Leti to demonstrate new multicarrier waveform for 5G networks

Jan. 10, 2017

Grenoble, France. Leti, a research institute of CEA Tech, today announced it will deploy a 5G framework on the MINATEC campus in Grenoble to demonstrate a new post-OFDM multicarrier waveform.

Leti recently was granted a six-month license from Arcep, France’s telecommunications regulatory agency, to run a field trial with multiservice transmission in the 3.5-GHz TDD band with 40-MHz bandwidth. 3.5 GHz might be the first carrier frequency that will be released for 5G.

The post-OFDM multicarrier waveform, block filtered-OFDM (BF-OFDM), can overcome shortcomings inherent in actual LTE waveforms and is backward-compatible with existing LTE receivers. An innovative medium access control (MAC) layer will demonstrate multiservice and coexistence with primary systems. More advanced features of future 5G networks will also be investigated, such as in-band full-duplex (IBFD). The results of these field trials will enhance Leti’s technology-to-system offer for its industrial partners in the context of 5G telecom applications and ad hoc proprietary radio solutions for vertical sectors.

“4G networks are quickly reaching their limits in capacity and capabilities to address new classes of services, such as massive machine-type connectivity and ultra-low-latency and ultra-reliable communications,” said Dimitri Ktenas, Leti wireless lab manager. “Anticipating these challenges, the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) began discussing radio access network (RAN) requirements in the fall of 2015, and further discussions produced a consensus that there would be a new, non-backward-compatible radio-access technology as part of 5G, targeting a first release in mid-2018.”

The new air interface, called new radio (NR), targets a single technical framework addressing enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), massive machine-type communications (mMTC), and ultrareliable and low-latency communications (URLLC). NR also is expected to offer additional support for very high velocities, and these diverse services support a highly flexible waveform allowing very different configurations.

Leti’s post-OFDM multicarrier waveform can overcome all shortcomings inherent in classical LTE waveforms—for example, out-of-band emission and weakness when exposed to asynchronous communications. It is designed to achieve good frequency localization and support simultaneous single-carrier and multicarrier modulations, along with classical multi-antenna MIMO solutions. The duration of the elementary communication slot is configurable and can be adapted for low-latency requirements. Leti’s solution also keeps backward-compatibility with current LTE receiver architecture.

Built on top of the proposed waveform, an access technique has been developed in order to exploit its promising characteristics of frequency localization and agility. This MAC layer also has the ability to adapt so that the channel can be shared with a coexisting system and provide a means to enable enhanced dynamic spectrum access (eDSA).

Leti’s field trials also will investigate advanced 5G features such as the promising IBFD technique that consists in transmitting and receiving in the same frequency band at the same time, theoretically doubling the data rate. However, practical implementations show fewer gains with this technique due to self-interference between signals. Leti’s solution merges three technical aspects to successfully mitigate self-interference: antenna isolation, RF cancellation circuits, and nonlinear digital filtering.

The six-month Arcep license will allow Leti to validate its innovative concepts through 5G experiments in a real-life situation. The over-the-air Leti test platform based on FPGAs, ARM processors, and an agile RF front-end will be used to demonstrate 5G multiservice transmission. The demonstration will mix mobile broadband, cellular Internet of Things, and low latency transmission for critical applications, and also include multi-user access for investigating eDSA options, and high spectral efficiency gains for IBFD.

www.leti.fr/en

About the Author

Rick Nelson | Contributing Editor

Rick is currently Contributing Technical Editor. He was Executive Editor for EE in 2011-2018. Previously he served on several publications, including EDN and Vision Systems Design, and has received awards for signed editorials from the American Society of Business Publication Editors. He began as a design engineer at General Electric and Litton Industries and earned a BSEE degree from Penn State.

Sponsored Recommendations

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!