Skip to content
forked from kit-cel/gr-gfdm

Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing in GNU Radio

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

noc0lour/gr-gfdm

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

GNU Radio GFDM Modulator/Demodulator

The gr-gfdm project is an Free Software Package which aims to provide an implementation of Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing (GFDM) in the GNU Radio framework. GFDM is a proposed waveform for use in 5G.

This project was initiated as a Bachelor thesis at the Communication Engineering Lab (CEL) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany, http://www.cel.kit.edu.

Concept

Tackling current issues with OFDM several new waveforms are proposed for consideration in 5G. FBMC, UFMC, BFDM and GFDM are the names of the proposed waveforms and they are filtered multicarrier systems. Orthogonality of neighboring carriers is no constraint.

GFDM was proposed by the Vodafone Chair of TU Dresden and accurately described in [1]. Due to the high complexity of a Transmit-Matrix-based approach a low coplexity receiver [2] and transmitter [3] are proposed.

GFDM can be described by parallelizing several SC-FDE streams on subcarrier. The transmit symbols are localized in a time/frequency-grid and pulshaping is applied subcarrier-wise. After pulshaping and localizing on the correct subcarrier-frequency the symbolstreams are superpositioned and can be transmitted. On receiver side the symbols on the subcarrier can be extracted by applying a MF, ZF or MMSE-filter of the previous pulseshaping filter. Non-orthogonality of neighboring subcarrier introduces ICI if demodulating with MF. A successive interference cancellation algorithm is proposed to remove interference.

Due to its block-nature a block synchronisation with improved Schmidl & Cox - Symbols can be achievd.

  1. N. Michailow et al. “Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing for 5th Generation Cellular Networks”. In: Communications, IEEE Transactions on 62.9 (2014), S. 3045–3061. doi: 10.1109/TCOMM.2014.2345566.

  2. I.S. Gaspar et al. “Low Complexity GFDM Receiver Based on Sparse Frequency Domain Processing”. In: Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC Spring), 2013 IEEE 77th. IEEE, 2013, S. 1–6. doi: 10.1109/VTCSpring.2013.6692619.

  3. N. Michailow et al. “Generalized frequency division multiplexing: Analysis of an alternative multi-carrier technique for next generation cellular systems”. In: Wireless Communication Systems (ISWCS), 2012 International Symposium on. IEEE, 2012, S. 171–175. doi: 10.1109/ISWCS.2012.6328352.

Capabilities

gr-gfdm provides a framer, modulator and cyclic prefixer block to generate transmit symbols and a synchronization, a prefix remover and a demodulator block to receive and demodulate the transmitted GFDM blocks. The modulator and demodulator are implemented using the low complexity approach with Sparse Frequency Domain processing and heavy use of FFTW and VOLK to accelerate signal processing on modern GPPs.

Requirements

  • GNU Radio 3.7.9 (verified)
    • GNU Radio 3.7.0

    • GR 3.7 API
    • GR-FFT
    • GR-FILTER
    • VOLK

Build/Install instructions

  1. Get, build and install GNU radio from https://www.gnuradio.org

  2. Get gr-gfdm from github - git clone https://github.com/kit-cel/gr-gfdm.git

  3. Configure gr-gfdm - mkdir build && cd build && cmake ../

  4. Build and install gr-gfdm - make && sudo make install (default install target: /usr/local)

  5. Configure custom blocks path in GNU Radio Companion to use /usr/local/share/gnuradio/grc/blocks

Troubleshooting/Bugs

In case you encounter non-GNU Radio bugs in gr-gfdm open an issue at https://github.com/kit-cel/gr-gfdm/issues. Otherwise consider reporting the issue at https://gnuradio.org.

About

Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing in GNU Radio

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C++ 42.3%
  • CMake 29.8%
  • Python 27.5%
  • C 0.4%