PrefaceAcknowledgementsAbbreviatio and AcronymsCHAPTER 1 Background of LTE 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Evolution of Mobile Systems Before LTE 1.2.1 The Fit 3G Standardization 1.3 ITU Activities 1.3.1 IMT-2000 and IMT-Advanced 1.3.2 Spectrum for IMT Systems 1.4 Drive for LTE 1.5 Standardization of LTE 1.5.1 The Standardization Process 1.5.2 The 3GPP Process 1.5.3 The 3G Evolution to 4GCHAPTER 2 High Data Rates in Mobile Communication 2.1 High Data Rates: Fundamental Cotraints 2.1.1 High Data Rates in Noise-Limited Scenarios 2.1.2 Higher Data Rates in Interference-Limited Scenarios 2.2 Higher Data Rates Within a Limited Bandwidth: Higher-OrderModulation 2.2.1 Higher-Order Modulation in Combination with ChannelCoding 2.2.2 Variatio in Itantaneous Tramit Power 2.3 Wider Bandwidth Including Multi-Carrier Tramission 2.3.1 Multi-Carrier TramissionCHAPTER 3 0FDM Tramission 3.1 Basic Principles of OFDM 3.2 OFDM Demodulation 3.3 OFDM Implementation Using IFFT/FFT Processing 3.4 Cyclic-prefix Iertion 3.5 Frequency-Domain Model of OFDM Tramission 3.6 Channel Estimation and Reference Symbols 3.7 Frequency Diveity with OFDM: Importance of Channel Coding 3.8 Selection of Basic OFDM Paramete 3.8.10FDM Subcarrier Spacing 3.8.2 Number of Subcarrie 3.8.3 Cyclic-Prefix Length 3.9 Variatio in Itantaneous Tramission Power 3.10 OFDM as a User-Multiplexing and Multiple-Access Scheme 3.1 1 Multi-Cell Broadcast/Multicast Tramission and OFDMCHAPTER 4 Wider-Band 'Single-Carrier' Tramission 4.1 Equalization Agait Radio-Channel Frequency Selectivity 4.1.1 Time-Domain Linear Equalization 4.1.2 Frequency-Domain Equalization 4.1.3 Other Equalizer Strategies 4.2 Uplink FDMA with Flexible Bandwidth Assignment 4.3 DFT-Spread OFDM 4.3.1 Basic Principles 4.3.2 DFTS-OFDM Receiver 4.3.3 User Multiplexing with DFTS-OFDM 4.3.4 Distributed DFFS-OFDMCHAPTER 5 Multi-Antenna Techniques 5.1 Multi-Antenna Configuratio 5.2 Benefits of Multi-Antenna Techniques 5.3 Multiple Receive Antennas 5.4 Multiple Tramit Antennas 5.4.1 Tramit-Antenna Diveity 5.4.2 Tramitter-Side Beam-Forming 5.5 Spatial Multiplexing 5.5.1 Basic Principles 5.5.2 Precoder-Based Spatial Multiplexing 5.5.3 Nonlinear Receiver ProcessingCHAPTER 6 Scheduling, Link Adaptation, and Hybrid ARQ 6.1 Link Adaptation: Power and Rate Control 6.2 Channel-Dependent Scheduling 6.2.1 Downlink Scheduling 6.2.2 Uplink Scheduling 6.2.3 Link Adaptation and Channel-Dependent Scheduling in theFrequency Domain 6.2.4 Acquiring on Channel-State Information 6.2.5 Traffic Behavior and Scheduling ……CHAPTER 7 LTE Radio Access: An OverviewCHAPTER 8 Radio-Interface Architecture.CHAPTER 9 Physical Tramission ResourcesCHAPTER 10 Downlink Physical-Layer Processing.CHAPTER 11 Uplink Physical-Layer Processing.CHAPTER 12 Retramission Protocols.CHAPTER 13 Power Control, Scheduling, and Interference HandlingCHAPTER 14 Access Procedures.CHAPTER 15 MultimediaBroadcastJMulticast ServicesCHAPTER 16 RelayingCHAPTER 17 Spectrum and RF CharacteristicsCHAPTER 18 PerformanceCHAPTER 19 Other Wireless Communicatio SystemsCHAPTER 20 Final ThoughtsReferencesIndex |