TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaptive transmission with finite code rates
AU - Lin, Lang
AU - Yates, Roy D.
AU - Spasojević, Predrag
N1 - Funding Information:
Manuscript received August 19, 2003; revised December 31, 2005. This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant SPN-0338805. The material in this paper was presented in part at IEEE International Conference on Communications, New York, April 2002. L. Lin is with Symbol Technologies Inc., Rockville, MD 20855 USA (e-mail: [email protected]). R. D. Yates and P. Spasojević are with the WINLAB, Rutgers University, North Brunswick, NJ 08902-3390 USA (e-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]). Communicated by G. Caire, Associate Editor for Communications. Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/TIT.2006.872987
PY - 2006/5
Y1 - 2006/5
N2 - This work examines a transmission system which adapts a finite set of code rates and a continuously varying transmit power. We propose a technique for finding the average reliable throughput (ART)-maximizing policy satisfying an average power constraint for a slow fading additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel. ART is a measure motivated by the information outage and can, for example, be argued to characterize the long-term average throughput of a data packet transmission system with a transmit queue and a feedback protocol which requests retransmission of erroneously received packets. Given the size of the code rate set L, the ART-maximizing policy has the following properties. 1. For a given set of code rates, the optimum allocation policy suggests quantizing the fading state space into a set of L+1 corresponding intervals. For each quantization interval the optimal policy specifies a minimum transmitted power assignment which guarantees zero information outage. The optimum average power assignments across quantization intervals have a waterfilling relationship with respect to the interval channel quality measure. 2. The joint optimization of quantization inter vals and the corresponding rate assignments are shown to have multiple local maxima. Nevertheless, this optimization problem can be reduced to a simple one-dimensional search over a parameter which determines the outage interval. Numerical results show that, in a Rayleigh-fading channel, there is only a 1-dB gap between the ergodic capacity and the throughput of a two-rate adaptive transmission system when the throughput is less than 6 bits/s/Hz. A special case of our optimal policy assignment is the optimal power and rate policy for an adaptive M-QAM system.
AB - This work examines a transmission system which adapts a finite set of code rates and a continuously varying transmit power. We propose a technique for finding the average reliable throughput (ART)-maximizing policy satisfying an average power constraint for a slow fading additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel. ART is a measure motivated by the information outage and can, for example, be argued to characterize the long-term average throughput of a data packet transmission system with a transmit queue and a feedback protocol which requests retransmission of erroneously received packets. Given the size of the code rate set L, the ART-maximizing policy has the following properties. 1. For a given set of code rates, the optimum allocation policy suggests quantizing the fading state space into a set of L+1 corresponding intervals. For each quantization interval the optimal policy specifies a minimum transmitted power assignment which guarantees zero information outage. The optimum average power assignments across quantization intervals have a waterfilling relationship with respect to the interval channel quality measure. 2. The joint optimization of quantization inter vals and the corresponding rate assignments are shown to have multiple local maxima. Nevertheless, this optimization problem can be reduced to a simple one-dimensional search over a parameter which determines the outage interval. Numerical results show that, in a Rayleigh-fading channel, there is only a 1-dB gap between the ergodic capacity and the throughput of a two-rate adaptive transmission system when the throughput is less than 6 bits/s/Hz. A special case of our optimal policy assignment is the optimal power and rate policy for an adaptive M-QAM system.
KW - Adaptive coded modulation
KW - Adaptive transmission
KW - Average reliable throughput (ART)
KW - Bit loading
KW - Block-fading channels
KW - Delayed constrained communications
KW - Information outage
KW - M-QAM
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U2 - 10.1109/TIT.2006.872987
DO - 10.1109/TIT.2006.872987
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33646031494
SN - 0018-9448
VL - 52
SP - 1847
EP - 1860
JO - IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
JF - IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
IS - 5
ER -