2.1. General Error Floor Due to Time Dispersion
Let us first review the OFDM BER floor for propagation environments ranging from indoor to small-cell outdoor, where mostly strong signals and thus large SNRs can be expected in various 4G/5G scenarios for residual channel estimation.
Consider an OFDM symbol at an arbitrary sampling instant τ, as comprising M original symbols of duration TS each. On the other hand, the multipath channel is represented by the sum of complex delta functions, each with a Rayleigh-weighted amplitude , uniformly distributed phase, and certain delay , .
Then the OFDM BER floor for the gray-mapped
m-quadrature amplitude modulation (
m-QAM) formats applied in 4G/5G is [
12]:
where
and
:
are relative delays of the channel response impulses, with respect to
that distinguishes the preceding (“−”) from the delayed (“+”) multipath echoes.
Furthermore, the normalized “−” and “+” rms delay spreads in Equation (1) are defined as:
respectively, whereas the mean aggregate “−” and “+” echoes’ powers, relative to the total mean power,
, are:
respectively, where
denotes the count of preceding echoes (out of
N overall) that, timewise, corresponds to the sampling instance.
Moreover, the variances of differences between the
n-th and the (
n+1)-th OFDM symbol in the observed data sequence, and between the (
n−1)-th and the
n-th OFDM symbol
and
, respectively [
12]:
can reasonably be expected to be small, as the difference between neighboring OFDM symbols does not change fast; rather it can be regarded as almost constant for the observed (
n-indexed) triplet of symbols.
Moreover, as the coefficient
km in Equation (1) is the only distinguishing BER factor of higher modulation schemes with respect to binary phase-shift keying (BPSK), this implies that we can substitute the value 1/
M for BPSK variances in Equation (5) into Equation (1), which transforms the latter to:
The BER floor estimation given by Equation (6), does not necessarily presume applying CP (to mitigate the multipath), but can easily incorporate it in the model by taking into account just the index range in Equations (3) and (4), which is outside of the CP span [
12].
2.3. Optimal Sample Delay for Least BER Floor
The optimal sample time instant
which minimizes the BER floor, can be found by deriving Equation (8):
Tedious testing of the second derivation is not necessary to be presented here, as no maximal P(e) value exists, so the first derivation is sufficient with this regard.
Furthermore, let us preselect the expected optimal sampling region: of the power delay profile where the “borderline” value of between the “−“ and “+“ echoes mutually balances and , and thus maximizes the numerator of the second term in Equations (1) and (6), and consequently minimizes BER.
Moreover, if (without much loss of accuracy) we consider that both
and
are independent of
, then after making derivation in Equation (9) we obtain:
Solving the implicitly expressed Equation (10) provides the optimal sample delay .
Moreover, considering balanced “−” and “+” rms delay spreads, both denominators in Equation (10) take mutually close values, so it reduces to:
enabling a simple approximate explicit expression for the optimal sample time:
As it is obvious from Equation (12), generally, the optimal sample delay is not at the mean delay:
Specifically, for symmetrical delay profiles, such as, for example, the two-delay model [
9], it is:
, and:
, implying that Equations (12) and (13) are identical in that the optimal sample delay is at the centerline of the power delay profile.
Thereby, as the mean delay alike, is also explicit in Equation (12), and determined by interpretable, though somewhat modified, delay dispersion parameters (distinct for “−“ and “+” echoes of the power delay profile).
However, apart from the general BER floor expression in Equation (6) that is really rather complex, from the perspective of low-performance network end-points, even Equation (12) is still somewhat more demanding for implementation than Equation (13); specifically as sampling at the mean delay further simplifies Equation (8), so that the residual BER becomes proportional to delay variance:
This, as well the formal similarity between Equations (12) and (13), raise the question of near-optimality of the mean delay (as the simplest to “tune-in”) (i.e., what will be the BER penalty for choosing the mean delay in Equation (13) instead of the optimal sample time in Equation (12).
Looking analytically, we can comment that the weighting factors of “−“ and “+” mean delays in Equation (12) are “−“ and “+” normalized aggregate rms values of the profile impulses’ amplitudes, whereas the powers themselves have the weighting role in Equation (13). This implies somewhat greater sensitivity of the mean delay on the imbalance between the “−“ and “+” parameters, while in Equation (13) it is a bit smoother.
Moreover, if we observe the
i-th echo of the received OFDM symbol:
which is not time-sampled at the optimal sampling instant
, but with the offset of
of the mean delay
from
, it introduces the phase shift:
and, consequently, the symbols’ constellation rotation, as well as scattering of symbol constellation spots, since Equation (16) depends on
m (i.e., the rotation angle is echo-dependent).
This (rotation) outcome is similar to the carrier lock angle error [
13,
14,
15] (while symbol spots scattering can be attributed to noise) being the arithmetic mean between the angles
and
of the
I and
Q axis, respectively, and the cluster-fitting lines (
Figure 1) [
16].
The carrier lock error distorts the constellation effectively closing the eyes of I and Q components by degrading the equivalent SNR of the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), as well as the non-AWGN impairments abstracted by AWGN that would equally increase BER.
Moreover, under our assumption of a high SNR, which is quite realistic for small cells due to their short propagation paths [
12], we expect that the OFDM BER floor is affected by time dispersion just to the extent for which the echo delays exceed the standard CP of 4.69 μs, which is very unlikely to occur in small cells [
17].
This finally implies that the only remaining OFDM impairment with regard to BER floor is CFO, even if it was compensated (mostly in time domain), as a phase error may still reside (to be corrected, too, mostly in frequency domain).