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A low-complexity peak cancellation scheme and its FPGA implementation for peak-to-average power ratio reduction

Abstract

The power amplifier (PA) is the most power-hungry component in a wireless base station transmitter, and reducing the peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) of wireless signals is an important issue for its effective use. In this paper, we focus on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) implementation of the peak cancellation (PC) technique, which is known as the simplest method for PAPR reduction. The design issue of effective peak-cancelling pulses under the constraint on the out-of-band emission is addressed. In order to reduce its hardware complexity, a novel approach for generating peak-cancelling pulses is also presented. The experimental results based on long-term evolution (LTE)/LTE-Advanced and multi-band Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA) signals demonstrate the validity of the proposed scheme. It has been shown that the proposed PC scheme can achieve lower in-band distortion than the conventional PC with an acceptable loss in out-of-band performance. Our study also includes mapping the signal processing methods onto a Xilinx virtex-7 FPGA device running at 245.76 MHz and addresses the resource utilization and the hardware design in detail.

1 Introduction

Signals such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) [1] and direct-sequence spread spectrum (DS-SS) for code division multiple access (CDMA) [2] are widely adopted in modern wireless communication systems due to their remarkable advantages such as flexible allocation of resources and high-spectrum utilization. As these signals are essentially a sum of multiple subcarriers/codes of multiple users in either frequency or time domain, the probability density functions (PDFs) of their signals tend to approach Gaussian, and thus, they exhibit high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) [3]. This poses strict demands on the dynamic range of data converters and especially limits efficient operation of the power amplifiers (PAs). Reducing the PAPR is hence important for boosting the PA efficiency by allowing higher average input power before saturation occurs. To mitigate this issue, extensive studies have been performed [4-6].

Some of the PAPR-reduction techniques for Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA) system can be found in, for example, [7,8]. On the other hand, those for multi-carrier and OFDM signals are much more abundant and appear in many forms including selected mapping (SLM) [9] and partial transmit sequence (PTS) [10,11], just to mention a few. The aforementioned techniques do not incur distortion, but they either have a large computational complexity or have to modify the signal, which makes their implementation in high-speed real-time systems challenging or hinders standard-compliant operations. It should be noted that, as the digital techniques in a transmitter continue to scale, the power consumed by digital circuits also takes up a large portion of the total power consumption. Implementing the PAPR reduction with a high-speed and power-hungry digital signal processor (DSP) is obviously detrimental to the cost and power efficiency of the entire system.

Motivated by the above observations, simple techniques such as clipping and filtering (CAF) [12-14], peak windowing (PW) [7,15,16] and peak cancellation (PC) [17-19], which have much lower complexity, can be considered as more realistic approaches from the viewpoint of practical implementation. These techniques essentially introduce nonlinear operations so that distortions are inevitable. Given that some degree of distortion is generally allowed for the transmitted signals, such techniques are very attractive. The major drawback of CAF is the peak regrowth caused by the filtering effect, and the amount of regrowth is generally intractable. This is undesirable for a transmitter with digital predistorter (DPD), as the DPD needs to strictly keep the peak below a predefined value to ensure that no signal sweeps into the saturation region of the PA. Although PAPR regrowth can be somewhat alleviated by iterative use of CAF [20,21], the resulting complexity will be increased several fold because of the duplicated functional blocks. Furthermore, the latency issue becomes also prohibitive.

In contrast, PC is a much overlooked technique that has advantages in several aspects. PC simply generates independent cancelling pulses to cancel the peak values to a given threshold. It allows more cost-effective hardware implementation than the CAF as no filtering operation, which involves either a large number of multipliers or a bank of fast Fourier transform (FFT) blocks, is required. Moreover, PC can be easily configured to make compliant operation to signals of different communication standards. This is because the cancelling pulses can be updated to support a variety of carrier configurations and bandwidths. The concept of PC can be also used to facilitate generating cancelling pulses in ACE [22] and tone reservation (TR) [23,24]. In [24], the cancelling pulse is generated by performing inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT) of the distorted signal after clipping and filtering located in the peak reduction tones (PTRs). This method thus generates neither in-band distortion nor out-of-band (OOB) emission but at a cost of data rate loss. In [19], the cancelling pulse generated using the PRTs is repetitively employed without FFT and IFFT for low-complexity implementation. Nevertheless, given the high computational complexity and high latency, the above-mentioned approaches may not be suitable for practical applications.

Until now, only a few papers address hardware implementation of the PC, and even fewer of them have mentioned its application to actual signals observed in commercial transmitters. Therefore, it is meaningful to investigate the applicability of PC in practical settings through field-programmable gate array (FPGA)-based experiments, and this is our main contribution in this work. Specifically, we investigate the feasibility and realizability of PC through elaboration of hardware design issues upon FPGA implementation. Furthermore, a novel PC scheme with notably low-hardware complexity and improved error vector magnitude (EVM) performance is proposed with its effectiveness experimentally demonstrated.

This paper is organized as follows. Section 2 begins with the introduction of the basic model of PC considered throughout the paper, where the design of cancelling pulse is described. In Section 3, two conventional approaches with their respective advantages and drawbacks for implementing the PC are presented. Furthermore, a novel PC approach with much reduced hardware complexity is proposed and its implementation issues are discussed. Experiments using various signals are performed in Section 4 to demonstrate the benefits that can be achieved with the proposed PC scheme. Finally, our conclusion is given in Section 5.

2 PAPR reduction by peak cancellation

A basic diagram of the PC process considered in this work is sketched in Figure 1. Its principle is to generate cancelling pulses at the time instants where the peaks higher than the predetermined threshold are found. The generated pulses are linearly scaled and rotated with appropriate phase shift such that after their addition the original signals have the peaks reduced to the threshold [17].

Figure 1
figure 1

A simplified block diagram of the PC process.

2.1 Peak-cancelling process

To perform peak cancellation on the complex baseband signal, the target signal should be oversampled as the Nyquist-rate-sampled signals cannot correctly represent the actual amplitude of peaks of the continuous-time signals [3]. The discrete complex baseband signal s n has the general form of:

$$\begin{array}{@{}rcl@{}} s_{n}=r_{n}e^{j\theta_{n}}, \end{array} $$
((1))

where r n and θ n represent the amplitude and phase, respectively, at the nth time instant. Suppose that there are N p peaks that are larger than the predefined threshold A th within a given time period T, and let \(\phantom {\dot {i}\!}\rho _{1},\rho _{2},\cdots,\rho _{N_{p}}\) denote the corresponding successive peaks observed at the time instants \(\phantom {\dot {i}\!}n_{1},n_{2}\cdots,n_{N_{p}}\), respectively. Let g n denote the impulse response of the cancelling pulse centred at n=0, i.e. g 0 representing its maximum value. Then, the ith peak cancelling pulse at the time instant n i , where i{1,,N p }, is expressed as:

$$\begin{array}{*{20}l} p^{(i)}_{n} = \left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) g_{n-n_{i}}e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}}, \end{array} $$
((2))

where the phase is rotated by \(e^{j\theta _{n_{i}}}\) to match the phase of the corresponding complex-valued peak sample, and the amplitude is scaled by \(|r_{n_{i}}-A_{\textit {th}}|\) such that the peak value at n=n i is equal to A th after peak cancellation. Then, the overall signal after cancellation of the entire peaks is expressed as:

$$ \begin{aligned} \bar{s}_{n}&=s_{n}- \sum_{i=1}^{N_{p}} p^{(i)}_{n} \\ &=s_{n}- \underbrace{\left[\sum_{i=1}^{N_{p}} \left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}} g_{n-n_{i}}\right]}_{=p_{n}}, \end{aligned} $$
((3))

where p n is all the combined cancelling pulses located at the time instant n i . If we ignore the change of the amplitude and average power due to the addition of all the cancelling pulses, A th is the maximum amplitude after peak cancellation. In what follows, we refer to the corresponding PAPR determined by A th as a target PAPR.

2.2 Effect of the cancelling pulse

The impulse response of the cancelling pulse g n determines the resulting OOB radiation. In general, g n should be compliant to the spectral mask of a given target standard. Suppose that s n is the oversampled version of the band-limited signal and let J denote the oversampling factor such that the \(\tilde {s}_{k J}\) represents the samples at the Nyquist rate for an integer k.

The resulting signal s n is then expressed as:

$$ \begin{aligned} s_{n}=\sum_{k} \tilde{s}_{k J}h_{n-kJ}, \end{aligned} $$
((4))

where h n is the corresponding impulse response of the pulse-shaping filter, and the summation is over the range of k where the impulse response has a non-negligible effect. It is worth mentioning that even though the OFDM signal is not explicitly shaped by a filter, we can still find an equivalent form [25] to represent the virtual pulse-shaping filter. Therefore, Equation 4 also applies to the conventional OFDM signals.

Now we consider the scenario where one peak ρ i is detected and subtracted by a cancelling pulse \(p_{n}^{(i)}\). It then follows that:

$$ \begin{aligned} \bar{s}_{n} &=s_{n}-p_{n}^{(i)} \\ &= \sum_{k}\tilde{s}_{kJ}h_{n-kJ}-\left[\left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}}g_{n-n_{i}}\right]. \end{aligned} $$
((5))

Suppose that the peak position is precisely given at n i =k i J+b i , where k i and b i are some integers. Then, Equation 5 is rewritten as:

$$ \begin{aligned} \bar{s}_{n} &= \sum_{k}\tilde{s}_{kJ}h_{n-kJ}-\left[\left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}} g_{n-(k_{i} J + b_{i})}\right] \\ & =\sum_{k, k \neq k_{i}}\tilde{s}_{kJ}h_{n-kJ}+ \left\{ \tilde{s}_{k_{i} J} -\left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}} \right\} h_{n-k_{i} J} \\ & \qquad + \underbrace{ \left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right) e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}} \left\{ h_{n-k_{i} J} - g_{n-k_{i} J - b_{i}} \right\}}_{d^{(i)}_{n}}, \end{aligned} $$
((6))

which indicates that a proper design of g n will avoid the out-of-band emission, but we still observe that distortion component \(d^{(i)}_{n}\) will affect all the other sampling instants. This distortion component can be nullified only if g n is set equal to h n and the peak position occurs at the Nyquist point, i.e. \(h_{n-k_{i} J} =g_{n-k_{i} J - b_{i}}\).

In other words, if the cancelling pulse g n is identical to h n , then no out-of-band regrowth will occur as the signal power is confined inside the pass-band of h n . In fact, the clipping and filtering approach presented in [13] corresponds to this special case where g n is the periodic sinc function [25]. Since the periodic sinc function has non-negligible impulse response over entire OFDM symbol, it causes considerable peak regrowth. Therefore, in practice, we wish to choose g n such that its side lobe (in time domain) vanishes rapidly, and yet, its frequency response has acceptable out-of-band emission in terms of adjacent channel leakage ratio (ACLR).

2.3 Design of the cancelling pulse

As we have seen, the impulse response of the peak-cancelling pulse g n , which is essentially a finite impulse response (FIR) filter, serves as a trade-off between the out-of-band radiation and in-band distortion. Specifically, shorter impulse response results in lower in-band distortion, but it will cause an increasing amount of out-of-band radiation that may violate the specified spectral mask. Therefore, careful design of the cancelling pulse is essential.

However, there exists no solid algorithm or closed-form deviation for finding the best cancelling pulse, and thus, exhaustive attempts are necessary to find the suitable one for a specified signal and to satisfy the design requirements. For instance, three different filters (cancelling pulses) of the same length are illustrated in Figure 2 with their respective impulse response and frequency response. Here, the windowed sinc (WS) is obtained by multiplying Kaiser window to sinc function. The raised cosine (RC) and sinc are both Nyquist filters as can be seen from the left hand of the figure. The equal ripple (ER) filter is obtained by the well-established Parks-McClellan algorithm [26] which minimizes the error in pass and stop bands by employing Chebyshev approximation. The performance of the peak cancellation based on the three cancelling pulses is demonstrated in Figure 3 using numerical simulation, where a WCDMA signal is used as its test signal. In this figure, as a practical measure for PAPR, we adopt the complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF) of the instantaneous power normalized by its average power.

Figure 2
figure 2

Performance comparison of the three different cancelling pulses designed based on different FIRs. The left hand side figure shows their impulse responses, whereas the right hand side figure shows the corresponding frequency responses. RC, raised cosine; WS, windowed sinc; ER, equal ripple.

Figure 3
figure 3

Peak-cancelled performance due to the different peak-cancelling pulses introduced in Figure 2. The left hand side figure shows the PAPR performance in terms of CCDF, whereas the right hand side figure shows the corresponding power spectra. CCDF, complementary cumulative distribution function; RC, raised cosine; WS, windowed sinc; ER, equal ripple.

From the left hand side of Figure 3, we observe that similar PAPR performance is achieved. However, comparison of the power spectra in Figure 3 with their corresponding frequency responses in Figure 2 reveals that the frequency response of the cancelling pulses has the dominant effect on the resulting spectrum after peak cancellation.

The effects of pulse length on the in-band distortion (i.e. EVM) and out-of-band distortion (i.e. ACLR) are reported in Figure 4a,b, respectively. The measurement of EVM and ACLR follows the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) frequency division duplexing (FDD) WCDMA downlink specification [27]. We have concluded in the last subsection that a longer pulse introduces more symbol errors to the target signal, and this is validated by Figure 4a. On the other hand, it can be easily grasped by inspection of Figure 4b that ACLR reduces with longer cancelling pulse length. However, the curves shown in the figure have some fluctuations. This can be understood by inspecting Figure 5, where the impulse response for a typical low-pass filter is shown. Truncation length of the impulse response also affects the shape of the resulting frequency response. For instance, L 1 has worse out-of-band attenuation than L 3 but may be better than L 2, because L 2 has non-zeroes at the head and end. This heuristic observation reveals a basic clue for choosing the cancelling pulse length: the cancelling pulse should be as short as possible to minimize the distortion but should be long enough to give admissible ACLR.

Figure 4
figure 4

Effect of different pulse length. (a) Pulse length effect on EVM. (b) Pulse length effect on ACLR. RC, raised cosine; WS, windowed sinc; ER, equal ripple; EVM, error vector magnitude; ACLR, adjacent channel leakage ratio.

Figure 5
figure 5

An example of typical impulse response of cancelling pulse with various truncation lengths.

It can also be observed from Figure 4a,b that the cancelling pulse generated by an equal ripple filter gives the best performance both in terms of EVM and ACLR. Better EVM performance is due to the lower side lobe in time domain, and lower ACLR is due to higher out-of-band attenuation of the cancelling pulse, as can be seen from Figure 2. It can also be seen from Figure 4a that even though the raised-cosine filter completely conforms to the pulse-shaping filter for WCDMA signal, it shows worst performance when the cancelling pulse length is short. This is mainly due to the distortion effect and the high sidelobe of the raised-cosine filter. In general, designing cancelling pulse with Parks-McClellan algorithm leads to better performance than other filter types that are frequently found in the literature.

3 Hardware implementation of peak cancellation

From this section and later, we focus on efficient implementation of PC by hardware. We first introduce the conventional approach for the implementation of PC as well as its alternative method, which is followed by the description of the proposed PC as well as their detailed implementation issues.

3.1 Conventional implementation: scheme 1

A conventional scheme for implementing the PC [28], which we refer to as a scheme 1 in what follows, is shown in Figure 6. The instantaneous magnitude and phase of the complex signal are computed with coordinate rotation digital computer (CORDIC) algorithm. The ‘Peak Detect’ block, which contains some registers and comparators, identifies the peak magnitude higher than the threshold. When a peak is detected, the corresponding phase and the magnitude amount higher than the threshold are latched. These values are used to scale and rotate the normalized real cancelling pulses, and these operations are accomplished by multiple CORDIC cores.

Figure 6
figure 6

Architecture of conventional PC hardware implementation - scheme 1. ROM, read only memory.

The cancelling-pulse generator block contains one counter, which is directly connected to the address port of the read only memory (ROM). The pre-determined cancelling pulse, which is compliant with the target signal spectrum, is stored in the ROM. The counter will be triggered as soon as one peak is found, and it is reset when it counts to the length of cancelling pulse L.

To deal with the occurrence of intensive peaks, multiple cancelling-pulse generators are necessary to generate independent cancelling pulses, and Figure 7 illustrates such an operation where the signal is propagating from left to right. When the first peak in the left is detected, the first generator will be turned on for L clocks to generate the first cancelling pulse. In the event that the second and third peaks are detected when the first generator is still on, the second and third generators will be triggered to generate the second and third cancelling pulses. If the fourth peak is detected when ROM 1 is free, the first generator will be reused to generate the fourth cancelling pulse. In summary, when the previous cancelling-pulse generator is triggered and the next peak is found, the next cancelling-pulse generator will be triggered in sequel. This successive process continues until no peak higher than the threshold is found. All the outputs of the cancelling-pulse generators are summed and finally subtracted from the delayed original signal.

Figure 7
figure 7

Principle of multiple cancelling pulse generation.

It becomes clear that the resource complexity of this scheme is bounded by the number of available cancelling-pulse generators. Note that whether this scheme can cancel all the peaks in one pass or not depends on the specific parameters such as the required pulse length, targeted PAPR and the number of cancelling-pulse generators. It is easy to see that the generators in the upper side of Figure 6 have a higher probability to be used while the cancelling-pulse generators in the bottom may be idle most of the time. Therefore, some compromise is necessary to determine how many cancelling-pulse generators are used. As a rule of thumb, five or six cancelling-pulse generators are enough when a reasonable threshold value is assumed, as the average number of the peaks above the threshold monotonically decreases as the threshold increases [3]. However, since the number of peaks itself is a random variable, with the fixed number of pulse generators, a failure to peak cancellation may occasionally happen. In this case, some iterative processing structure should be introduced, which may lead to increasing latency.

3.2 Conventional implementation: scheme 2

To overcome the issue of a peak cancellation failure, an alternative implementation scheme [29], which we refer to as scheme 2, can be applied. Let us rewrite Equation 3 as:

$$ \bar{s}_{n}=s_{n}-\sum_{i=1}^{N_{p}}\left[\left(r_{n_{i}}-A_{th}\right)\cdot \delta\left(n-n_{i}\right)e^{j\theta_{n_{i}}}\right] \ast g_{n}, $$
((7))

where g n serves as the coefficients (impulse response) of an FIR filter and denotes the convolution operation. The cancelling pulses can be thus generated by propagating the delta function train to this filter, and this principle is illustrated in Figure 8 and its hardware implementation is given in Figure 9.

Figure 8
figure 8

Principle of cancelling pulse generated by delta function trains.

Figure 9
figure 9

Architecture of conventional hardware implementation of peak cancellation - scheme 2. FIR, finite impulse response.

Similar to the first scheme, a CORDIC core is used to compute the magnitude and phase of the signal. The ‘Pulse Gen’ block outputs a sample which is properly scaled and rotated when a peak is detected. The resulting delta function train is complex-valued. It is easy to see from Figure 9 that the resource complexity relies primarily on the filter, while the complexity of its counterpart in Figure 6 depends on the number of CORDIC cores. Implementing an FIR filter requires a large number of multipliers, which makes the scheme 1 preferable as it consumes less resources.

In summary, the first scheme has lower complexity in terms of fewer multipliers but has the problem of peak generation failure. The second scheme is easier to implement but has higher resource complexity due to the use of FIR filter. In order to cope with the peak generation failure, however, the first scheme may require more iterations which in turn increase the complexity several fold. In this sense, the second scheme that has a fixed hardware overhead is preferred.

3.3 The proposed peak cancellation

As can be observed from Figure 7, a sum of multiple overlapped pulses forms the final pulse when intensive peaks occur. The tails of the previous pulses may happen to be added in-phase to the peaks in sequel, resulting in less effective peak reduction. Inspired by these observations, we proposed a novel approach of peak cancellation. The principle of the proposed approach is illustrated in Figure 10. Instead of generating complete cancelling pulses stored in the ROMs as the one shown in Figure 6, the proposed scheme generates truncated cancelling pulses when they are overlapping with each other. More specifically, when the interval of two contiguous peaks is detected to be less than the predefined cancelling-pulse length, the generation of the first cancelling pulse terminates in the middle of the interval and immediately triggers the second cancelling pulse. Since this scheme reduces the length for overlapping cancelling pulses, lower in-band error can be expected in view of the observation given in the Section 2.3.

Figure 10
figure 10

Principle of the proposed peak cancellation approach.

However, as can be seen from Figure 10, the cancelling pulses show obvious discontinuity which would produce substantial out-of-band emission. To mitigate the out-of-band emission, a filter can be applied to smooth the discontinuities, and the resulting waveform of the smoothed cancelling pulse is also denoted by the dashed curve in Figure 10. In our method, we use a simple moving average filter as a smoothing filter, with which the out-of-band spurious level caused by non-continuous cancelling pulses can be reduced. Note that the smoothing filter is actually optional as we can still obtain a moderate out-of-band emission without it, considering that the occurrence of high peaks is a rare event [3]. The smoothing filter is only necessary in the ACLR-prior circumstance. Normally, a short-length smoothing filter is adequate to further improve the ACLR performance. As the filter length is very short, it gives negligible effect on EVM.

3.4 Implementation of the proposed peak cancellation

We now describe the hardware implementation aspects of the proposed scheme. A detailed block diagram of the proposed scheme is given in Figure 11. Some example waveforms of the internal signals labelled in Figure 11 are plotted in Figure 12.

Figure 11
figure 11

Hardware circuit of the proposed PC scheme using FPGA. ROM, read only memory.

Figure 12
figure 12

Internal signal illustration of the proposed PC circuit.

Similar to the previous schemes, a CORDIC core is used to compute the instantaneous magnitude and phase of the signal. The ‘Peak Detect’ block, which contains some registers and comparators, outputs a ‘1’ when a magnitude peak is found, as shown in the second plot in Figure 12. The output of the ‘Peak Detect’ block is connected to the enable ports of the two latches which store the magnitude and phase of the corresponding peak. The ‘Interval Locator’ block generates a ‘1’ in the middle of two peaks when the interval of these peaks is less than the cancelling-pulse length. The outputs of ‘Interval Locator’ and ‘Peak Detect’ (I) and (II) are combined with an OR gate. A ‘Delay’ block is used to align these two signals as the ‘Interval Locator’ has a fixed delay. The ‘Cancelling Pulse Duration” block produces enable signal (III) for the counter which outputs the address of the ROM. The counting direction of the counter is controlled by a latch output which is reversed when triggered by the output of the OR gate. Operation of these signals can be easily seen from the second and third plots in Figure 12.

The ROM output (V) is then scaled and rotated by the latched magnitude and phase to form the cancelling pulses and fed to the FIR filter. The smoothed cancelling pulses (VI) are subtracted from the delayed original signal to form the PAPR-reduced signal. It should be noted that the four ‘Delay’ blocks shown in Figure 12 do not necessarily indicate that the delay values for these blocks are identical.

The moving average filter used here for smoothing the truncated pulses is much shorter than the one used in Figure 9. Thus, it has less hardware complexity, even though both of them contain two CORDIC cores.

4 Performance evaluation of the proposed peak cancellation

In this section, the experimental results for implementation with FPGA are reported. We will compare the hardware complexity (in terms of resource utilization) of the proposed PC and conventional PC first. This is followed by the experimental results using a standard-conforming long-term evolution (LTE) signal as well as multi-standard signals.

4.1 Experiment description

The implementation is carried out using an FPGA evaluation board VC707, which contains a Xilinx Virtex-7 XC7VX485T-2FFG1761C device. The test WCDMA/LTE signal (baseband IQ) is generated by Matlab on the computer and is stored in a bank of RAMs in the FPGA as the signal source. The output of peak cancellation is captured by a series of integrated logic analyzers (ILAs) in parallel, which is arranged in a time-interleaved manner so as to receive the signal of long length. This signal is then transferred to computer through USB port and circularly shifted to align with the original signal and is analysed by Matlab.

A 245.76-MHz clock is synthesized by the on-chip mixed-mode clock manager (MMCM), which uses the on-board 200-MHz oscillator as the reference. The clock is set to integer times (64 times in our example implementation) of 3.84 MHz, targeting the specification of the 3GPP WCDMA and LTE signals.

The cancelling-pulse length is set to 115, and the order of the moving averaging filter is set to 6 for the proposed PC. The complex cancelling pulse is assumed to support the asymmetric signal spectrum. As the smoothing filter is symmetric and one complex-variant multiplication uses three multipliers, the filter consumes 6÷2×3 multipliers. Furthermore, to optimize the speed, three multipliers are used to implement a CORDIC algorithm and the total of six multipliers by the two CORDIC cores. Another two multipliers are used to scale the cancelling pulse (real magnitude multiplying the complex cancelling pulse in I/Q) so that the total consumption of multipliers is 17.

4.2 Resource utilization

The FPGA resource utilization, which is evaluated with Resource Estimator using post-mapping, for the three PC approaches introduced are summarized in Table 1 where the scheme 1 is operated either without iteration or with one iteration. Only primary resources such as the slices and look-up tables (LUTs) are listed here, since they are generic for any FPGA, while the other resources used for our test (primarily block RAMs and IOs for ChipScope) are specific to the FPGA board and thus are not taken into consideration.

Table 1 FPGA resource utilization table

In scheme 1, the PC is comprised of four cancelling-pulse generators, and therefore, four RAMs are used to store the cancelling pulse and accordingly four CORDIC cores are needed. One can see that with a single iteration, the hardware resource of scheme 1 is roughly doubled. It is obvious that all of the three schemes consume only a small portion of the resources such as flip flops (FFs) and slice LUTs. The conventional scheme 2 costs more multipliers. This is because it requires implementing the FIR filter to generate the cancelling pulses of equivalent length. For circuit integration, the multipliers are most concerned as they generally cost more power and take up larger area than other simple arithmetic elements. In this sense, the proposed PC is rather cost effective as it consumes fewer multipliers. Although the conventional scheme 1 without iteration requires even fewer multipliers, the peak-missing problem will make it unworkable as will be demonstrated in the subsequent subsections. In view of this, the proposed PC yields the lowest complexity.

The signal has 16-bit precision, which gives a noise floor of approximately −80 dB. Note that since the systems such as LTE and WCDMA require an ACLR of −55 dB at most, actual implementation needs less bits.

4.3 Test results using LTE signals

The rest of the paper is devoted to the comparison of the three approaches in terms of in-band distortion, out-of-band emission and realizable PAPR.

The applied LTE signal is a 16-QAM OFDM signal with 1,200 subcarriers within 18.015-MHz occupied bandwidth and 20-MHz channel bandwidth. The basic sampling rate for such signal is 30.72 MHz since the FFT size is 2,048. The PC for LTE signal is operated at 245.76 MHz which represents an oversampling rate of 8. The signal spectrum and cancelling-pulse spectrum are demonstrated in Figure 13. The cancelling pulse used here was designed by Chebyshev approximation, as described in Section 2.3.

Figure 13
figure 13

Demonstration of the spectra of LTE signal and its corresponding cancelling pulse.

4.3.1 4.3.1 Peak power reduction capability comparison for different PC schemes

In what follows, we evaluate the CCDF of the normalized instantaneous power after employing the PC schemes considered in this work.

The CCDF plots of the signal with the proposed PC and the two conventional PC schemes are demonstrated in Figure 14 where the target PAPR values are set as 6 and 8 dB. As can be seen from the figure, the conventional scheme 1 without iteration exhibits high peaks due to the cancelling peak generation failure under the condition that only four ROMs are made available for this purpose. This problem can be solved by adding a single iteration, but this doubles the required resources as can be seen from Table 1. The conventional scheme 2 outperforms the scheme 1 without iteration, at a cost of increasing hardware complexity. The proposed PC, on the other hand, achieves performance comparable to the scheme 1 with iteration, even with lower hardware complexity.

Figure 14
figure 14

CCDF comparison in terms of normalized instantaneous power for different PC schemes with the target PAPR of 6 and 8 dB. CCDF, complementary cumulative distribution function.

Considering the fact that the scheme 1 may not necessarily achieve a target peak power reduction performance without iteration, the experiments hereinafter will be focused exclusively on the proposed scheme and conventional scheme 2.

An important factor for evaluating the performance of a PAPR-reduction technique is the actually realizable PAPR. It is well known that the CAF causes an unavoidable peak power regrowth, and this will make the precise control of PAPR challenging without resorting to increasing complexity such as iterative use of CAF [20], which may also introduce a prohibitive amount of latency. In contrast, the peak power achieved by PC schemes can reduce the effect of the peak power regrowth and thus achieve the PAPR close to the target PAPR. Figure 15 compares the peak power reduction capabilities of the schemes 2 and the proposed scheme. In this figure, in response to the target PAPR, the actual threshold values of the normalized instantaneous power at given specific CCDF of 10−4 and 10−5 are plotted as a realizable PAPR. It is observed that the proposed scheme outperforms the scheme 2 from the viewpoint of PAPR reduction as well.

Figure 15
figure 15

Realizable PAPR versus target PAPR for LTE signal. The realizable PAPR is defined as the corresponding threshold-normalized instantaneous power values measured at the CCDF of 10−4 and 10−5. PAPR, peak-to-average power ratio.

4.3.2 4.3.2 In-band and out-of-band distortion comparison for different PC schemes

The constellation plots of the user data, which are 16-QAM signal, with target PAPR of 5 and 7 dB, are delineated in Figure 16. The pilot points (reference signal) in red, which is QPSK, are used to rotate, rescale and equalize the user data. It can be inspected from the figure that, for a target PAPR of 5 dB, the constellation of the user data is rather dispersive.

Figure 16
figure 16

Constellation plots of user data. (a) When target PAPR = 5 dB. (b) When target PAPR = 7 dB. PAPR, peak-to-average power ratio.

The measured EVM and ACLR with different target PAPRs are demonstrated in Figures 17 and 18, respectively. It can be inspected from the figures that the proposed scheme yields lower in-band distortion (in terms of lower EVM) and higher out-of-band distortion (in terms of higher ACLR). This stems from the fact that since the proposed method generates shorter cancelling pulses, it can essentially reduce the in-band distortion in time domain but with the broader side lobes in frequency domain, as discussed in Section 2. Also, even though the proposed scheme has higher out-of-band emission, the observed ACLR with this parameter setting is still satisfactory for practical applications.

Figure 17
figure 17

EVM versus target PAPR for LTE signal. EVM, error vector magnitude; PAPR, peak-to-average power ratio.

Figure 18
figure 18

ACLRs (both lower and upper side bands) versus target PAPR for LTE signal. ACLR, adjacent channel leakage ratio; PAPR, peak-to-average power ratio.

4.4 Test results using various signals

Finally, multiple tests have been performed to validate the proposed scheme for a more general framework with multi-carrier and multi-standard signals.

4.4.1 4.4.1 Carrier-aggregated LTE signals

The first test here assumes an LTE-Advanced signal with carrier aggregation of three 20-MHz carrier components (CCs). The spacing of the two carriers are set to 20.1 MHz, which is an integer multiple of 15 KHz in order to maintain the OFDM subcarrier spacing. The target PAPR is set to 7 dB which can yield reasonable EVM. The resulting CCDF is plotted in Figure 19a to show the effectiveness of the proposed scheme. The spectral density plots provided in Figure 19b show that, with the given cancelling pulse, the proposed scheme yields very limited spectral regrowth. The EVMs for the respective CCs under the condition of different realizable PAPRs are plotted in Figure 20. We observe that the EVM curves for different CCs almost overlap with each other, indicating the effectiveness of the proposed PC under the system operated with multiple carrier frequencies.

Figure 19
figure 19

The performance comparison of PC for three-carrier LTE-Advanced signal. (a) CCDF when target PAPR is set to 7 dB. (b) The power spectral density plots when target PAPR is set to 7 dB. CCDF, complementary cumulative distribution function; PC, peak cancellation.

Figure 20
figure 20

EVM of each LTE-Advanced component carrier. EVM, error vector magnitude; PAPR, peak-to-average power ratio.

4.4.2 4.4.2 Multi-standard signals

The second test uses a multi-standard signal, which contains three WCDMA carriers and a 20-MHz LTE carrier, where the two standard signals are spaced by 40 MHz. The WCDMA signal used in this paper is generated following the specification defined by 3GPP test model 3, for which 64 users (16-QAM) are multiplexed in dedicated physical data channel (DPDCH) to form the 3.84 Mc/s chip rate. The WCDMA chip is oversampled 64 times, and the PC is operated at a corresponding sampling frequency of 245.76 MHz.

The resulting CCDF and power spectral plots are given in Figure 21a,b, which demonstrate the adaptability of the proposed PC to the signal with non-contiguous spectrum. The proposed scheme, with a realizable PAPR of around 7 dB, can meet the imposed requirement on power spectrum well as can be inspected from Figure 21b.

Figure 21
figure 21

The performance comparison of PC for the aggregated signal of three-carrier WCDMA and LTE signal. (a) CCDF performance when target PAPR is set to 7 dB. (b) The power spectral density plots when target PAPR is set to 7 dB. CCDF, complementary cumulative distribution function; PC, peak cancellation.

5 Conclusions

In this paper, the peak cancellation technique as a general purpose PAPR reduction has been addressed. The design issues of cancelling pulses that determine the performance of PC have been also discussed. Our main focus was on their FPGA implementation with a special consideration on the hardware complexity. A novel PC scheme with notably low-hardware complexity has been also presented. The experimental results using various signals have demonstrated the validity of the proposed approach.

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Song, J., Ochiai, H. A low-complexity peak cancellation scheme and its FPGA implementation for peak-to-average power ratio reduction. J Wireless Com Network 2015, 85 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13638-015-0319-0

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