Wideband blind signal classification on a battery budget

A wideband signal sensor is an essential component to enable cognitive radio and dynamic spectrum access techniques, providing real-time detection and modulation classification in a wideband environment of interest. The problem is challenging, requiring a processing suite incorporating detection, es...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE communications magazine 2015-10, Vol.53 (10), p.173-181
Hauptverfasser: Harjani, Ramesh, Yuan, Fang-Li, Cabric, Danijela, Markovic, Dejan, Sadler, Brian M., Palani, Rakesh K., Saha, Anindya, Shin, Hundo, Rebeiz, Eric, Basir-Kazeruni, Sina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A wideband signal sensor is an essential component to enable cognitive radio and dynamic spectrum access techniques, providing real-time detection and modulation classification in a wideband environment of interest. The problem is challenging, requiring a processing suite incorporating detection, estimation, and classification, with stringent power objectives to enable widespread use in untethered battery powered devices. This article provides an overview of an integrated system-on-chip extremely low-power solution, including a wideband mixed-signal front-end, an algorithm suite that incorporates a blind hierarchical modulation classifier, and an ASIC implementation that employs dynamic voltage-frequency scaling and parallel processing that achieves measured energy efficiency ranging between 11.9 GOPS/mW and 13.6 GOPS/mW for full channel feature extraction, resulting in power consumption of 20.1-22.6 mW depending on the number of signals and signal bandwidth. The system bandwidth is selectable at 5, 50, and 500 MHz; in the 500 MHz case an efficient analog 8-point FFT channelizer relaxes the A/D requirement. The sensor can blindly detect and process up to 32 concurrent non-overlapping signals, with a variety of signal characteristics including single- vs. multi-carrier discrimination, carrier detection and estimation, and modulation classification.
ISSN:0163-6804
1558-1896
DOI:10.1109/MCOM.2015.7295481