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Toshiaki TAKAO Yoshifumi SUZUKI Tadashi SHIRATO
We propose a new bit timing recovery (BTR) scheme, called perturbed sampling BTR (PSBTR), that can operate near the symbol rate in high-bit-rate wireless systems. A peculiar sample clock, the duty factor of which is not 50%, is used in the PSBTR scheme. We call this type of clock a perturbed sample clock and use it for clock recovery. In PSBTR, there is no cycle slip of the sample clock, and the PSBTR circuit is mostly digital. We examine the performance of the PSBTR scheme under additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) by computer simulation and experiment, and from these results, clarify the relationship between the performance and circuit parameters of the PSBTR circuit. The overall results indicate that the PSBTR scheme performs well and can be employed as a BTR scheme for high-bit-rate wireless systems.
Toshiaki TAKAO Yoshifumi SUZUKI Tadashi SHIRATO
We propose a new bit timing recovery (BTR) scheme, what we call Step Sampled BTR (SSBTR), that can lower the sampling clock frequency and shorten the clock phase convergence time, for burst signals in high bit rate wireless access systems. The SSBTR scheme has the following characteristics. A sine wave resulting from the BTR code passing through a Nyquist Transmission System is always used, the sampling clock has a lower frequency than the system clock, and the clock phase of Intermediate Frequency (IF) signal input can be estimated from as few as 3 sampled data. The SSBTR scheme corrects the clock phase only once in a burst signal. Therefore, in some wireless access systems, some kind of operation must be performed after the SSBTR, in order to deal with long burst signals, instability of the system clock, and so on. In other wireless access systems that do not have these problems, clock phase can be fixed by the SSBTR scheme alone. The preformance of the SSBTR scheme with respect to additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) was examined by computer simulation. In addition, when SSBTR is implemented in hardware, there are imperfections in the circuitry that lead to phase estimation error and thus deterioration, so we studied the effects of several such imperfections by computer simulation. The results of these simulations clarify the performance of the SSBTR scheme.