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Project: IEEE P802.11 Working Group for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs)

Project: IEEE P802.11 Working Group for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) Submission Title: [ STMicroelectronics LDPCC Proposal for 802.11n CFP ] Date Submitted: [ 13 August 2004 ] Source: [ Nicola Moschini, Massimiliano Siti, Stefano Valle - Andres Vila Casado, Prof. Richard Wesel ]

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Project: IEEE P802.11 Working Group for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs)

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  1. Project: IEEE P802.11 Working Group for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) Submission Title: [STMicroelectronics LDPCC Proposal for 802.11n CFP] Date Submitted: [13 August 2004] Source: [Nicola Moschini, Massimiliano Siti, Stefano Valle - Andres Vila Casado, Prof. Richard Wesel] Company [STMicroelectronics, N.V.][University of California at Los Angeles] Address [Via C. Olivetti, 2, 20041 Agrate Brianza, Italy] [405 Hilgard Avenue, 90095 Los Angeles CA] Voice: [+1 619 278 8648], FAX: [+1 858 452 3756] E-Mail: [{Nicola.Moschini, Massimiliano.Siti, Stefano.Valle}@ST.com] Re: [This submission presents the proposal for optional advanced coding of STMicroelectronics to the 802.11n Call For Proposals (Doc #11-03/0858r5) that was issued on 17 May 2004] Abstract: [This presentation details STMicroelectronics’ LDPCC partial proposal for IEEE 802.11 TGn. Rate-compatible LDPCCs are presented as optional advanced coding technique, in order to achieve a higher coverage and/or throughput in MIMO-OFDM systems. ] Purpose: [STMicroelectronics offers this contribution to the IEEE 802.11n task group for its consideration as the solution for standardization.] Notice:This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.11. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release:The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P802.11. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  2. ST Microelectronics LDPCC Partial Proposal for 802.11n CFP STMicroelectronics, Inc {Nicola.Moschini, Massimiliano.Siti, Stefano.Valle}@ST.com N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  3. Outline • Reasons for introducing an optional advanced coding technique in 802.11n. • Reasons for preferring Low Density Parity Check Codes (LDPCC). • Variable-rate LDPCC proposal: • principle • performance • complexity N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  4. Reasons for advanced coding techniques in .11n • Advanced coding techniques significantly boost performance in MIMO-OFDM systems  increase in the range and/or the throughput of the system. • Advanced coding techniques, like LDPCC or turbo codes, rely upon iterative decoding: as technology improves ( more iterations) the coding gain can potentially improve. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  5. Targets for advanced coding in 11n N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  6. Motivation for promoting LDPCC as optional advanced coding technique • Performance is significantly better than 64-state CC [1]. • LDPCC are intrinsically more parallelizable than other codes. • LDPCC can be designed to have good performance at every rate (i.e. avoiding puncturing or shortening) without exploding HW complexity. • LDPCC performances have been demonstrated with 12 iterations: technology evolution will make feasible a larger number of iterations providing further gains. • The LDPCC class described in this proposal [2] is the optional advanced coding technique in the WWISE complete proposal [3]. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  7. Proposal: a variable-rate structured LDPCC • The performance of different matrices show, in general, slight differences for short block lengths. • Implementation complexity is a key factor. • Structured parity check matrices allow a higher degree of decoder parallelization compared to random matrix design. • Rate-compatibility, i.e. good performance at every rate while avoiding puncturing or shortening, is essential. • A common shared HW architecture for all the rates and all the codeword lengths ensures low cost devices. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  8. Structure of Rate-1/2 “mother” LDPC matrix(1/2) ZERO MATRIX STRUCTURED MATRIX BI-DIAGONAL MATRIX • For efficient implementation, red squares are super-positions of cyclic permutations of the identity matrix. • Linear-complexity encoder based on back substitution thanks to the block-lower triangular structure. • Matrices for different code sizes are different, but all share the structure described in these two slides. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  9. S3= S7= S0= Structure of Rate-1/2 “mother” LDPC matrix(2/2) • H is divided into p x p (p=27) sub-matrices that are either the all-zero matrix or a superposition of cyclic permutations of identity matrix as: • The green block represents a bi-diagonal sub-matrix in order to avoid having p degree one variable nodes N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  10. Variable-rate LDPC through row-combining • Combining rows of the parity-check matrix (H) for the lowest rate code (“mother code”) produces H for higher rates. • This is equivalent to replacing a group of check nodes with a single check node that sums all the edges coming into each of the original check nodes. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  11. Variable-rate matrices design criteria • Row-combining of rows which do not have a ‘1’ in the same position the same variable node degree distribution for all rates. • The selection of rows to sum preserves the lower triangular structure throughout all the rates. • In addition, the codes are designed to avoid length 4 cycles and also to have a good performance in the error floor region [4][5]. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  12. Rate ½ Row combining example (1/4) Rate-1/2 Mother LDPC Matrix N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  13. Rate ½ Rate ¾ Row combining example (2/4) Combining two rows produces rate-3/4 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  14. Rate ½ Rate 5/6 Row combining example (3/4) Three at a time produces rate-5/6 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  15. Rate ½ Rate 2/3 Row combining example (4/4) Variable grouping produces rate-2/3 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  16. Advantages of Variable-rate structured LDPC • A new method to design LDPCC for a variety of different code rates that all share the same fundamental decoder architecture. • An important advantage of this approach is that all code rates have the same block length (a key performance factor). • The same variable degree distribution is maintained for all the rates. Although not optimum, a single variable node degree distribution can be employed that works well for all the different code rates of interest. • Low-complexity encoding (because of block-lower triangular structure) is preserved for all the code rates. • Different ‘mother’ parity-check matrices, to provide different block sizes, can be added at the expense of small extra-HW complexity (basically, ROM for matrix storage). • Other approaches (i.e. puncturing and shortening) suffer from performance degradation. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  17. LDPCC parameters • Codeword lengths are selected in order to minimize the padding bits of OFDM-MIMO symbols. Lengths are searched among the multiples of the number of coded bits per OFDM-MIMO symbol. • Here 54 data carriers for OFDM symbols are assumed. • The present proposal holds with minor changes in case of a different number of data carriers (e.g. 48). N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  18. LDPCC 1944 - 12 Iterations 0 10 Rate 1/2 Rate 2/3 Rate 3/4 Rate 5/6 -1 10 FER -2 10 -3 10 -4 10 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 E /N b 0 Performance in AWGN channel & BPSK N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  19. Performance in MIMO channels (1/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  20. CC59: 20 MHz, 2x2, Fourier Channel, 1944 LDPCC (12 Iterations) 0 10 -1 10 PER -2 10 16QAM, R=1/2 16QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=2/3 64QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=5/6 -3 10 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (2/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  21. CC67: 20 MHz, 2x2, Channel B NLOS, LDPCC 1944 (12 Iterations) vs. BCC K7 - solid line LDPCC 0 10 16QAM, R=1/2 16QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=2/3 64QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=5/6 -1 10 PER -2 10 -3 10 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (3/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  22. CC67: 20 MHz, 2x3, Channel B NLOS, LDPCC 1944 (12 Iterations) vs. BCC K7. - solid line LDPCC 0 10 16QAM, R=1/2 16QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=2/3 64QAM, R=3/4 64QAM, R=5/6 -1 10 PER -2 10 -3 10 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (4/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  23. CC67: 20 MHz, 2x2, Channel D NLOS, LDPCC 1944 (12 Iterations) vs. BCC K7 - solid lines LDPCC 0 10 16QAM 1/2 16QAM 3/4 64QAM 2/3 64QAM 3/4 64QAM 5/6 -1 10 PER -2 10 -3 10 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (5/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  24. CC67: 20 MHz, 2x3, Channel D NLOS, LDPCC 1944 (12 Iterations) vs. BCC K7 - solid lines LDPCC 0 10 16QAM 1/2 16QAM 3/4 64QAM 2/3 64QAM 3/4 64QAM 5/6 -1 10 PER -2 10 -3 10 -4 10 10 15 20 25 30 35 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (6/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  25. Comparison: LDPCC (12 Iterations), BCC, 20 MHz, 2x3, Channel B NLOS 0 10 BCC 16QAM, R=1/2 LDPCC 16QAM, N=648, R=1/2 LDPCC 16QAM, N=1296, R=1/2 LDPCC 16QAM, N=1944, R=1/2 BCC 64QAM, R=5/6 LDPCC 64QAM, N=648, R=5/6 LDPCC 64QAM, N=1296, R=5/6 LDPCC 64QAM, N=1944, R=5/6 -1 10 PER -2 10 -3 10 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 SNR [dB] Performance in MIMO channels (7/7) N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  26. PSDU transmission • (k, n) LDPC code and generic PSDU length result in an integer number of LDPCC frames plus a last shorter frame of size [(n – k)+ k1] ≤n, where k1 is the number of last information bits. • Information bits of the last frame are padded with zeros for encoding  fixed number of parity bits equal to p = (n – k). • The padded bits are not transmitted (i.e. shortening). • The last frame requires fewer iterations (see next slides) because it is more protected: N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  27. Results on zero-padding (1/2) 0 10 Zero-padding half the information bits in 1944 Rate = 2/3 -1 10 FER -2 10 N=1944, Rate=2/3, 12 iterations N=1296, Rate=1/2, 6 iterations N=1296, Rate=1/2, 7 iterations -3 10 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 E /N s 0 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  28. E /N s 0 Results on zero-padding (2/2) 0 10 Zero-padding half the information bits in 1944 Rate = 5/6 -1 10 -2 10 FER -3 10 N=1944, Rate=5/6, 12 iterations N=1134, Rate=5/7, 5 iterations N=1134, Rate=5/7, 6 iterations -4 10 4.5 5 6 6.5 5.5 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  29. Var-Rate LDPCC: implementation complexity • Massive HW re-use is possible because all the rates are derived from the “mother” rate ½ and the same sub-matrix size is adopted for all the codeword lengths. • The encoder has a linear complexity thanks to its lower triangular structure that permits the back substitution. • A different mother matrix for each code size implies extra-ROM, as the use of the same structure for the basic building blocks (27x27) allows efficient re-use of parallel processors. • Main targets in the table can be met. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  30. Conclusions • This proposal contains LDPCC designed with a powerful/well performing technique to generate variable rate codes up to rate 5/6. • Performances are significantly better than 64-state CC (>= 2dB @ 10-2 PER for all code rates higher than 1/2). • In order to optimize padding management and/or handle short packets, different code-size matrices have been designed; they can coexist at low extra HW complexity and yield similar performances. • These codes result in a reasonable overall complexity / latency / performance trade-off. • Results have been obtained with 12 iterations: technology evolution will make feasible a larger number of iterations providing further gains. N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

  31. References [1] IEEE Std. 802.11a-1999, “Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY) specification: high speed physical layer in the 5 GHz band”, IEE-SA Standards Board (1999-09-16) [2] IEEE 802.11/04-0898-01-000n, “STMicroelectronics Partial Proposal for LDPCC as optional coding technique for IEEE 802.11 TGn High Throughput Standard”, N. Moschini, M. Siti, S.Valle, et al. [3] IEEE 802.11/04-0886-00-000n, “WWiSE group PHY and MAC specification,” M. Singh, B. Edwards et al. [4] Tian T., Jones C., Villasenor J. D. and Wesel R. D., "Selective Avoidance of Cycles in Irregular LDPC Code Construction," IEEE Transactions on Communications, August 2004. [5] Ramamoorthy A. and Wesel R. D., "Construction of Short Block Length Irregular LDPC Codes,", in Proc. IEEE ICC 2004, Paris, France, June 2004. [6] IEEE 802.11-03/940r1, "IEEE P802.11, Wireless LANs - TGn ChannelModels" - January 9, 2004 N. Moschini, M. Siti, S. Valle, STMicroelectronics

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