Publication
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
Paper

Channel Coding with Multilevel/Phase Signals

View publication

Abstract

A coding technique is described which improves error performance of synchronous data links without sacrificing data rate or requiring more bandwith. This is achieved by channel coding with expanded sets of multilevel/phase signals in a manner which increases free Euclidean distance. Soft maximum—likelihood (ML) decoding using the Viterbi algorithm is assumed. Following a discussion of channel capacity, simple hand-designed trellis codes are presented for 8 phase-shift keying (PSK) and 16 quadrature amplitude-shift keying (QASK) modulation. These simple codes achieve coding gains in the order of 3-4 dB. It is then shown that the codes can be interpreted as binary convolutional codes with a mapping of coded bits into channel signals, which we call “mapping by set partitioning.” Based on a new distance measure between binary code sequences which efficiently lower-bounds the Euclidean distance between the corresponding channel signal sequences, a search procedure for more powerful codes is developed. Codes with coding gains up to 6 dB are obtained for a variety of multilevel/phase modulation schemes. Simulation results are presented and an example of carrier-phase tracking is discussed. © 1982 IEEE

Date

Publication

IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory

Authors

Topics

Share