uncorrected errors occurs. A similar design of audio data encoding makes compact disc (CD) playback robust.

A classical type of error correction coding used with OFDM-based systems is convolutional coding, often concatenated with Reed-Solomon coding. Usually, additional interleaving (on top of the time and frequency interleaving mentioned above) in between the two layers of coding is implemented. The choice for Reed-Solomon coding as the outer error correction code is based on the observation that the Viterbi decoder used for inner convolutional decoding produces short error bursts when there is a high concentration of errors, and Reed-Solomon codes are inherently well suited to correcting bursts of errors.

Newer systems, however, usually now adopt near-optimal types of error correction codes that use the turbo decoding principle, where the decoder iterates towards the desired solution. Examples of such error correction coding types include turbo codes and LDPC codes, which perform close to the Shannon limit for the Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN) channel. Some systems that have implemented these codes have concatenated them with either Reed-Solomon (for example on the MediaFLO system) or BCH codes (on the DVB-S2 system) to improve upon an error floor inherent to these codes at high signal-to-noise ratios.[28]

Adaptive transmission edit

The resilience to severe channel conditions can be further enhanced if information about the channel is sent over a return-channel. Based on this feedback information, adaptive modulation, channel coding and power allocation may be applied across all subcarriers, or individually to each subcarrier. In the latter case, if a particular range of frequencies suffers from interference or attenuation, the carriers within that range can be disabled or made to run slower by applying more robust modulation or error coding to those subcarriers.

The term discrete multitone modulation (DMT) denotes OFDM-based communication systems that adapt the transmission to the channel conditions individually for each subcarrier, by means of so-called bit-loading. Examples are ADSL and VDSL.

The upstream and downstream speeds can be varied by allocating either more or fewer carriers for each purpose. Some forms of rate-adaptive DSL use this feature in real time, so that the bitrate is adapted to the co-channel interference and bandwidth is allocated to whichever subscriber needs it most.

OFDM extended with multiple access edit

OFDM in its primary form is considered as a digital modulation technique, and not a multi-user channel access method, since it is used for transferring one bit stream over one communication channel using one sequence of OFDM symbols. However, OFDM can be combined with multiple access using time, frequency or coding separation of the users.

In orthogonal frequency-division multiple access (OFDMA), frequency-division multiple access is achieved by assigning different OFDM sub-channels to different users. OFDMA supports differentiated quality of service by assigning different number of subcarriers to different users in a similar fashion as in CDMA, and thus complex packet scheduling or medium access control schemes can be avoided. OFDMA is used in:

  • the mobility mode of the IEEE 802.16 Wireless MAN standard, commonly referred to as WiMAX,
  • the IEEE 802.20 mobile Wireless MAN standard, commonly referred to as MBWA,
  • the 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) fourth generation mobile broadband standard downlink. The radio interface was formerly named High Speed OFDM Packet Access (HSOPA), now named Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA).
  • the 3GPP 5G NR (New Radio) fifth generation mobile network standard downlink and uplink. 5G NR is the successor to LTE.
  • the now defunct Qualcomm/3GPP2 Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) project, intended as a successor of CDMA2000, but replaced by LTE.

OFDMA is also a candidate access method for the IEEE 802.22 Wireless Regional Area Networks (WRAN). The project aims at designing the first cognitive radio-based standard operating in the VHF-low UHF spectrum (TV spectrum).

  • the most recent amendment of 802.11 standard, namely 802.11ax, includes OFDMA for high efficiency and simultaneous communication.

In multi-carrier code-division multiple access (MC-CDMA), also known as OFDM-CDMA, OFDM is combined with CDMA spread spectrum communication for coding separation of the users. Co-channel interference can be mitigated, meaning that manual fixed channel allocation (FCA) frequency planning is simplified, or complex dynamic channel allocation (DCA) schemes are avoided.

Space diversity edit

In OFDM-based wide-area broadcasting, receivers can benefit from receiving signals from several spatially dispersed transmitters simultaneously, since transmitters will only destructively interfere with each other on a limited number of subcarriers, whereas in general they will actually reinforce coverage over a wide area. This is very beneficial in many countries, as it permits the operation of national single-frequency networks (SFN), where many transmitters send the same signal simultaneously over the same channel frequency. SFNs use the available spectrum more effectively than conventional multi-frequency broadcast networks (MFN), where program content is replicated on different carrier frequencies. SFNs also result in a diversity gain in receivers situated midway between the transmitters. The coverage area is increased and the outage probability decreased in comparison to an MFN, due to increased received signal strength averaged over all subcarriers.

Although the guard interval only contains redundant data, which means that it reduces the capacity, some OFDM-based systems, such as some of the broadcasting systems, deliberately use a long guard interval in order to allow the transmitters to be spaced farther apart in an SFN, and longer guard intervals allow larger SFN cell-sizes. A rule of thumb for the maximum distance between transmitters in an SFN is equal to the distance a signal travels during the guard interval — for instance, a guard interval of 200 microseconds would allow transmitters to be spaced 60 km apart.

A single frequency network is a form of transmitter macrodiversity. The concept can be further used in dynamic single-frequency networks (DSFN), where the SFN grouping is changed from timeslot to timeslot.

OFDM may be combined with other forms of space diversity, for example antenna arrays and MIMO channels. This is done in the IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN standards.

Linear transmitter power amplifier edit

An OFDM signal exhibits a high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) because the independent phases of the subcarriers mean that they will often combine constructively. Handling this high PAPR requires:

Any non-linearity in the signal chain will cause intermodulation distortion that

  • Raises the noise floor
  • May cause inter-carrier interference
  • Generates out-of-band spurious radiation

The linearity requirement is demanding, especially for transmitter RF output circuitry where amplifiers are often designed to be non-linear in order to minimise power consumption. In practical OFDM systems a small amount of peak clipping is allowed to limit the PAPR in a judicious trade-off against the above consequences. However, the transmitter output filter which is required to reduce out-of-band spurs to legal levels has the effect of restoring peak levels that were clipped, so clipping is not an effective way to reduce PAPR.

Although the spectral efficiency of OFDM is attractive for both terrestrial and space communications, the high PAPR requirements have so far limited OFDM applications to terrestrial systems.

The crest factor CF (in dB) for an OFDM system with n uncorrelated subcarriers is[29]

 

where CFc is the crest factor (in dB) for each subcarrier. (CFc is 3.01 dB for the sine waves used for BPSK and QPSK modulation).

For example, the DVB-T signal in 2K mode is composed of 1705 subcarriers that are each QPSK-modulated, giving a crest factor of 35.32 dB.[29]

Many PAPR (or crest factor) reduction techniques have been developed, for instance, based on iterative clipping.[30] Over the years, numerous model-driven approaches have been proposed to reduce the PAPR in communication systems. In recent years, there has been a growing interest in exploring data-driven models for PAPR reduction as part of ongoing research in end-to-end communication networks. These data-driven models offer innovative solutions and new avenues of exploration to address the challenges posed by high PAPR effectively. By leveraging data-driven techniques, researchers aim to enhance the performance and efficiency of communication networks by optimizing power utilization. [31]


The dynamic range required for an FM receiver is 120 dB while DAB only require about 90 dB.[32] As a comparison, each extra bit per sample increases the dynamic range by 6 dB.

Efficiency comparison between single carrier and multicarrier edit

The performance of any communication system can be measured in terms of its power efficiency and bandwidth efficiency. The power efficiency describes the ability of communication system to preserve bit error rate (BER) of the transmitted signal at low power levels. Bandwidth efficiency reflects how efficiently the allocated bandwidth is used and is defined as the throughput data rate per hertz in a given bandwidth. If the large number of subcarriers are used, the bandwidth efficiency of multicarrier system such as OFDM with using optical fiber channel is defined as[33]

 

where   is the symbol rate in giga-symbols per second (Gsps),   is the bandwidth of OFDM signal, and the factor of 2 is due to the two polarization states in the fiber.

There is saving of bandwidth by using multicarrier modulation with orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing. So the bandwidth for multicarrier system is less in comparison with single carrier system and hence bandwidth efficiency of multicarrier system is larger than single carrier system.

S. no. Transmission type M in M-QAM No. of subcarriers Bit rate Fiber length Received power, at BER of 10−9 Bandwidth efficiency
1 Single carrier 64 1 10 Gbit/s 20 km −37.3 dBm 6.0000
2 Multicarrier 64 128 10 Gbit/s 20 km −36.3 dBm 10.6022

There is only 1 dB increase in receiver power, but we get 76.7% improvement in bandwidth efficiency with using multicarrier transmission technique.

Idealized system model edit

This section describes a simple idealized OFDM system model suitable for a time-invariant AWGN channel.

Transmitter edit

 

An OFDM carrier signal is the sum of a number of orthogonal subcarriers, with baseband data on each subcarrier being independently modulated commonly using some type of quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) or phase-shift keying (PSK). This composite baseband signal is typically used to modulate a main RF carrier.

  is a serial stream of binary digits. By inverse multiplexing, these are first demultiplexed into   parallel streams, and each one mapped to a (possibly complex) symbol stream using some modulation constellation (QAM, PSK, etc.). Note that the constellations may be different, so some streams may carry a higher bit-rate than others.

An inverse FFT is computed on each set of symbols, giving a set of complex time-domain samples. These samples are then quadrature-mixed to passband in the standard way. The real and imaginary components are first converted to the analogue domain using digital-to-analogue converters (DACs); the analogue signals are then used to modulate cosine and sine waves at the carrier frequency,  , respectively. These signals are then summed to give the transmission signal,  .

Receiver edit

 

The receiver picks up the signal  , which is then quadrature-mixed down to baseband using cosine and sine waves at the carrier frequency. This also creates signals centered on  , so low-pass filters are used to reject these. The baseband signals are then sampled and digitised using analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), and a forward FFT is used to convert back to the frequency domain.

This returns   parallel streams, each of which is converted to a binary stream using an appropriate symbol detector. These streams are then re-combined into a serial stream,  , which is an estimate of the original binary stream at the transmitter.

Mathematical description edit

 
Subcarriers system of OFDM signals after FFT

If   subcarriers are used, and each subcarrier is modulated using   alternative symbols, the OFDM symbol alphabet consists of   combined symbols.

The low-pass equivalent OFDM filter is expressed as:

 

where   are the data symbols,   is the number of subcarriers, and   is the OFDM symbol time. The subcarrier spacing of   makes them orthogonal over each symbol period; this property is expressed as:

 

where   denotes the complex conjugate operator and   is the Kronecker delta.

To avoid intersymbol interference in multipath fading channels, a guard interval of length   is inserted prior to the OFDM block. During this interval, a cyclic prefix is transmitted such that the signal in the interval   equals the signal in the interval  . The OFDM signal with cyclic prefix is thus:

 

The low-pass signal filter above can be either real or complex-valued. Real-valued low-pass equivalent signals are typically transmitted at baseband—wireline applications such as DSL use this approach. For wireless applications, the low-pass signal is typically complex-valued; in which case, the transmitted signal is up-converted to a carrier frequency  . In general, the transmitted signal can be represented as:

 

Usage edit

OFDM is used in:

OFDM system comparison table edit

Key features of some common OFDM-based systems are presented in the following table.

Standard name DAB Eureka 147 DVB-T DVB-H DTMB DVB-T2 IEEE 802.11a
Year ratified 1995 1997 2004 2006 2007 1999
Frequency range of
today's equipment (MHz)
174–240, 1,452–1,492 470–862, 174–230 470–862 48–870 4,915–6,100
Channel spacing,
B (MHz)
1.712 6, 7, 8 5, 6, 7, 8 6, 7, 8 1.7, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 20
FFT size, k = 1,024 Mode I: 2k
Mode II: 512
Mode III: 256
Mode IV: 1k
2k, 8k 2k, 4k, 8k 1 (single-carrier)
4k (multi-carrier)
1k, 2k, 4k, 8k, 16k, 32k 64
Number of non-silent subcarriers, N Mode I: 1,536
Mode II: 384
Mode III: 192
Mode IV: 768
2K mode: 1,705
8K mode: 6,817
1,705, 3,409, 6,817 1 (single-carrier)
3,780 (multi-carrier)
853–27,841 (1K normal to 32K extended carrier mode) 52
Subcarrier modulation scheme π4-DQPSK QPSK,[35] 16QAM, 64QAM QPSK,[35] 16QAM, 64QAM 4QAM,[35] 4QAM-NR,[36] 16QAM, 32QAM, 64QAM QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM, 256QAM BPSK, QPSK,[35] 16QAM, 64QAM
Useful symbol
length, TU (μs)
Mode I: 1,000
Mode II: 250
Mode III: 125
Mode IV: 500
2K mode: 224
8K mode: 896
224, 448, 896 500 (multi-carrier) 112–3,584 (1K to 32K mode on 8 MHz channel) 3.2
Additional guard
interval, TG/TU
24.6% (all modes) 14, 18, 116, 132 14, 18, 116, 132 14, 16, 19 1/128, 1/32, 1/16, 19/256, 1/8, 19/128, 1/4
(for 32k mode maximum 1/8)
14
Subcarrier spacing,
  (Hz)
Mode I: 1,000
Mode II: 4,000
Mode III: 8,000
Mode IV: 2,000
2K mode: 4,464
8K mode: 1,116
4,464, 2,232, 1,116 8 M (single-carrier)
2,000 (multi-carrier)
279–8,929 (32K down to 1K mode) 312.5 K
Net bit rate,
R (Mbit/s)
0.576–1.152 4.98–31.67
(typ. 24.13)
3.7–23.8 4.81–32.49 Typically 35.4 6–54
Link spectral efficiency,
R/B (bit/s·Hz)
0.34–0.67 0.62–4.0 (typ. 3.0) 0.62–4.0 0.60–4.1 0.87–6.65 0.30–2.7
Inner FEC Conv. coding with equal error protection code rates:
14, 38, 49, 12, 47, 23, 34, 45

Unequal error protection with avg. code rates of:
~0.34, 0.41, 0.50, 0.60, and 0.75

Conv. coding with code rates:
12, 23, 34, 56, or 78
Conv. coding with code rates:
12, 23, 34, 56, or 78
LDPC with code rates:
0.4, 0.6, or 0.8
LDPC: 12, 35, 23, 34, 45, 56 Conv. coding with code rates:
12, 23, or 34
Outer FEC Optional RS (120, 110, t = 5) RS (204, 188, t = 8) RS (204, 188, t = 8) + MPE-FEC BCH code (762, 752) BCH code None
Maximum travelling
speed (km/h)
200–600 53–185, varies with transmission frequency
Time interleaving
depth (ms)
384 0.6–3.5 0.6–3.5 200–500 Up to 250 (500 with extension frame)
Adaptive transmission None None None None
Multiple access method None None None None
Typical source coding 192 kbit/s MPEG2 Audio layer 2 2–18 Mbit/s Standard – HDTV H.264 or MPEG2 H.264 Not defined (video: MPEG-2, H.264, H.265 and/or AVS+; audio: MP2 or DRA or AC-3) H.264 or MPEG2 (audio: AAC HE, Dolby Digital AC-3 (A52), MPEG-2 AL 2)

ADSL edit

OFDM is used in ADSL connections that follow the ANSI T1.413 and G.dmt (ITU G.992.1) standards, where it is called discrete multitone modulation (DMT).[37] DSL achieves high-speed data connections on existing copper wires. OFDM is also used in the successor standards ADSL2, ADSL2+, VDSL, VDSL2, and G.fast. ADSL2 uses variable subcarrier modulation, ranging from BPSK to 32768QAM (in ADSL terminology this is referred to as bit-loading, or bit per tone, 1 to 15 bits per subcarrier).

Long copper wires suffer from attenuation at high frequencies. The fact that OFDM can cope with this frequency selective attenuation and with narrow-band interference are the main reasons it is frequently used in applications such as ADSL modems.

Powerline Technology edit

OFDM is used by many powerline devices to extend digital connections through power wiring. Adaptive modulation is particularly important with such a noisy channel as electrical wiring. Some medium speed smart metering modems, "Prime" and "G3" use OFDM at modest frequencies (30–100 kHz) with modest numbers of channels (several hundred) in order to overcome the intersymbol interference in the power line environment.[38] The IEEE 1901 standards include two incompatible physical layers that both use OFDM.[39] The ITU-T G.hn standard, which provides high-speed local area networking over existing home wiring (power lines, phone lines and coaxial cables) is based on a PHY layer that specifies OFDM with adaptive modulation and a Low-Density Parity-Check (LDPC) FEC code.[34]

Wireless local area networks (LAN) and metropolitan area networks (MAN) edit

OFDM is extensively used in wireless LAN and MAN applications, including IEEE 802.11a/g/n and WiMAX.

IEEE 802.11a/g/n, operating in the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands, specifies per-stream airside data rates ranging from 6 to 54 Mbit/s. If both devices can use "HT mode" (added with 802.11n), the top 20 MHz per-stream rate is increased to 72.2 Mbit/s, with the option of data rates between 13.5 and 150 Mbit/s using a 40 MHz channel. Four different modulation schemes are used: BPSK, QPSK, 16-QAM, and 64-QAM, along with a set of error correcting rates (1/2–5/6). The multitude of choices allows the system to adapt the optimum data rate for the current signal conditions.

Wireless personal area networks (PAN) edit

OFDM is also now being used in the WiMedia/Ecma-368 standard for high-speed wireless personal area networks in the 3.1–10.6 GHz ultrawideband spectrum (see MultiBand-OFDM).

Terrestrial digital radio and television broadcasting edit

Much of Europe and Asia has adopted OFDM for terrestrial broadcasting of digital television (DVB-T, DVB-H and T-DMB) and radio (EUREKA 147 DAB, Digital Radio Mondiale, HD Radio and T-DMB).

DVB-T edit

By Directive of the European Commission, all television services transmitted to viewers in the European Community must use a transmission system that has been standardized by a recognized European standardization body,[40] and such a standard has been developed and codified by the DVB Project, Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Framing structure, channel coding and modulation for digital terrestrial television.[41] Customarily referred to as DVB-T, the standard calls for the exclusive use of COFDM for modulation. DVB-T is now widely used in Europe and elsewhere for terrestrial digital TV.

SDARS edit

The ground segments of the Digital Audio Radio Service (SDARS) systems used by XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio are transmitted using Coded OFDM (COFDM).[42] The word "coded" comes from the use of forward error correction (FEC).[5]

COFDM vs VSB edit

The question of the relative technical merits of COFDM versus 8VSB for terrestrial digital television has been a subject of some controversy, especially between European and North American technologists and regulators. The United States has rejected several proposals to adopt the COFDM-based DVB-T system for its digital television services, and for many years has opted to use 8VSB (vestigial sideband modulation) exclusively for terrestrial digital television.[43] However, in November 2017, the FCC approved a voluntary transition to ATSC 3.0, a new broadcast standard which is based on COFDM. Unlike the first digital television transition in America, TV stations will not be assigned separate frequencies to transmit ATSC 3.0 and are not required to switch to ATSC 3.0 by any deadline. Televisions sold in the U.S. are also not required to include ATSC 3.0 tuning capabilities. Full-powered television stations are permitted to make the switch to ATSC 3.0, as long as they continue to make their main channel available through a simulcast agreement with another in-market station (with a similar coverage area) through at least November 2022.[44]

One of the major benefits provided by COFDM is in rendering radio broadcasts relatively immune to multipath distortion and signal fading due to atmospheric conditions or passing aircraft. Proponents of COFDM argue it resists multipath far better than 8VSB. Early 8VSB DTV (digital television) receivers often had difficulty receiving a signal. Also, COFDM allows single-frequency networks, which is not possible with 8VSB.

However, newer 8VSB receivers are far better at dealing with multipath, hence the difference in performance may diminish with advances in equalizer design.[45]

Digital radio edit

COFDM is also used for other radio standards, for Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB), the standard for digital audio broadcasting at VHF frequencies, for Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM), the standard for digital broadcasting at shortwave and medium wave frequencies (below 30 MHz) and for DRM+ a more recently introduced standard for digital audio broadcasting at VHF frequencies. (30 to 174 MHz)

The United States again uses an alternate standard, a proprietary system developed by iBiquity dubbed HD Radio. However, it uses COFDM as the underlying broadcast technology to add digital audio to AM (medium wave) and FM broadcasts.

Both Digital Radio Mondiale and HD Radio are classified as in-band on-channel systems, unlike Eureka 147 (DAB: Digital Audio Broadcasting) which uses separate VHF or UHF frequency bands instead.

BST-OFDM used in ISDB edit

The band-segmented transmission orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (BST-OFDM) system proposed for Japan (in the ISDB-T, ISDB-TSB, and ISDB-C broadcasting systems) improves upon COFDM by exploiting the fact that some OFDM carriers may be modulated differently from others within the same multiplex. Some forms of COFDM already offer this kind of hierarchical modulation, though BST-OFDM is intended to make it more flexible. The 6 MHz television channel may therefore be "segmented", with different segments being modulated differently and used for different services.

It is possible, for example, to send an audio service on a segment that includes a segment composed of a number of carriers, a data service on another segment and a television service on yet another segment—all within the same 6 MHz television channel. Furthermore, these may be modulated with different parameters so that, for example, the audio and data services could be optimized for mobile reception, while the television service is optimized for stationary reception in a high-multipath environment.

Ultra-wideband edit

Ultra-wideband (UWB) wireless personal area network technology may also use OFDM, such as in Multiband OFDM (MB-OFDM). This UWB specification is advocated by the WiMedia Alliance (formerly by both the Multiband OFDM Alliance [MBOA] and the WiMedia Alliance, but the two have now merged), and is one of the competing UWB radio interfaces.

Flash-OFDM edit

Fast low-latency access with seamless handoff orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (Flash-OFDM), also referred to as F-OFDM, was based on OFDM and also specified higher protocol layers. It was developed by Flarion, and purchased by Qualcomm in January 2006.[46][47] Flash-OFDM was marketed as a packet-switched cellular bearer, to compete with GSM and 3G networks. As an example, 450 MHz frequency bands previously used by NMT-450 and C-Net C450 (both 1G analogue networks, now mostly decommissioned) in Europe are being licensed to Flash-OFDM operators.[citation needed]

In Finland, the license holder Digita began deployment of a nationwide "@450" wireless network in parts of the country since April 2007. It was purchased by Datame in 2011.[48] In February 2012 Datame announced they would upgrade the 450 MHz network to competing CDMA2000 technology.[49]

Slovak Telekom in Slovakia offers Flash-OFDM connections[50] with a maximum downstream speed of 5.3 Mbit/s, and a maximum upstream speed of 1.8 Mbit/s, with a coverage of over 70 percent of Slovak population.[citation needed] The Flash-OFDM network was switched off in the majority of Slovakia on 30 September 2015.[51]

T-Mobile Germany used Flash-OFDM to backhaul Wi-Fi HotSpots on the Deutsche Bahn's ICE high speed trains between 2005 and 2015, until switching over to UMTS and LTE.[52]

American wireless carrier Nextel Communications field tested wireless broadband network technologies including Flash-OFDM in 2005.[53] Sprint purchased the carrier in 2006 and decided to deploy the mobile version of WiMAX, which is based on Scalable Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiple Access (SOFDMA) technology.[54]

Citizens Telephone Cooperative launched a mobile broadband service based on Flash-OFDM technology to subscribers in parts of Virginia in March 2006. The maximum speed available was 1.5 Mbit/s.[55] The service was discontinued on April 30, 2009.[56]

Vector OFDM (VOFDM) edit

VOFDM was proposed by Xiang-Gen Xia in 2000 (Proceedings of ICC 2000, New Orleans, and IEEE Trans. on Communications, Aug. 2001) for single transmit antenna systems. VOFDM replaces each scalar value in the conventional OFDM by a vector value and is a bridge between OFDM and the single carrier frequency domain equalizer (SC-FDE). When the vector size is  , it is OFDM and when the vector size is at least the channel length and the FFT size is  , it is SC-FDE.

In VOFDM, assume   is the vector size, and each scalar-valued signal   in OFDM is replaced by a vector-valued signal  of vector size  ,  . One takes the  -point IFFT of  , component-wisely and gets another vector sequence of the same vector size  ,  . Then, one adds a vector CP of length   to this vector sequence as

 .

This vector sequence is converted to a scalar sequence by sequentializing all the vectors of size  , which is transmitted at a transmit antenna sequentially.

At the receiver, the received scalar sequence is first converted to the vector sequence of vector size  . When the CP length satisfies  , then, after the vector CP is removed from the vector sequence and the  -point FFT is implemented component-wisely to the vector sequence of length  , one obtains

 

where   are additive white noise and   and   is the following   polyphase matrix of the ISI channel  :

 ,

where   is the  th polyphase component of the channel  . From (1), one can see that the original ISI channel is converted to   many vector subchannels of vector size  . There is no ISI across these vector subchannels but there is ISI inside each vector subchannel. In each vector subchannel, at most   many symbols are interfered each other. Clearly, when the vector size  , the above VOFDM returns to OFDM and when   and  , it becomes the SC-FDE. The vector size   is a parameter that one can choose freely and properly in practice and controls the ISI level. There may be a trade-off between vector size  , demodulation complexity at the receiver, and FFT size, for a given channel bandwidth.

Note that the length of the CP part in the sequential form does not have to be an integer multiple of the vector size,  . One can truncate the above vectorized CP to a sequential CP of length not less than the ISI channel length, which will not affect the above demodulation.

Also note that there exist many other different generalizations/forms of OFDM, to see their essential differences, it is critical to see their corresponding received signal equations to demodulate. The above VOFDM is the earliest and the only one that achieves the received signal equation (1) and/or its equivalent form, although it may have different implementations at transmitter vs. different IFFT algorithms.

It has been shown (Yabo Li et al., IEEE Trans. on Signal Processing, Oct. 2012) that applying the MMSE linear receiver to each vector subchannel (1), it achieves multipath diversity and/or signal space diversity. This is because the vectorized channel matrices in (1) are pseudo-circulant and can be diagonalized by the  -point DFT/IDFT matrix with some diagonal phase shift matrices. Then, the right hand side DFT/IDFT matrix and the  th diagonal phase shift matrix in the diagonalization can be thought of the precoding to the input information symbol vector   in the  th sub vector channel, and all the vectorized subchannels become diagonal channels of   discrete frequency components from the  -point DFT of the original ISI channel. It may collect the multipath diversity and/or signal space diversity similar to the precoding to collect the signal space diversity for single antenna systems to combat wireless fading or the diagonal space-time block coding to collect the spatial diversity for multiple antenna systems. The details are referred to the IEEE TCOM and IEEE TSP papers mentioned above.

Wavelet-OFDM edit

OFDM has become an interesting technique for power line communications (PLC). In this area of research, a wavelet transform is introduced to replace the DFT as the method of creating orthogonal frequencies. This is due to the advantages wavelets offer, which are particularly useful on noisy power lines.[57]

Instead of using an IDFT to create the sender signal, the wavelet OFDM uses a synthesis bank consisting of a  -band transmultiplexer followed by the transform function

 

On the receiver side, an analysis bank is used to demodulate the signal again. This bank contains an inverse transform

 

followed by another  -band transmultiplexer. The relationship between both transform functions is

 

An example of W-OFDM uses the Perfect Reconstruction Cosine Modulated Filter Bank (PR-CMFB)[58] and Extended Lapped Transform (ELT)[59][60] is used for the wavelet TF. Thus,   and   are given as

 

These two functionsare their respective inverses, and can be used to modulate and demodulate a given input sequence. Just as in the case of DFT, the wavelet transform creates orthogonal waves with  ,  , ...,  . The orthogonality ensures that they do not interfere with each other and can be sent simultaneously. At the receiver,  ,  , ...,   are used to reconstruct the data sequence once more.

Advantages over standard OFDM edit

W-OFDM is an evolution of the standard OFDM, with certain advantages.

Mainly, the sidelobe levels of W-OFDM are lower. This results in less ICI, as well as greater robustness to narrowband interference. These two properties are especially useful in PLC, where most of the lines aren't shielded against EM-noise, which creates noisy channels and noise spikes.

A comparison between the two modulation techniques also reveals that the complexity of both algorithms remains approximately the same.[57]

Other orthogonal transforms edit

The vast majority of implementations of OFDM use the fast Fourier transform (FFT). However, there exist other orthogonal transforms that can be used. For example, OFDM systems based on the discrete Hartley transform (DHT) [61] and the wavelet transform have been investigated.

History edit

  • 1957: Kineplex, multi-carrier HF modem (R.R. Mosier & R.G. Clabaugh)[62][63]
  • 1966: Chang, Bell Labs: OFDM paper[3] and patent[4]
  • 1971: Weinstein & Ebert proposed use of FFT and guard interval[6]
  • 1985: Cimini described use of OFDM for mobile communications
  • 1985: Telebit Trailblazer Modem introduced a 512 carrier Packet Ensemble Protocol (18 432 bit/s)
  • 1987: Alard & Lasalle: COFDM for digital broadcasting[9]
  • 1988: In September TH-CSF LER, first experimental Digital TV link in OFDM, Paris area
  • 1989: OFDM international patent application[64]
  • October 1990: TH-CSF LER, first OFDM equipment field test, 34 Mbit/s in an 8 MHz channel, experiments in Paris area
  • December 1990: TH-CSF LER, first OFDM test bed comparison with VSB in Princeton USA
  • March 1992: Fattouche and Zaghloul file patent "Method and apparatus for multiple access between transceivers in wireless communications using OFDM spread spectrum" with digital carrier recovery allowing high speed packet radio and complex randomization reducing the peak to average problem. [65]
  • December 1991: Fattouche and Zaghloul use large HP equipment to demonstrate 100 Mbps wireless LAN.
  • September 1992: TH-CSF LER, second generation equipment field test, 70 Mbit/s in an 8 MHz channel, twin polarisations. Wuppertal, Germany
  • October 1992: TH-CSF LER, second generation field test and test bed with BBC, near London, UK
  • 1993: TH-CSF show in Montreux SW, 4 TV channel and one HDTV channel in a single 8 MHz channel
  • 1993: Morris: Experimental 150 Mbit/s OFDM wireless LAN
  • February 1994: [[WiLAN}Wi-LAN Inc.]] demonstrates 20 Mbps wireless WOFDM transceiver operating in the 902-928 MHz band.
  • 1995: ETSI Digital Audio Broadcasting standard EUreka: first OFDM-based standard
  • 1997: ETSI DVB-T standard
  • 1998: Magic WAND project demonstrates OFDM modems for wireless LAN
  • 1999: IEEE 802.11a wireless LAN standard (Wi-Fi)[66]
  • 2000: Proprietary fixed wireless access (V-OFDM, FLASH-OFDM, etc.)
  • May 2001: Wi-LAN Inc. successfully petitioned the FCC to allow OFDM equipment in the 24 GHz band.
  • May 2001: The FCC allows OFDM in the 2.4 GHz license exempt band.[67]
  • 2002: IEEE 802.11g standard for wireless LAN[68]
  • 2004: IEEE 802.16 standard for wireless MAN (WiMAX)[69]
  • 2004: ETSI DVB-H standard
  • 2004: Candidate for IEEE 802.15.3a standard for wireless PAN (MB-OFDM)
  • 2004: Candidate for IEEE 802.11n standard for next generation wireless LAN
  • 2005: OFDMA is candidate for the 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) air interface E-UTRA downlink.
  • 2007: The first complete LTE air interface implementation was demonstrated, including OFDM-MIMO, SC-FDMA and multi-user MIMO uplink[70]

See also edit

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  69. ^ "IEEE Standard 802.16 for Global Broadband Wireless Access" (PDF). 2002-10-21.
  70. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2008-01-29.

Further reading edit

  • Bank, M. (2007). "System free of channel problems inherent in changing mobile communication systems". Electronics Letters. 43 (7): 401–402. Bibcode:2007ElL....43..401B. doi:10.1049/el:20070014.
  • US 7986740, Bank, Michael; Hill, Boris & Bank, Miriam et al., "Wireless mobile communication system without pilot signals", published 2011-07-26 

External links edit

  • Numerous useful links and resources for OFDM – WCSP Group – University of South Florida (USF)
  • WiMAX Forum, WiMAX, the framework standard for 4G mobile personal broadband
  • Stott, 1997 [1] Technical presentation by J H Stott of the BBC's R&D division, delivered at the 20 International Television Symposium in 1997; this URL accessed 24 January 2006.
  • Page on Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing at accessed on 24 September 2007.
  • A tutorial on the significance of Cyclic Prefix (CP) in OFDM Systems.
  • An Introduction to Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplex Technology
  • – Tutorial written by Prof. Debbah, head of the Alcatel-Lucent Chair on flexible radio.
  • Short free tutorial on COFDM by Mark Massel formerly at STMicroelectronics and in the digital TV industry for many years.
  • A popular book on both COFDM and US ATSC by Mark Massel
  • OFDM transmission step-by-step – online experiment
  • Simulation of optical OFDM systems

orthogonal, frequency, division, multiplexing, telecommunications, orthogonal, frequency, division, multiplexing, ofdm, type, digital, transmission, used, digital, modulation, encoding, digital, binary, data, multiple, carrier, frequencies, ofdm, developed, in. In telecommunications orthogonal frequency division multiplexing OFDM is a type of digital transmission used in digital modulation for encoding digital binary data on multiple carrier frequencies OFDM has developed into a popular scheme for wideband digital communication used in applications such as digital television and audio broadcasting DSL internet access wireless networks power line networks and 4G 5G mobile communications 1 OFDM is a frequency division multiplexing FDM scheme that was introduced by Robert W Chang of Bell Labs in 1966 2 3 4 In OFDM the incoming bitstream representing the data to be sent is divided into multiple streams Multiple closely spaced orthogonal subcarrier signals with overlapping spectra are transmitted with each carrier modulated with bits from the incoming stream so multiple bits are being transmitted in parallel 5 Demodulation is based on fast Fourier transform algorithms OFDM was improved by Weinstein and Ebert in 1971 with the introduction of a guard interval providing better orthogonality in transmission channels affected by multipath propagation 6 Each subcarrier signal is modulated with a conventional modulation scheme such as quadrature amplitude modulation or phase shift keying at a low symbol rate This maintains total data rates similar to conventional single carrier modulation schemes in the same bandwidth 7 Consecutive raised cosine impulses demonstrating zero ISI property these closely resemble OFDM power spectrum frequency domain The main advantage of OFDM over single carrier schemes is its ability to cope with severe channel conditions for example attenuation of high frequencies in a long copper wire narrowband interference and frequency selective fading due to multipath without the need for complex equalization filters Channel equalization is simplified because OFDM may be viewed as using many slowly modulated narrowband signals rather than one rapidly modulated wideband signal The low symbol rate makes the use of a guard interval between symbols affordable making it possible to eliminate intersymbol interference ISI and use echoes and time spreading in analog television visible as ghosting and blurring respectively to achieve a diversity gain i e a signal to noise ratio improvement This mechanism also facilitates the design of single frequency networks SFNs where several adjacent transmitters send the same signal simultaneously at the same frequency as the signals from multiple distant transmitters may be re combined constructively sparing interference of a traditional single carrier system In coded orthogonal frequency division multiplexing COFDM forward error correction convolutional coding and time frequency interleaving are applied to the signal being transmitted This is done to overcome errors in mobile communication channels affected by multipath propagation and Doppler effects COFDM was introduced by Alard in 1986 8 9 10 for Digital Audio Broadcasting for Eureka Project 147 In practice OFDM has become used in combination with such coding and interleaving so that the terms COFDM and OFDM co apply to common applications 11 12 Contents 1 Example of applications 1 1 Wired version mostly known as Discrete Multi tone Transmission DMT 1 2 Wireless 2 Key features 2 1 Summary of advantages 2 2 Summary of disadvantages 3 Characteristics and principles of operation 3 1 Orthogonality 3 2 Implementation using the FFT algorithm 3 3 Guard interval for elimination of intersymbol interference 3 4 Simplified equalization 3 5 Channel coding and interleaving 3 6 Adaptive transmission 3 7 OFDM extended with multiple access 3 8 Space diversity 3 9 Linear transmitter power amplifier 4 Efficiency comparison between single carrier and multicarrier 5 Idealized system model 5 1 Transmitter 5 2 Receiver 6 Mathematical description 7 Usage 7 1 OFDM system comparison table 7 2 ADSL 7 3 Powerline Technology 7 4 Wireless local area networks LAN and metropolitan area networks MAN 7 5 Wireless personal area networks PAN 7 6 Terrestrial digital radio and television broadcasting 7 6 1 DVB T 7 6 2 SDARS 7 6 3 COFDM vs VSB 7 6 4 Digital radio 7 6 5 BST OFDM used in ISDB 7 7 Ultra wideband 7 8 Flash OFDM 8 Vector OFDM VOFDM 9 Wavelet OFDM 9 1 Advantages over standard OFDM 10 Other orthogonal transforms 11 History 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksExample of applications editThe following list is a summary of existing OFDM based standards and products For further details see the Usage section at the end of the article Wired version mostly known as Discrete Multi tone Transmission DMT edit ADSL and VDSL broadband access via POTS copper wiring DVB C2 an enhanced version of the DVB C digital cable TV standard Power line communication PLC ITU T G hn a standard which provides high speed local area networking of existing home wiring power lines phone lines and coaxial cables 13 TrailBlazer telephone line modems Multimedia over Coax Alliance MoCA home networking DOCSIS 3 1 Broadband delivery Wireless edit The wireless LAN WLAN radio interfaces IEEE 802 11a g n ac ah and HIPERLAN 2 The digital radio systems DAB EUREKA 147 DAB Digital Radio Mondiale HD Radio T DMB and ISDB TSB The terrestrial digital TV systems DVB T and ISDB T The terrestrial mobile TV systems DVB H T DMB ISDB T and MediaFLO forward link The wireless personal area network PAN ultra wideband UWB IEEE 802 15 3a implementation suggested by WiMedia Alliance Wi SUN Smart Ubiquitous Network The OFDM based multiple access technology OFDMA is also used in several 4G and pre 4G cellular networks mobile broadband standards the next generation WLAN and the wired portion of Hybrid fiber coaxial networks citation needed The mobility mode of the wireless MAN broadband wireless access BWA standard IEEE 802 16e or Mobile WiMAX The mobile broadband wireless access MBWA standard IEEE 802 20 The downlink of the 3GPP Long Term Evolution LTE fourth generation mobile broadband standard The radio interface was formerly named High Speed OFDM Packet Access HSOPA now named Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access E UTRA WLAN IEEE 802 11ax DOCSIS 3 1 Upstream 14 Key features editThe advantages and disadvantages listed below are further discussed in the Characteristics and principles of operation section below Summary of advantages edit High spectral efficiency as compared to other double sideband modulation schemes spread spectrum etc Can easily adapt to severe channel conditions without complex time domain equalization Robust against narrow band co channel interference Robust against intersymbol interference ISI and fading caused by multipath propagation Efficient implementation using fast Fourier transform Low sensitivity to time synchronization errors Tuned sub channel receiver filters are not required unlike conventional FDM Facilitates single frequency networks SFNs i e transmitter macrodiversity Summary of disadvantages edit Sensitive to Doppler shift Sensitive to frequency synchronization problems High peak to average power ratio PAPR requiring linear transmitter circuitry which suffers from poor power efficiency Loss of efficiency caused by cyclic prefix guard intervalCharacteristics and principles of operation editOrthogonality edit Conceptually OFDM is a specialized frequency division multiplexing FDM method with the additional constraint that all subcarrier signals within a communication channel are orthogonal to one another In OFDM the subcarrier frequencies are chosen so that the subcarriers are orthogonal to each other meaning that crosstalk between the sub channels is eliminated and inter carrier guard bands are not required This greatly simplifies the design of both the transmitter and the receiver unlike conventional FDM a separate filter for each sub channel is not required The orthogonality requires that the subcarrier spacing is D f k T U displaystyle scriptstyle Delta f frac k T U nbsp Hertz where TU seconds is the useful symbol duration the receiver side window size and k is a positive integer typically equal to 1 This stipulates that each carrier frequency undergoes k more complete cycles per symbol period than the previous carrier Therefore with N subcarriers the total passband bandwidth will be B N Df Hz The orthogonality also allows high spectral efficiency with a total symbol rate near the Nyquist rate for the equivalent baseband signal i e near half the Nyquist rate for the double side band physical passband signal Almost the whole available frequency band can be used OFDM generally has a nearly white spectrum giving it benign electromagnetic interference properties with respect to other co channel users A simple example A useful symbol duration TU 1 ms would require a subcarrier spacing of D f 1 1 m s 1 k H z displaystyle scriptstyle Delta f frac 1 1 mathrm ms 1 mathrm kHz nbsp or an integer multiple of that for orthogonality N 1 000 subcarriers would result in a total passband bandwidth of NDf 1 MHz For this symbol time the required bandwidth in theory according to Nyquist is B W R 2 N T U 2 0 5 M H z displaystyle scriptstyle mathrm BW R 2 N T U 2 0 5 mathrm MHz nbsp half of the achieved bandwidth required by our scheme where R is the bit rate and where N 1 000 samples per symbol by FFT If a guard interval is applied see below Nyquist bandwidth requirement would be even lower The FFT would result in N 1 000 samples per symbol If no guard interval was applied this would result in a base band complex valued signal with a sample rate of 1 MHz which would require a baseband bandwidth of 0 5 MHz according to Nyquist However the passband RF signal is produced by multiplying the baseband signal with a carrier waveform i e double sideband quadrature amplitude modulation resulting in a passband bandwidth of 1 MHz A single side band SSB or vestigial sideband VSB modulation scheme would achieve almost half that bandwidth for the same symbol rate i e twice as high spectral efficiency for the same symbol alphabet length It is however more sensitive to multipath interference OFDM requires very accurate frequency synchronization between the receiver and the transmitter with frequency deviation the subcarriers will no longer be orthogonal causing inter carrier interference ICI i e cross talk between the subcarriers Frequency offsets are typically caused by mismatched transmitter and receiver oscillators or by Doppler shift due to movement While Doppler shift alone may be compensated for by the receiver the situation is worsened when combined with multipath as reflections will appear at various frequency offsets which is much harder to correct This effect typically worsens as speed increases 15 and is an important factor limiting the use of OFDM in high speed vehicles In order to mitigate ICI in such scenarios one can shape each subcarrier in order to minimize the interference resulting in a non orthogonal subcarriers overlapping 16 For example a low complexity scheme referred to as WCP OFDM Weighted Cyclic Prefix Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing consists of using short filters at the transmitter output in order to perform a potentially non rectangular pulse shaping and a near perfect reconstruction using a single tap per subcarrier equalization 17 Other ICI suppression techniques usually drastically increase the receiver complexity 18 Implementation using the FFT algorithm edit The orthogonality allows for efficient modulator and demodulator implementation using the FFT algorithm on the receiver side and inverse FFT on the sender side Although the principles and some of the benefits have been known since the 1960s OFDM is popular for wideband communications today by way of low cost digital signal processing components that can efficiently calculate the FFT The time to compute the inverse FFT or FFT has to take less than the time for each symbol 19 84 which for example for DVB T FFT 8k means the computation has to be done in 896 µs or less For an 8192 point FFT this may be approximated to 19 clarification needed M I P S c o m p u t a t i o n a l c o m p l e x i t y T s y m b o l 1 3 10 6 147 456 2 896 10 6 1 3 10 6 428 displaystyle begin aligned mathrm MIPS amp frac mathrm computational complexity T mathrm symbol times 1 3 times 10 6 amp frac 147 456 times 2 896 times 10 6 times 1 3 times 10 6 amp 428 end aligned nbsp MIPS Million instructions per second The computational demand approximately scales linearly with FFT size so a double size FFT needs double the amount of time and vice versa 19 83 As a comparison an Intel Pentium III CPU at 1 266 GHz is able to calculate a 8192 point FFT in 576 µs using FFTW 20 Intel Pentium M at 1 6 GHz does it in 387 µs 21 Intel Core Duo at 3 0 GHz does it in 96 8 µs 22 Guard interval for elimination of intersymbol interference edit One key principle of OFDM is that since low symbol rate modulation schemes i e where the symbols are relatively long compared to the channel time characteristics suffer less from intersymbol interference caused by multipath propagation it is advantageous to transmit a number of low rate streams in parallel instead of a single high rate stream Since the duration of each symbol is long it is feasible to insert a guard interval between the OFDM symbols thus eliminating the intersymbol interference The guard interval also eliminates the need for a pulse shaping filter and it reduces the sensitivity to time synchronization problems A simple example If one sends a million symbols per second using conventional single carrier modulation over a wireless channel then the duration of each symbol would be one microsecond or less This imposes severe constraints on synchronization and necessitates the removal of multipath interference If the same million symbols per second are spread among one thousand sub channels the duration of each symbol can be longer by a factor of a thousand i e one millisecond for orthogonality with approximately the same bandwidth Assume that a guard interval of 1 8 of the symbol length is inserted between each symbol Intersymbol interference can be avoided if the multipath time spreading the time between the reception of the first and the last echo is shorter than the guard interval i e 125 microseconds This corresponds to a maximum difference of 37 5 kilometers between the lengths of the paths The cyclic prefix which is transmitted during the guard interval consists of the end of the OFDM symbol copied into the guard interval and the guard interval is transmitted followed by the OFDM symbol The reason that the guard interval consists of a copy of the end of the OFDM symbol is so that the receiver will integrate over an integer number of sinusoid cycles for each of the multipaths when it performs OFDM demodulation with the FFT nbsp In some standards such as Ultrawideband in the interest of transmitted power cyclic prefix is skipped and nothing is sent during the guard interval The receiver will then have to mimic the cyclic prefix functionality by copying the end part of the OFDM symbol and adding it to the beginning portion Simplified equalization edit The effects of frequency selective channel conditions for example fading caused by multipath propagation can be considered as constant flat over an OFDM sub channel if the sub channel is sufficiently narrow banded i e if the number of sub channels is sufficiently large This makes frequency domain equalization possible at the receiver which is far simpler than the time domain equalization used in conventional single carrier modulation In OFDM the equalizer only has to multiply each detected subcarrier each Fourier coefficient in each OFDM symbol by a constant complex number or a rarely changed value On a fundamental level simpler digital equalizers are better because they require fewer operations which translates to fewer round off errors in the equalizer Those round off errors can be viewed as numerical noise and are inevitable Our example The OFDM equalization in the above numerical example would require one complex valued multiplication per subcarrier and symbol i e N 1000 displaystyle scriptstyle N 1000 nbsp complex multiplications per OFDM symbol i e one million multiplications per second at the receiver The FFT algorithm requires N log 2 N 10 000 displaystyle scriptstyle N log 2 N 10 000 nbsp this is imprecise over half of these complex multiplications are trivial i e to 1 and are not implemented in software or HW complex valued multiplications per OFDM symbol i e 10 million multiplications per second at both the receiver and transmitter side This should be compared with the corresponding one million symbols second single carrier modulation case mentioned in the example where the equalization of 125 microseconds time spreading using a FIR filter would require in a naive implementation 125 multiplications per symbol i e 125 million multiplications per second FFT techniques can be used to reduce the number of multiplications for an FIR filter based time domain equalizer to a number comparable with OFDM at the cost of delay between reception and decoding which also becomes comparable with OFDM If differential modulation such as DPSK or DQPSK is applied to each subcarrier equalization can be completely omitted since these non coherent schemes are insensitive to slowly changing amplitude and phase distortion In a sense improvements in FIR equalization using FFTs or partial FFTs leads mathematically closer to OFDM citation needed but the OFDM technique is easier to understand and implement and the sub channels can be independently adapted in other ways than varying equalization coefficients such as switching between different QAM constellation patterns and error correction schemes to match individual sub channel noise and interference characteristics clarification needed Some of the subcarriers in some of the OFDM symbols may carry pilot signals for measurement of the channel conditions 23 24 i e the equalizer gain and phase shift for each subcarrier Pilot signals and training symbols preambles may also be used for time synchronization to avoid intersymbol interference ISI and frequency synchronization to avoid inter carrier interference ICI caused by Doppler shift OFDM was initially used for wired and stationary wireless communications However with an increasing number of applications operating in highly mobile environments the effect of dispersive fading caused by a combination of multi path propagation and doppler shift is more significant Over the last decade research has been done on how to equalize OFDM transmission over doubly selective channels 25 26 27 Channel coding and interleaving edit OFDM is invariably used in conjunction with channel coding forward error correction and almost always uses frequency and or time interleaving Frequency subcarrier interleaving increases resistance to frequency selective channel conditions such as fading For example when a part of the channel bandwidth fades frequency interleaving ensures that the bit errors that would result from those subcarriers in the faded part of the bandwidth are spread out in the bit stream rather than being concentrated Similarly time interleaving ensures that bits that are originally close together in the bit stream are transmitted far apart in time thus mitigating against severe fading as would happen when travelling at high speed However time interleaving is of little benefit in slowly fading channels such as for stationary reception and frequency interleaving offers little to no benefit for narrowband channels that suffer from flat fading where the whole channel bandwidth fades at the same time The reason why interleaving is used on OFDM is to attempt to spread the errors out in the bit stream that is presented to the error correction decoder because when such decoders are presented with a high concentration of errors the decoder is unable to correct all the bit errors and a burst of uncorrected errors occurs A similar design of audio data encoding makes compact disc CD playback robust A classical type of error correction coding used with OFDM based systems is convolutional coding often concatenated with Reed Solomon coding Usually additional interleaving on top of the time and frequency interleaving mentioned above in between the two layers of coding is implemented The choice for Reed Solomon coding as the outer error correction code is based on the observation that the Viterbi decoder used for inner convolutional decoding produces short error bursts when there is a high concentration of errors and Reed Solomon codes are inherently well suited to correcting bursts of errors Newer systems however usually now adopt near optimal types of error correction codes that use the turbo decoding principle where the decoder iterates towards the desired solution Examples of such error correction coding types include turbo codes and LDPC codes which perform close to the Shannon limit for the Additive White Gaussian Noise AWGN channel Some systems that have implemented these codes have concatenated them with either Reed Solomon for example on the MediaFLO system or BCH codes on the DVB S2 system to improve upon an error floor inherent to these codes at high signal to noise ratios 28 Adaptive transmission edit The resilience to severe channel conditions can be further enhanced if information about the channel is sent over a return channel Based on this feedback information adaptive modulation channel coding and power allocation may be applied across all subcarriers or individually to each subcarrier In the latter case if a particular range of frequencies suffers from interference or attenuation the carriers within that range can be disabled or made to run slower by applying more robust modulation or error coding to those subcarriers The term discrete multitone modulation DMT denotes OFDM based communication systems that adapt the transmission to the channel conditions individually for each subcarrier by means of so called bit loading Examples are ADSL and VDSL The upstream and downstream speeds can be varied by allocating either more or fewer carriers for each purpose Some forms of rate adaptive DSL use this feature in real time so that the bitrate is adapted to the co channel interference and bandwidth is allocated to whichever subscriber needs it most OFDM extended with multiple access edit Main article Orthogonal frequency division multiple access OFDM in its primary form is considered as a digital modulation technique and not a multi user channel access method since it is used for transferring one bit stream over one communication channel using one sequence of OFDM symbols However OFDM can be combined with multiple access using time frequency or coding separation of the users In orthogonal frequency division multiple access OFDMA frequency division multiple access is achieved by assigning different OFDM sub channels to different users OFDMA supports differentiated quality of service by assigning different number of subcarriers to different users in a similar fashion as in CDMA and thus complex packet scheduling or medium access control schemes can be avoided OFDMA is used in the mobility mode of the IEEE 802 16 Wireless MAN standard commonly referred to as WiMAX the IEEE 802 20 mobile Wireless MAN standard commonly referred to as MBWA the 3GPP Long Term Evolution LTE fourth generation mobile broadband standard downlink The radio interface was formerly named High Speed OFDM Packet Access HSOPA now named Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access E UTRA the 3GPP 5G NR New Radio fifth generation mobile network standard downlink and uplink 5G NR is the successor to LTE the now defunct Qualcomm 3GPP2 Ultra Mobile Broadband UMB project intended as a successor of CDMA2000 but replaced by LTE OFDMA is also a candidate access method for the IEEE 802 22 Wireless Regional Area Networks WRAN The project aims at designing the first cognitive radio based standard operating in the VHF low UHF spectrum TV spectrum the most recent amendment of 802 11 standard namely 802 11ax includes OFDMA for high efficiency and simultaneous communication In multi carrier code division multiple access MC CDMA also known as OFDM CDMA OFDM is combined with CDMA spread spectrum communication for coding separation of the users Co channel interference can be mitigated meaning that manual fixed channel allocation FCA frequency planning is simplified or complex dynamic channel allocation DCA schemes are avoided Space diversity edit In OFDM based wide area broadcasting receivers can benefit from receiving signals from several spatially dispersed transmitters simultaneously since transmitters will only destructively interfere with each other on a limited number of subcarriers whereas in general they will actually reinforce coverage over a wide area This is very beneficial in many countries as it permits the operation of national single frequency networks SFN where many transmitters send the same signal simultaneously over the same channel frequency SFNs use the available spectrum more effectively than conventional multi frequency broadcast networks MFN where program content is replicated on different carrier frequencies SFNs also result in a diversity gain in receivers situated midway between the transmitters The coverage area is increased and the outage probability decreased in comparison to an MFN due to increased received signal strength averaged over all subcarriers Although the guard interval only contains redundant data which means that it reduces the capacity some OFDM based systems such as some of the broadcasting systems deliberately use a long guard interval in order to allow the transmitters to be spaced farther apart in an SFN and longer guard intervals allow larger SFN cell sizes A rule of thumb for the maximum distance between transmitters in an SFN is equal to the distance a signal travels during the guard interval for instance a guard interval of 200 microseconds would allow transmitters to be spaced 60 km apart A single frequency network is a form of transmitter macrodiversity The concept can be further used in dynamic single frequency networks DSFN where the SFN grouping is changed from timeslot to timeslot OFDM may be combined with other forms of space diversity for example antenna arrays and MIMO channels This is done in the IEEE 802 11 Wireless LAN standards Linear transmitter power amplifier edit An OFDM signal exhibits a high peak to average power ratio PAPR because the independent phases of the subcarriers mean that they will often combine constructively Handling this high PAPR requires A high resolution digital to analog converter DAC in the transmitter A high resolution analog to digital converter ADC in the receiver A linear signal chain Any non linearity in the signal chain will cause intermodulation distortion that Raises the noise floor May cause inter carrier interference Generates out of band spurious radiation The linearity requirement is demanding especially for transmitter RF output circuitry where amplifiers are often designed to be non linear in order to minimise power consumption In practical OFDM systems a small amount of peak clipping is allowed to limit the PAPR in a judicious trade off against the above consequences However the transmitter output filter which is required to reduce out of band spurs to legal levels has the effect of restoring peak levels that were clipped so clipping is not an effective way to reduce PAPR Although the spectral efficiency of OFDM is attractive for both terrestrial and space communications the high PAPR requirements have so far limited OFDM applications to terrestrial systems The crest factor CF in dB for an OFDM system with n uncorrelated subcarriers is 29 C F 10 log 10 n C F c displaystyle CF 10 log 10 n CF c nbsp where CFc is the crest factor in dB for each subcarrier CFc is 3 01 dB for the sine waves used for BPSK and QPSK modulation For example the DVB T signal in 2K mode is composed of 1705 subcarriers that are each QPSK modulated giving a crest factor of 35 32 dB 29 Many PAPR or crest factor reduction techniques have been developed for instance based on iterative clipping 30 Over the years numerous model driven approaches have been proposed to reduce the PAPR in communication systems In recent years there has been a growing interest in exploring data driven models for PAPR reduction as part of ongoing research in end to end communication networks These data driven models offer innovative solutions and new avenues of exploration to address the challenges posed by high PAPR effectively By leveraging data driven techniques researchers aim to enhance the performance and efficiency of communication networks by optimizing power utilization 31 The dynamic range required for an FM receiver is 120 dB while DAB only require about 90 dB 32 As a comparison each extra bit per sample increases the dynamic range by 6 dB Efficiency comparison between single carrier and multicarrier editThe performance of any communication system can be measured in terms of its power efficiency and bandwidth efficiency The power efficiency describes the ability of communication system to preserve bit error rate BER of the transmitted signal at low power levels Bandwidth efficiency reflects how efficiently the allocated bandwidth is used and is defined as the throughput data rate per hertz in a given bandwidth If the large number of subcarriers are used the bandwidth efficiency of multicarrier system such as OFDM with using optical fiber channel is defined as 33 h 2 R s B OFDM displaystyle eta 2 frac R s B text OFDM nbsp where R s displaystyle R s nbsp is the symbol rate in giga symbols per second Gsps B OFDM displaystyle B text OFDM nbsp is the bandwidth of OFDM signal and the factor of 2 is due to the two polarization states in the fiber There is saving of bandwidth by using multicarrier modulation with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing So the bandwidth for multicarrier system is less in comparison with single carrier system and hence bandwidth efficiency of multicarrier system is larger than single carrier system S no Transmission type M in M QAM No of subcarriers Bit rate Fiber length Received power at BER of 10 9 Bandwidth efficiency 1 Single carrier 64 1 10 Gbit s 20 km 37 3 dBm 6 0000 2 Multicarrier 64 128 10 Gbit s 20 km 36 3 dBm 10 6022 There is only 1 dB increase in receiver power but we get 76 7 improvement in bandwidth efficiency with using multicarrier transmission technique Idealized system model editThis section describes a simple idealized OFDM system model suitable for a time invariant AWGN channel Transmitter edit nbsp An OFDM carrier signal is the sum of a number of orthogonal subcarriers with baseband data on each subcarrier being independently modulated commonly using some type of quadrature amplitude modulation QAM or phase shift keying PSK This composite baseband signal is typically used to modulate a main RF carrier s n displaystyle s n nbsp is a serial stream of binary digits By inverse multiplexing these are first demultiplexed into N displaystyle N nbsp parallel streams and each one mapped to a possibly complex symbol stream using some modulation constellation QAM PSK etc Note that the constellations may be different so some streams may carry a higher bit rate than others An inverse FFT is computed on each set of symbols giving a set of complex time domain samples These samples are then quadrature mixed to passband in the standard way The real and imaginary components are first converted to the analogue domain using digital to analogue converters DACs the analogue signals are then used to modulate cosine and sine waves at the carrier frequency f c displaystyle f text c nbsp respectively These signals are then summed to give the transmission signal s t displaystyle s t nbsp Receiver edit nbsp The receiver picks up the signal r t displaystyle r t nbsp which is then quadrature mixed down to baseband using cosine and sine waves at the carrier frequency This also creates signals centered on 2 f c displaystyle 2f text c nbsp so low pass filters are used to reject these The baseband signals are then sampled and digitised using analog to digital converters ADCs and a forward FFT is used to convert back to the frequency domain This returns N displaystyle N nbsp parallel streams each of which is converted to a binary stream using an appropriate symbol detector These streams are then re combined into a serial stream s n displaystyle hat s n nbsp which is an estimate of the original binary stream at the transmitter Mathematical description edit nbsp Subcarriers system of OFDM signals after FFT If N displaystyle N nbsp subcarriers are used and each subcarrier is modulated using M displaystyle M nbsp alternative symbols the OFDM symbol alphabet consists of M N displaystyle M N nbsp combined symbols The low pass equivalent OFDM filter is expressed as n t k 0 N 1 X k e j 2 p k t T 0 t lt T displaystyle nu t sum k 0 N 1 X k e j2 pi kt T quad 0 leq t lt T nbsp where X k displaystyle X k nbsp are the data symbols N displaystyle N nbsp is the number of subcarriers and T displaystyle T nbsp is the OFDM symbol time The subcarrier spacing of 1 T textstyle frac 1 T nbsp makes them orthogonal over each symbol period this property is expressed as 1 T 0 T e j 2 p k 1 t T e j 2 p k 2 t T d t 1 T 0 T e j 2 p k 2 k 1 t T d t d k 1 k 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp frac 1 T int 0 T left e j2 pi k 1 t T right left e j2 pi k 2 t T right dt amp frac 1 T int 0 T e j2 pi left k 2 k 1 right t T dt delta k 1 k 2 end aligned nbsp where displaystyle cdot nbsp denotes the complex conjugate operator and d displaystyle delta nbsp is the Kronecker delta To avoid intersymbol interference in multipath fading channels a guard interval of length T g displaystyle T text g nbsp is inserted prior to the OFDM block During this interval a cyclic prefix is transmitted such that the signal in the interval T g t lt 0 displaystyle T text g leq t lt 0 nbsp equals the signal in the interval T T g t lt T displaystyle T T text g leq t lt T nbsp The OFDM signal with cyclic prefix is thus n t k 0 N 1 X k e j 2 p k t T T g t lt T displaystyle nu t sum k 0 N 1 X k e j2 pi kt T quad T text g leq t lt T nbsp The low pass signal filter above can be either real or complex valued Real valued low pass equivalent signals are typically transmitted at baseband wireline applications such as DSL use this approach For wireless applications the low pass signal is typically complex valued in which case the transmitted signal is up converted to a carrier frequency f c displaystyle f text c nbsp In general the transmitted signal can be represented as s t ℜ n t e j 2 p f c t k 0 N 1 X k cos 2 p f c k T t arg X k displaystyle begin aligned s t amp Re left nu t e j2 pi f c t right amp sum k 0 N 1 X k cos left 2 pi left f text c frac k T right t arg X k right end aligned nbsp Usage editOFDM is used in Digital Radio Mondiale DRM Digital Audio Broadcasting DAB Digital television DVB T T2 terrestrial ATSC 3 0 terrestrial DVB H handheld DMB T H DVB C2 cable Wireless LAN IEEE 802 11a IEEE 802 11g IEEE 802 11n IEEE 802 11ac and IEEE 802 11ad WiMAX Li Fi ADSL G dmt ITU G 992 1 LTE and LTE Advanced 4G mobile networks DECT cordless phones Modern narrow and broadband power line communications 34 OFDM system comparison table edit Key features of some common OFDM based systems are presented in the following table Standard name DAB Eureka 147 DVB T DVB H DTMB DVB T2 IEEE 802 11a Year ratified 1995 1997 2004 2006 2007 1999 Frequency range of today s equipment MHz 174 240 1 452 1 492 470 862 174 230 470 862 48 870 4 915 6 100 Channel spacing B MHz 1 712 6 7 8 5 6 7 8 6 7 8 1 7 5 6 7 8 10 20 FFT size k 1 024 Mode I 2kMode II 512Mode III 256Mode IV 1k 2k 8k 2k 4k 8k 1 single carrier 4k multi carrier 1k 2k 4k 8k 16k 32k 64 Number of non silent subcarriers N Mode I 1 536Mode II 384Mode III 192Mode IV 768 2K mode 1 7058K mode 6 817 1 705 3 409 6 817 1 single carrier 3 780 multi carrier 853 27 841 1K normal to 32K extended carrier mode 52 Subcarrier modulation scheme p 4 DQPSK QPSK 35 16QAM 64QAM QPSK 35 16QAM 64QAM 4QAM 35 4QAM NR 36 16QAM 32QAM 64QAM QPSK 16QAM 64QAM 256QAM BPSK QPSK 35 16QAM 64QAM Useful symbol length TU ms Mode I 1 000Mode II 250Mode III 125Mode IV 500 2K mode 2248K mode 896 224 448 896 500 multi carrier 112 3 584 1K to 32K mode on 8 MHz channel 3 2 Additional guard interval TG TU 24 6 all modes 1 4 1 8 1 16 1 32 1 4 1 8 1 16 1 32 1 4 1 6 1 9 1 128 1 32 1 16 19 256 1 8 19 128 1 4 for 32k mode maximum 1 8 1 4 Subcarrier spacing D f 1 T U B N textstyle Delta f frac 1 T U approx frac B N nbsp Hz Mode I 1 000Mode II 4 000Mode III 8 000Mode IV 2 000 2K mode 4 4648K mode 1 116 4 464 2 232 1 116 8 M single carrier 2 000 multi carrier 279 8 929 32K down to 1K mode 312 5 K Net bit rate R Mbit s 0 576 1 152 4 98 31 67 typ 24 13 3 7 23 8 4 81 32 49 Typically 35 4 6 54 Link spectral efficiency R B bit s Hz 0 34 0 67 0 62 4 0 typ 3 0 0 62 4 0 0 60 4 1 0 87 6 65 0 30 2 7 Inner FEC Conv coding with equal error protection code rates 1 4 3 8 4 9 1 2 4 7 2 3 3 4 4 5 Unequal error protection with avg code rates of 0 34 0 41 0 50 0 60 and 0 75 Conv coding with code rates 1 2 2 3 3 4 5 6 or 7 8 Conv coding with code rates 1 2 2 3 3 4 5 6 or 7 8 LDPC with code rates 0 4 0 6 or 0 8 LDPC 1 2 3 5 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 Conv coding with code rates 1 2 2 3 or 3 4 Outer FEC Optional RS 120 110 t 5 RS 204 188 t 8 RS 204 188 t 8 MPE FEC BCH code 762 752 BCH code None Maximum travelling speed km h 200 600 53 185 varies with transmission frequency Time interleaving depth ms 384 0 6 3 5 0 6 3 5 200 500 Up to 250 500 with extension frame Adaptive transmission None None None None Multiple access method None None None None Typical source coding 192 kbit s MPEG2 Audio layer 2 2 18 Mbit s Standard HDTV H 264 or MPEG2 H 264 Not defined video MPEG 2 H 264 H 265 and or AVS audio MP2 or DRA or AC 3 H 264 or MPEG2 audio AAC HE Dolby Digital AC 3 A52 MPEG 2 AL 2 ADSL edit OFDM is used in ADSL connections that follow the ANSI T1 413 and G dmt ITU G 992 1 standards where it is called discrete multitone modulation DMT 37 DSL achieves high speed data connections on existing copper wires OFDM is also used in the successor standards ADSL2 ADSL2 VDSL VDSL2 and G fast ADSL2 uses variable subcarrier modulation ranging from BPSK to 32768QAM in ADSL terminology this is referred to as bit loading or bit per tone 1 to 15 bits per subcarrier Long copper wires suffer from attenuation at high frequencies The fact that OFDM can cope with this frequency selective attenuation and with narrow band interference are the main reasons it is frequently used in applications such as ADSL modems Powerline Technology edit OFDM is used by many powerline devices to extend digital connections through power wiring Adaptive modulation is particularly important with such a noisy channel as electrical wiring Some medium speed smart metering modems Prime and G3 use OFDM at modest frequencies 30 100 kHz with modest numbers of channels several hundred in order to overcome the intersymbol interference in the power line environment 38 The IEEE 1901 standards include two incompatible physical layers that both use OFDM 39 The ITU T G hn standard which provides high speed local area networking over existing home wiring power lines phone lines and coaxial cables is based on a PHY layer that specifies OFDM with adaptive modulation and a Low Density Parity Check LDPC FEC code 34 Wireless local area networks LAN and metropolitan area networks MAN edit OFDM is extensively used in wireless LAN and MAN applications including IEEE 802 11a g n and WiMAX IEEE 802 11a g n operating in the 2 4 and 5 GHz bands specifies per stream airside data rates ranging from 6 to 54 Mbit s If both devices can use HT mode added with 802 11n the top 20 MHz per stream rate is increased to 72 2 Mbit s with the option of data rates between 13 5 and 150 Mbit s using a 40 MHz channel Four different modulation schemes are used BPSK QPSK 16 QAM and 64 QAM along with a set of error correcting rates 1 2 5 6 The multitude of choices allows the system to adapt the optimum data rate for the current signal conditions Wireless personal area networks PAN edit OFDM is also now being used in the WiMedia Ecma 368 standard for high speed wireless personal area networks in the 3 1 10 6 GHz ultrawideband spectrum see MultiBand OFDM Terrestrial digital radio and television broadcasting edit Much of Europe and Asia has adopted OFDM for terrestrial broadcasting of digital television DVB T DVB H and T DMB and radio EUREKA 147 DAB Digital Radio Mondiale HD Radio and T DMB DVB T edit By Directive of the European Commission all television services transmitted to viewers in the European Community must use a transmission system that has been standardized by a recognized European standardization body 40 and such a standard has been developed and codified by the DVB Project Digital Video Broadcasting DVB Framing structure channel coding and modulation for digital terrestrial television 41 Customarily referred to as DVB T the standard calls for the exclusive use of COFDM for modulation DVB T is now widely used in Europe and elsewhere for terrestrial digital TV SDARS edit The ground segments of the Digital Audio Radio Service SDARS systems used by XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio are transmitted using Coded OFDM COFDM 42 The word coded comes from the use of forward error correction FEC 5 COFDM vs VSB edit The question of the relative technical merits of COFDM versus 8VSB for terrestrial digital television has been a subject of some controversy especially between European and North American technologists and regulators The United States has rejected several proposals to adopt the COFDM based DVB T system for its digital television services and for many years has opted to use 8VSB vestigial sideband modulation exclusively for terrestrial digital television 43 However in November 2017 the FCC approved a voluntary transition to ATSC 3 0 a new broadcast standard which is based on COFDM Unlike the first digital television transition in America TV stations will not be assigned separate frequencies to transmit ATSC 3 0 and are not required to switch to ATSC 3 0 by any deadline Televisions sold in the U S are also not required to include ATSC 3 0 tuning capabilities Full powered television stations are permitted to make the switch to ATSC 3 0 as long as they continue to make their main channel available through a simulcast agreement with another in market station with a similar coverage area through at least November 2022 44 One of the major benefits provided by COFDM is in rendering radio broadcasts relatively immune to multipath distortion and signal fading due to atmospheric conditions or passing aircraft Proponents of COFDM argue it resists multipath far better than 8VSB Early 8VSB DTV digital television receivers often had difficulty receiving a signal Also COFDM allows single frequency networks which is not possible with 8VSB However newer 8VSB receivers are far better at dealing with multipath hence the difference in performance may diminish with advances in equalizer design 45 Digital radio edit COFDM is also used for other radio standards for Digital Audio Broadcasting DAB the standard for digital audio broadcasting at VHF frequencies for Digital Radio Mondiale DRM the standard for digital broadcasting at shortwave and medium wave frequencies below 30 MHz and for DRM a more recently introduced standard for digital audio broadcasting at VHF frequencies 30 to 174 MHz The United States again uses an alternate standard a proprietary system developed by iBiquity dubbed HD Radio However it uses COFDM as the underlying broadcast technology to add digital audio to AM medium wave and FM broadcasts Both Digital Radio Mondiale and HD Radio are classified as in band on channel systems unlike Eureka 147 DAB Digital Audio Broadcasting which uses separate VHF or UHF frequency bands instead BST OFDM used in ISDB edit The band segmented transmission orthogonal frequency division multiplexing BST OFDM system proposed for Japan in the ISDB T ISDB TSB and ISDB C broadcasting systems improves upon COFDM by exploiting the fact that some OFDM carriers may be modulated differently from others within the same multiplex Some forms of COFDM already offer this kind of hierarchical modulation though BST OFDM is intended to make it more flexible The 6 MHz television channel may therefore be segmented with different segments being modulated differently and used for different services It is possible for example to send an audio service on a segment that includes a segment composed of a number of carriers a data service on another segment and a television service on yet another segment all within the same 6 MHz television channel Furthermore these may be modulated with different parameters so that for example the audio and data services could be optimized for mobile reception while the television service is optimized for stationary reception in a high multipath environment Ultra wideband edit Ultra wideband UWB wireless personal area network technology may also use OFDM such as in Multiband OFDM MB OFDM This UWB specification is advocated by the WiMedia Alliance formerly by both the Multiband OFDM Alliance MBOA and the WiMedia Alliance but the two have now merged and is one of the competing UWB radio interfaces Flash OFDM edit Fast low latency access with seamless handoff orthogonal frequency division multiplexing Flash OFDM also referred to as F OFDM was based on OFDM and also specified higher protocol layers It was developed by Flarion and purchased by Qualcomm in January 2006 46 47 Flash OFDM was marketed as a packet switched cellular bearer to compete with GSM and 3G networks As an example 450 MHz frequency bands previously used by NMT 450 and C Net C450 both 1G analogue networks now mostly decommissioned in Europe are being licensed to Flash OFDM operators citation needed In Finland the license holder Digita began deployment of a nationwide 450 wireless network in parts of the country since April 2007 It was purchased by Datame in 2011 48 In February 2012 Datame announced they would upgrade the 450 MHz network to competing CDMA2000 technology 49 Slovak Telekom in Slovakia offers Flash OFDM connections 50 with a maximum downstream speed of 5 3 Mbit s and a maximum upstream speed of 1 8 Mbit s with a coverage of over 70 percent of Slovak population citation needed The Flash OFDM network was switched off in the majority of Slovakia on 30 September 2015 51 T Mobile Germany used Flash OFDM to backhaul Wi Fi HotSpots on the Deutsche Bahn s ICE high speed trains between 2005 and 2015 until switching over to UMTS and LTE 52 American wireless carrier Nextel Communications field tested wireless broadband network technologies including Flash OFDM in 2005 53 Sprint purchased the carrier in 2006 and decided to deploy the mobile version of WiMAX which is based on Scalable Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access SOFDMA technology 54 Citizens Telephone Cooperative launched a mobile broadband service based on Flash OFDM technology to subscribers in parts of Virginia in March 2006 The maximum speed available was 1 5 Mbit s 55 The service was discontinued on April 30 2009 56 Vector OFDM VOFDM editVOFDM was proposed by Xiang Gen Xia in 2000 Proceedings of ICC 2000 New Orleans and IEEE Trans on Communications Aug 2001 for single transmit antenna systems VOFDM replaces each scalar value in the conventional OFDM by a vector value and is a bridge between OFDM and the single carrier frequency domain equalizer SC FDE When the vector size is 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp it is OFDM and when the vector size is at least the channel length and the FFT size is 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp it is SC FDE In VOFDM assume M displaystyle M nbsp is the vector size and each scalar valued signal X n displaystyle X n nbsp in OFDM is replaced by a vector valued signal X n displaystyle bf X n nbsp of vector size M displaystyle M nbsp 0 n N 1 displaystyle 0 leq n leq N 1 nbsp One takes the N displaystyle N nbsp point IFFT of X n 0 n N 1 displaystyle bf X n 0 leq n leq N 1 nbsp component wisely and gets another vector sequence of the same vector size M displaystyle M nbsp x k 0 k N 1 displaystyle bf x k 0 leq k leq N 1 nbsp Then one adds a vector CP of length G displaystyle Gamma nbsp to this vector sequence as x 0 x 1 x N 1 x 0 x 1 x G 1 displaystyle bf x 0 bf x 1 bf x N 1 bf x 0 bf x 1 bf x Gamma 1 nbsp This vector sequence is converted to a scalar sequence by sequentializing all the vectors of size M displaystyle M nbsp which is transmitted at a transmit antenna sequentially At the receiver the received scalar sequence is first converted to the vector sequence of vector size M displaystyle M nbsp When the CP length satisfies G L M textstyle Gamma geq left lceil frac L M right rceil nbsp then after the vector CP is removed from the vector sequence and the N displaystyle N nbsp point FFT is implemented component wisely to the vector sequence of length N displaystyle N nbsp one obtains Y n H n X n W n 0 n N 1 1 displaystyle bf Y n bf H n bf X n bf W n 0 leq n leq N 1 1 nbsp where W n displaystyle bf W n nbsp are additive white noise and H n H exp 2 p j n N H z z exp 2 p j n N textstyle bf H n bf H mathord left exp mathord left frac 2 pi jn N right right bf H z z exp 2 pi jn N nbsp and H z displaystyle bf H z nbsp is the following M M displaystyle M times M nbsp polyphase matrix of the ISI channel H z k 0 L h k z k textstyle H z sum k 0 L h k z k nbsp H z H 0 z z 1 H M 1 z z 1 H 1 z H 1 z H 0 z z 1 H 2 z H M 1 z H M 2 z H 0 z displaystyle mathbf H z left begin array cccc H 0 z amp z 1 H M 1 z amp cdots amp z 1 H 1 z H 1 z amp H 0 z amp cdots amp z 1 H 2 z vdots amp vdots amp vdots amp vdots H M 1 z amp H M 2 z amp cdots amp H 0 z end array right nbsp where H m z l h M l m z l textstyle H m z sum l h Ml m z l nbsp is the m displaystyle m nbsp th polyphase component of the channel H z 0 m M 1 displaystyle H z 0 leq m leq M 1 nbsp From 1 one can see that the original ISI channel is converted to N displaystyle N nbsp many vector subchannels of vector size M displaystyle M nbsp There is no ISI across these vector subchannels but there is ISI inside each vector subchannel In each vector subchannel at most M displaystyle M nbsp many symbols are interfered each other Clearly when the vector size M 1 displaystyle M 1 nbsp the above VOFDM returns to OFDM and when M gt L displaystyle M gt L nbsp and N 1 displaystyle N 1 nbsp it becomes the SC FDE The vector size M displaystyle M nbsp is a parameter that one can choose freely and properly in practice and controls the ISI level There may be a trade off between vector size M displaystyle M nbsp demodulation complexity at the receiver and FFT size for a given channel bandwidth Note that the length of the CP part in the sequential form does not have to be an integer multiple of the vector size G M displaystyle Gamma M nbsp One can truncate the above vectorized CP to a sequential CP of length not less than the ISI channel length which will not affect the above demodulation Also note that there exist many other different generalizations forms of OFDM to see their essential differences it is critical to see their corresponding received signal equations to demodulate The above VOFDM is the earliest and the only one that achieves the received signal equation 1 and or its equivalent form although it may have different implementations at transmitter vs different IFFT algorithms It has been shown Yabo Li et al IEEE Trans on Signal Processing Oct 2012 that applying the MMSE linear receiver to each vector subchannel 1 it achieves multipath diversity and or signal space diversity This is because the vectorized channel matrices in 1 are pseudo circulant and can be diagonalized by the M displaystyle M nbsp point DFT IDFT matrix with some diagonal phase shift matrices Then the right hand side DFT IDFT matrix and the k displaystyle k nbsp th diagonal phase shift matrix in the diagonalization can be thought of the precoding to the input information symbol vector X k displaystyle bf X k nbsp in the k displaystyle k nbsp th sub vector channel and all the vectorized subchannels become diagonal channels of M displaystyle M nbsp discrete frequency components from the M N displaystyle MN nbsp point DFT of the original ISI channel It may collect the multipath diversity and or signal space diversity similar to the precoding to collect the signal space diversity for single antenna systems to combat wireless fading or the diagonal space time block coding to collect the spatial diversity for multiple antenna systems The details are referred to the IEEE TCOM and IEEE TSP papers mentioned above Wavelet OFDM editOFDM has become an interesting technique for power line communications PLC In this area of research a wavelet transform is introduced to replace the DFT as the method of creating orthogonal frequencies This is due to the advantages wavelets offer which are particularly useful on noisy power lines 57 Instead of using an IDFT to create the sender signal the wavelet OFDM uses a synthesis bank consisting of a N displaystyle N nbsp band transmultiplexer followed by the transform function F n z k 0 L 1 f n k z k 0 n lt N displaystyle F n z sum k 0 L 1 f n k z k quad 0 leq n lt N nbsp On the receiver side an analysis bank is used to demodulate the signal again This bank contains an inverse transform G n z k 0 L 1 g n k z k 0 n lt N displaystyle G n z sum k 0 L 1 g n k z k quad 0 leq n lt N nbsp followed by another N displaystyle N nbsp band transmultiplexer The relationship between both transform functions is f n k g n L 1 k F n z z L 1 G n z 1 displaystyle begin aligned f n k amp g n L 1 k F n z amp z L 1 G n z 1 end aligned nbsp An example of W OFDM uses the Perfect Reconstruction Cosine Modulated Filter Bank PR CMFB 58 and Extended Lapped Transform ELT 59 60 is used for the wavelet TF Thus f n k displaystyle textstyle f n k nbsp and g n k displaystyle textstyle g n k nbsp are given as f n k 2 p 0 k cos p N n 1 2 k L 1 2 1 n p 4 g n k 2 p 0 k cos p N n 1 2 k L 1 2 1 n p 4 P 0 z k 0 N 1 z k Y k z 2 N displaystyle begin aligned f n k amp 2p 0 k cos left frac pi N left n frac 1 2 right left k frac L 1 2 right 1 n frac pi 4 right g n k amp 2p 0 k cos left frac pi N left n frac 1 2 right left k frac L 1 2 right 1 n frac pi 4 right P 0 z amp sum k 0 N 1 z k Y k left z 2N right end aligned nbsp These two functionsare their respective inverses and can be used to modulate and demodulate a given input sequence Just as in the case of DFT the wavelet transform creates orthogonal waves with f 0 displaystyle textstyle f 0 nbsp f 1 displaystyle textstyle f 1 nbsp f N 1 displaystyle textstyle f N 1 nbsp The orthogonality ensures that they do not interfere with each other and can be sent simultaneously At the receiver g 0 displaystyle textstyle g 0 nbsp g 1 displaystyle textstyle g 1 nbsp g N 1 displaystyle textstyle g N 1 nbsp are used to reconstruct the data sequence once more Advantages over standard OFDM edit W OFDM is an evolution of the standard OFDM with certain advantages Mainly the sidelobe levels of W OFDM are lower This results in less ICI as well as greater robustness to narrowband interference These two properties are especially useful in PLC where most of the lines aren t shielded against EM noise which creates noisy channels and noise spikes A comparison between the two modulation techniques also reveals that the complexity of both algorithms remains approximately the same 57 Other orthogonal transforms editThe vast majority of implementations of OFDM use the fast Fourier transform FFT However there exist other orthogonal transforms that can be used For example OFDM systems based on the discrete Hartley transform DHT 61 and the wavelet transform have been investigated History edit1957 Kineplex multi carrier HF modem R R Mosier amp R G Clabaugh 62 63 1966 Chang Bell Labs OFDM paper 3 and patent 4 1971 Weinstein amp Ebert proposed use of FFT and guard interval 6 1985 Cimini described use of OFDM for mobile communications 1985 Telebit Trailblazer Modem introduced a 512 carrier Packet Ensemble Protocol 18 432 bit s 1987 Alard amp Lasalle COFDM for digital broadcasting 9 1988 In September TH CSF LER first experimental Digital TV link in OFDM Paris area 1989 OFDM international patent application 64 October 1990 TH CSF LER first OFDM equipment field test 34 Mbit s in an 8 MHz channel experiments in Paris area December 1990 TH CSF LER first OFDM test bed comparison with VSB in Princeton USA March 1992 Fattouche and Zaghloul file patent Method and apparatus for multiple access between transceivers in wireless communications using OFDM spread spectrum with digital carrier recovery allowing high speed packet radio and complex randomization reducing the peak to average problem 65 December 1991 Fattouche and Zaghloul use large HP equipment to demonstrate 100 Mbps wireless LAN September 1992 TH CSF LER second generation equipment field test 70 Mbit s in an 8 MHz channel twin polarisations Wuppertal Germany October 1992 TH CSF LER second generation field test and test bed with BBC near London UK 1993 TH CSF show in Montreux SW 4 TV channel and one HDTV channel in a single 8 MHz channel 1993 Morris Experimental 150 Mbit s OFDM wireless LAN February 1994 WiLAN Wi LAN Inc demonstrates 20 Mbps wireless WOFDM transceiver operating in the 902 928 MHz band 1995 ETSI Digital Audio Broadcasting standard EUreka first OFDM based standard 1997 ETSI DVB T standard 1998 Magic WAND project demonstrates OFDM modems for wireless LAN 1999 IEEE 802 11a wireless LAN standard Wi Fi 66 2000 Proprietary fixed wireless access V OFDM FLASH OFDM etc May 2001 Wi LAN Inc successfully petitioned the FCC to allow OFDM equipment in the 24 GHz band May 2001 The FCC allows OFDM in the 2 4 GHz license exempt band 67 2002 IEEE 802 11g standard for wireless LAN 68 2004 IEEE 802 16 standard for wireless MAN WiMAX 69 2004 ETSI DVB H standard 2004 Candidate for IEEE 802 15 3a standard for wireless PAN MB OFDM 2004 Candidate for IEEE 802 11n standard for next generation wireless LAN 2005 OFDMA is candidate for the 3GPP Long Term Evolution LTE air interface E UTRA downlink 2007 The first complete LTE air interface implementation was demonstrated including OFDM MIMO SC FDMA and multi user MIMO uplink 70 See also editATSC standards Carrier interferometry N OFDM Orthogonal Time Frequency and Space OTFS Polarization division multiplexing Single carrier FDMA SC FDMA Single carrier frequency domain equalization SC FDE References edit Mustafa Ergen 2009 Mobile Broadband including WiMAX and LTE Springer Science Business Media doi 10 1007 978 0 387 68192 4 ISBN 978 0 387 68189 4 Weinstein S B November 2009 The history of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing IEEE Communications Magazine 47 11 IEEE Communications Magazine Volume 47 Issue 11 November 2009 26 35 doi 10 1109 MCOM 2009 5307460 S2CID 29001312 a b Chang R W 1966 Synthesis of band limited orthogonal signals for multi channel data transmission Bell System Technical Journal 45 10 1775 1796 doi 10 1002 j 1538 7305 1966 amp nbsp tb02435 x a b US 3488445 Chang Robert W Orthogonal frequency multiplex data transmission system published 1970 01 06 assigned to Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc a b webe org 2 GHz BAS Relocation Tech Fair COFDM Technology Basics 2007 03 02 a b Weinstein S Ebert P October 1971 Data Transmission by Frequency Division Multiplexing Using the Discrete Fourier Transform IEEE Transactions on Communication Technology 19 5 628 634 doi 10 1109 TCOM 1971 1090705 S2CID 28439102 Ahmad R S Bahai Burton R Saltzberg Mustafa Ergen Multi carrier digital communications Theory and applications of OFDM Springer November 2004 WO 8800417 Pommier Daniel amp Alard Michel Method and installation for digital communication particularly between and toward moving vehicle published 1988 01 14 assigned to Centre national d etudes des telecommunications and Telediffusion de France a b Principles of modulation and channel coding for digital broadcasting for mobile receivers PDF EBU Technical Review n 224 p 187 August 1987 Le Floch B Alard M Berrou C 1995 Coded orthogonal frequency division multiplex TV broadcasting Proceedings of the IEEE 83 6 982 996 doi 10 1109 5 387096 Archived from the original on 2014 07 03 Akansu Ali et al 1998 Orthogonal transmultiplexers in communication a review PDF IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 46 4 IEEE Trans On Signal Processing Vol 46 No 4 April 1998 979 995 Bibcode 1998ITSP 46 979D CiteSeerX 10 1 1 46 3342 doi 10 1109 78 668551 Yang James Ching Nung October 10 2001 What is OFDM and COFDM Shoufeng Hualien Taiwan Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering National Dong Hwa University Retrieved 2017 04 16 Ben Tovim Erez February 2014 ITU G hn Broadband Home Networking In Berger Lars T Schwager Andreas Pagani Pascal Schneider Daniel M eds MIMO Power Line Communications Devices Circuits and Systems CRC Press pp 457 472 doi 10 1201 b16540 16 ISBN 9781466557529 Specifications Search CableLabs Retrieved 2023 10 23 Robertson P Kaiser S 1999 The effects of Doppler spreads in OFDM A mobile radio systems Gateway to 21st Century Communications Village VTC 1999 Fall IEEE VTS 50th Vehicular Technology Conference Vol 1 pp 329 333 doi 10 1109 vetecf 1999 797150 ISBN 0 7803 5435 4 S2CID 2052913 Haas R Belfiore J C 1997 A Time Frequency Well localized Pulse for Multiple Carrier Transmission Wireless Personal Communications 5 1 1 18 doi 10 1023 A 1008859809455 S2CID 5062251 Roque D Siclet C 2013 Performances of Weighted Cyclic Prefix OFDM with Low Complexity Equalization PDF IEEE Communications Letters 17 3 439 442 doi 10 1109 LCOMM 2013 011513 121997 S2CID 9480706 Jeon W G Chang K H Cho Y S 1999 An equalization technique for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing systems in time variant multipath channels IEEE Transactions on Communications 47 1 27 32 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 460 4807 doi 10 1109 26 747810 a b c Eric Lawrey October 1997 The suitability of OFDM as a modulation technique for wireless telecommunications with a CDMA comparison PDF B E 1 266 GHz Pentium 3 fftw org 2006 06 20 1 6 GHz Pentium M Banias GNU compilers fftw org 2006 06 20 3 0 GHz Intel Core Duo Intel compilers 32 bit mode fftw org 2006 10 09 Coleri S Ergen M Puri A Bahai A Sep 2002 Channel estimation techniques based on pilot arrangement in OFDM systems IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting 48 3 223 229 doi 10 1109 TBC 2002 804034 Hoeher P Kaiser S Robertson P 1997 Two dimensional pilot symbol aided channel estimation by Wiener filtering 1997 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics Speech and Signal Processing IEEE International Conference on Acoustics Speech and Signal Processing ICASSP 97 Vol 3 pp 1845 1848 doi 10 1109 ICASSP 1997 598897 ISBN 0 8186 7919 0 Zemen T Mecklenbrauker CF Sep 2005 Time Variant Channel Estimation Using Discrete Prolate Spheroidal Sequences IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 53 9 3597 3607 Bibcode 2005ITSP 53 3597Z CiteSeerX 10 1 1 60 9526 doi 10 1109 TSP 2005 853104 S2CID 16493970 Tang Z Cannizzaro RC Leus G Banelli P May 2007 Pilot Assisted Time Varying Channel Estimation for OFDM Systems IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 55 5 2226 2238 Bibcode 2007ITSP 55 2226T CiteSeerX 10 1 1 418 2386 doi 10 1109 TSP 2007 893198 S2CID 570753 Hrycak T Das S Matz G Feichtinger HG Aug 2010 Low Complexity Equalization for Doubly Selective Channels Modeled by a Basis Expansion IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 58 11 5706 5719 Bibcode 2010ITSP 58 5706H doi 10 1109 TSP 2010 2063426 S2CID 17077919 Berger Lars T Schwager Andreas Pagani Pascal Schneider Daniel M eds February 2014 Introduction to Power Line Communication Channel and Noise Characterisation MIMO Power Line Communications Narrow and Broadband Standards EMC and Advanced Processing Devices Circuits and Systems CRC Press p 25 doi 10 1201 b16540 1 ISBN 978 1 4665 5753 6 a b Bernhard Kaehs January 2007 The Crest Factor in DVB T OFDM Transmitter Systems and its Influence on the Dimensioning of Power Components PDF Rohde amp Schwarz Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 05 Wang Y C Luo Z Q January 2011 Optimized Iterative Clipping and Filtering for PAPR Reduction of OFDM Signals IEEE Transactions on Communications 59 1 33 37 doi 10 1109 TCOMM 2010 102910 090040 S2CID 2487860 Huleihel Yara Ben Dror Eilam Permuter Haim H 2020 Low PAPR Waveform Design for OFDM Systems Based on Convolutional Autoencoder 2020 IEEE International Conference on Advanced Networks and Telecommunications Systems ANTS pp 1 6 Hoeg Wolfgang Lauterbach Thomas 2009 Digital Audio Broadcasting Principles and Applications of DAB DAB and DMB 3rd ed John Wiley amp Sons p 333 ISBN 9780470746196 Retrieved 2013 07 04 William Shieh Ivan Djordjevic 2010 OFDM for Optical Communications 525 B Street Suite 1900 San Diego California 92101 4495 USA Academic Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b Berger Lars T Schwager Andreas Pagani Pascal Schneider Daniel M eds February 2014 Introduction to Power Line Communication Channel and Noise Characterisation MIMO Power Line Communications Narrow and Broadband Standards EMC and Advanced Processing Devices Circuits and Systems CRC Press pp 3 37 doi 10 1201 b16540 1 ISBN 9781466557529 a b c d 4QAM is equivalent to QPSK NR refers to Nordstrom Robinson code A Multicarrier Primer PDF ANSI T1E1 4 pp 91 157 1991 Hoch Martin Comparison of PLC G3 and Prime PDF 2011 IEEE Symposium on Powerline Communication and its Applications Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 10 Stefano Galli Oleg Logvinov July 2008 Recent Developments in the Standardization of Power Line Communications within the IEEE IEEE Communications Magazine 46 7 64 71 doi 10 1109 MCOM 2008 4557044 ISSN 0163 6804 S2CID 2650873 An overview of P1901 PHY MAC proposal DIRECTIVE 95 47 EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on the use of standards for the transmission of television signals ec europa eu ETSI Standard EN 300 744 V1 5 1 2004 11 Junko Yoshida June 28 2001 Agere gets Sirius about satellite radio design EE Times Lung Doug 2001 01 01 8 VSB vs COFDM The Debate Continues TVTechnology Retrieved 2021 11 18 Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Federal Communications Commission 20 November 2017 Archived from the original on 18 October 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2021 TVTechnology 2008 04 11 Distortions and 8 VSB TVTechnology Retrieved 2021 11 18 Qualcomm and Exoteq Sign OFDM OFDMA License Agreement News release Qualcomm August 1 2007 Retrieved July 23 2011 Qualcomm Completes Acquisition Of WiMAX Competitor Network Computing January 19 2006 Retrieved July 23 2011 Briefly in English 450 Network web site Datame Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved July 23 2011 Aleksi Kolehmainen February 8 2012 450 siirtyy cdma2000 tekniikkaan jopa puhelut mahdollisia Tietoviikko in Finnish Mapy pokrytia Slovak Telekom web site in Slovak Retrieved May 30 2012 Slovak Telekom closed Flash OFDM network ceeitandtelecom November 5 2015 Ins Netz bei Tempo 300 heise online December 23 2014 Retrieved December 20 2016 Nextel Flash OFDM The Best Network You May Never Use PC Magazine March 2 2005 Retrieved July 23 2011 Sascha Segan August 8 2006 Sprint Nextel Goes To The WiMax PC Magazine Archived from the original on 2018 11 30 Retrieved July 23 2011 Citizens Offers First Truly Mobile Wireless Internet in Christiansburg and other parts of the New River Valley PDF News release Citizens Wireless March 28 2006 Retrieved July 23 2011 Thank you for supporting Citizens Mobile Broadband Citizens Wireless 2009 Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved July 23 2011 a b S Galli H Koga N Nodokama May 2008 Advanced signal processing for PLCS Wavelet OFDM 2008 IEEE International Symposium on Power Line Communications and Its Applications pp 187 192 doi 10 1109 ISPLC 2008 4510421 ISBN 978 1 4244 1975 3 S2CID 12146430 Koilpillai R D Vaidyanathan P P April 1992 Cosine modulated FIR filter banks satisfying perfect reconstruction IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 40 4 770 783 Bibcode 1992ITSP 40 770K doi 10 1109 78 127951 Malvar Henrique November 1992 Extended lapped transforms properties applications and fast algorithms IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 40 11 2703 2714 Bibcode 1992ITSP 40 2703M doi 10 1109 78 165657 Malvar Henrique November 1991 Signal Processing with Lapped Transforms Norwood MA Artech House ISBN 9780890064672 C K Jao S S Long and M T Shiue On the DHT based multicarrier tranceiver over multipath fading channel 2009 IEEE 20th International Symposium on Personal Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications 2009 pp 1662 1666 doi 10 1109 PIMRC 2009 5450277 R R Mosier and R G Clabaugh Kineplex a bandwidth efficient binary transmission system in Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers Part I Communication and Electronics vol 76 no 6 pp 723 728 Jan 1958 doi 10 1109 TCE 1958 6372736 Collins Data Transmission System Kineplex scanned Collins Radio product literature at Archive org WO 1990004893 Fouche Yvon Elleaume Philippe amp DE Couasnon Tristan et al Emitter transmission method and receiver published 1990 05 03 assigned to Thomson CSF Method and apparatus for multiple access between transceivers in wireless communications using OFDM spread spectrum IEEE 802 11a 1999 IEEE Standard for Telecommunications and Information Exchange Between Systems LAN MAN Specific Requirements Part 11 Wireless Medium Access Control MAC and physical layer PHY specifications High Speed Physical Layer in the 5 GHz band standards ieee org Retrieved 2020 12 12 Goodman Ellen P 2004 Spectrum Rights in the Telecosm to Come San Diego Law Review 41 1 Archived from the original on 2022 01 13 IEEE 802 11g 2003 IEEE Standard for Information technology Local and metropolitan area networks Specific requirements Part 11 Wireless LAN Medium Access Control MAC and Physical Layer PHY Specifications Further Higher Data Rate Extension in the 2 4 GHz Band standards ieee org Retrieved 2020 12 12 IEEE Standard 802 16 for Global Broadband Wireless Access PDF 2002 10 21 Nortel 3G World Congress Press Release Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2008 01 29 Further reading editBank M 2007 System free of channel problems inherent in changing mobile communication systems Electronics Letters 43 7 401 402 Bibcode 2007ElL 43 401B doi 10 1049 el 20070014 US 7986740 Bank Michael Hill Boris amp Bank Miriam et al Wireless mobile communication system without pilot signals published 2011 07 26 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing Numerous useful links and resources for OFDM WCSP Group University of South Florida USF WiMAX Forum WiMAX the framework standard for 4G mobile personal broadband Stott 1997 1 Technical presentation by J H Stott of the BBC s R amp D division delivered at the 20 International Television Symposium in 1997 this URL accessed 24 January 2006 Page on Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing at https web archive org web 20090325005048 http www iss rwth aachen de Projekte Theo OFDM node6 html accessed on 24 September 2007 A tutorial on the significance of Cyclic Prefix CP in OFDM Systems Siemens demos 360 Mbit s wireless An Introduction to Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex Technology Short Introduction to OFDM Tutorial written by Prof Debbah head of the Alcatel Lucent Chair on flexible radio Short free tutorial on COFDM by Mark Massel formerly at STMicroelectronics and in the digital TV industry for many years A popular book on both COFDM and US ATSC by Mark Massel OFDM transmission step by step online experiment Simulation of optical OFDM systems Portal nbsp Technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing amp oldid 1220741235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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