Abstract
MIMO has been proposed as an extension to 3G and Wireless LANs. As an implementation scheme of MIMO systems, V-BLAST is suitable for the applications with very high data rates. The square root algorithm for V-BLAST detection is attractive to hardware implementations due to its low computational complexity and numerical stability. In this paper, the fixed-point implementation of the square root algorithm is analyzed, and a low complexity VLSI architecture is proposed. The proposed architecture is scalable for various configurations, and implemented for a 4 x 4 QPSK V-BLAST system in a 0.35 mu m CMOS technology. The chip core covers 9 mm(2) and 190 K gates. The detection throughput of the chip depends on the received symbol packet length. When the packet length is larger than or equal to 100 bytes, it can achieve a maximal detection throughput of 128 similar to 160 Mb/s at a maximal clock frequency of 80 MHz. The core power consumption, measured at 2.7 V and room temperature, is about 608 mW for 160 Mb/s data rate at 80 MHz, and 81 mW for 20 Mb/s at 10 MHz. The proposed architecture is shown to meet the requirements for emerging MIMO applications, such as 3G HSDPA and IEEE 802.11n.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 219-230 |
Journal | Journal of VLSI Signal Processing |
Volume | 44 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2006 |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering
Free keywords
- wireless LAN
- CORDIC
- fixed-point
- square root algorithm
- MIMO
- BLAST
- ASIC
- VLSI
- HSDPA
- 3G