Performance Analysis of Higher Order Digital Modulation Techniques for Hybrid Spread Spectrum Systems
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ASTU
Abstract
There are two types of digital transmission techniques that give acceptable bit rates and
good performance. The first is in satellite communications, where these schemes make
efficient use of the limited power available. The second is in mobile wireless, where the
schemes make efficient use of the limited bandwidth available for the in-demand service.
However, both systems are limited in bandwidth and vulnerable to hostile jamming and
radio interference. The novelty of the spread spectrum lies primarily in its wideband,
pseudorandom approach to signal transmission, which provides intrinsic benefits such as
interference resistance and security. Specific implementations of spread spectrum, such as
FHSS and DSSS, add their own innovative techniques to realize these benefits.
Furthermore, a hybrid of the two methods can be built to improve processing gain over a
single strategy. Compared to traditional narrowband methods, spread spectrum offers a
fundamentally different and more robust approach to communication. Hence, the aim of
this thesis is to model and simulate the three spread spectrum systems, FFHSS, DSSS, and
DS/FFHSS, using Matlab /Simulink software, with Higher M-QAM (16 QAM, 32 QAM, 64
QAM and 128 QAM) modulations and Rayleigh fading channel. The DS/FFHSS system
performances were then compared with FHSS, and DSSS based on Bit Error Rate (BER),
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), Q-factor, and received signal power (POWER) metrics. The
results revealed that the DS/FFHSS system outperformed the DSSS and FHSS systems at
fixed SNR values (0-20 dB) by 74%, 58.5%, and 32.5%, respectively, in BER, SNR, and Q-
factor metrics, whereas the values in the received power signal were identical in lower
SNRs and differed slightly at higher SNR levels.
