Novel analytical results on performance of bit-interleaved and chip-interleaved DS-CDMA with convolutional coding

We present a unified performance analysis for the conventional bit-interleaved direct-sequence (DS) code-division multiple access (BIDS-CDMA) and the more recently proposed chip-interleaved DS-CDMA (CIDS-CDMA), both with channel coding. Simple CIDS-CDMA treats a set of bits at a time and interleaves...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on vehicular technology Vol. 54; no. 3; pp. 996 - 1012
Main Authors Yu-Nan Lin, Lin, D.W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, NY IEEE 01.05.2005
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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ISSN0018-9545
1939-9359
DOI10.1109/TVT.2005.844654

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Summary:We present a unified performance analysis for the conventional bit-interleaved direct-sequence (DS) code-division multiple access (BIDS-CDMA) and the more recently proposed chip-interleaved DS-CDMA (CIDS-CDMA), both with channel coding. Simple CIDS-CDMA treats a set of bits at a time and interleaves their chips together for transmission. But bit interleaving may also be used on top of chip interleaving (thus abbreviated BCIDS-CDMA) to enhance performance. For simplicity, we first tackle flat-faded synchronous transmission, in which we treat both the condition with perfect power control and that where the received signal is subject to Rayleigh fading. We then extend the analysis to asynchronous and multipath channels, with the latter treated only briefly. By approximating the correlation among the spreading codes (rather than the ensuing interference) as Gaussian, we obtain novel and relatively simple results for the various conditions above. In general, BCIDS-CDMA performs best, followed by simple CIDS-CDMA and then by BIDS-CDMA. Within simple CIDS-CDMA and BIDS-CDMA, long-code spreading performs better than short-code spreading. For BCIDS-CDMA with perfect interleaving that fully randomizes the fading coefficients, the performance is not affected by the spreading code period. The above ordering of performance follows the amount of diversity each scheme exploits, where the diversity may come from spectrum spreading, channel coding, and independence in fading of different paths. Simulation results agree well with the theoretical analysis.
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ISSN:0018-9545
1939-9359
DOI:10.1109/TVT.2005.844654