Research Article | OPEN ACCESS
Sparse Channel Estimation for Dual-Hop Amplify-and-Forward Cooperative Communiacion Systems
1Guan Gui, 2, 3Aihua Zhang, 4Aihua Kuang and 1Wei Peng
1Department of Communication Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Tohoku University, Sendai, 980-8579, Japan
2School of Information Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, 450001, China
3School of Electronic and Information Engineering, Zhongyuan University of Technology,
Zhengzhou, 450007, China
4Department of Electronics, School of Electronics and Information Engineering of Zhengzhou, Zhengzhou, 450007, China
Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology 2013 2:485-490
Received: May 11, 2012 | Accepted: July 02, 2012 | Published: January 11, 2013
Abstract
Cooperative transmission is one of key techniques which can improve system capacity and transmit range with limit power in the next-generation communication systems. However, accurate Channel State Information (CSI) is necessary at the destination for coherent detection. Consider a Dual-Hop Amplify-and-Forward (DHAF) Cooperative Communication System (CCS), traditional linear channel estimation method, e.g., Least Square (LS), based assumption of the rich multipath cascaded channel, is robust and simple while at the cost of low spectrum efficiency. Recent channel measurements have shown that the wireless channel exhibits great sparse in some high-dimensional space. In this study, we confirmed that cascaded channel exhibits sparse distribution if the two individual channels are sparse by using representative simulation results. Later, we propose an efficient sparse channel estimation method to take advantage of the inherent sparse prior information in DHAF CCS. Simulation results confirm the superiority of our proposed methods over LS-based linear channel estimation method.
Keywords:
Cascaded channel, Compressive Sensing (CS), Cooperative Communication Systems (CCS), Dual-Hop Amplify-and-Forward (DHAF), Sparse Channel Estimation (SCE),
Competing interests
The authors have no competing interests.
Open Access Policy
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
Copyright
The authors have no competing interests.
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ISSN (Online): 2040-7467
ISSN (Print): 2040-7459 |
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