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Traditional wireless communication systems operate in duplexed modes i.e. using time division duplexing or frequency division duplexing. These methods can respectively emulate full duplex mode operation or realize full duplex mode operation with decreased spectral efficiency. This thesis presents a

Traditional wireless communication systems operate in duplexed modes i.e. using time division duplexing or frequency division duplexing. These methods can respectively emulate full duplex mode operation or realize full duplex mode operation with decreased spectral efficiency. This thesis presents a novel method of achieving full duplex operation by actively cancelling out the transmitted signal in pseudo-real time. With appropriate hardware, the algorithms and techniques used in this work can be implemented in real time without any knowledge of the channel or any training sequence. Convergence times of down to 1 ms can be achieved which is adequate for the coherence bandwidths associated with an indoor environment. By utilizing adaptive cancellation, additional overhead for re-calibrating the system in other open-loop methods is not needed.
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    Title
    • Adaptive baseband interference cancellation for full duplex wireless communication
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2016
    Resource Type
  • Text
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    Note
    • thesis
      Partial requirement for: M.S., Arizona State University, 2016
    • bibliography
      Includes bibliographical references (pages 64-65)
    • Field of study: Electrical engineering

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    by Sanjay Avasarala

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