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Rate and Power Allocation for Discrete-Rate Link Adaptation
EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking volume 2008, Article number: 394124 (2008)
Abstract
Link adaptation, in particular adaptive coded modulation (ACM), is a promising tool for bandwidth-efficient transmission in a fading environment. The main motivation behind employing ACM schemes is to improve the spectral efficiency of wireless communication systems. In this paper, using a finite number of capacity achieving component codes, we propose new transmission schemes employing constant power transmission, as well as discrete- and continuous-power adaptation, for slowly varying flat-fading channels. We show that the proposed transmission schemes can achieve throughputs close to the Shannon limits of flat-fading channels using only a small number of codes. Specifically, using a fully discrete scheme with just four codes, each associated with four power levels, we achieve a spectral efficiency within 1 dB of the continuous-rate continuous-power Shannon capacity. Furthermore, when restricted to a fixed number of codes, the introduction of power adaptation has significant gains with respect to average spectral efficiency and probability of no transmission compared to a constant power scheme.
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Gjendemsjø, A., Øien, G.E., Holm, H. et al. Rate and Power Allocation for Discrete-Rate Link Adaptation. J Wireless Com Network 2008, 394124 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/394124
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/394124