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Mitigating Near-field Interference in Laptop Embedded Wireless Transceivers

Authors :
Marcus R. Deyoung
Brian L. Evans
Gulati Kapil
Keith R. Tinsley
Marcel Nassar
Source :
Journal of Signal Processing Systems. 63:1-12
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2009.

Abstract

In laptop and desktop computers, clocks and busses generate significant radio frequency interference (RFI) for the embedded wireless data transceivers. RFI is well modeled using non-Gaussian impulsive statistics. Data communication transceivers, however, are typically designed under the assumption of additive Gaussian noise and exhibit degradation in communication performance in the presence of RFI. When detecting a signal in additive impulsive noise, Spaulding and Middleton showed a potential improvement in detection of 25 dB at a bit error rate of 10???5 when using a Bayesian detector instead of a standard correlation receiver. In this paper, we model RFI using Middleton Class A and Symmetric Alpha Stable (S ?S) models. The contributions of this paper are to evaluate (1) the performance vs. complexity of parameter estimation algorithms, (2) the closeness of fit of RFI models to the measured interference data from a computer platform, (3) the communication performance vs. computational complexity tradeoffs in receivers designed to mitigate RFI modeled as Class A interference, (4) the communication performance vs. computational complexity tradeoffs in filtering and detections methods to combat RFI modeled as S ?S interference, and (5) the approximations to filtering and detection methods developed to mitigate RFI for a computationally efficient implementation.

Details

ISSN :
19398115 and 19398018
Volume :
63
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Signal Processing Systems
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........21613f920cc0baea3c6273be567440f9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11265-009-0350-7