This paper and its companion (Part I) are devoted to the evaluation of the impact of chaos-based techniques on communications systems with asynchronous Code Division Multiple Access. In Part I, a performance index was introduced and exploited to a priori estimate the performance of DS-CDMA communications systems based on chaotic spreading sequences, and to compare it to that of conventional systems. Here, tools from nonlinear dynamical system theory are employed to give a formal ground for those results. Analytical bounds on the expected partial cross correlation between spreading sequences obtained by quantizing and repeating a chaotic time series are derived, ensuring general applicability of such a technique in a real environment. Further analytical arguments guarantee that, when particular chaotic generators are used, expected performance is not worse than that of a well-behaving communications system. This analysis ensures also that, unlike conventional sequences, chaotic spreading codes can be generated for any number of users and allocated bandwidth
Chaotic complex spreading sequences for asynchronous DS-CDMA - Part II: Some theoretical performance bounds
ROVATTI, Riccardo;SETTI, Gianluca;MAZZINI, Gianluca
1998
Abstract
This paper and its companion (Part I) are devoted to the evaluation of the impact of chaos-based techniques on communications systems with asynchronous Code Division Multiple Access. In Part I, a performance index was introduced and exploited to a priori estimate the performance of DS-CDMA communications systems based on chaotic spreading sequences, and to compare it to that of conventional systems. Here, tools from nonlinear dynamical system theory are employed to give a formal ground for those results. Analytical bounds on the expected partial cross correlation between spreading sequences obtained by quantizing and repeating a chaotic time series are derived, ensuring general applicability of such a technique in a real environment. Further analytical arguments guarantee that, when particular chaotic generators are used, expected performance is not worse than that of a well-behaving communications system. This analysis ensures also that, unlike conventional sequences, chaotic spreading codes can be generated for any number of users and allocated bandwidthI documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.