Specification
BACKGROUND
[0001] As used herein, the terms "user equipment" and "UE" might in
some cases refer to mobile devices such as mobile telephones, personal digital
assistants, handheld or laptop computers, and similar devices that have
telecommunications capabilities. Such a UE might consist of a device and its associated removable memory module, such as but not limited to a Universal Integrated Circuit Card (UICC) that includes a Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) application, a Universal Subscriber Identity Module (USIM) application, or a
Removable User Identity Module (R-UIM) application. Alternatively, such a UE
might consist of the device itself without such a module. In other cases, the term "UE" might refer to devices that have similar capabilities but that are not transportable, such as desktop computers, set-top boxes, or network appliances. The term "UE" can also refer to any hardware or software component that can
terminate a communication session for a user. Also, the terms "user equipment,"
"UE," "user agent," "UA," "user device," and "mobile device" might be used synonymously herein.
[0002] As telecommunications technology has evolved, more advanced
network access equipment has been introduced that can provide services that were
not possible previously. This network access equipment might include systems and
devices that are improvements of the equivalent equipment in a traditional wireless telecommunications system. Such advanced or next generation equipment maybe included in evolving wireless communications standards, such as long-term
evolution (LTE). For example, an LTE system might include an Evolved Universal
Terrestrial Radio Access Network (E-UTRAN) node B (eNB), a wireless access
point, or a similar component rather than a traditional base station. Any such
component will be referred to herein as an eNB, but it should be understood that
such a component is not necessarily an eNB.
[0003] LTE may be said to correspond to Third Generation Partnership
Project (3GPP) Release 8 (Rel-8 or R8), Release 9 (Rel-9 or R9), and Release 10 (Rel-10 or R10), and possibly also to releases beyond Release 10, while LTE Advanced (LTE-A) may be said to correspond to Release 10 and possibly also to
releases beyond Release 10. As used herein, the terms "legacy", "legacy UE", and
the like might refer to signals, UEs, and/or other entities that comply with LTE Release 10 and/or earlier releases but do not comply with releases later than Release 10. The terms "advanced", "advanced UE", and the like might refer to signals, UEs, and/or other entities that comply with LTE Release 11 and/or later
releases. While the discussion herein deals with LTE systems, the concepts are
equally applicable to other wireless systems as well.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0004] For a more complete understanding of this disclosure, reference is
now made to the following brief description, taken in connection with the
accompanying drawings and detailed description, wherein like reference numerals
represent like parts.
[0005] Figure 1 is a diagram of a downlink LTE subframe, according to an
embodiment of the disclosure.
[0006] Figure 2 is a diagram of an LTE downlink resource grid, according
to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0007] Figure 3 is a diagram of a mapping of a cell-specific reference
signal in a resource block in the case of two antenna ports at an eNB, according to
an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0008] Figure 4 is a diagram of a resource element group allocation in a
resource block in the first slot when two antenna ports are configured at an eNB,
according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0009] Figure 5 is a diagram of an example of a remote radio head (RRH)
deployment in a cell, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0010] Figure 6 is a block diagram of an RRH deployment with a separate
central control unit for coordination between a macro-eNB and the RRHs, according
to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0011] Figure 7 is a block diagram of an RRH deployment where
coordination is done by the macro-eNB, according to an embodiment of the
disclosure.
[0012] Figure 8 is a diagram of an example of possible transmission
schemes in a cell with RRHs, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0013] Figure 9 is a conceptual diagram of physical downlink control
channel (PDCCH) allocations at different transmission points, according to an
embodiment of the disclosure.
[0014] Figure 10 is a conceptual diagram of a UE-PDCCH-DMRS
allocation, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0015] Figure 11 is a diagram of an example of a pre-coded transmission
of a PDCCH with a UE-PDCCH-DMRS, according to an embodiment of the
disclosure.
[0016] Figure 12 is a diagram of an example of cycling through a
predetermined set of precoding vectors, according to an embodiment of the
disclosure.
[0017] Figure 13 is a diagram of legacy PDCCH processing at a
transmission point with four antennas.
[0018] Figure 14 is a diagram of an example of a PDCCH implementation
for a PDCCH with a UE-PDCCH-DMRS at a transmission point with four antennas,
according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0019] Figure 15 is a diagram of an example of a scrambling process for
both legacy PDCCHs and advanced PDCCHs, according to an embodiment of the
disclosure.
[0020] Figure 16 is a diagram of an example of a scrambling process for
both legacy PDCCHs and advanced PDCCHs with advanced cell-specific
scrambling sequences, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0021] Figure 17 is a diagram of an example of UE-PDCCH-DMRS
insertion, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0022] Figure 18 is a diagram of an example of multiplexing of two
PDCCHs with a UE-PDCCH-DMRS, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0023] Figure 19 is a diagram of an example of resource element group
determination from a candidate PDCCH, according to an embodiment of the disclosure.
[0024] Figure 20 contains tables related to embodiments of the
disclosure.
[0025] Figure 21 illustrates a processor and related components suitable
for implementing the several embodiments of the present disclosure.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] It should be understood at the outset that although illustrative
implementations of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure are
provided below, the disclosed systems and/or methods may be implemented using any number of techniques, whether currently known or in existence. The disclosure should in no way be limited to the illustrative implementations, drawings, and techniques illustrated below, including the exemplary designs and implementations
illustrated and described herein, but may be modified within the scope of the
appended claims along with their full scope of equivalents.
[0027] The present disclosure deals with cells that include one or more
remote radio heads in addition to an eNB. Implementations are provided whereby such cells can take advantage of the capabilities of advanced UEs while still
allowing legacy UEs to operate in their traditional manner. More specifically, a UE-
specific signal is introduced that allows a UE to demodulate its control channels without the need of a cell-specific reference signal.
[0028] In an LTE system, physical downlink control channels (PDCCHs)
are used to carry downlink (DL) or uplink (UL) data scheduling information, or
grants, from an eNB to one or more UEs. The scheduling information may include
a resource allocation, a modulation and coding rate (or transport block size), the identity of the intended UE or UEs, and other information. A PDCCH could be intended for a single UE, multiple UEs or all UEs in a cell, depending on the nature and content of the scheduled data. A broadcast PDCCH is used to carry
scheduling information for a Physical Downlink Shared Channel (PDSCH) that is
intended to be received by all UEs in a cell, such as a PDSCH carrying system information about the eNB. A multicast PDCCH is intended to be received by a group of UEs in a cell. A unicast PDCCH is used to carry scheduling information for a PDSCH that is intended to be received by only a single UE.
[0029] Figure 1 illustrates a typical DL LTE subframe 110. Control
information such as the PCFICH (physical control format indicator channel), PHICH
(physical HARQ (hybrid automatic repeat request) indicator channel), and PDCCH
are transmitted in a control channel region 120. The control channel region 120
consists of the first few OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplexing) symbols
in the subframe 110. The exact number of OFDM symbols for the control channel region 120 is either dynamically indicated by PCFICH, which is transmitted in the first symbol, or semi-statically configured in the case of carrier aggregation in LTE Rel-10.
[0030] The PDSCH, PBCH (physical broadcast channel), PSC/SSC
(primary synchronization channel/secondary synchronization channel), and CSI-RS (channel state information reference signal) are transmitted in a PDSCH region 130. DL user data is carried by the PDSCH channels scheduled in the PDSCH region 130. Cell-specific reference signals (CRS) are transmitted over both the control
channel region 120 and the PDSCH region 130.
[0031] Each subframe 110 consists of a number of OFDM symbols in the
time domain and a number of subcarriers in the frequency domain. An OFDM symbol in time and a subcarrier in frequency together define a resource element (RE). A physical resource block (RB) can be defined as 12 consecutive subcarriers
in the frequency domain and all the OFDM symbols in a slot in the time domain. An
RB pair with the same RB index in slot 0 140a and slot 1 140b in a subframe are always allocated together.
[0032] Figure 2 shows an LTE DL resource grid 210 within each slot 140
in the case of a normal cyclic prefix (CP) configuration. The resource grid 210 is
defined for each antenna port, i.e., each antenna port has its own separate resource
grid 2 10. Each element in the resource grid 210 for an antenna port is an RE 220, which is uniquely identified by an index pair of a subcarrier and an OFDM symbol in a slot 140. An RB 230 consists of a number of consecutive subcarriers in the frequency domain and a number of consecutive OFDM symbols in the time domain
as shown in the figure. An RB 230 is the minimum unit used for the mapping of
certain physical channels to REs 220.
[0033] For DL channel estimation and demodulation purposes, cell-
specific reference signals (CRS) are transmitted over each antenna port on certain predefined time and frequency REs in every subframe. CRS are used by Rel-8 to
Rel-10 legacy UEs to demodulate the control channels. Figure 3 shows an
example of CRS locations in a subframe for two antenna ports 310a and 310b,
where the RE locations marked with "R0" and "R1" are used for CRS port 0 and
CRS port 1 transmission, respectively. REs marked with "X" indicate that nothing should be transmitted on those REs, as CRS will be transmitted on the other
antenna.
[0034] Resource element groups (REGs) are used in LTE for defining the
mapping of control channels such as the PDCCH to REs. An REG consists of either four or six consecutive REs in an OFDM symbol, depending on the number of
CRS configured. For example, for the two antenna port CRS as shown in Figure 3,
the REG allocation in each RB is shown in Figure 4, where the control region 410 consists of two OFDM symbols and different REGs are indicated with different types of shading. REs marked with "R0","R1" or"X" are reserved for other purposes, and therefore only four REs in each REG are available for carrying control channel data.
[0035] A PDCCH is transmitted on an aggregation of one or several
consecutive control channel elements (CCEs), where one CCE consists of nine REGs. The CCEs available for a UE's PDCCH transmission are numbered from 0 to nCCE - \. In LTE, multiple formats are supported for the PDCCH as shown in
Table 1 of Figure 20.
[0036] The demand on wireless data services has grown exponentially,
driven particularly by the popularity of smart phones. To meet this growing demand, new generations of wireless standards with both multiple input and multiple output (Ml MO) and orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) and/or single carrier - frequency division multiple access (SC-FDMA) technologies have been
adopted in next generation wireless standards such as 3GPP LTE and WIMAX
(Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access). In these new standards, the peak DL and UL data rates for the whole cell or a UE can be greatly improved with the MIMO technique, especially when there is a good signal to interference and noise ratio (SINR) at the UE. This is typically achieved when a UE is close to an
eNB. Much lower data rates are typically achieved for UEs that are far away from
an eNB, i.e., at the cell edge, because of the lower SINR experienced at these UEs due to large propagation losses or high interference levels from adjacent cells,
especially in a small cell scenario. Thus, depending on where a UE is located in a
cell, different user experiences may be expected by different UEs.
[0037] To provide a more consistent user experience, remote radio heads
(RRH) with one, two or four antennas may be placed in the areas of a cell where the
SINR from the eNB is low to provide better coverage for UEs in those areas. RRHs
are sometimes referred to by other names such as remote radio units or remote antennas, and the term "RRH" as used herein should be understood as referring to any distributed radio device that functions as described herein. This type of RRH deployment has been under study in LTE for possible standardization in Release 11
or later releases.
[0038] Figure 5 shows an example of such a deployment with one eNB
510 and six RRHs 520, where the eNB 510 is located near the center of a cell 530 and the six RRHs 520 are spread in the cell 530, such as near the cell edge. An eNB that is deployed with a plurality of RRHs in this manner can be referred to as a
macro-eNB. A cell is defined by the coverage of the macro-eNB, which may or may
not be located at the center of a cell. The RRHs may or may not be within the coverage of the macro-eNB. In general, the macro-eNB need not always have a collocated radio transceiver and can be considered a device that exchanges data with and controls radio transceivers. The term "transmission point" (TP) may be
used herein to refer to either a macro-eNB or an RRH. A macro-eNB or an RRH
can be considered a TPwith a number of antenna ports.
[0039] The RRHs 520 might be connected to the macro-eNB 510 via high
capacity and low latency links, such as CPRI (common public radio interface) over optical fiber, to send and receive either digitized baseband signals or radio
frequency signals to and from the macro-eNB 510. In addition to coverage
enhancement, another benefit of the use of RRHs is an improvement in overall cell
capacity. This is especially beneficial in hot-spots, where the UE density may be
higher.
[0040] When RRHs are deployed in a cell, there are at least two possible
system implementations. In one implementation, as shown in Figure 6, each RRH
520 may have built-in, full MAC (Medium Access Control) and PHY (Physical) layer functions, but the MAC and the PHY functions of all the RRHs 520 as well as the macro-eNB 510 may be controlled by a central control unit 610. The main function of the central control unit 610 is to perform coordination between the macro-eNB
510 and the RRHs 520 for DL and UL scheduling. In another implementation, as
shown in Figure 7, the functions of the central unit could be built into the macro-eNB
510. In this case, the PHY and MAC functions of each RRH 520 could also be
combined into the macro-eNB 510. When the term "macro-eNB" is used
hereinafter, it may refer to either a macro-eNB separate from a central control unit
or a macro-eNB with built-in central control functions.
[0041] In a deployment of one or more RRHs in a cell with a macro-eNB,
there are at least two possible operation scenarios. In a first scenario, each RRH is treated as an independent cell and thus has its own cell identifier (ID). From a UE's
perspective, each RRH is equivalent to an eNB in this scenario. The normal hand-
off procedure is required when a UE moves from one RRH to another RRH. In a second scenario, the RRHs are treated as part of the cell of the macro-eNB. That is, the macro-eNB and the RRHs have the same cell ID. One of the benefits of the second scenario is that the hand-off between the RRHs and the macro-eNB within
the cell is transparent to a UE. Another potential benefit is that better coordination
may be achieved to avoid interference among the RRHs and the macro-eNB.
[0042] These benefits may make the second scenario more desirable.
However, some issues may arise regarding differences in how legacy UEs and advanced UEs might receive and use the reference signals that are transmitted in a
cell. Specifically, a legacy reference signal known as the cell-specific reference
signal (CRS) is broadcast throughout a cell by the macro-eNB and can be used by the UEs for channel estimation and demodulation of control and shared data. The RRHs also transmit a CRS that may be the same as or different from the CRS broadcast by the macro-eNB. Under the first scenario, each RRH would transmit a
unique CRS that is different from and in addition to the CRS that is broadcast by the
macro-eNB. Under the second scenario, the macro-eNB and all the RRHs would transmit the same CRS.
[0043] For the second scenario, where all the RRHs deployed in a cell
are assigned the same cell ID as the macro-eNB, several goals may be desirable.
First, when a UE is close to one or more TPs, it may be desirable for the DL
channels, such as the PDSCH and PDCCH, that are intended for that UE to be transmitted from that TP or those TPs. (Terms such as "close to" or "near" a TP are used herein to indicate that a UE would have a better DL signal strength or quality if the DL signal is transmitted to that UE from that TP rather than from a different TP.)
Receiving the DL channels from a nearby TP could result in better DL signal quality
and thus a higher data rate and fewer resources used for the UE. Such
transmissions could also result in reduced interference to the neighboring cells.
[0044] Second, it may be desirable for the same time/frequency
resources for a UE served by one TP to be reused for other UEs close to different
TPs when the interferences between the TPs are negligible. This would allow for
increased spectrum efficiency and thus higher data capacity in the cell.
[0045] Third, in the case where a UE sees comparable DL signal levels
from a plurality of TPs, it may be desirable for the DL channels intended for the UE
to be transmitted jointly from the plurality of TPs in a coordinated fashion to provide
a better diversity gain and thus improved signal quality and possibly improved data throughput.
[0046] An example of a mixed macro-eNB/RRH cell in which an attempt
to achieve these goals might be implemented is illustrated in Figure 8. It may be
desirable for the DL channels for UE2 810a to be transmitted only from RRH#1
520a. Similarly, the DL channels to UE5 810b may be sent only from RRH#4 520b. In addition, it may be allowable for the same time/frequency resources used for UE2 810a to be reused by UE5 810b due to the large spatial separation of RRH #1 520a and RRH #4 520b. Also, it may be desirable for the DL channels for UE3 810c,
which is covered by both RRH#2 520c and RRH#3 520d, to be transmitted jointly
from both RRH#2 520c and RRH#3 520d such that the signals from the two RRHs
520c and 520d are constructively added at UE3 810c for improved signal quality.
[0047] To achieve these goals, UEs may need to be able to measure DL
channel state information (CSI) for each individual TP or a set of TPs, depending on
a macro-eNB request. For example, the macro-eNB 510 may need to know the DL
CSI from RRH#1 520a to UE2 810a in order to transmit DL channels from RRH#1 520a to UE2 810a with proper precoding and proper modulation and coding schemes (MCS). Furthermore, to jointly transmit a DL channel from RRH#2 520c and RRH#3 520d to UE3 810c, an equivalent four-port DL CSI feedback for the two
RRHs 520c and 520d from UE3 810c may be needed. However, these kinds of DL
CSI feedback cannot be easily achieved with the Rel-8/9 CRS for one or more of the following reasons.
[0048] First, a CRS is transmitted on every subframe and on each
antenna port. A CRS antenna port, alternatively a CRS port, can be defined as the
reference signal transmitted on a particular antenna port. Up to four antenna ports
are supported, and the number of CRS antenna ports is indicated in the DL PBCH.
CRSs are used by UEs in Rel-8/9 for DL CSI measurement and feedback, DL
channel demodulation, and link quality monitoring. CRSs are also used by Rel-10
UEs for control channels such as PDCCH/PHICH demodulations and link quality
monitoring. Therefore, the number of CRS ports typically needs to be the same for
all UEs. Thus, a UE is typically not able to measure and feed back DL channels for
a subset of TPs in a cell based on the CRS.
[0049] Second, CRSs are used by Rel-8/9 UEs for demodulation of DL
channels in certain transmission modes. Therefore, DL signals typically need to be
transmitted on the same set of antenna ports as the CRS in these transmission
modes. This implies that DL signals for Rel-8/9 UEs may need to be transmitted on
the same set of antenna ports as the CRS.
[0050] Third, CRSs are also used by Rel-8/9/10 UEs for DL control
channel demodulations. Thus, the control channels typically have to be transmitted
on the same antenna ports as the CRS.
[0051] In Rel-1 0, channel state information reference signals (CSI-RS)
are introduced for DL CSI measurement and feedback by Rel-10 UEs. CSI-RS is cell-specific in the sense that a single set of CSI-RS is transmitted in each cell.
Muting is also introduced in Rel-10, in which the REs of a cell's PDSCH are not
transmitted so that a UE can measure the DL CSI from neighbor cells.
[0052] In addition, UE-specific demodulation reference signals (DMRS)
are introduced in the DL in Rel-10 for PDSCH demodulation without a CRS. With the DL DMRS, a UE can demodulate a DL data channel without knowledge of the
antenna ports or the precoding matrix being used by the eNB for the transmission.
A precoding matrix allows a signal to be transmitted over multiple antenna ports with different phase shifts and amplitudes.
[0053] Therefore, CRS reference signals are no longer required for a Rel-
10 UE to perform CSI feedback and data demodulation. However, CRS reference
signals are still required for control channel demodulation. This means that even for
a UE-specific or unicast PDCCH, the PDCCH has to be transmitted on the same antenna ports as the CRS. Therefore, with the current PDCCH design, a PDCCH cannot be transmitted from only a TP close to a UE. Thus, it is not possible to reuse the time and frequency resources for the PDCCH.
[0054] Thus, at least three problems with the existing CRS have been
identified. First, the CRS cannot be used for PDCCH demodulation if a PDCCH is
transmitted from antenna ports that are different from the CRS ports. Second, the
CRS is not adequate for CSI feedback of individual TP information when data
transmissions to a UE are desired on a TP-specific basis for capacity enhancement.
Third, the CRS is not adequate for joint CSI feedback for a group of TPs for joint PDSCH transmission.
[0055] Several solutions have previously been proposed to address these
problems, but each proposal has one or more drawbacks. In one previous solution,
the concept of a UE-specific reference signal (RS) was proposed for
PDCCH/PHICH channels to enhance capacity and coverage of these channels by techniques such as CoMP (Coordinated Multi-Point), MU-MIMO (multi-user multiple-input/multiple-output) and beamforming. The use of a UE-specific RS for PDCCH/PHICH would enable area splitting gains also for the UE-specific control
channels in a shared cell-ID deployment. One proposal was to reuse the R-PDCCH
(relay PDCCH) design principles described in Rel-10 for relay nodes (RNs), in which a UE-specific RS is supported. The R-PDCCH was introduced in Rel-10 for sending scheduling information from the eNB to the RNs. Due to the half-duplex nature of an RN in each DL or UL direction, the PDCCH for an RN cannot be
located in the legacy control channel region (the first few OFDM symbols in a
subframe) and has to be located in the legacy PDSCH region in a subframe.
[0056] A drawback with the R-PDCCH structure is that the micro-sleep
feature, in which a UE can turn off its receiver in a subframe after the first few OFDM symbols if it does not detect any PDCCH in the subframe, cannot be
supported because an RN has to be active in the whole subframe in order to know
whether there is a PDCCH for it. This may be acceptable for an RN because an RN is considered part of the infrastructure, and power saving is a lesser concern. In addition, only 1/8 of the DL subframes can be configured for eNB-to-RN transmission, so micro-sleep is less important to a RN. The micro-sleep feature is,
however, important to a UE because micro-sleep helps to reduce the power
consumption of a UE and thus can increase its battery life. In addition, a UE needs to check at every subframe for a possible PDCCH, making the micro-sleep feature additionally important to a UE. Thus, retaining the micro-sleep feature for UEs would be desirable in any new PDCCH design.
[0057] In another previous solution, to support individual DL CSI
feedback, it was proposed that each TP should transmit the CSI-RS on a separate
CSI-RS resource. The macro-eNB handling the joint operation of all the TPs within
the macro-eNB's coverage area could then configure the CSI-RS resource that a particular UE should use when estimating the DL channel for CSI feedback. A UE
sufficiently close to a TP would typically be configured to measure on the CSI-RS
resource used by that TP. Different UEs would thus potentially measure on
different CSI-RS resources depending on the location of the UE in the cell.
[0058] The set of TPs from which a UE receives significant signals may
differ from UE to UE. The CSI-RS measurement set thus may need to be
configured in a UE-specific manner. It follows that the zero-power CSI-RS set also
needs to support UE-specific configurations, since muting patterns need to be
configured in relation to the resources used for the CSI-RS.
[0059] To restate the issues, in a first scenario, different IDs are used for
the macro-eNB and the RRHs, and in a second scenario, the macro-eNB and the
RRHs have the same ID. If the first scenario is deployed, the benefits of the second scenario described above could not be easily gained due to possible CRS and control channel interference between the macro-eNB and the RRHs. If these benefits are desired and the second scenario is selected, some accommodations
may need to be made for the differences between the capabilities of legacy UEs
and advanced UEs. A legacy UE performs channel estimation based on CRS for DL control channel (PDCCH) demodulation. A PDCCH intended for a legacy UE needs to be transmitted on the same TPs over which the CRS are transmitted. Since CRS are transmitted over all TPs, the PDCCH also needs be transmitted over
all the TPs. A Rel-8 or Rel-9 UE also depends on CRS for PDSCH demodulation.
Thus a PDSCH for the UE needs to be transmitted on the same TPs as the CRS. Although Rel-10 UEs do not depend on CRS for PDSCH demodulation, they may have difficulty in measuring and feeding back DL CSI for each individual TP, which is required for an eNB to send the PDSCH over only the TPs close to the UEs. An
advanced UE may not depend on the CRS for PDCCH demodulation. Thus, the
PDCCH for such a UE might be transmitted over only the TPs close to the UE. In addition, an advanced UE is able to measure and feed back DL CSI for each individual TP. Such capabilities of advanced UEs provide possibilities for cell operation that are not available with legacy UEs.
[0060] As an example, two advanced UEs that are widely separated in a
cell may each be near an RRH, and the coverage areas of the two RRHs may not
overlap. Each UE might receive a PDCCH or PDSCH from its nearby RRH. Since
each UE could demodulate its PDCCH or PDSCH without CRS, each UE could
receive its PDCCH and PDSCH from its nearby RRH rather than from the macro-
eNB. Since the two RRHs are widely separated, the same PDCCH and PDSCH
time/frequency resources could be reused in the two RRHs, thus improving the
overall cell spectrum efficiency. Such cell operation is not possible with legacy UEs.
[0061] As another example, a single advanced UE might be located in an
area of overlapping coverage by two RRHs and could receive and properly process
CRSs from each RRH. This would allow the advanced UE to communicate with
both of the RRHs, and signal quality at the UE could be improved by constructive
addition of the signals from the two RRHs.
[0062] Embodiments of the present disclosure deal with the second
operation scenario where the macro-eNB and the RRHs have the same cell ID.
Therefore, these embodiments can provide the benefits of transparent hand-offs and improved coordination that are available under the second scenario. In addition, these embodiments allow different TPs to transmit different CSI-RS in some circumstances. This can allow cells to take advantage of the ability of
advanced UEs to distinguish between CSI-RS transmitted by different TPs, thus
improving the efficiency of the cells. Further, these embodiments are backward
compatible with legacy UEs in that a legacy UE could still receive the same CRS or
CSI-RS anywhere in a cell as it has traditionally been required to do.
[0063] In an embodiment, a UE-specific, or unicast, PDCCH for an
advanced UE is allocated in the control channel region in the same way a legacy
PDCCH is allocated. However, for each REG allocated to a UE-specific PDCCH for an advanced UE, one or more of the REs not allocated for the CRS are replaced with a UE-specific DMRS symbol. The UE-specific DMRS is a sequence of complex symbols carrying a UE-specific bit sequence, and thus only the intended
UE is able to decode the PDCCH correctly. Such DMRS sequences could be
configured explicitly by higher layer signaling or implicitly derived from the user ID.
[0064] This UE-specific DMRS for PDCCH (hereinafter referred to as the
UE-PDCCH-DMRS) allows a PDCCH to be transmitted from either a single TP or multiple TPs to a UE. It also enables PDCCH transmission with more advanced
techniques such as beamforming, MU-MIMO, and CoMP. In this solution, there is
no change in multicast or broadcast PDCCH transmissions; they are transmitted in
the common search space in the same way as in Rel-8/9/10. A UE could still
decode the broadcast PDCCH using the CRS in the common search space. The
UE-PDCCH-DMRS could be used to decode the unicast PDCCH.
[0065] This solution is fully backward compatible as it does not have any
impact on the operation of legacy UEs. One drawback may be that there may be a resource overhead due to the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, but this overhead may be justified because fewer overall resources for the PDCCH may be needed when
more advanced techniques are used.
[0066] More specifically, in an embodiment, a UE-specific PDCCH
demodulation reference signal (UE-PDCCH-DMRS) is introduced for unicast PDCCH channels. The UE-PDCCH-DMRS allows a UEto estimate the DL channel and demodulate its PDCCH channels without the need of the CRS. In this way, a
unicast PDCCH channel to a UE can be transmitted over antenna ports that are
different from those ports for CRS transmission. Transmitting in this manner can
allow the transmission of a PDCCH over one or multiple TPs that are close to the
UE and therefore can exploit the benefit of RRH deployment.
[0067] An example is shown in Figure 9, where three TPs 910 are
deployed in a cell, with TP1 910a being a macro-eNB and TP2 910b and TP3 910c
being RRHs. Four UEs 810 are shown in the example with UE4 81Od being a legacy Rel-8/9/10 UE and UE1 81Oe, UE2 8 1 Of, and UE3 81Og being advanced UEs. A PDCCH intended for all the UEs 810, such as for transmission of system information, is transmitted over all the TPs 910 on the same antenna ports as those
used for CRS transmission, using the legacy Rel-8 approach in the common search
space. Here it is assumed that CRS reference signals are transmitted over all the TPs 910. A PDCCH intended for UE4 81Od is also transmitted over all the TPs on the same antenna ports as those used for CRS transmission, using the legacy Rel-8 approach.
[0068] A PDCCH intended for one of UE1 81Oe, UE2 81Of, and UE3
81Og might be transmitted over only the TP 910 which is close to that UE810, using the advanced approach with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. The same PDCCH resources may be reused for a UE 810 in the coverage of a different TP 910 if there is
sufficiently low interference. For example, the PDCCH resource for UE2 81 Of in
TP2 910b may be reused for UE3 81Og in TP3 910c, as shown in the figure.
[0069] The coverage of the macro-eNB (i.e., TP1 910a) overlaps with all
the other TPs 910. Therefore, PDCCH resources cannot be reused between TP1
910a and the other TPs 910.
[0070] So at each TP 910, two sets of PDCCHs may be transmitted, i.e.,
a set of legacy PDCCHs in which CRS are required for PDCCH demodulation and a set of advanced PDCCHs in which the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is used for PDCCH demodulation. Resources used for PDCCH transmission to a legacy UE may not
be reused, as they need to be transmitted with the CRS from all TPs 910.
Resources used for PDCCH transmission to advanced UEs could be reused, as
they may be transmitted from different TPs 910 if the coverage of the TPs 910 has
no or little overlapping.
[0071] The resources allocated to a PDCCH can be one, two, four, or
eight control channel elements (CCEs) or aggregation levels, as specified in Rel-8.
Each CCE consists of nine REGs. Each REG consists of four or six REs that are contiguous in the frequency domain and within the same OFDM symbol. Six REs are allocated for a REG only when there are two REs reserved for the CRS within the REG. Thus, effectively only four REs in a REG are available for carrying
PDCCH data.
[0072] In an embodiment, a UE-specific reference signal, the UE-
PDCCH-DMRS, may be inserted into each REG by replacing one RE that is not reserved for the CRS. This is shown in Figure 10, where four non-CRS REs are shown for each REG 101 0. Within each REG 1010, out of the four non-CRS REs,
one RE 1020 is designated as an RE for the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. The REGs within
a CCE may not be adjacent in frequency due to REG interleaving defined in Rel-8/9/10. Thus, at least one reference signal is required for each REG 1010 for channel estimation purposes. The location of the reference signal RE 1020 within each REG 1010 may be fixed or could vary from REG 1010to REG 1010. Multiple
reference signals within the REGs 1010 could also be considered to improve
performance.
[0073] A UE-specific reference signal sequence may be defined for the
reference REs 1020 within each CCE or over all the CCEs allocated for a PDCCH. The sequence could be derived from the 16-bit RNTI (radio network temporary
identifier) assigned to a UE, the cell ID, and/or the subframe index. Thus, only the
intended UE in a cell would be able to estimate the DL channel correctly and
decode the PDCCH successfully. Since a CCE consists of nine REGs, a sequence
length of 18 bits may be defined for a CCE if quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK)
modulation is used for each reference signal RE. A sequence length of a multiple of
18 bits may be defined for aggregation levels of more than one CCE.
[0074] The presence of a reference RE in each REG for the UE-PDCCH-
DMRS results in one fewer RE being available for carrying PDCCH data. This overhead may be justified because the use of UE-PDCCH-DMRS could allow a
PDCCH to be transmitted from a TP close to an intended UE and thus could enable
better received signal quality at the UE. That, in turn, could lead to lower CCE aggregation levels and thus increased overall PDCCH capacity. In addition, higher order modulation may be applied to compensate for the reduced number of resources due to the UE-PDCCH-DMRS overhead.
[0075] In addition, with the use of the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, a beamforming
type of precoded PDCCH transmission can be used, in which a PDCCH signal is weighted and transmitted from multiple antenna ports of either a single TP or multiple TPs such that the signals are coherently combined at the intended UE. As a result, PDCCH detection performance improvement can be expected at the UE.
Unlike in the CRS case where a unique reference signal is needed for each
antenna port, the UE-PDCCH-DMRS can be precoded together with the PDCCH,
and thus only one UE-PDCCH-DMRS is needed for a PDCCH channel regardless
of the number of antenna ports used for the PDCCH transmission.
[0076] Such a PDCCH transmission example is shown in Figure 11,
where the PDCCH channel 1110 together with a UE-PDCCH-DMRS 1120 is
precoded with a coding vector w 1130 before it is transmitted over the four antennas.
[0077] The precoding vector w 1130 can be obtained from the DL
wideband PMI (precoding matrix indicator) feedback from a UE configured in close
loop transmission modes 4, 6 and 9 in LTE. It could be also obtained in the case
where the PMI is estimated from a UL channel measurement based on channel reciprocity, such as in TDD (time division duplex) systems.
[0078] In situations where the DL PMI is not available or not reliable, a set
of precoding vectors may be predefined, and each REG of a PDCCH may be
precoded with one of the precoding vectors in the set. The mapping from precoding
vector to REG can be done in a cyclic manner to maximize the diversity in both time
and frequency. For example, if the predetermined set of precoding vectors are
{w0,vPj,vP2,vP3} and one CCE is allocated to a PDCCH, then the mapping shown in
Figure 12 may be used. That is, precoding vectors w0,w,w2, w3 are mapped to
REGs 0, 1,2, and 3, respectively, to REGs 4, 5, 6, and 7, respectively, and so on. In other embodiments, other mappings could be used. As the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is
also precoded, the use of the precoding vector is transparent to a UE because the
precoded UE-PDCCH-DMRS can be used by the UE for channel estimation and PDCCH data demodulation.
[0079] In one scenario of system operation, the CRS could be transmitted
over the antenna ports of both the macro-eNB and the RRHs. Returning to Figure 8
as an example, four CRS ports could be configured. The corresponding four CRS
signals {CRS0,CRS1 ,CRS2,CRS3} could be transmitted as follows: CRSO could be transmitted over antenna port 0 of all the TPs. CRS1 could be transmitted over antenna port 1 of all the TPs. CRS2 could be transmitted on antenna port 2 of the macro-eNB 510. CRS3 could be transmitted on antenna port 3 of the macro-eNB
5 10. In other embodiments, the CRS signals could be transmitted in other ways.
[0080] A PDCCH intended for multiple UEs in a cell or for legacy UEs
could be transmitted over the same antenna ports as the CRS by assuming four CRS ports. A PDCCH intended for UE2 810a may be transmitted with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS and over only RRH1 520a with two antenna ports. Similarly, a
PDCCH intended for UE5 810b may be transmitted with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS
over only RRH4 520b.
[0081] Since the PDCCHs are transmitted over the TPs that are close to
the intended UEs, better signal quality can be expected and thus a higher coding rate can be used. As a result, a lower aggregation level (or a smaller number of
CCEs) may be used. In addition, due to the large separation between RRH#1 520a
and RRH#4 520b, the same PDCCH resource could be reused in these two RRHs, which doubles the PDCCH capacity.
[0082] A unicast PDCCH intended for UE3 810c, which is covered by
both RRH#2 520c and RRH#3 520d, may be transmitted jointly from both RRH#2
520c and RRH#3 520d to further enhance the PDCCH signal quality at UE3 8 10c.
[0083] For legacy PDCCHs, the approach to procedures such as PDCCH
channel coding and rate matching, PDCCH bit multiplexing, scrambling, modulation,
layer mapping, precoding, and resource element mapping can be the same as the
procedures followed in Rel-8. This legacy approach is shown in Figure 13. During
the bit level multiplexing at block 1390, only the legacy PDCCHs are considered.
[0084] For advanced PDCCHs with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, different
procedures are implemented. Assuming one RE in each REG is used for UE-
PDCCH-DMRS transmission, the number of encoded bits for the PDCCH in each CCE is 54 instead of 72 as in Rel-8 (assuming QPSK modulation for the PDCCH). An example of a PDCCH implementation with the advanced PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is shown in Figure 14. In this case, the same precoding is applied
to both the PDCCH and the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, which could provide precoding
(beamforming) gain for PDCCH transmission. For each antenna port, the precoded symbols from each PDCCH using the UE-PDCCH-DMRS are then multiplexed before resource element mapping. Further details about the procedures followed in the blocks in Figure 14 are provided below.
[0085] The PDCCH formats in Rel-8 as shown in Table 2 in Figure 20 are
supported except that the number of PDCCH bits for each format is different, as one RE in each REG is used for UE-PDCCH-DMRS transmission, as shown in Table 2. Here QPSK is assumed for ease of discussion, but it should be understood that other modulations such as 16 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (16QAM) could be
used. In the case of 16QAM, the number of bits for each PDCCH format in the last
column of Table 2 would be doubled.
[0086] As shown in Figure 14, the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is precoded in the
same manner as the PDCCH. One UE-PDCCH-DMRS sequence per UE is needed regardless of the number of antenna ports used for PDCCH transmission.
This allows the UE-PDCCH-DMRS to be supported for transmission of the PDCCH
over antenna ports that may be different from the antenna used for transmission of the CRS. The UE-PDCCH-DMRS is transmitted over the same antenna port or ports as the corresponding PDCCH and is transmitted only on the CCEs upon which such a corresponding precoded PDCCH is mapped. The UE-PDCCH-DMRS
is not transmitted in the REs in which the CRS is allocated, regardless of the CRS ports.
[0087] When one RE out of a group of four REs in an REG is designated
for the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, as shown in Figure 10, it may be necessary to generate a symbol sequence for the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. In an embodiment, the UE-PDCCH-DMRS symbol sequence can be defined as
r(m) = —7=(l — 2-c(2m))+ j—T=(1 — 2-c(2m + l)), m = 0,\,...,Mr—where c(z) is a pseudo-random bit sequence (PRBS) generated from a pseudo-random sequence generator such as the one defined in Rel-8 and M r is the length of
the UE-PDCCH-DMRS sequence and depends on the aggregation level of a PDCCH. To allow only the intended UE in a cell to correctly decode a PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, the PRBS generator could be initialized with the cell ID, the UE's RNTI (C-RNTI orSPS C-RNTI) and the subframe index. For example, the PRBS may be initialized at the start of each subframe as follows
c
mit = (PS^J+ 1)(2NS" + l)2 6 + nRi
where ns e {0,1,. ..,19} is the slot index, N^f e {0,1,. ..,513} is the cell ID, and «i?M7 is the
RNTI assigned to the UE.
[0088] That is, when a UE connects to an eNB, the eNB assigns the UE a
UE ID, nmTI. The cell ID and the UE ID are fed as initial seed bits into a random
sequence generator which then generates a unique random sequence based on
the bits. The UE can recognize that the sequence pertains to itself based on the
cell ID and its UE ID.
[0089] This UE-PDCCH-DMRS sequence design allows the same
PDCCH to be transmitted from more than one TP with the same sequence for
enhanced PDCCH signal quality. It also enables the same PDCCH resource to be
used by more than one UE covered by the same TP.
[0090] Returning to Figure 10, it can be seen that one or more REs in
each REG, which are originally allocated to the PDCCH in Rel-8 (excluding those
allocated for CRS), may be allocated to carry the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. REG
interleaving with a PDCCH REG from another UE, as defined in Rel-8/9/10, may be
done during resource element mapping. After REG interleaving is performed, the
REGs within a CCE for a UE may not be adjacent in frequency or time. Therefore, at least one reference signal is required in each REG for proper channel estimation. The location of the UE-PDCCH-DMRS RE within each REG, denoted as K DMRS s={°,l,2,3}, could be predefined or signaled to the UE semi-statically. For
better channel estimation, eitherK„,¾ = 1 or KMS =2 may be preferred. More
than one RE could be allocated per REG to transmit the UE-PDCCH-DMRS.
[0091] The transmit power on the UE-PDCCH-DMRS could be the same
as the associated PDCCH or could be higher than the PDCCH to improve the accuracy of channel estimation. If increased power on the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is
transmitted, the additional power could be borrowed from the PDCCH to maintain
the total transmit power unchanged within a REG. The power ratio between a UE-PDCCH-DMRS RE and a PDCCH RE could be either signaled to the UE using higher level signaling or implicitly signaled. The power ratio is only needed when high order modulation (HOM) is used on the PDCCH for PDCCH demodulation.
However, if the transmit power level of the UE-PDCCH-DMRS and the PDCCH is
the same, such a power level would be inherited in the UE-PDCCH-DMRS and no signaling would be required.
[0092] In other words, the UE-PDCCH-DMRS REs 1020 in Figure 10 can
be used for channel estimation. If channel conditions are poor, it may be necessary
to boost the transmit power in those REs 1020 to ensure that channel estimation is
done correctly. This could cause the transmit power for those REs 1020 to be different from the transmit power for the other REs in each REG 1010. In some cases, such as with QPSK modulation, signals could be decoded even when the power difference between the UE-PDCCH-DMRS REs 1020 and the other REs is
not known. However, in other cases, such as with 16QAM, a received signal could
not be scaled properly if the difference in amplitude between the power of the UE-PDCCH-DMRS REs 1020 and the power of the other REs is not known. In an embodiment, in such cases, the macro-eNB explicitly or implicitly signals to the UE the fact that there is a power difference between the REs and what that difference
is.
[0093] Details regarding the procedures shown in Figure 14 are now
provided. It should be understood that the procedures do not necessarily need to
occur in the order shown. For example, the multiplexing steps at blocks 1470 and
1490 could be performed elsewhere in the overall procedure.
[0094] For the encoding procedure at block 1410, the same PDCCH
encoding procedure used in Rel-8 can be used except that the last column of Table
2 in Figure 20 could be used to determine the number of bits for each PDCCH
format. Alternatively, in an embodiment, an 8-bit cyclic redundancy code (CRC)
could be used for the advanced PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. That is, the
legacy PDCCH uses a 16-bit CRC to ensure that data is transmitted correctly.
When the UE-PDCCH-DMRS is used instead of the CRS, performance may be
enhanced, and it may be possible to use a CRC that is only eight bits long.
[0095] The UE-specific scrambling procedure at block 1420 will now be
considered. In the current LTE, the encoded bits from all PDCCHs are concatenated and scrambled with a single cell-specific scrambling sequence, denoted here as c, (i), of 72N„„nin length, where N is the total number of
lgaty v ' L,L,a ^ CCE
CCEs available in a subframe. Specifically, the encoded bits
b(0\o),...,b(0\M^ -Y),b(l\o),...,b(l\M^-i),...,fc("roccH"1)(0),...,fc("roccH"1)(M^troccH"1) -l) for all the legacy PDCCHs in a subframe are scrambled with the cell-specific sequence '<■%<, (0 Pior to modulation, resulting in a block of scrambled bits
b(0),...,b(Mtot-l) according to b(i) =(b(i) +ck ac (i))mod2 ,where Mtot =12NCCE. The
scrambling sequence generator is initialized with c, ■-t = I n /2 \29 + N^1 at the
o ~i o lgacy, mit L s / J ID
start of each subframe. CCE number n corresponds to bits
b(12n), b(72n + 1),. ..,b(72n + 71) .
[0096] When the advanced PDCCHs are supported, one CCE
corresponds to 54 bits instead of 72 bits, breaking the rule of CCE number n
corresponding to ¾(72«),¾(72« + i) (72« + 7i) . For transparency to legacy UEs, the
advanced PDCCHs need to be scrambled separately from the legacy PDCCHs.
b(i) = {b(i) +c (i))mod2. Both c, and c are initialized with c m = «,/2j9 +A^f
v ' i \ / new \ '' legacy new nrt L b * U-J
at the start of each subframe. The elements, if necessary, are inserted in the
block of bits prior to scrambling to ensure that the PDCCHs start at the CCE
positions as described in 3GPP LTE TS 36.213.
[00101] So for the legacy PDCCHs, the same Rel-8 cell-specific
scrambling sequences are generated and are applied only to the legacy PDCCHs.
For advanced PDCCHs, either UE-specific scrambling sequences or a new cell-
specific sequence could be generated and applied to each advanced PDCCH.
[00102] An example is shown in Figure 15, in which a total of five CCEs
are available in a subframe, and two legacy PDCCHs and two advanced PDCCHs
are allocated, each in a single CCE. The presence of advanced PDCCHs is ignored in the processing of legacy PDCCHs.
[00103] That is, a PDCCH can take up one or more CCEs, and the
PDCCHs for multiple UEs might be concatenated into a sequence of CCEs. An
index can be used to indicate where each PDCCH begins in the sequence. Row
1510 in Figure 15 depicts a sequence of five CCEs, four of which contain a PDCCH. The first CCE 1511 contains a legacy PDCCH, the second CCE 1513 contains an advanced PDCCH, the third CCE 1515 has no PDCCH assignment, the fourth CCE 151 7 contains an advanced PDCCH, and the fifth CCE 1519 contains a
legacy PDCCH.
[00104] Each CCE contains nine REGs, and each REG contains four REs.
For a legacy PDCCH, all four REs in an REG carry PDCCH data, so 36 REs carry PDCCH data in a legacy PDCCH. If QPSK modulation is used, each RE can transmit two bits, so a legacy CCE contains 72 bits of PDCCH data. In an
advanced PDCCH, one of the four REs in an REG is used for the UE-PDCCH-
DMRS, so only three REs per REG can be used for PDCCH data. With nine REGs
in a CCE, only 27 REs in an advanced CCE carry PDCCH data. So with two bits
per RE, an advanced CCE contains 54 bits of PDCCH data.
[00105] When the bit-level scrambling depicted at block 1420 in Figure 14
occurs, the CCEs in row 1510 in Figure 15 might be scrambled in sequence from
left to right. The scrambling procedure might base the expected starting point of each CCE in the sequence on the assumption that each CCE contains 72 bits of PDCCH data. Since some of the CCEs that are scrambled might contain legacy
PDCCHs with 72 bits and some might contain advanced PDCCHs with 54 bits, the
scrambling procedure could make an incorrect assumption regarding the starting
points of the CCEs, and thus the scrambling procedure might be performed
incorrectly.
[00106] For example, the fifth CCE 1519 in row 1510 is a 72-bit CCE
containing a legacy PDCCH, and the second CCE 1513 and fourth CCE 1517 are 54-bit CCEs containing advanced PDCCHs. When the scrambling procedure attempts to scramble the fifth CCE 1519, the scrambling procedure might assume that all of the CCEs that were previously scrambled contained 72 bits of PDCCH
data. Since two of the prior CCEs had 54 bits, the scrambling procedure would
assume an incorrect starting point for the fifth CCE 1519.
[00107] In an embodiment, a scrambling procedure retains the indexes for
the CCE starting points that would have been used in the legacy case. When a CCE actually contains 72 bits of PDCCH data, the CCE is processed in the legacy
manner, but when a CCE contains 54 bits of PDCCH data, the CCE is processed in
a different manner. This is illustrated in Figure 15, where 5 CCEs are assumed as an example. Scrambling procedures for legacy PDCCHs are depicted in a downward direction from row 1510, and scrambling procedures for advanced PDCCHs are depicted in an upward direction from row 1510. It should be noted
that PDCCHs with one CCE each are considered as an example. PDCCHs with
multiple CCEs can be similarly implemented. It should be understood that, after the scrambling procedures are complete for the legacy PDCCHs and the advanced PDCCHs, both types of PDCCH are multiplexed together in a later stage of processing and transmitted in the legacy PDCCH region.
[00108] For legacy PDCCHs, a single scrambling bit sequence of 5x72 bits
in length is generated at row 1520. The encoded bits of the legacy PDCCHs in row 1510 are then scrambled by the corresponding bits of the scrambling sequence at row 1520, resulting in scrambled PDCCH bits for legacy PDCCHs at row 1530. A 72-bit CCE 1532 occupies the same position in the sequence of row 1530 as the
72-bit CCE 151 1 in row 15 10 and is used to scramble CCE 1511, and a 72-bit CCE
1534 occupies the same position in the sequence of row 1530 as the 72-bit CCE 1519 in row 1510 and is used to scramble CCE 1519. Three nil CCEs 1536, each of 72 bits in length and having no PDCCH assignment, occupy the same CCE
positions in the sequence of row 1530 as the 54-bit CCEs 1513 and 1517 and the third CCE 1515 in row 1510.
[00109] For advanced PDCCHs, two 54-bit scrambling sequences are
generated at row 1540 at the same locations in the sequence as the corresponding
54-bit CCEs 1513 and 151 7 in row 1510. Each of the two encoded PDCCHs of
advanced UEs at row 1510 is scrambled by the corresponding UE-specific scrambling sequence in row 1540, resulting in scrambled PDCCH bits for advanced PDCCHs at row 1550. The two scrambling sequences in row 1540 are UE-specific in the sense that each of the sequences in row 1540 is generated only for the
corresponding PDCCH intended for an advanced UE.
[00110] In an alternative embodiment, an advanced cell-specific
scrambling sequence could be used to scramble the advanced PDCCHs. As shown in Figure 16, a single scrambling sequence of length 5x54 bits in row 1610 is generated. The encoded PDCCH bits at row 1510 for the two advanced UEs are
then scrambled by the corresponding bits of the scrambling sequence at the same
bit positions, resulting in scrambled PDCCH bits for advanced PDCCHs at row 1550, as in Figure 15. The scrambling sequence at row 1610 is cell-specific in the sense that no distinction is made at this point between CCEs intended for different advanced UEs in that cell.
[00111] The length of the advanced scrambling sequence in row 1610
could be different from that of the Rel-8 scrambling sequence based on several factors. First, scrambling does not need to be applied to the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. Second, higher order modulation may be applied to advanced PDCCHs, which results in more scrambling bits. Similar to the scrambling for legacy PDCCHs, this
scrambling sequence might be applied only to advanced PDCCHs and might skip
legacy PDCCHs.
[00112] Returning to Figure 14, the modulation procedure at block 1430
will now be considered. The same modulation method used in Rel-8 can be used for modulation of the scrambled bits b0,b,...,bM _x. The resulting QPSK symbols
can be denoted as d(0),.. .,d(M„ . - ), where M „„„,„ is the number of QPSK symbols.
\ /> ' \ symb ' ' symb J
Alternatively, higher modulation such as 16QAM may be used.
[00113] In the UE-PDCCH-DMRS insertion procedure at block 1440, a
UE-PDCCH-DMRS is inserted into one of the REs in an REG, as shown in Figure 10. More specifically, UE-PDCCH-DMRS symbols, ''Co),.., ?C.Vr, - O, are inserted
into d(0),...,d(Msm -\) , resulting in a new symbol sequence, d(0),...,d(M b -1) , as
follows:
7fAi , i [d^k + m), form ^ KDMRS „ „ „ „ , „„ nj
d{Ak +m) =\ \m = 0,1,2,3; k = 0,1,..., 9L - 1
[ r{k), for m =KDMRS
where K DMRS e {0,1,2,3} is the UE-PDCCH-DMRS RE location within each REG, LPDCCH's tne aggregation level of the PDCCH, andM , =36LPDCCH. An example with
^^ ^ symo rULLti '
L„„„„ = 1 and K MS = 2 is shown in Figure 17. In this case, every third RE 1020 in
an REG 1010 contains a UE-PDCCH-DMRS.
[00114] Returning to Figure 14, in the layer mapping procedure at block
1450, the layer mapping method defined in Rel-8 for a single layer transmission can be applied to d(0),...,d(M , - 1) , i.e.,
ii \ / \ symD
x(i) =d(i) , z= 0,l,...,M b - l .
[00115] In the precoding procedure at block 1460, each symbol x(i) can
be precoded with a precoding vector w(i) = [w(0)(i),. ..,wip~v>(i)] T, i.e.,
y(i) = w(i) -x(i), i = 0,...,MSV b -
m
1
where y(i) = [y()(i) ... y(p~l)(i)\ , (Y denotes transpose, and ypQ) and w(p>(i) 20 represent the signal and weighting factor for antenna port P , respectively. That is, x(i) represents data and w(i) represents a precoding weight. The precoding performed at block 1460 is a new procedure implemented to deal with advanced PDCCHs; precoding was performed differently for legacy PDCCHs. Previously, if a single antenna was used for a legacy PDCCH, the transmission would occur without 25 any precoding or other modification. If two antennas were used for a legacy PDCCH, transmit diversity would be employed, which uses a different precoding scheme.
[00116] The procedure at block 1470 for multiplexing of PDCCHs with the
UE-PDCCH-DMRS will now be considered. Let {y(jp)(0),y(jp)(\),...,ylP)(Msymlv -1)}
(i =0,1,...,n(PpCCH -!• ) be the precoded symbols of the f PDCCH channel at the pth antenna port of the TP under consideration, where M mb is the number of symbols to be transmitted on the ith PDCCH channel and np CCH is the number of PDCCHs
with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS to be transmitted in the subframe over the pth antenna port. The symbols from all the PDCCH channels are then multiplexed, resulting in a new symbol sequence y(p)(0),y(p)(l),...,y(p)M - 1) asfollows:
yw(36n^ +m) = y(p\m),m = 0,1,..,M^, -1
where «.¾£ is the starting CCE index of the fh PDCCH determined based on the Rel-8
PDCCH procedure. For indices that are not mapped to any of PDCCH channels, elements can be inserted.
[00117] Let {CCE§,CCE\,...,CCEM ,} be the total number of available
tO??? NCCE_ '
CCEs in a subframe. The starting CCE index, n(^CE , for the fh PDCCH can then be
determined based on the Rel-8 PDCCH procedure and M, =36A/ . An example
1 y NCCE ■
is shown in Figure 1 8, where N =10, nnr^„u =2, n (}!==2 and A7E =6. That is,
^ CCE ' PDCCH ' CE nCt
PDCCH1 1810 and PDCCH2 1820 might be advanced PDCCHs that are intended for different UEs and that are to be multiplexed together. Applying the formulas
given above might result in PDCCH 1 1810 starting at CCE2 1830 and PDCCH2
1820 starting at CCE6 1840. Legacy PDCCHs might be multiplexed into the gaps
1850 around and/or between PDCCH 1 181 0 and PDCCH2 1820 at block 1470 or at
block 1490 of Figure 14, as described below.
[00118] Returning to Figure 14, the resource element mapping procedure
at block 1480 will now be considered. Let
z(p)(i) = (y(p)(4i), j)(rt (4/' + l),j)(t (4/ +2),5'(')(4/ + 3)) denote the symbol quadruplet i for antenna port p . The mapping from z(p)(0),...,z(p)(Mquad -1), where
M_, =M„I4 , to REGs can be the same as is done in Rel-8.
quad y '
[00119] In block 1490, advanced PDCCHs are multiplexed with legacy
PDCCHs. After mapping to the resource elements in the control channel region in a
subframe is done, PDCCHs with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS and legacy PDCCHs can
be mapped to different REs. Thus, multiplexing of the two sets of PDCCHs in the
control region is effectively done as well. Alternatively, legacy PDCCHs could be
multiplexed with PDCCHs with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS in the same way as that
described with regard to the multiplexing performed at block 1470. The order of the
PDCCHs in a sequence could depend on the identities of the UEs that the PDCCHs are intended for.
[00120] The processing that occurs after block 1490, such as CRS
insertion and OFDM signal generation, can be the same as in Rel-8, as indicated by
the dashed lines around those subsequent blocks.
[00121] It may be necessary for a UE to determine whether a legacy
PDCCH or an advanced PDCCH has been assigned to the UE. In an embodiment, the same PDCCH assignment procedure defined in Rel-8/9/10 can be used for a PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS. For clarity, this procedure is now repeated.
Let N._t be the total number of CCEs in the control region of subframe k The
" CCE ,K C
CCEs can be numbered from 0 to NcEk - 1. The UE can monitor a set of PDCCH
candidates for control information in every non-DRX (discontinuous reception)
subframe, where monitoring implies attempting to decode each of the PDCCHs in
the set according to all the monitored DCI (downlink channel information) formats.
[00122] The set of PDCCH candidates to monitor is defined in terms of
search spaces, where a search space s^L) at aggregation level LE {1,2,4,8} is defined
by a set of PDCCH candidates. The CCEs corresponding to PDCCH candidate m of the search space s(kL) are given by
L-[(Yk+m)mod[NCCEJc/L\) + i
wherez^ is defined in the following paragraphs, I = o,---,L -1 and m = o,--,M(> - i . M (L) is the number of PDCCH candidates to monitor in the given search space. The UE can monitor one UE-specific search space at each of the aggregation levels 1,2,4,8 and one common search space at each of the aggregation levels 4 and 8. The aggregation levels defining the search spaces are listed in Table 3 in Figure 20. The
DCI formats that the UE monitors depend on the configured transmission mode as defined in Rel-8/9/10.
[00123] For the common search spaces, Yk\s set to 0 for the two
aggregation levels L = 4 and L = 8. For the UE-specific search space s^ at aggregation level L , the variable Yk is defined by Yk =(A- Yk_l)modD
where z_j = «RNTI ^ o, ^4 = 39827, D =65537 and k=\_ns/2j, ns e {0,1,2.. .,19} is the slot number within a radio frame. The RNTI value used for nWTI is the C-RNTI or SPS-
RNTI defined in Rel-8/9/10.
[00124] As the UE procedure for PDCCH assignment has no changes
from Rel-8, the PDCCH of a legacy UE and an advanced UE could be multiplexed
the same way as in Rel-8, thus making the introduction of the advanced PDCCH
transparent to the legacy UE.
[00125] By default, an advanced UE should follow the legacy Rel-8
procedure for PDCCH detection if there is no UE-PDCCH-DMRS. An advanced UE may be semi-statically configured by a higher layer to decode the UE-specific
PDCCH with the CRC scrambled by the C-RNTI, or other types of RNTI configured
by the eNB, by assuming one of three configurations. In a first configuration, the UE is semi-statically configured to assume it will receive a legacy PDCCH and will thus attempt to use only the CRS for demodulation. This configuration might be used when it is known that the UE is not near an RRH. In a second configuration,
the UE is semi-statically configured to assume it will receive an advanced PDCCH
and will thus attempt to use only the UE-PDCCH-DMRS for demodulation. This configuration might be used when it is known that the UE is near an RRH. In a third configuration, no signaling is performed to inform the UE which type of PDCCH it should expect. Instead, the UE might assume that it could receive either a legacy
PDCCH or an advanced PDCCH and that it could need to use either the CRS or the
UE-PDCCH-DMRS for demodulation.
[00126] Because the Rel-8 CCE allocation method and aggregation levels
can be used for a PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, the maximum number of blind decodings for PDCCH detection in a subframe is the same for the first and
second configurations. More blind decodings might be required for the third
configuration. That is, the UE might first assume that it has received a legacy PDCCH that uses QPSK and has no UE-PDCCH-DMRS. If processing of the
PDCCH using the CRS occurs correctly, the UE knows that the assumption of a
legacy PDCCH was correct. If processing of the PDCCH does not occur correctly,
the UE performs another round of blind decoding assuming that it has received an
advanced PDCCH and using the UE-PDCCH-DMRS.
[00127] Asa UE-specific PDCCH could be transmitted in both the common
search space and the UE-specific search space, the third configuration could be
applied in both these search spaces. An advanced UE might always decode the
PDCCH with the CRC scrambled by special RNTIs (e.g., SI-RNTI, P-RNTI, TPC-
RNTI, etc.) assuming a legacy PDCCH in the common search space.
[00128] A UE typically performs channel estimation based on a reference
signal received from the macro-eNB. For legacy PDCCH demodulation, the UE
uses the CRS for channel estimation. For advanced PDCCH demodulation, the
UE-PDCCH-DMRS is used for channel estimation. In an embodiment, when a UE
is configured to detect a PDCCH with the UE-PDCCH-DMRS, the UE can perform
the following steps in each subframe to detect a UE-specific PDCCH with the CRC
scrambled by the C-RNTI in both the UE-specific search space and the common search space:
Determine the number of CCEs in the control region.
For each aggregation level (L=1 ,2,4,8) :
Set m = 0;
If m
Documents
Application Documents
| # |
Name |
Date |
| 1 |
8735-CHENP-2013-AbandonedLetter.pdf |
2019-09-03 |
| 1 |
8735-CHENP-2013.pdf |
2013-10-31 |
| 2 |
8735-CHENP-2013 FORM-18 07-11-2013.pdf |
2013-11-07 |
| 2 |
8735-CHENP-2013-FER.pdf |
2019-02-28 |
| 3 |
IB304.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 3 |
abstract 8735-CHENP-2013.jpg |
2014-09-22 |
| 4 |
FORM-5.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 4 |
8735-CHENP-2013 CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 23-04-2014.pdf |
2014-04-23 |
| 5 |
8735-CHENP-2013 POWER OF ATTORNEY 23-04-2014.pdf |
2014-04-23 |
| 5 |
FORM-3.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 6 |
11516A-04-SPECIFICATION.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 7 |
8735-CHENP-2013 POWER OF ATTORNEY 23-04-2014.pdf |
2014-04-23 |
| 7 |
FORM-3.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 8 |
8735-CHENP-2013 CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 23-04-2014.pdf |
2014-04-23 |
| 8 |
FORM-5.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 9 |
abstract 8735-CHENP-2013.jpg |
2014-09-22 |
| 9 |
IB304.pdf |
2013-11-18 |
| 10 |
8735-CHENP-2013-FER.pdf |
2019-02-28 |
| 10 |
8735-CHENP-2013 FORM-18 07-11-2013.pdf |
2013-11-07 |
| 11 |
8735-CHENP-2013.pdf |
2013-10-31 |
| 11 |
8735-CHENP-2013-AbandonedLetter.pdf |
2019-09-03 |
Search Strategy
| 1 |
8735CHENP2013_27-02-2019.pdf |