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{{Short description|Multiple access scheme in telecommunications}}
'''Multi-
MC-CDMA spreads each user symbol in the frequency ___domain. That is, each user symbol is carried over multiple parallel subcarriers, but it is phase
Since each data symbol occupies a much wider bandwidth (in hertz) than the data rate (in bit/s), a ratio of signal
One way of interpreting MC-CDMA is to regard it as a direct-sequence CDMA signal ([[DS-CDMA]]), which is transmitted after it has been fed through an inverse FFT ([[fast Fourier transform]]).
== Rationale ==
Wireless radio links suffer from frequency-selective channel interference. If the signal on one subcarrier experiences an outage, it can still be reconstructed from the energy received over other subcarriers.
== Downlink: MC-CDM ==
In the downlink (one base station transmitting to one or more terminals), MC-CDMA typically reduces to Multi-Carrier Code Division Multiplexing. All user signals can easily be synchronized, and all signals on one subcarrier experience the same radio channel properties. In such case a preferred system implementation is to take N user bits (possibly but not necessarily for different destinations), to transform these using a Walsh [[Hadamard transform]], followed by an IFFT.
== Variants ==
A number of alternative possibilities exist as to how this frequency ___domain spreading can take place, such as by using a long PN code and multiplying each data symbol, d<sub>i</sub>, on a subcarrier by a chip from the PN code, c<sub>i</sub>, or by using short PN codes and spreading each data symbol by an individual PN code — i.e. d<sub>i</sub> is multiplied by each c<sub>i</sub> and the resulting vector is placed on N<sub>freq</sub> subcarriers, where N<sub>freq</sub> is the PN code length.
Once frequency ___domain spreading has taken place and the [[OFDM]] subcarriers have all been allocated values, [[OFDM]] modulation then takes place using the [[
An alternative form of multi-carrier [[CDMA]], called MC-DS-CDMA or MC/DS-CDMA, performs spreading in the time ___domain, rather than in the frequency ___domain in the case of MC-CDMA — for the special case where there is only one carrier, this reverts to standard [[DS-CDMA]].
For the case of MC-DS-CDMA where [[OFDM]] is used as the modulation scheme, the data symbols on the individual subcarriers are spread in time by multiplying the chips on a PN code by the data symbol on the subcarrier. For example, assume the PN code chips consist of {1,
2-dimensional spreading in both the frequency and time domains is also possible, and a scheme that uses 2-D spreading is [[VSF-OFCDM]] (which stands for variable spreading factor orthogonal frequency code-division multiplexing), which [[NTT DoCoMo]] is using for its [[4G]] prototype system.
As an example of how the 2D spreading on [[VSF-OFCDM]] works, if you take the first data symbol, ''d''<sub>0</sub>, and a spreading factor in the time ___domain, ''SF''<sub>time</sub>, of length 4, and a spreading factor in the frequency ___domain, ''SF''<sub>frequency</sub> of 2, then the data symbol, ''d''<sub>0</sub>, will be multiplied by the length-2 frequency-___domain PN codes and placed on subcarriers 0 and 1, and these values on subcarriers 0 and 1 will then be multiplied by the length-4 time-___domain PN code and transmitted on [[OFDM]] symbols 0, 1, 2 and 3.<ref>http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/atarashi02broadband.html Broadband Packet Wireless Access Based On VSF-OFCDM And MC/DS-CDMA (2002) Atarashi et al.</ref>
[[NTT DoCoMo]] has already achieved 5
Summary
==See also==▼
▲1. [[OFDMA]] with frequency spreading (MC-CDMA)
* [[OFDMA]], an alternative multiple access scheme for OFDM systems, where the signals of different users are separated in the [[frequency ___domain]] by allocating different sub-carriers to different users.▼
▲2. [[OFDMA]] with time spreading ([[MC-DS-CDMA]] and [[MT-CDMA]])
▲3. [[OFDMA]] with both time and frequency spreading (Orthogonal Frequency Code Division Multiple Access([[OFCDMA]]))
==References==
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==Literature==
* N. Yee, J.P.M.G. Linnartz and G. Fettweis, "Multi-Carrier CDMA in indoor wireless Radio Networks", IEEE Personal Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC) Int. Conference, Sept. 1993, Yokohama, Japan, pp.
* K. Fazel and L. Papke, "On the performance of convolutionally-coded CDMA/OFDM for mobile communication system", IEEE Personal Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC) Int. Conference, Sept. 1993, Yokohama, Japan, pp.
* A. Chouly, A. Brajal, and S. Jourdan, "Orthogonal multicarrier techniques applied to direct sequence spread spectrum CDMA systems," in Proceedings of Global Telecommunications Conference (GLOBECOM'93), pp.
▲* K. Fazel and L. Papke, "On the performance of convolutionally-coded CDMA/OFDM for mobile communication system", IEEE Personal Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC) Int. Conference, Sept. 1993, Yokohama, Japan, pp. 468–472
* N.Yee, J.P.M.G. Linnartz and G. Fettweis, "Multi-Carrier-CDMA in indoor wireless networks", IEICE Transaction on Communications, Japan, Vol. E77-B, No. 7, July 1994, pp.
* J.P.M.G. Linnartz, "Performance Analysis of Synchronous MC-CDMA in mobile Rayleigh channels with both Delay and Doppler spreads", IEEE VT, Vol. 50, No. 6, Nov. 2001, pp 1375–1387. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070316010759/http://www.wireless.per.nl/wireless/articles/01_j2.mc_cdma_doppler.pdf ''PDF'']▼
▲* A. Chouly, A. Brajal, and S. Jourdan, "Orthogonal multicarrier techniques applied to direct sequence spread spectrum CDMA systems," in Proceedings of Global Telecommunications Conference (GLOBECOM'93), pp. 1723–1728, Houston, Tex, USA, November 1993.
* K. Fazel and S. Kaiser, ''Multi-Carrier and Spread Spectrum Systems: From OFDM and MC-CDMA to LTE and WiMAX'', 2nd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2008, {{ISBN
* Hughes Software Systems, [https://web.archive.org/web/20041210061929/http://www.hssworld.com/whitepapers/whitepaper_pdf/service4.pdf ''Multi Carrier Code Division Multiple Access''], March 2002.▼
▲* N.Yee, J.P.M.G. Linnartz and G. Fettweis, "Multi-Carrier-CDMA in indoor wireless networks", IEICE Transaction on Communications, Japan, Vol. E77-B, No. 7, July 1994, pp. 900–904.
▲* J.P.M.G. Linnartz, "Performance Analysis of Synchronous MC-CDMA in mobile Rayleigh channels with both Delay and Doppler spreads", IEEE VT, Vol. 50, No. 6, Nov. 2001, pp 1375–1387. [http://www.wireless.per.nl/wireless/articles/01_j2.mc_cdma_doppler.pdf ''PDF'']
▲* K. Fazel and S. Kaiser, ''Multi-Carrier and Spread Spectrum Systems: From OFDM and MC-CDMA to LTE and WiMAX'', 2nd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2008, ISBN 978-0-470-99821-2.
▲* Hughes Software Systems, [http://www.hssworld.com/whitepapers/whitepaper_pdf/service4.pdf ''Multi Carrier Code Division Multiple Access''], March 2002.
* German Aerospace Center, Institute of Communications and Navigation, [http://www.kn-s.dlr.de/mcss2007/history.php ''History of Multi-Carrier Code Division Multiple Access (MC-CDMA) and Multi-Carrier Spread Spectrum Workshop''], November 2006.
* Wireless Communication Reference Web Site, section about [http://www.wirelesscommunication.nl/reference/chaptr05/mccdma/mccdma.htm''MC-CDMA''], 2001.
▲==See also==
▲* [[OFDMA]], an alternative multiple access scheme for OFDM systems, where the signals of different users are separated in the [[frequency ___domain]] by allocating different sub-carriers to different users.
{{cdma}}
{{Channel access methods}}
[[Category:Code division multiple access]]
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