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Article

Full-Diversity QO-STBC Technique for Large-Antenna MIMO Systems

1
Electrical and Electronic Engineering Department, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester M1 5GD, UK
2
Maths and Computer Science Department, Novena University, Delta State, Nigeria
3
Electrical and Computer Science Department, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7 1DP, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
This paper is an extended version of our paper published in 2015 Internet Technologies and Applications (ITA), Wrexham, UK, 8–11 September 2015.
Submission received: 20 February 2017 / Revised: 26 April 2017 / Accepted: 5 May 2017 / Published: 11 May 2017
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Antennas and MIMO Communications)

Abstract

:
The need to achieve high data rates in modern telecommunication systems, such as 5G standard, motivates the study and development of large antenna and multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems. This study introduces a large antenna-order design of MIMO quasi-orthogonal space-time block code (QO-STBC) system that achieves better signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and bit-error ratio (BER) performances than the conventional QO-STBCs with the potential for massive MIMO (mMIMO) configurations. Although some earlier MIMO standards were built on orthogonal space-time block codes (O-STBCs), which are limited to two transmit antennas and data rates, the need for higher data rates motivates the exploration of higher antenna configurations using different QO-STBC schemes. The standard QO-STBC offers a higher number of antennas than the O-STBC with the full spatial rate. Unfortunately, also, the standard QO-STBCs are not able to achieve full diversity due to self-interference within their detection matrices; this diminishes the BER performance of the QO-STBC scheme. The detection also involves nonlinear processing, which further complicates the system. To solve these problems, we propose a linear processing design technique (which eliminates the system complexity) for constructing interference-free QO-STBCs and that also achieves full diversity using Hadamard modal matrices with the potential for mMIMO design. Since the modal matrices that orthogonalize QO-STBC are not sparse, our proposal also supports O-STBCs with a well-behaved peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) and better BER. The results of the proposed QO-STBC outperform other full diversity techniques including Givens-rotation and the eigenvalue decomposition (EVD) techniques by 15 dB for both MIMO and multiple-input single-output (MISO) antenna configurations at 10 3 BER. The proposed interference-free QO-STBC is also implemented for 16 × N R and 32 × N R MIMO systems, where N R 2 . We demonstrate 8, 16 and 32 transmit antenna-enabled MIMO systems with the potential for mMIMO design applications with attractive BER and PAPR performance characteristics.

1. Introduction

The need for higher data rates at the user end is the major motivation for new multiple-input multiple output (MIMO) schemes in modern communication systems. These modern techniques dispensing with the large number of antennas also enable spectral efficiency and increased transmit-energy efficiency, although all antennas do not contribute equally [1,2,3,4]. This is laudable in the study of massive MIMO (mMIMO) systems that are being pursued by researchers and industrialists alike for coping with the growing demand for higher data rates in modern telecommunication services. In the 5G standard, for example, the mmWavebands have been selected due to the abundance of unused spectrum resources [5]. However, while the high data rate problem can be overcome easily by deploying large bandwidths, the scarcity of the electromagnetic spectrum subtends some efficiency limitations in using large bandwidths to satisfy the high data rate demand. One of the ways of realizing such data rates (on which the mMIMO can rely), for example in wireless communication systems, is by enabling higher antenna configurations or by optimizing the available/known configuration techniques. In this study, we explore the methods of both optimizing the present MIMO design methods and exploring higher order antenna configurations with potentials for mMIMO.
Space-time block coding (STBC) [6,7], for example, is a MIMO technique that exploits time and antenna dimensions to achieve high data rates with minimum error probability. In [8], it was shown that under similar spectral efficiencies, STBCs outperform spatial modulation in terms of bit error ratio (BER) metrics. STBCs can be combined with beamforming to minimize the error probability of MIMO systems [9,10,11] and presently studied for systems supporting mMIMO schemes [3]. Other methods include the use of large antennas at the transmitting base stations [3].
Although STBCs combined with beamforming are good hybrids when minimum BER is desired, the conventional orthogonal STBC (STBC) [6] is limited to only two transmit antennas ( N T = 2) as higher order antenna configurations do not achieve orthogonality [12]. These limitations are overcome by specially combining the O-STBCs to increase the spatial diversity capability of the scheme [13]. Such codes are referred to as QO-STBCs [11,14]. The standard QO-STBC scheme provides N T > 2 over similar spectral conditions as the O-STBC with better performance and also dispenses with the full spatial rate, but not full diversity. Unfortunately, also, QO-STBC complicates the receiver design due to the lack of orthogonality among the codes. Such a limitation also leads to ISI in the decoding matrix of the QO-STBC receiver and diminishes the BER performance.
In terms of the detection matrix, these off-diagonal (ISI) terms are described also as self-interference terms [15]. Usually, it is difficult to decouple transmitted symbols using linear processing at the receiver of a standard QO-STBC system. Consequently, several solutions have been offered by researchers to eliminate the ISI, namely using Givens-rotation [16], eigenvalue decomposition (EVD) [17,18] and Hadamard matrices [1,17]. Although both the Givens-rotation technique and the EVDs approach yielded similar results [19], the EVD method is less complex to implement. The Hadamard matrices are equivalent modal matrices of the EVD with non-zero entries to enhance full-diversity realization of the ISI-free QO-STBCs. In [17], the authors proposed a QO-STBC code structure of with no off-diagonal terms in its detection matrix. Unfortunately, however, the output ISI-free matrix is complex, and it will be demonstrated later in this study to have a poor BER performance (compared to the Givens-rotations and EVD methods). This is due to the degradation of the true gain by the power of the ISI terms (removed from the rest off-diagonal points), which are greater than the ISIs of the Givens-rotation and EVD methods.
Initially, this present work was first introduced in [1] for multiple input single output (MISO) systems; we extend our results to include large-antenna ( N T > 4 ), MIMO, receivers up to N R = 2 receiving antennas and spectrally-efficient modulation schemes (e.g., 16 quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) and 128 QAM). Large antenna systems provide three advantages, namely: the effect of small-scale fading is averaged out; the random channel between N T and N R become pairwise orthogonal as the elements grow; and lastly, it allows for transmit power efficiency in massive MIMO [20]. We apply modal matrices from the eigenvalues of the QO-STBCs provided by the Hadamard matrices to orthogonalize the detection matrix and enable linear processing. This is achieved by deriving an equivalent virtual channel matrix (EVCM) first, which can be used to reduce the complexity of decoupling the space-time transmitted messages at the receiver. With the EVCM approach, the design and study of QO-STBC become attractive since there exist only the estimates of the originally N T -transmitted messages received at the receiver. Using the EVCM approach also, the receiver complexity is thus transferred to the transmitters such as the base stations, which have the flexibility of supporting very-large/mMIMO antennas (as in [21]) and also complex algorithms better than the receivers [14], such as mobile phones. This is attractive for massive MIMO as linear processing does not require the complex detection process required as well in dirty paper coding [22]. In mMIMO, the capacities when N T can be verified using a left-truncated Gaussian distribution [23]. Furthermore, given that the conventional STBC has found applications in multi-directional MIMO designs [9], the proposed QO-STBC can also impact mMIMO multi-directional QO-STBCs being explored in [24,25]. Our results, in future studies, can enhance the performance of large antenna wireless sensor networks (WSNs) design [20] in mMIMO systems since the total power consumption decays by 1 / N T as N T becomes very large [26], satisfying the power efficiency criteria of large antennas [20]. In addition, the linear process of our proposed technique will be useful for low-complexity implementations at the decision fusion centres (DFCs) over inhomogeneous large-scale fading between the sensors and the DFC as in [27], although, massive MIMO trade antennas at the FDCs for energy efficiency at the sensors of WSNs [28].
QO-STBCs with non-sparse matrices enable a well-performing peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) [29,30]. Thus, since the modal matrices of our system do not have zero entries, then we present among other properties a QO-STBC design scheme with well-performing PAPR. In addition, our system exhibits full diversity, increased SNR performance that minimizes the BER and supports linear decoding. The standard QO-STBC is combined with the modal matrices of the Hadamard matrices motivated by EVD to construct new QO-STBC with no ISI and achieves full diversity. Furthermore, we have also shown in the literature that the true gain is significantly reduced by the eliminated ISI terms for N R > 3 receiving antennas in [8] and also that realistic receivers may not support more than N R = 2 without severe mutual coupling degradation.
In Section 2, the system model is described for specific QO-STBC characteristics. An introduction to full-diversity QO-STBC including the proposed full-diversity QO-STBC is presented in Section 3. We presented the pairwise error probability in Section 4 and our simulation results in Section 5 with the conclusions following in Section 6.

2. System Model

Given a standard STBC code with a full rate ( R s = 1 ) (e.g., [6]), the ratio of the space (number of antennas) and time (number of timeslots) can be expressed as R s = N T / T = 1 . Then, for an orthogonal-STBC (O-STBC) system (e.g., [6]) with two transmit antennas ( N T = 2 ) and one receiver ( N R = 1 ), the received signal at the receiver can be represented as:
x = H ¯ s + z
where s C N T × N R , x = x 1 x 2 T , H ¯ C N T × N T = h 1 h 2 is a multipath Rayleigh fading channel with h 1 = h 1 h 2 , h 2 = h 2 h 1 and z = z 1 z 2 T represent the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) and h 1 and h 2 represent the channel coefficients from Rayleigh fading and N R = 1 in the above example. Note that · T represents the transpose of · , and · represents the complex conjugate.
Although the STBC code described in [6] achieves full rate criteria and full diversity, its major disadvantage is that the design does not support N T > 2 . This problem can be solved by deploying QO-STBC, which can be formed from the STBCs. The QO-STBC can dispense with N T > 2 and complex entries. It achieves full spatial rate [12,13,31], but it does not attain full diversity; QO-STBCs exhibit full spatial rate ( R s = 1 ) when, for example N T = T . Meanwhile, consider a QO-STBC code with N T = T = 4 as follows [18,31]:
S = Ω 12 Ω 34 Ω 34 Ω 12 = s 1 s 2 s 3 s 4 s 2 s 1 s 4 s 3 s 3 s 4 s 1 s 2 s 4 s 3 s 2 s 1
where Ω 12 = s 1 s 2 s 2 s 1 and Ω 34 = s 3 s 4 s 4 s 3 follow the standard Alamouti STBC of [6]. Unfortunately, (2) does not satisfy the S N T H S N T = n = 1 N s n 2 I N T condition n . This property has also motivated the proposal for the QO-STBC design discussed in [32].
The QO-STBC signal, S , can be a phase-shift keying (PSK) or quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) modulated signal, b C 1 × N , of length N. Unlike the case of N T = 2 , where there are h i i = 1 N T = 2 , the QO-STBC (e.g., (2)) involves N T > 2 antenna spaces. Assuming that there are h i i = 1 N T = 4 antenna spaces over which the QO-STBC symbols of (2) can be transmitted at different timeslots with one receiver ( N R = 1 ), then combining the QO-STBC of (2) with the channel h = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 T , the receiver obtains:
x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 = h 1 s 1 + h 2 s 2 + h 3 s 3 + h 4 s 4 h 1 s 2 + h 2 s 1 h 3 s 4 + h 4 s 3 h 1 s 3 + h 2 s 4 + h 3 s 1 + h 4 s 2 h 1 s 4 + h 2 s 3 h 3 s 2 + h 4 s 1 + z 1 z 2 z 3 z 4
The result in (3) follows from combining (2) and the channel vector h = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 T so that the received symbols can be expressed as:
x = Sh + z
where z C N T × 1 . The design in (3) complicates the receiver since the received signals cannot be linearly processed without difficulty. For instance, it is difficult to decouple the transmitted messages at the receiver using linear processing. Thus, an EVCM is derived to enable the linear processing, simplifying the decoding of only s = s i i = 1 N T and also the decoupling of received symbols into the estimates of s (namely s ^ ). As an example, computing the conjugates of the second and fourth rows of (3) and rearranging the results,
x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 h 2 h 1 h 4 h 3 h 3 h 4 h 1 h 2 h 4 h 3 h 2 h 1 s 1 s 2 s 3 s 4 + z 1 z 2 z 3 z 4
A major advantage of the (5) architecture is that if s i = 1 , , N T s but s C 1 × N and s i C 1 × N N T i = 1 , , N T , then it is therefore impossible for an eavesdropper to compromise s over a time varying condition, hence making the scheme secure. The result realized in (5) enables that the channel H ¯ given in (1) can be expressed as:
H v = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 h 2 h 1 h 4 h 3 h 3 h 4 h 1 h 2 h 4 h 3 h 2 h 1
where (6) represents the EVCM, H v . In the literature, an EVCM can be described as a matrix with ones on its leading diagonal and at least N 2 / 2 zeros at its off-diagonal positions and its remaining (self-interference) entries being bounded in magnitude by 1 [33]. Representatively,
H v H v H = i = 1 N T h i 2 D
where D is a sparse matrix. To reduce the system complexity, we apply the EVCM, which simplifies decoding at the receiver. If there exists an optimum detector of a maximal ratio combining (MRC) output, namely using zero-forcing (ZF), G o p t H = G 1 , , G N T = H v H , such that s ^ = t r G o p t H x , then s ^ = H v H x = H v H H v s + H v H z = i = 1 N T G i x i . For instance, let the received signal estimate be:
s ^ = H v H H v s + H v H z = D 4 × s + H v H z
where · H is the conjugate transpose of · . It can be verified that D 4 is the detection matrix that implements a QO-STBC systems with N T = 4 and N R = 1 . In relation to (7), we define:
D 4 = H v H H v = σ h 2 1 0 β ̲ 0 0 1 0 β ̲ β ̲ 0 1 0 0 β ̲ 0 1
where σ h 2 = i = 1 N T h i 2 and N T = 4 . The mutual interference terms outside the leading diagonal can be expressed as β = 2 h 1 h 3 + h 2 h 4 and β ̲ = β σ h 2 . Of course, the interference term diminishes the performance of this style of QO-STBC, for example the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and consequently the BER. Our interest is to minimize the impact of β so that the SNR can be maximized and then the BER minimized. An example is in constructing a suitable channel matrix whose decoding matrix is devoid of the ISI of (9).

3. Full-Diversity QO-STBC Using EVD and the Proposed

In [34], a zero-forcing detection was discussed for the QO-STBC design; this is similar to the eigenvalue method proposed in [18]. Since the matrices that orthogonalize the detection of symbols are non-singular, the received noise estimate is non-Gaussian. Similarly, also, the pre-whitening process of the noise further amplifies the noise, so that the BER statistics are impacted to reduction. In [32], the author explored the method of the analytical derivation of the closed-form expression of the pairwise error probability (PEP). The models described in [32,34] sacrifice the data rates and would require switching off the first two antennas or the last two antennas at the RF-chain during each timeslot; this can be expensive.
Meanwhile, QO-STBCs that exhibit no-ISI in the detection matrices are said to achieve full diversity. For example, the ISI-free QO-STBC is achieved through the rotation of one-half of the symbol constellation set [35,36,37], multidimensional rotation [38,39,40], Givens-rotations [16], EVD [17,18] and Hadamard matrices [1,17]. Although the EVD approach is less complex and will be followed, the results can be enhanced if an equivalent modal matrix can be derived without zeros terms.
Definition 1.
[1]: If A = a i , j is a square matrix and x is a column matrix ( x i ), let A x = v i x , where v is a scalar, then v i is an eigenvalue and x i an eigenvector. The vector x i can be formed into a square matrix M = x 1 , x 2 , , x N T , usually called a modal matrix. If the eigenvalue of A is the leading diagonal of a matrix V , then V = v i I ; both A and V share the same eigenvalues; I is an identity matrix. It follows that AM = MV .
Here, we use Definition 1 to demonstrate our proposal using a handy N T = 4 and show also that this can easily be extended to other higher antenna configurations, namely N T > 4 . Substituting for A using D in Definition 1, it can be observed that:
D M = MV .
We formulate the modal matrices depending on the number of transmitting antennas to eliminate the interfering terms in the detection matrix; this results in different modal matrix sizes. By applying (10), namely M 1 DM = V to (9), the QO-STBC scheme can attain full diversity; this is the principle of diagonalizing a matrix [41]. The matrix V therefore achieves the required interference-free detection. By (9), the resulting modal matrix of the QO-STBC system under study with N T = 4 and T = 4 can be expressed as:
M H v = 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1
A new EVCM can be formed by post-multiplying H v by M H v , such as:
H = H v × M H v = h 1 + h 3 h 2 + h 4 h 3 h 1 h 4 h 2 h 2 + h 4 h 1 h 3 h 4 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 3 h 2 + h 4 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 4 h 2 + h 4 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 4 h 3 h 1
Note that if the channel is defined as (12), the linear model will be expressed as (1). On the other hand, if the system has channel coefficients given by h = h i i = 1 N T , then the system can be described (in linear form) as (4).
Definition 2.
(see Theorem 5.5.1 of [12]): A T × n complex generalized linear processing orthogonal design O c in variables 0, ± c 1 , ± c 1 , ± c 2 , ± c 2 , ± c n , ± c n exists if and only if there exists a complex generalized linear processing orthogonal design G c in the same variables and of the same size, such that G c G c = G c G c = c 1 2 + c 2 2 + + c n 2 I .
Notably, only the Alamouti STBC achieves this condition without other post- (or pre-) processing. Now, rewrite (4) in the following form,
x = H s + z
then the receiver receives:
s ^ = H H x = H H H s + H H z
From (13), the encoding matrix S of (2) simplifies to s = s i i = 1 N T only. On the other hand, the term H H H in (13) also permits linear decoding and eliminates the off-diagonal β interfering terms, such as:
H H H = σ h 2 1 + β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 + β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 β ̲
Observe that H H H provides:
M H v 1 D M H v = M H v 1 H v H H v M H v
as the new detection matrix with no ISI. Furthermore, observe that the eliminated ISI impacts the true power gain. For a large number of antenna configurations, some antenna branches contribute more than others [2]. In (14) for example, the energy of the last two antenna branches are reduced by the eliminated off-diagonal ISI terms so that the resulting gains are more on the first two antenna branches. This can be useful with RF-chain switching and also when using directional communications to concentrate power including the antenna selection technique.
For the 4 × 1 configuration, h i i = 1 N T = 4 , while for the 3 × 1 configuration h i i = 1 N T = 3 but within the QO-STBC design. The 3 × 1 configuration is achieved by setting h 4 = 0 ; for example, using the method of (12), it is possible to construct an EVCM suitable for N T = 3 with N R = 1 such as:
H 3 = h 1 + h 3 h 2 h 3 h 1 h 2 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 3 h 1
On the other hand, formulating the equivalent symbol matrix involves eliminating the fourth column of the matrix [16] since only three antenna spaces are required, for example:
H 3 = h 1 + h 3 h 2 h 3 h 1 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 1 + h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 2
With a receiver dispensing with a maximum likelihood (ML) detection, the receiver finds s ^ = s i i = 1 N T signals that have the closest Euclidean distance nearest to the original transmitted QO-STBC signals as follows s ^ 1 , , s ^ N T . In this case, the error matrix can be expressed as Δ s = s ¯ 1 s ^ 1 , , s ¯ N T s ^ N T . We assume that the channel is quasi-static for N T consecutive timeslots.

3.1. Combined Standard QO-STBC and Hadamard Matrices for QO-STBC Design

Although one can easily verify that H H H = σ h 2 1 ± β ̲ I N T , the limitations of (11) include poor PAPR performance due to the sparsity of the EVD modal matrix [30] and poor BER resulting from the zero terms [8]. Since QO-STBC matrices can be diagonalized using modal matrices ( M ), then Hadamard matrices can also be used to diagonalize QO-STBC systems. For an n × n matrix, Hadamard matrices have ± 1 entries with the columns (and rows) being pairwise orthogonal [42,43], for example:
H n H n H = H n H H n = n I n
where I n is an identity matrix. Considering the system example under study, the Hadamard matrix of 4 × 4 order can be expressed as:
M 4 = M 2 M 2 M 2 M 2 = 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
where:
M 2 = 1 1 1 1
It can be observed in (17) that there exist no zero (0) entries as there are in (11). These zero entries limit the BER performance as they null-out the channel gains. From (16), it can be observed that use of the Hadamard matrix as the modal matrix gives the advantage of the N T multiple of the diagonalized matrix.
In Section 3, we discussed that modal matrices are applied to QO-STBC systems in order to eliminate the off-diagonal (ISI) terms. This phenomenon also led to the proposal of applying Hadamard matrices to ensure that QO-STBC systems attain full diversity by eliminating the off-diagonal terms. Since the 0’s null-out the channel gains, the modal matrix in (11) diminishes the SNR and consequently worsens the BER performance of the QO-STBC systems. For instance, the channel gains are eliminated when combined with a zero. Second, the presence of these zeros leads to poorer PAPR performance (see [29,30] and the references therein). The modal matrices subtended by the Hadamard matrices do not have these limitations, consequently QO-STBC codes constructed from it would exhibit better BER and better PAPR advantages. Meanwhile, our interest in this study is in minimizing the error probability (BER). Thus, we combine (6) and (17) so that the channel matrix can be expressed as:
H new = H v × M 4
At the receiver, linear processing can be applied as follows:
H n e w H x = H n e w H H n e w s + H n e w H z
where:
H n e w H H n e w = N T × σ h 2 1 + β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 + β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 β ̲ 0 0 0 0 1 β ̲
The result in (18) can be discussed in terms of the advantages it provides. As an example, it eliminates the nonlinear decoding that existed in standard QO-STBC. Additionally, comparing (19) with (14), using the proposed modal matrix technique improves the gain by N T -times the power gain. Consequently, the received SNR is thus improved by N T -times. With N T = 3 , the channel term namely h 4 is set to zero (0) [16,17]. As an example, we express:
H new 3 = H v 3 × M 4 = h 1 h 2 h 3 0 h 2 h 1 0 h 3 h 3 0 h 1 h 2 0 h 3 h 2 h 1 × 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 = h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 1 + h 2 h 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 2 h 1 + h 3 h 1 + h 2 h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 2 h 1 + h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 h 3 h 2 h 1
If s = s i i = 1 N T , where N T = 4 were sent in (18), then s = s i i = 1 N T where N T = 3 are required in the case of N T = 3 . Thus, the fourth column of (20) is ignored so that the EVCM for N T = 3 becomes:
H new 3 = h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 1 + h 2 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 2 h 1 + h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 3 h 2 h 1 h 2 h 1 h 3 h 1 + h 2 + h 3 h 1 h 2 h 3
This phenomenon (as in (21)) can be extended to designing QO-STBC systems with N T = 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, etc. for higher order antenna configurations.
In terms of complexity in comparison to the EVD method, the number of terms is exactly the same except that when the standard QO-STBC matrix terms are multiplied by the null terms from the sparse eigenvalues of the EVD matrix, it nulls-out the channel gains so that the resulting EVCM matrix is reduced in the number of terms; this is pronounced in the analysis results discussed in Section 3 of this paper (see (12)).
Theorem 1.
The standard QO-STBCs can achieve full diversity if the detection matrix exhibits no off-diagonal terms and its modal matrix has non-zero entries.
In [30], it was shown that full-diversity Toeplitz STBC codes exhibit well-reduced PAPR if the codes have non-zero entries. Meanwhile, the PAPR can be calculated as:
P A P R = 10 log 10 max x ¯ 2 1 K x ¯ 2
where x ¯ is the time domain orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) symbol vector of x with length K. Since the scheme involves multiple N T transmit branches, the OFDM driver is performed along each of the transmit branches, and the PAPR is measured using the complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF), namely C C D F = 1 C s , where C s = Pr x ( k ) x 0 k = 0 , , K 1 . Pr · and x 0 are the probability of · and the target symbol amplitude threshold, respectively. The indicative PAPR is therefore an average of the PAPRs over each transmitting branch.
Corollary 1.
As a corollary of Theorem 1, it can be established that modal matrices with no zero entries yield better PAPR performing QO-STBCs.
Similar to the foregoing discussion, when the antenna configuration is increased to N T = 8 , the method of realizing (6) can be used. However, the process can be simplified by formulating two EVCMs from h = h i i = 1 N T = 8 as follows; define the EVCM for antenna Indices 5 to 8 as:
H v 5 8 = h 5 h 6 h 7 h 8 h 6 h 5 h 8 h 7 h 7 h 8 h 5 h 6 h 8 h 7 h 6 h 5
Then, combining (23) and (6) in the regime of (2) and then multiplying by the necessary modal matrix,
H v 8 = H v H v 5 8 H v 5 8 H v × M 8
Using the method that subtends (24), other higher antenna configurations (namely, N T > 8 ) can be explored. For other base stations equipped with 4 > N T < 8 , the process that subtended (21) can be used.

3.2. Diagonalized Hadamard STBC

Other methods of constructing new codes from the standard QO-STBC have been reported [17,30]. The method described in [30] does not adopt the use of the Hadamard matrix and does not achieve the full rate. However, [17] combined cyclic matrices with Hadamard matrices to form new codes. The cyclic matrix does not achieve orthogonality, hence its combination with the Hadamard matrix. In [17], the authors introduced a new QO-STBC design from cyclic matrices called diagonalized Hadamard STBC (DHSTBC). For instance, the DHSTBC can be expressed as [17]:
S c = s 1 s 2 s 3 s 4 s 2 s 1 s 4 s 3 s 3 s 4 s 1 s 2 s 4 s 3 s 2 s 1
Given the knowledge of modal matrices proposed in this study, the equivalent symbol matrix is discussed. As the modal matrix of D = H H H from M H v 1 D M H v = V was used to form an EVCM in (12), similarly from M s 1 D s M s = V , the equivalent symbol matrix can be discussed knowing that M s is the modal matrix of D s . Considering (25), the equivalent symbol matrix can be derived as S n e w = S c × M s ; this is realized by combining a cyclic matrix of (25) and a Hadamard matrix to obtain the DHSTBC code, which was defined as [17]:
S ¯ n e w = s 1 s 2 s 3 s 4 s 2 s 1 s 4 s 3 s 3 s 4 s 1 s 2 s 4 s 3 s 2 s 1 × 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Recall a system model of (4). Similar to the (4) model, if the symbols matrix is defined from the cyclic matrix of (25), then the channel matrix can also be expressed as:
H c = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 h 2 h 1 h 4 h 3 h 3 h 4 h 1 h 2 h 4 h 3 h 2 h 1
Then, constructing an EVCM for linear decoding involves combining the EVCM and the Hadamard-based modal matrix (17), as:
H 4 = H c × M 4 = h 1 h 2 h 3 h 4 h 2 h 1 h 4 h 3 h 3 h 4 h 1 h 2 h 4 h 3 h 2 h 1 × 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Similar to (18), the receiver receives:
H 4 H x = H 4 H H 4 s + H 4 H z
where s = s i i = 1 N T . The detection matrix is fat in terms of elements, for example:
H 4 H H 4 = N T a 1 b 1 0 0 0 0 a 2 b 2 0 0 0 0 a 3 b 3 0 0 0 0 a 4 b 4
where:
a 1 = h 1 + h 2 + h 3 + h 4 , b 1 = h 1 + h 2 + h 3 + h 4 a 2 = h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 4 , b 2 = h 1 h 2 + h 3 h 4 a 3 = h 1 + h 2 h 3 h 4 , b 3 = h 1 + h 2 h 3 h 4 a 4 = h 1 h 2 h 3 + h 4 , b 4 = h 1 h 2 h 3 + h 4
where N T = 4 . Furthermore, if H 4 is formed as H 4 = M 4 × H c instead of H 4 = H c × M 4 , then H n H n H = H n H H n = n I n (where n = 4 ) as the sequel to the Hadamard criteria. The resulting matrix is huge and complex; these have their respective implications that will be enumerated shortly. For instance, since there are additional interfering terms in (27) after expanding a i b i i = 1 , , N T , then, when compared to the results of the ISI-free QO-STBC in (37), the terms a i b i i = 1 , , N T further diminish the BER performance, so that the DHSTBC scheme performs poorly.
Comparing the proposed QO-STBC result (18) with the earlier Hadamard algorithm of DHSTBC in (27), the proposed QO-STBC has well-reduced computational complexity. For instance, expanding a i b j i = 1 , , N T , it can be observed that there are 16 terms involved in the earlier DHSTBC, while there are only eight terms involved in the proposed one; there exist β ̲ + O 2 N T ISI terms. In terms of performance, the earlier Hadamard QO-STBC (DHSTBC) involves eight additional interfering terms (apart from β ) that would degrade its BER performance.

3.3. MIMO QO-STBC

In the earlier discussions, we have supposed that there are N R = 1 receiver antennas; here, we consider the case of N R > 1 . Thus, each of the channel terms from the H = h i i = 1 N T can be treated respectively as a vector of the form:
H = h 1 h 2 h N T T
where:
h 1 = h 11 , h 21 , , h N R 1 T
h 2 = h 12 , h 22 , , h N R 2 T
h N T = h 1 N T , h 2 N T , , h N R N T T
If the equivalent channel can be derived, then the MRC when there are N R maximum receiving elements can be described. Assuming perfect channel state information (CSI) (i.e., the channel coefficients are perfectly available at the receiver), the detector attains the optimal maximum likelihood (ML) rule as [44]:
s ^ = arg max s j = 1 N R P x j H j , s = arg min s j = 1 N R H j H x j s H 1 2 j = 1 N R H j 2 s j 2
where P x j H j , s = 1 π exp x j H j s j 2 . The term x j H j s j 2 is the Euclidean distance metric for an ML decoding. If an equivalent channel is known (e.g., the EVCM), the maximal ratio combining (MRC) rule from [33,44] provides that:
s ^ = j = 1 N R H n e w H j H n e w j s + H n e w H j z j
where H n e w C N T × N T , s C N T × 1 and z C N T × 1 for each receiver antenna branch. In the case of [1], we only studied the QO-STBC scheme for a multiple-input and single-output (MISO) system; thus, N R = 1 , but in this version, we have extended the study to include N R = 2 .
Considering the MIMO scheme in (29), both N T and the gain H n e w H H n e w influence the amplitude of the received signal. Then, the noise part is amplified by the H n e w H j j = 1 , 2 . This is because the EVCM is unitary (see (37)), except that they are scaled by the gains. Notice that N R , H n e w H H n e w represents an identity matrix impacted (as in the case N R = 1 ) by the channel gains, such as H F 2 = j = 1 N R i = 1 N T h i , j 2 . The noise term is rather amplified by H n e w H j , j = 1 , , N R . The degree of impact of H n e w H j on the noise term impacts the Euclidean distance metric at the receiver; this depends on the fading of the channel. The complexity in the decoupling of the transmitted message in the receiver reduces to finding only s ^ = s ^ i i = 1 N T for all of the receiving branches. STBCs that support linear transceiver systems incur a loss in capacity over channels with multiple receive antennas [45]. This is even more noticeable in the case of conventional QO-STBCs due to ISI and worst when DHSTBC is used to enable transmitter diversity because the ISI terms ( β ̲ ) will grow as the N R increases, in fact up to the point of no more diversity gain.

4. Pairwise Error Probability of the QO-STBCs

Usually, the channel is considered quasi-static throughout each symbol block so that the Chernoff bound is averaged over a Rayleigh fading channel as [9]:
P s s ^ = E H ¯ P s s ^ H ¯
where P s s ^ H ¯ is the pairwise error probability (PEP), which responds to the received SNR and E H ¯ · is the expectation value over each symbol block. The conditional PEP, for a given channel say H ¯ , is described using the well-discussed Chernoff bound of the form:
P s s ^ H ¯ = Q H ¯ s s ^ 2 2 N 0
where N 0 is from the circularly-symmetric additive white Gaussian noise with zero mean and variance σ Z 2 = N 0 2 ; this is the case when E s = 1 . Indeed, the Gaussian Q-function is the complementary error function expressed as:
Q x = 1 π 0 π 2 exp x 2 2 sin 2 θ d θ 1 2 exp x 2 2 , x 0
In terms of (32), the conditional PEP is summarized as:
P s s ^ H ¯ = Q 2 γ x P s s ^ = E H ¯ Q 2 γ x
where γ x = H ¯ s s ^ 2 / 4 N 0 is the SNR at the maximal ratio combining (MRC) receiver output. The performance bound then follows as [9]:
P s s ^ 1 2 I N T + g Q A M λ N T d m i n 2 4 N 0 1
where g Q A M = 3 / 2 ( M 1 ) and λ N T is from the detection matrix. Meanwhile, from the Cauchy–Schwartz inequality,
A B 2 A B 2 2
AB 2 2 = A 2 2 B 2 2
Furthermore, define B as an m × n matrix, then its Frobenius norm B F 2 = tr BB H , then B F 2 = i m j m b i , j 2 . Rewrite H ¯ s s ^ as H ¯ s , such that:
γ x = H ¯ s 2 2 4 N 0 = H ¯ s F 2 4 N 0 = H ¯ F 2 s F 2 4 N 0
where H ¯ 2 2 = H ¯ F 2 [46]. If s = s s ^ estimates the error detection metrics, then s F 2 = tr s s H . Furthermore, H ¯ F 2 = tr H ¯ H ¯ H . The likelihood of erroneously decoding the transmitted signals can be used to discuss the diversity product of the scheme [47]. However, for any ISI-free QO-STBC, H ¯ H H ¯ = σ H ¯ 2 I N T where N T > 2 and σ H ¯ 2 is the gain power.

4.1. The SNR Performance of EVD and DHSTBC

The conventional O-STBC achieves full diversity, and there exists only N T = 2 . For N T = 4 , one can express the SNR at the receiver of the ISI-free QO-STBC (14) from EVD as:
γ = E H H H s 2 E H H z 2 = E H H H 2 E H H H E s σ Z 2 = E M H v 1 H v H H v M H v E s σ Z 2
where E s ¯ = E s 2 and σ Z 2 = N 0 2 = E z 2 . For an ISI-free QO-STBC, although the results in (35) and (27) are similar, the impacts of the channel matrix are different. When the detection matrix is a diagonal matrix, for instance, rank H H H = 2 when N T = 2, while rank H H H = 4 when N T = 4, and so on, the Euclidean distance metrics are also different both for different QAM constellations and different N T . Now, the probability that s ^ s was detected can be expressed as:
P s s ^ = E H P s s ^ H
where P s s ^ = E H Q 2 γ x . In [9], E H Q 2 γ x 1 2 I N T + λ 2 g Q A M s s ^ 2 4 N 0 1 for N T = 2 . Then, for N T > 2 , λ N T s s ^ 2 4 N 0 = λ N T d m i n 2 4 N 0 and d m i n 2 = s s ^ 2 . Notice that when N T = 4 , then λ 4 = E H H H 2 , which can be described further in terms of H s s ^ 2 = H s F 2 being the Euclidean distance metric at the receiver. Sometimes, the Chernoff bound of the Gaussian function can be used to approximate the Q-function, such as in [8]. The method of DHSTBC does not perform any better. For example, the ISI is greater in the DHSTBC (see (27)) than using either the EVD (14) or the proposed technique (19). The effects of the ISI on diminishing the true-power gain of the DHSTBC will be reduced as evidently shown in the BER results discussed in Section 5.

4.2. The SNR Performance of Proposed Full-Diversity QO-STBC

Although one can easily verify that H v H v H = σ h 2 1 ± β ̲ I N T , the limitations of (11) include poor PAPR performance due to the sparsity of the modal matrix [30] and poor BER resulting from the zero terms of M H v [1] because the SNR and the BER performance depend on the power gain contributed by H v . The proposed modal matrix is M H d and the proposed channel matrix is H n e w . Thus, the SNR at the receiver can be described as:
γ p r o p o s e d = E H n e w H H n e w s 2 E H n e w H z 2
One can also verify that:
H n e w H n e w H = σ h 2 1 ± β ̲ I N T × N T
Equation (37) provides the SNR statistics at the MRC output of the receiver and provides information of the BER performance of the EVD ISI-free QO-STBC from the Hadamard modal matrix. Notice that H n e w H n e w H provides M H d 1 D M H d = M H d 1 H v H H v M H d with an extra factor, N T impacting the power gain, which will further minimize the BER statistics; similarly, M H v 1 D M H v = M H v 1 H v H H v M H v . Consequently, the SNR can be well described as:
γ p r o p s e d = E H n e w H H n e w s 2 E H n e w H z 2 = E H n e w H H n e w s 2 E H n e w H z H z H n e w = E H n e w H H n e w E s E z H z
Since H n e w H n e w H provides:
M H d 1 D M H d = M H d 1 H v H H v M H d
then (38) can be rewritten as:
γ p r o p s e d = M H d 1 H v H H v M H d E s σ Z 2 = N T M H v 1 H v H H v M H v E s σ Z 2
where M H d is a 4 × 4 Hadamard matrix when N T = 4 . Comparing (38) and (37), it is clear that the power gain in using M H d is N T -times greater than using M H v . The use of M H d thus affects the slope of the BER so that the full-diversity method of the proposed QO-STBC becomes better. In general, the method of constructing N T = 4 antenna configurations described in Section 3.1 can be extended to any higher order design, namely N T = 8 , 16, 32, etc.
Remark 1.
We refer the reader to our earlier discussion in [1,48] for other designs that do not enable the full rate, but maintain full diversity.

5. Simulation Results and Discussion

In [1], we have studied only the cases of MISO using QPSK and N T = 4 , and here (in this study), we extend the MISO configuration to include N R > 1 . For fair comparisons, the simulation environments are similar except for the use of suitable EVCM configurations for different numbers of antenna configurations and code design styles. The symbols we have used are not coded; in other words, no forward error correction is applied. At the receiver, the optimum detector is assumed so that an MRC combining method is adopted. We do not present the simulation results for N T = 4 and N T = 3 in this work, as these have been addressed in [1]. Meanwhile, the Rayleigh fading channel model is used, which is considered to be quasi-static over each symbol block. The model has zero mean with unit variance.

5.1. MISO and MIMO QO-STBC Design Using Eight Transmit Antennas

This study implements the standard QO-STBC code system described in Section 2 in the transmitter and an ML detection dispensing with MRC in the receiver to construct a 8 × N R , 16 × N R and 32 × N R MIMO system using 16 and 128 QAM; N R 2 and these are simulated over the MATLAB environment. In the process, random symbols are generated; this involves 7 . 5 × 10 4 symbols averaged over each channel block. These are mapped using the aforementioned mapping schemes, demultiplexed and processed over the EVCM channels that enabled N T × N R when N T > 4 and N R 2 transmit antennas are used, respectively.
Using EVCM simplifies detection to linear processing so that the estimates of the transmitted symbols, s ^ 1 , , s ^ N T T , are easily decoupled. Since there are N T > 4 transmitting branches, then each branch receives N T messages up to a total of N R N T (where N R = 1 for MISO design) receptions. The receiver finds estimates S i i = 1 N R N T whose Euclidean distance, x H s 2 , is closest to the transmitted messages; then, afterwards, M-QAM signal demodulation is performed. The transmitted message ( s ) and the received message ( s ^ ) are then compared for the error value as Δ s s ^ = s s ^ ; the BER is computed, and the results are shown in the following Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3, Figure 4, Figure 5 and Figure 6.
In Figure 1, the proposed QO-STBC outperforms the standard and eigenvalue QO-STBC styles. Specifically, at 10 4 BER, the proposed outperforms eigenvalue QO-STBC by 10 dB and better than the standard QO-STBC by 5 dB. For the MIMO design, namely 8 × 2 , the proposed technique outperforms the standard QO-STBC by 6 dB and better than the eigenvalue QO-STBC technique by 9 dB. The degradation is from the eliminated off-diagonal terms that diminishes the true power of the received signal.
We extend our investigation to 128 QAM as shown in Figure 2; it is found that the proposed also outperforms both the eigenvalue technique and the standard QO-STBC.
From (18), the gain H n e w H H n e w and N T impact the amplitude of the received signal while only H n e w H impacts the noise. The N T amplifies the amplitude of the received signal such that the power gain is improved (see (18)) compared to the eigenvalue interference-free QO-STBC in Figure 2. Furthermore, in Figure 2, this proposed QO-STBC technique translates to a 6-dB gain in comparison to the earlier eigenvalue-based QO-STBC scheme. Significantly, two parts are involved ( σ h 2 and β ); β is an interference term that degrades the true gain σ h 2 . Any method that can eliminate β would further improve the BER performance.

5.2. MISO and MIMO QO-STBC Design Using 16 Transmit Antennas

In (18), it is found that the result of the proposed QO-STBC (in Figure 3) satisfied the Hadamard criteria in (18). For N T = 16 with the N R = 1 , 2 QO-STBC scheme, the proposed outperformed the eigenvalue QO-STBC. Clearly, the N T -times amplitude gain of the Hadamard criteria in (18) is reflected also in Figure 3, as the proposed QO-STBC consistently outperformed both the standard and eigenvalue-based QO-STBCs by about 10 dB and 13 dB, respectively, at 10 3 BER. In all cases, the proposed method outperformed all other QO-STBCs.
Although the symbols transmitted over antenna spaces are typically unique, however, the EVCM are constructed with respect to Section 2 of this study. In the receiver, AWGN terms, Z , are constructed and added to each receiver antenna branch. Since there are N T = 4 transmitting branches, then each branch receives N T messages up to a total of N R N T = 16 (where N R 2 for MIMO design) receptions. Again, using the EVCM simplifies the detection of the transmitted symbol for a linear processing so that the estimates of the transmitted symbols, s ^ 1 , , s ^ N T T , are easily decoupled. The receiver finds estimates of s i i = 1 N R N T whose Euclidean distance, x H s 2 , is closest to the transmitted messages; then, 128 QAM signal demodulation is performed in Figure 4. The proposed method clearly outperformed both the standard and eigenvalue approaches. Both techniques show falling BER measures due to some irreducible errors from the “untrue-gain” and the noise-power enhancement.
In (27), linear detection was performed; for the QO-STBC discussed in [17], it was shown that the detection matrix (27) is huge, complex and contains further degrading elements that limit the improvement from the true gain ( σ h 2 ); on the other hand, the QO-STBC method of [48] provided a matrix that precludes these limitations.
The investigation is further extended to a higher modulation scheme, such as 16 QAM; the results are shown in Figure 5.

5.3. MISO and MIMO QO-STBC Design Using 32 Transmit Antennas

Finally, we report in Figure 5 and Figure 6 the results for N T = 16 , 32 with N R = 1 , 2 using 16 and 128 QAM, respectively. In Figure 5, the proposed QO-STBC for the 16 × 1 antenna design at 10 4 BER outperformed eigenvalue QO-STBC by 15 dB and better than the standard QO-STBC by 8 dB. Consider the design also for the 16 × 2 antenna configurations at 10 4 BER, the proposed QO-STBC outperformed eigenvalue-based QOSTBC by 15 dB.
Similarly, the proposed Hadamard-based QO-STBC performs better than the standard QOSTBC technique by 10 dB. From the proposed QO-STBC design coupled with the MRC rule in the receiver, it follows that the performance of the MIMO design method using MRC provides improvement to the QO-STBC system design for independently fading channels, thus showing increasing power gain with increasing receivers. By increasing the transmitter diversity and using a higher order and spectrally-efficient modulation scheme as in Figure 6, the results for 128-QAM also corroborate the foregoing performance gains achieved by the proposed QO-STBC over other similarly-configured QO-STBC techniques. For example, at 10 4 BER for N T = 32 with N R = 1 , the proposed QO-STBC design achieves 15 dB better than eigenvalue-based QO-STBC. Similarly, when the receiver diversity is increased from N R = 1 to N R = 2 , it can be seen that the proposed scheme achieves 15 dB better than the eigenvalue-based QO-STBC and 12 dB better than the standard QO-STBC.
In general, the off-diagonal interfering terms further reduce the performance of the QO-STBC scheme of the eigenvalue-based QO-STBC design.
Note that due to amplitude modulation in QAM modulators, a normalization of the received symbol amplitudes must be observed before demodulation to realize these results. For PSK symbols, there are no bias-energy terms, and thus, it can be more tolerant than the QAM modulators.

5.4. PAPR Evaluation of Different QO-STBC Schemes

In this section, we evaluate the performances of these different QO-STBC schemes in our foregoing discussion. We show in Figure 7 the performances of the PAPR metrics of the three QO-STBCs under study using N T = 8 and 128 QAM modulation.
From the results, the Hadamard technique proffers better PAPR than the rest EVD and standard techniques in all cases. On the other hand, while the Hadamard technique volunteers a better PAPR than the EVD technique, the EVD QO-STBC is also 1 dB better than the standard QO-STBC scheme, which is slightly better than the conventional OFDM system. Meanwhile, the performance of the Hadamard-based (and similarly, the EVD) QO-STBC system can be improved by adopting any of the well-known PAPR reduction techniques. Such techniques must also appeal to the aim of this work, which is geared towards reducing the complexity of the receiver, as the receiver modules are general small in nature, and this will eliminate the unnecessary depletion of the limited-battery power of such devices. Examples of such light-weight PAPR reduction techniques include companding and iterative clipping and filtering.

6. Conclusions

In this study, we have proposed and evaluated a simple technique for using eigenvalues or its matrix (modal matrix) to improve QO-STBC system performances so that it can achieve full diversity. Similar matrices of earlier methods are limited in performance by some null-terms of the modal matrix, which further impoverishes the RF chain in terms of PAPR. We suggested and proved that by using Hadamard matrices as the modal matrices, the QO-STBC can achieve linear processing, thus reducing the system complexity, since the detection matrices are diagonal with no off-diagonal ISI terms. Two new proposed methods of constructing QO-STBC codes for maximal diversity gain attainment were explored for up to N R = 8 , 16 and 32 antenna configurations enabling MIMO design. While the QO-STBC was used to enable multiple antennas at the transmitter, we introduced MRC at the receiver, which combines the gains from all branches to maximize diversity gain. DHSTBC code provides a method of designing the QO-STBC system, but the detection matrix provides poorer performance due to some extra interfering terms, β ̲ + O 2 N T , in the detection matrix. These extra degrading detection terms are absent in the proposed QO-STBC scheme, leading to better performances in terms of BER and PAPR. The results showed that the proposed method consistently outperforms the conventional ISI-free EVD QO-STBC in the order of N T -times the received SNR for all E b / N 0 investigated and increasingly outperformed earlier QO-STBC schemes that used Hadamard matrices. Thus, the interference terms are a limitation in the QO-STBC design as they degrade the true power gains on every antenna at the receiver; especially in earlier DHSTBC. In all of the MIMO cases reported with MRC at the receiver, it is found that the proposed QO-STBC is a better MIMO technique by at least 9 dB at 10 4 BER. With the style of higher antenna orders discussed, our proposal therefore shows the potential for supporting massive MIMO system configurations.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers whose comments helped to improve the quality of this paper.

Author Contributions

This study was led by K.A. while G.O. and A.A. assisted with the computer simulations under the supervisions of B.A., S.J. and R.A.-A.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Glossary of Notations

N T and N R are the numbers of transmitting and receiving antennas, respectively.
x and X represent vectors and matrices, respectively.
· represents a vector or matrix.
· T is the transpose of · .
· represents the real part of · .
x represents complex conjugate x.
· H represents the conjugate transpose of · .
· represents the absolute value.
· represents the norm operator.
I N T represents the identity matrix with N T × N T dimensions.
M n represents the modal matrix of n × n dimensions.
H v represents the equivalent virtual channel matrix.
H N T is the EVCM with N T × N T dimensions.
tr · is the trace of · .
P X C , D is the conditional probability of X given C and D.
E · represents the expectation value.
D N T is the detection matrix that implements a QO-STBC system.
Q x represents the Q-function of x.
· F is the Frobenius norm.

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Figure 1. The The 16-QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 8 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 1. The The 16-QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 8 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 2. The 128 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 8 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 2. The 128 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 8 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 3. The 16 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 16 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 3. The 16 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 16 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 4. The 128 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 16 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 4. The 128 QAM results for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 16 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 5. The 16 QAM for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 32 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 5. The 16 QAM for the full-diversity QO-STBC MIMO system N T = 32 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 6. The 128 QAM for the full-diversity QOSTBC MIMO system N T = 32 with N R = 1 , 2.
Figure 6. The 128 QAM for the full-diversity QOSTBC MIMO system N T = 32 with N R = 1 , 2.
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Figure 7. PAPR for different QO-STBCs ( N T = 8 , 128 QAM).
Figure 7. PAPR for different QO-STBCs ( N T = 8 , 128 QAM).
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MDPI and ACS Style

Anoh, K.; Okorafor, G.; Adebisi, B.; Alabdullah, A.; Jones, S.; Abd-Alhameed, R. Full-Diversity QO-STBC Technique for Large-Antenna MIMO Systems . Electronics 2017, 6, 37. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/electronics6020037

AMA Style

Anoh K, Okorafor G, Adebisi B, Alabdullah A, Jones S, Abd-Alhameed R. Full-Diversity QO-STBC Technique for Large-Antenna MIMO Systems . Electronics. 2017; 6(2):37. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/electronics6020037

Chicago/Turabian Style

Anoh, Kelvin, Godfrey Okorafor, Bamidele Adebisi, Ali Alabdullah, Steve Jones, and Raed Abd-Alhameed. 2017. "Full-Diversity QO-STBC Technique for Large-Antenna MIMO Systems " Electronics 6, no. 2: 37. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/electronics6020037

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