Chapter 5

Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA)

Andrea Ancora, Issam Toufik, Andreas Bury and Dirk Slock

5.1 Introduction

The choice of an appropriate modulation and multiple-access technique for mobile wireless data communications is critical to achieving good system performance. In particular, typical mobile radio channels tend to be dispersive and time-variant, and this has generated interest in multicarrier modulation.

In general, multicarrier schemes subdivide the used channel bandwidth into a number of parallel subchannels as shown in Figure 5.1(a). Ideally the bandwidth of each subchannel is such that they are, ideally, each non-frequency-selective (i.e. having a spectrally flat gain); this has the advantage that the receiver can easily compensate for the subchannel gains individually in the frequency domain.

Figure 5.1: Spectral efficiency of OFDM compared to classical multicarrier modulation: (a) classical multicarrier system spectrum; (b) OFDM system spectrum.

Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a special case of multicarrier transmission where the non-frequency-selective narrowband subchannels, into which the frequency-selective wideband channel is divided, are overlapping but orthogonal, as shown in Figure 5.1(b). This avoids the need to separate the carriers by means of guard-bands, and therefore makes OFDM highly spectrally efficient. ...

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