학술논문

Distributed Antenna System Using Sigma-Delta Intermediate-Frequency-Over-Fiber for Frequency Bands Above 24 GHz
Document Type
Periodical
Source
Journal of Lightwave Technology J. Lightwave Technol. Lightwave Technology, Journal of. 38(10):2765-2773 May, 2020
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Photonics and Electrooptics
Sigma-delta modulation
Radio frequency
OFDM
5G mobile communication
Frequency modulation
Baseband
Optical fiber communication
Distributed antenna system
millimeter wave
multiple-input single-output
radio-over-fiber
sigma-delta modulation
Language
ISSN
0733-8724
1558-2213
Abstract
The fifth generation (5G) cellular network is expected to include the millimeter wave spectrum, to increase base station density, and to employ higher-order multiple-antenna technologies. The centralized radio access network architectures combined with radio-over-fiber (RoF) links can be the key enabler to improve fronthaul networks. The sigma-delta modulated signal over fiber (SDoF) architecture has been proposed as a solution leveraging the benefits of both digitized and analog RoF. This work proposes a novel distributed antenna system using sigma-delta modulated intermediate-frequency signal over fiber (SDIFoF) links. The system has an adequately good optical bit-rate efficiency and high flexibility to switch between different carrier frequencies. The SDIFoF link transmits a signal centered at a 2.5 GHz intermediate frequency over a 100 m multi-mode fiber and the signal is up-converted to the radio frequency (24–29 GHz) at the remote radio unit. An average error vector magnitude (EVM) of 6.40% (−23.88 dB) is achieved over different carrier frequencies when transmitting a 300 MHz-bandwidth 64-QAM OFDM signal. The system performance is demonstrated by a 2 × 1 multiple-input single-output system transmitting 160 MHz-bandwidth 64-QAM OFDM signals centered at 25 GHz. Owing to transmit diversity, an average gain of 1.12 dB in EVM is observed. This work also evaluates the performance degradation caused by asynchronous phase noise between remote radio units. The performance shows that the proposed approach is a competitive solution for the 5G downlink fronthaul network for frequency bands above 24 GHz.