摘要

In this paper, we propose a class of methods for compensating for the Doppler distortions of the underwater acoustic channel for differentially coherent detection of orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) signals. These methods are based on multiple fast Fourier transform (FFT) demodulation, and are implemented as partial (P), shaped (S), fractional (F), and Taylor (T) series expansion FFT demodulation. They replace the conventional FFT demodulation with a few FFTs and a combiner. The input to each FFT is a specific transformation of the input signal, and the combiner performs weighted summation of the FFT outputs. The four methods differ in the choice of the pre-FFT transformation (P, S, F, T), while the rest of the receiver remains identical across these methods. We design an adaptive algorithm of stochastic gradient type to learn the combiner weights for differentially coherent detection. The algorithm is cast into the multichannel framework to take advantage of spatial diversity. The receiver is also equipped with an improved synchronization technique for estimating the dominant Doppler shift and resampling the signal before demodulation. An additional technique of carrier sliding is introduced to aid in the post-FFT combining process when residual Doppler shift is nonnegligible. Synthetic data, as well as experimental data from a recent mobile acoustic communication experiment (few kilometers in shallow water, 10.5-15.5-kHz band) are used to demonstrate the performance of the proposed methods, showing significant improvement over conventional detection techniques with or without intercarrier interference equalization (5-7 dB on average over multiple hours), as well as improved bandwidth efficiency [ability to support up to 2048 quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) modulated carriers].