Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Low-Resolution Quantization in Phase Modulated Systems: Optimum Detectors and Error Rate Analysis

Published 28 Feb 2019 in eess.SP | (1902.10896v1)

Abstract: This paper considers a wireless communication system with low-resolution quantizers, in which transmitted signals are corrupted by fading and additive noise. For such wireless systems, a universal lower bound on the average symbol error probability (SEP), correct for all M-ary modulation schemes, is obtained when the number of quantization bits is not enough to resolve M signal points. In the special case of M-ary phase shift keying (M-PSK), the optimum maximum likelihood detector for equi-probable signal points is derived. Utilizing the structure of the derived optimum receiver, a general average SEP expression for M-PSK modulation with n-bit quantization is obtained when the wireless channel is subject to fading with a circularly-symmetric distribution. Adopting this result for Nakagami-m fading channels, easy-to-evaluate expressions for the average SEP for M-PSK modulation are further derived. It is shown that a transceiver architecture with n-bit quantization is asymptotically optimum in terms of communication reliability if n is greater than or equal to log_2(M +1). That is, the decay exponent for the average SEP is the same and equal to m with infinite-bit and n-bit quantizers for n is greater than or equal to log_2(M+1). On the other hand, it is only equal to half and 0 for n = log_2(M) and n < log_2(M), respectively. An extensive simulation study is performed to illustrate the derived results and energy efficiency gains obtained by means of low-resolution quantizers.

Citations (8)

Summary

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.