Communication device and communication method for performing control signaling
Patent Information
- Authority / Receiving Office
- JP · JP
- Patent Type
- Applications
- Current Assignee / Owner
- PANASONIC INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CORP OF AMERICA
- Filing Date
- 2026-03-30
- Publication Date
- 2026-06-11
Smart Images

Figure 2026095540000001_ABST
Abstract
Description
Technical Field
[0001] The present disclosure relates to a communication device and a communication method for performing control signaling, and more particularly to a communication device and a communication method for performing control signaling in an EHT WLAN (Extremely High Throughput Wireless Local Area Network).
Background Art
[0002] In the standardization of next-generation wireless local area networks (WLANs), a new wireless access technology having backward compatibility with IEEE 802.11a / b / g / n / ac / ax technologies has been under consideration in the IEEE 802.11 working group and is named IEEE 802.11be Extremely High Throughput (EHT) WLAN.
[0003] In 802.11be EHT WLAN, for the purpose of greatly increasing peak throughput and capacity so as to exceed 802.11ax High Efficiency (HE) WLAN, the maximum channel bandwidth is expanded from 160 MHz to 320 MHz, the maximum number of spatial streams is increased from 8 to 16, and it is desired to support multi-link operation. Further, for the purpose of improving spectral efficiency so as to exceed 11ax HE WLAN, it has been proposed to enable preamble puncturing for physical layer protocol data units (PPDUs) transmitted to one communication device or a plurality of communication devices.
Summary of the Invention
Problems to be Solved by the Invention
[0004] However, there has been no discussion so far regarding an efficient signaling support for preamble puncturing for PPDUs transmitted to a single communication device or a plurality of communication devices in the context of a communication device and a communication method for performing control signaling, particularly in EHT WLAN.
[0005] Therefore, there is a need for communication devices and communication methods that provide feasible technical solutions for control signaling in the context of EHT WLANs. Furthermore, other desirable features and characteristics will become apparent by reading the following detailed description and the appended claims in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the background art contained herein. [Means for solving the problem]
[0006] Non-limiting and exemplary embodiments facilitate the provision of communication devices and communication methods for performing control signaling in the context of an EHT WLAN.
[0007] According to one embodiment of the present disclosure, a communication device is provided comprising: a circuit that generates a transmit signal during operation, the transmit signal including a first signal field and a second signal field, wherein the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, wherein the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information if the transmit signal is used for punctured single-user (SU) transmission or multi-user (MU) multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal; and a transmitter that transmits the transmit signal during operation.
[0008] Another embodiment of the present disclosure provides a communication device comprising: a receiver that, in operation, receives a transmit signal including a first signal field and a second signal field, wherein the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, wherein the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information if the transmit signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal; and a circuit that, in operation, processes the transmit signal.
[0009] A communication method is provided, comprising the steps of: generating a transmit signal including a first signal field and a second signal field, wherein the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, wherein the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information if the transmit signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal; and transmitting the transmit signal.
[0010] It should be noted that general or specific embodiments can be implemented as systems, methods, integrated circuits, computer programs, storage media, or any selective combination thereof.
[0011] Further benefits and advantages of the disclosed embodiments will become apparent from this specification and the drawings. These benefits and / or advantages can be obtained individually by the various embodiments and features of this specification and the drawings, and it is not necessary to provide all of these features in order to obtain one or more of such benefits and / or advantages. [Brief explanation of the drawing]
[0012] Those with ordinary art in this field will be able to fully understand and easily grasp the embodiments of this disclosure by reading the following description, which is merely an example, with reference to the drawings. [Figure 1A] This diagram shows a schematic representation of single-user (SU) multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication between an access point (AP) and a station (STA) in a MIMO wireless network, including uplink and downlink communication. [Figure 1B] This diagram shows a schematic representation of downlink multi-user (MU) communication between an access point (AP) and multiple service stations (STAs) in a MIMO wireless network. [Figure 1C] This diagram shows a schematic representation of trigger-based uplink MU communication between an AP and multiple STAs in a MIMO wireless network. [Figure 1D] This diagram shows a schematic representation of trigger-based downlink multi-AP communication between multiple APs and STAs in a MIMO wireless network. [Figure 2A] This shows an example of the PPDU (Physical Layer Protocol Data Unit) format used for uplink and downlink SU communication between APs and STAs in an HE WLAN. [Figure 2B] This shows an example of the PPDU format used for downlink MU communication between an AP and multiple STAs in an HE WLAN. [Figure 2C] The HE-SIG-B field is shown in detail. [Figure 2D] This shows an example of the PPDU format used for trigger-based uplink MU communication between an AP and multiple STAs in an HE WLAN. [Figure 3A] This document provides schematic examples of communication devices in various embodiments. The communication devices can be implemented as APs or STAs and can be configured to perform control signaling in accordance with this disclosure. [Figure 3B] A flowchart illustrating the communication method related to this disclosure is shown. [Figure 4]A flowchart illustrating downlink communication according to various embodiments is shown. [Figure 5A] An example of the format of an EHT basic PPDU in non-trigger-based communication is shown. [Figure 5B] An example of the transmission of the U-SIG field is shown. [Figure 5C] A table showing how the number of EHT-SIG content channels depends on the bandwidth and the value of L. [Figure 5D] A diagram of the mapping of one or two EHT-SIG content channels when a 40 MHz EHT basic PPDU is transmitted to multiple STAs is shown. [Figure 5E] A diagram of the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels when an 80 MHz EHT basic PPDU is transmitted to multiple STAs is shown. [Figure 5F] A diagram of the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels when an 80+80 MHz or 160 MHz EHT basic PPDU is transmitted to multiple STAs is shown. [Figure 5G] A diagram of the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels when a 160+80 MHz or 240 MHz EHT basic PPDU is transmitted to multiple STAs is shown. [Figure 5H] A diagram of the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels when a 160+160 MHz or 320 MHz EHT basic PPDU is transmitted to multiple STAs is shown. [Figure 6] A flowchart illustrating the processing of a received EHT basic PPDU in an AP or STA according to the first embodiment is shown. [Figure 7A] An example of the format of an EHT-SIG content channel is shown. [Figure 7B] An example of the format of an EHT-SIG content channel is shown. [Figure 8]A flowchart illustrating the processing of a received EHT basic PPDU in an AP or STA according to the second embodiment is shown. [Figure 9A] A flowchart illustrating the processing of a received EHT basic PPDU in an AP or STA according to the third embodiment is shown. [Figure 9B] A flowchart illustrating the processing of a received EHT basic PPDU in an AP or STA according to the third embodiment is shown. [Figure 10] An example of the format of an EHT TB PPDU is shown. [Figure 11] The configuration of a communication device according to the present disclosure, such as an AP, is shown. [Figure 12] The configuration of a communication device according to the present disclosure, such as a STA, is shown.
[0013] It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the elements in the figures are illustrated in a concise and clear manner and are not necessarily drawn to an exact scale. For the purpose of assisting in an accurate understanding of the embodiments of the present invention, for example, the dimensions of some elements in the illustrations, block diagrams, or flowcharts may be exaggerated compared to other elements.
Modes for Carrying Out the Invention
[0014] Some embodiments of the present disclosure will be described by way of example only with reference to the drawings. Similar reference numerals and reference characters in the drawings refer to similar elements or equivalent elements.
[0015] In the following paragraphs, specific exemplary embodiments will be described with reference to access points (APs) and stations (STAs) that perform uplink or downlink control signaling, particularly in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) wireless networks.
[0016] In the context of IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) technology, a station (also known synonymously as an STA) is a communications device capable of using the 802.11 protocol. Based on the IEEE 802.11-2016 definition, an STA can be any device that includes IEEE 802.11-compliant media access control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) interfaces to a wireless medium (WM).
[0017] An STA can be, for example, a notebook computer, desktop personal computer (PC), personal digital assistant (PDA), access point, or Wi-Fi phone within a wireless local area network (WLAN) environment. An STA can be stationary or mobile. In a WLAN environment, the terms "STA," "wireless client," "user," "user device," and "node" are often used synonymously.
[0018] Similarly, an AP (also known as a Wireless Access Point (WAP) in the context of IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) technology) is a communication device that enables STAs within a WLAN to connect to a wired network. APs are typically connected to a router (via a wired network) as standalone devices, but APs can also be integrated with or used within a router.
[0019] As mentioned above, an STA within a WLAN can function as an AP in other cases, and vice versa. This is because a communication device in the context of IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) technology can include both STA and AP hardware elements. In this way, the communication device can switch between STA mode and AP mode based on the actual WLAN conditions and / or requirements.
[0020] In MIMO wireless networks, "multiple" means multiple antennas used simultaneously for transmission through a wireless channel and multiple antennas used simultaneously for reception. In this sense, "multiple inputs" means multiple transmitter antennas that input wireless signals into the channel, and "multiple outputs" means multiple receiver antennas that receive wireless signals from the channel and input them into the receivers. For example, in an N×M MIMO network system, N is the number of transmitter antennas and M is the number of receiver antennas, and N may be equal to or unequal to M. For the sake of brevity, this disclosure does not further discuss the number of transmitter antennas and the number of receiver antennas.
[0021] MIMO wireless networks can deploy both single-user (SU) and multi-user (MU) communication between communication devices such as access points (APs) and service stations (STAs). MIMO wireless networks offer advantages such as spatial multiplexing and spatial diversity, which enable higher data rates and robustness by using multiple spatial streams. Depending on the embodiment, the term "spatial stream" may be used interchangeably with the term "spatiotemporal stream" (or STS).
[0022] Figure 1A shows a schematic diagram of SU communication 100 between AP 102 and STA 104 in a MIMO radio network. As illustrated, a MIMO radio network can include one or more STAs (e.g., STA 104, STA 106, etc.). When SU communication 100 in a channel is performed across the entire channel bandwidth, it is called full-band SU communication. When SU communication 100 in a channel is performed across a portion of the channel bandwidth (e.g., one or more 20 MHz subchannels within the channel are punctured), it is called punctured SU communication. In SU communication 100, AP 102 uses multiple antennas (e.g., four antennas as shown in Figure 1A) to transmit multiple spatiotemporal streams, all directed toward a single communication device (i.e., STA 104). For simplicity, the multiple spatiotemporal streams directed toward STA 104 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 108 directed toward STA 104.
[0023] The SU communication 100 can be configured for bidirectional transmission. As shown in Figure 1A, in the SU communication 100, the STA 104 can use multiple antennas (for example, two antennas as shown in Figure 1A) to transmit multiple spatiotemporal streams, all directed toward the AP 102. For simplicity, the multiple spatiotemporal streams directed toward the AP 102 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 110 directed toward the AP 102.
[0024] As shown in Figure 1A, the SU-MIMO communication 100 enables both uplink SU transmission and downlink SU transmission in a MIMO wireless network.
[0025] Figure 1B shows a schematic diagram of downlink MU communication 112 between AP 114 and multiple STAs 116, 118, 120 in a MIMO radio network. A MIMO radio network can include one or more STAs (e.g., STA 116, STA 118, STA 120, etc.). MU communication 112 can be OFDMA (orthogonal frequency division multiple access) communication or MU-MIMO communication. In OFDMA communication on a channel, AP 114 simultaneously transmits multiple streams to STAs 116, 118, 120 in the network using different resource units (RUs) within the channel bandwidth. In MU-MIMO communication on a channel, AP 114 simultaneously transmits multiple streams to STAs 116, 118, 120 using the same (one or more) RUs within the channel bandwidth, using multiple antennas via spatial mapping or precoding techniques. When a RU (Routing Unit) performing OFDMA or MU-MIMO communication occupies the entire channel bandwidth, that OFDMA or MU-MIMO communication is called full-band OFDMA or full-band MU-MIMO communication. When a RU performing OFDMA or MU-MIMO communication occupies only a portion of the channel bandwidth (for example, one or more 20MHz subchannels within the channel are punctured), that OFDMA or MU-MIMO communication is called punctured OFDMA or MU-MIMO communication. For example, two spatiotemporal streams can be directed to STA 118, another spatiotemporal stream to STA 116, and yet another spatiotemporal stream to STA 120. For simplicity, the two spatiotemporal streams directed to STA 118 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 124, the spatiotemporal stream directed to STA 116 is shown as data transmission arrow 122, and the spatiotemporal stream directed to STA 120 is shown as data transmission arrow 126.
[0026] To enable uplink MU transmission, trigger-based communication is provided to the MIMO radio network. In this regard, Figure 1C shows a schematic diagram of trigger-based uplink MU communication 128 between AP 130 and several STAs 132, 134, 136 in a MIMO radio network.
[0027] Since multiple STA 132, 134, and 136 devices participate in this trigger-based uplink MU communication, AP 130 needs to coordinate the simultaneous transmission of multiple STA 132, 134, and 136 devices.
[0028] To this end, as shown in Figure 1C, AP 130 simultaneously transmits trigger frames 139, 141, and 143 to STAs 132, 134, and 136, indicating user-specific resource allocation information available to each STA (e.g., the number of spatiotemporal streams, the starting STS number, and the allocated RUs). In response to the trigger frames, STAs 132, 134, and 136 can simultaneously transmit their respective spatiotemporal streams to AP 130 according to the user-specific resource allocation information shown in trigger frames 139, 141, and 143. For example, two spatiotemporal streams may be directed from STA 134 to AP 130, another spatiotemporal stream from STA 132 to AP 130, and yet another spatiotemporal stream from STA 136 to AP 130. For the sake of brevity, the two spatiotemporal streams from STA 134 to AP 130 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 140, the spatiotemporal stream from STA 132 to AP 130 is shown as data transmission arrow 138, and the spatiotemporal stream from STA 136 to AP 130 is shown as data transmission arrow 142.
[0029] Furthermore, trigger-based communication is provided to the MIMO radio network to enable downlink multi-AP communication. In this regard, Figure 1D shows a schematic diagram of downlink multi-AP communication 144 between STA 150 and multiple APs 146,148 in a MIMO radio network.
[0030] Because multiple APs 146 and 148 participate in this trigger-based downlink multi-AP MIMO communication, the master AP 146 needs to coordinate the simultaneous transmission of multiple APs 146 and 148.
[0031] To this end, as shown in Figure 1D, the master AP 146 simultaneously sends trigger frames 147 and 153 to AP 148 and STA 150, indicating AP-specific resource allocation information available to each AP (e.g., the number of spatiotemporal streams, the starting STS stream number, and the allocated RUs). In response to the trigger frames, multiple APs 146 and 148 can send their respective spatiotemporal streams to STA 150 according to the AP-specific resource allocation information shown in trigger frame 147. STA 150 can receive all spatiotemporal streams according to the AP-specific resource allocation information shown in trigger frame 153. For example, two spatiotemporal streams are directed from AP 146 to STA 150, and two other spatiotemporal streams are directed from AP 148 to STA 150. For the sake of brevity, the two spatiotemporal streams directed from AP 146 to STA 150 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 152, and the two spatiotemporal streams directed from AP 148 to STA 150 are shown as a single data transmission arrow 154.
[0032] In 802.11 WLANs, due to packet / PPDU (Physical Layer Protocol Data Unit) based transmission and distributed MAC (Media Access Control) schemes, there is no time scheduling (e.g., the allocation of periodic time slots for data transmission, such as in TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)). Frequency and spatial resource scheduling is performed on a packet-by-packet basis. In other words, resource allocation information is PPDU-based.
[0033] Figure 2A shows an example of the format of a PPDU 200 used for SU communication between APs and STAs in an HE WLAN. Such a PPDU 200 is referred to as an HE SU PPDU 200. An HE SU PPDU 200 may include a non-high-throughput short training field (L-STF), a non-high-throughput long training field (L-LTF), a non-high-throughput signal (L-SIG) field, a repeated L-SIG (RL-SIG) field, an HE signal A (HE-SIG-A) field 202, an HE short training field (HE-STF), an HE long training field (HE-LTF), a data field, and a packet extension (PE) field. The RL-SIG field is primarily used to identify the format of the HE PPDU. The HE-SIG-A field 202 contains control information necessary for decoding the data field, such as uplink / downlink, modulation coding scheme (MCS), and bandwidth (BW).
[0034] Figure 2B shows an example of a PPDU 204 format used for downlink MU communication between an AP and multiple STAs in an HE WLAN, such as OFDMA transmission or full-band MU-MIMO transmission. Such a PPDU 204 is referred to as an HE MU PPDU 204. An HE MU PPDU may have a format similar to an HE SU PPDU, but may include an HE Signal B (HE-SIG-B) field 210. In particular, an HE MU PPDU 204 may include an L-STF field, an L-LTF field, an L-SIG field, an RL-SIG field, an HE-SIG-A field 206, an HE-SIG-B field 210, an HE-STF field, an HE-LTF field, a Data field 214, and a PE field. In the HE MU PPDU 204, the HE-SIG-B field 210 provides OFDMA and MU-MIMO resource allocation information so that the STA can identify the corresponding resource used in the Data field 214, as indicated by arrow 212. The HE-SIG-A field 206 contains the information necessary to decode the HE-SIG-B field 210 (e.g., the MCS of HE-SIG-B, the number of HE-SIG-B symbols), as indicated by arrow 208.
[0035] Figure 2C shows the HE-SIG-B field 210 in more detail. The HE-SIG-B field 210 includes (or consists of) a Common field 216 (if present) followed by a User Specific field 218, which together are referred to as the HE-SIG-B content channel. The HE-SIG-B field 210 includes an RU Allocation subfield that shows RU information for each allocation. The RU information includes the location of the RU in the frequency domain, information indicating the RU allocated for non-MU-MIMO or MU-MIMO allocations, and the number of users in the MU-MIMO allocation. The Common field 216 is not present in the case of full-bandwidth MU-MIMO transmission. In this case, the RU information (e.g., the number of users in the MU-MIMO allocation) is shown in the HE-SIG-A field 202.
[0036] The User Specific field 218 includes (or consists of) one or more User fields for non-MU-MIMO assignments and / or MU-MIMO assignments. The User field contains user information (i.e., user-specific assignment information) indicating a user-specific assignment. In the example shown in Figure 2C, the User Specific field 218 includes five User fields (User Field 0, ..., User Field 4), where User Specific assignment information for assignment 0 is provided by User Field 0, User Specific assignment information for a further assignment (Assignment 1, which includes three MU-MIMO users) is provided by User Field 1, User Field 2, and User Field 3, and User Specific assignment information for a further assignment (Assignment 2) is provided by User Field 4.
[0037] Figure 2D shows the format of a PPDU 220 used for uplink MU communication between an AP and multiple STAs in an HE WLAN. Such a PPDU 220 is referred to as an HE TB (trigger-based) PPDU 220. An HE TB PPDU can have a format similar to an HE SU PPDU. Specifically, an HE TB PPDU 220 may include an L-STF field, an L-LTF field, an L-SIG field, an RL-SIG field, an HE-SIG-A field 222, an HE-STF field, an HE-LTF field, a Data field, and a PE field. The HE-STF of the HE TB PPDU 220 has a duration of 8 μs. The HE TB PPDU 220 is used for uplink MU transmission in response to a trigger frame. Instead of using the HE-SIG-B field, the information required for uplink MU transmission from one or more STAs is conveyed by a trigger frame requesting this transmission. In a typical HE TB PPDU 220 transmission, HE-SIG-A related information is copied from the requested trigger frame to the HE-SIG-A field 222 of the HE TB PPDU 220.
[0038] In 11ax HE WLANs, only preamble puncturing of PPDUs transmitted to multiple STAs is permitted. With the maximum channel bandwidth increasing from 160 MHz to 320 MHz, the object of this disclosure is to substantially overcome the existing challenge of providing communication devices and methods that perform control signaling to enable preamble puncturing of PPDUs transmitted to a single or multiple STAs in order to improve the spectral efficiency of EHT WLANs to a level exceeding that of 11ax HE WLANs. In particular, this disclosure provides preamble puncturing of PPDUs used in SU, MU-MIMO, or OFDMA transmissions. Depending on the various embodiments, the term “preamble puncturing” may be used interchangeably with the term “channel puncturing.”
[0039] According to various embodiments, the EHT WLAN supports non-trigger-based communication as shown in Figures 1A and 1B, and trigger-based communication as shown in Figures 1C and 1D. In non-trigger-based communication, a communication device sends a PPDU to one or more other communication devices without explicit request. In trigger-based communication, a communication device sends a PPDU to one or more other communication devices only after receiving a requested trigger frame.
[0040] Figure 3A shows a partially framed schematic diagram of the communication device 300 according to this disclosure. The communication device 300 can be implemented as an AP or STA.
[0041] As shown in Figure 3A, the communication device 300 may include a circuit 314, at least one radio transmitter 302, at least one radio receiver 304, and at least one antenna 312 (only one antenna is shown in Figure 3A for illustrative purposes for simplicity). The circuit 314 may include at least one controller 306 for use in performing tasks designed to be performed by at least one controller 306, including controlling communication with one or more other communication devices in a MIMO radio network, with the assistance of software and hardware. The circuit 314 may further include at least one transmit signal generator 308 and at least one receive signal processor 310. At least one controller 306 can control at least one transmit signal generator 308 to generate PPDUs (e.g., PPDUs used for non-trigger-based communication or trigger-based multi-AP joint transmission if communication device 300 is an AP, and PPDUs used for non-trigger-based communication or trigger-based uplink transmission if communication device 300 is an STA), and can also control at least one receive signal processor 310 to process PPDUs (e.g., PPDUs used for non-trigger-based communication or trigger-based uplink transmission if communication device 300 is an AP, and PPDUs used for non-trigger-based communication or trigger-based multi-AP joint transmission if communication device 300 is an STA) received from one or more other communication devices via at least one radio receiver 304 under the control of at least one controller 306. At least one transmit signal generator 308 and at least one receive signal processor 310 can be a standalone module of the communication device 300, communicating with at least one controller 306 for the functions described above, as shown in Figure 3A.Alternatively, at least one transmit signal generator 308 and at least one receive signal processor 310 may be included in at least one controller 306. Those skilled in the art will understand that the arrangement of these functional modules is flexible and can vary according to actual needs and / or requirements. Data processing devices, storage devices, and other related control devices can be provided on a suitable circuit board and / or chipset. In various embodiments, at least one radio transmitter 302, at least one radio receiver 304, and at least one antenna 312 can be controlled by at least one controller 306 during operation.
[0042] The communication device 300, when in operation, provides the functions necessary for control signaling in non-trigger-based and trigger-based communications. For example, the communication device 300 can be an AP, and the circuit 314 (e.g., at least one transmit signal generator 308 of the circuit 314) can, when in operation, generate a transmit signal (e.g., a PPDU used for non-trigger-based communications or a PPDU used for trigger-based multi-AP joint transmission) including a first signal field and a second signal field, in which case the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, where the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information if the transmit signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal. The radio transmitter 302 can, when in operation, transmit the generated transmit signal to one or more other communication devices.
[0043] The communication device 300 can be an STA, and the wireless receiver 304, when in operation, receives a transmission signal (e.g., a PPDU used for non-trigger-based communication, or a PPDU used for trigger-based multi-AP co-transmission) including a first signal field and a second signal field, in which case the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, where the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information if the transmission signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmission signal. Circuit 314 (e.g., at least one received signal processor 310 of circuit 314) can process the received transmission signal when in operation.
[0044] Figure 3B is a flowchart 316 illustrating a communication method for transmitting a generated transmit signal according to the present disclosure. In step 318, a transmit signal is generated, and the transmit signal (e.g., a PPDU used for non-trigger-based communication, or a PPDU used for trigger-based multi-AP co-transmission) comprises a first signal field and a second signal field, wherein the first signal field comprises punctured channel information and the second signal field comprises supplemental punctured channel information, where the second signal field does not comprise supplemental punctured channel information if the transmit signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal. In step 320, the generated transmit signal is transmitted to one or more other communication devices.
[0045] In various embodiments, when the transmitted signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmitted signal, a second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, which, together with the punctured channel information, indicates the channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmitted signal. According to one embodiment of the present disclosure, when the transmitted signal is used for puncturing OFDMA transmission and the punctured channel information cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmitted signal, a second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, which, together with the punctured channel information, indicates the channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmitted signal. In one embodiment, the punctured channel information can indicate all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz). In another embodiment, the punctured channel information may show all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz) and a portion of the channel puncturing patterns for bandwidths greater than the defined bandwidth. This enables preamble puncturing for PPDUs transmitted to a single or multiple communication devices, which can advantageously provide more efficient signaling support and improved spectral efficiency for 11be EHT WLANs compared to 11ax HE WLANs.
[0046] The following paragraphs describe specific exemplary embodiments of control signaling that enable preamble puncturing of PPDUs transmitted to a single or multiple communication devices in non-trigger-based communications, in relation to APs and multiple STAs.
[0047] Figure 4 shows a flowchart 400 illustrating downlink communication according to the present disclosure, where downlink communication is communication between AP 402 and a single STA 404, or between AP 402 and multiple communication devices (STA 404, STA 406, etc.). A contention-based channel access procedure, such as an enhanced distributed channel access (EDCA) procedure, is shown by block 408, and a short interframe spacing (SIFS) 411 is shown. AP 402 can generate a transmit signal (e.g., EHT basic PPDU) 410 including a first signal field and a second signal field, wherein the first signal field includes punctured channel information and the second signal field includes supplemental punctured channel information, where the second signal field does not include supplemental punctured channel information when the transmit signal is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission and the punctured channel information can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the transmit signal. The AP 402 radio transmitter can transmit the generated transmission signal 410 to the STA 404 or STA 404,406.
[0048] In an IEEE 802.11 network, SIFS is the time interval before an acknowledgment is sent by an STA. After the last symbol of transmit signal 410 is sent, SIFS 411 becomes active, and 412 means that when transmit signal 410 is sent to STA 404,406, the radio transmitters of STA 404,406 can simultaneously send their respective block acknowledgment (BA) frames 414,415, or when transmit signal 410 is sent to STA 404, the radio transmitter of STA 404 can send its own BA frame 414.
[0049] According to this disclosure, the EHT basic PPDU can be used for non-trigger-based SU or MU communications. Figure 5A shows an example of the format of the EHT basic PPDU 500. The EHT basic PPDU 500 includes an L-STF field, an L-LTF field, an L-SIG field, an RL-SIG field, a universal signal (U-SIG) field 502, an EHT signal (EHT-SIG) field 504, an EHT-STF field, an EHT-LTF field, a Data field, and a PE field. The L-STF field, L-LTF field, L-SIG field, RL-SIG field, U-SIG field, and EHT-SIG field can be grouped as pre-EHT modulated fields, and the EHT-STF field, EHT-LTF field, Data field, and PE field can be grouped as EHT modulated fields. Both U-SIG field 502 and EHT-SIG field 504 are present in the EHT base PPDU sent to a single STA or multiple STAs.
[0050] According to various embodiments, the U-SIG field 502 has the duration of two OFDM (orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing) symbols. The data bits of the U-SIG field 502 are encoded and modulated together, similar to the HE-SIG-A field in 802.11ax. The modulated data bits of the U-SIG field 502 are mapped to 52 data tones each of the two OFDM symbols, similar to the HE-SIG-A field in 802.11ax, and duplicated for every 20 MHz frequency segment. An example of transmitting the U-SIG field 502 when the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500 is 80 MHz is shown in Figure 5B. According to various embodiments, the term “frequency segment” may be used interchangeably with the term “subchannel.”
[0051] In various embodiments, the U-SIG field 502 has the same format regardless of whether the EHT basic PPDU 500 is transmitted to a single STA or multiple STAs. The U-SIG field 502 comprises two parts, U-SIG1 and U-SIG2, each containing 26 data bits. The U-SIG field 502 includes all version-independent bits and some version-dependent bits. All version-independent bits are contained in U-SIG1 and have a static position and bit definition across different physical layer (PHY) versions, and the version-independent bits include a PHY version identifier (3 bits), an uplink / downlink (UL / DL) flag (1 bit), a basic service set (BSS) color (e.g., 6 bits), a transmit opportunity (TXOP) duration (e.g., 7 bits), and a bandwidth (e.g., 3 or 4 bits). The PHY version identifier in the version-independent bits is used to identify the exact PHY version starting with 802.11be. The effect of including all version-independent bits in one part of the U-SIG field 502 (i.e., U-SIG1) is that legacy STAs only need to parse U-SIG1, thus improving their power efficiency. On the other hand, version-dependent bits may have variable bit definitions for each version of the PHY. The version-dependent bit portion included in the U-SIG field 502 may include, in addition to the PPDU type, EHT-SIG related bits used to interpret the EHT-SIG field 504 and space reuse related bits used to coexist with unintended STAs.
[0052] [Table 1] Table 1 shows an example of the format of U-SIG field 502. As mentioned above, U-SIG field 502 consists of two parts, U-SIG1 and U-SIG2, each containing 26 data bits. U-SIG1 includes the PHY Version Identifier field, the UL / DL Flag field, the BSS Color field, the TXOP Duration field, the BW (Bandwidth) field, and the PPDU Type field. U-SIG2 includes an EHT-SIG Compression field, an EHT-SIG Dual sub-Carrier Modulation (DCM) field, an EHT-SIG EHT MCS field, an EHT-SIG Symbols Or Non-OFDMA Users field, a Spatial Reuse field, followed by a spare bit, a Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) field for error detection, and a tail bit. In one embodiment, if the PHY Version Identifier field points to 802.11be, the PPDU Type field can be set to "0" for an EHT basic PPDU and "1" for an EHT TB PPDU. Unless otherwise specified herein, it will be apparent to those with the ordinary art in this field that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of most of the U-SIG Field 502 fields listed in Table 1 are derived from the 802.11ax specification.
[0053] Returning to Figure 5A, the EHT-SIG field 504 of the EHT base PPDU 500 may include the remaining version-dependent bits. The EHT-SIG field 504 has a variable MCS and a variable length. The EHT-SIG field 504 has a Common field followed by a User Specific field, which together are referred to as the EHT-SIG content channel. The User Specific field includes one or more user fields. The Common field includes a first part and may include a second part. The first part may include information common to all scheduled STAs except RU allocation information, while the second part may include RU allocation information. The first part may include a fixed number of data bits and may be the same across all EHT-SIG content channels, while the second part may differ between EHT-SIG content channels.
[0054] Unlike the U-SIG field 502, the format of the EHT-SIG field 504 depends on whether the EHT base PPDU 500 is transmitted to a single STA or to multiple STAs. If the EHT base PPDU 500 is transmitted to a single STA, there is one EHT-SIG content channel, regardless of the EHT base PPDU's BW, and it is duplicated for each 20MHz frequency segment. If the EHT base PPDU 500 is transmitted to multiple STAs, there are one or two EHT-SIG content channels, depending on the EHT base PPDU 500's BW. Specifically, the EHT-SIG field 504, including the Common field and the User Specific field, is encoded separately for each L × 20MHz frequency segment (L=1 or 2).
[0055] Figure 5C is a table showing how the number of EHT-SIG content channels depends on the bandwidth and the value of L when the EHT base PPDU 500 is transmitted to multiple STAs. As shown in Figure 5C, in an embodiment where the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is 20 MHz, the EHT-SIG field 504 is encoded every 20 MHz, and there is only one EHT-SIG content channel, so L is always 1. In an embodiment where the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is 40 MHz, the AP can assign a value of 1 or 2 to L. If L is set to "1", there will be two EHT-SIG content channels. If L is set to "2", there will be only one EHT-SIG content channel. In embodiments where the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is 80MHz, 80+80MHz, 160MHz, 160+80MHz, 240MHz, 160+160MHz, or 320MHz, there are two EHT-SIG content channels regardless of the value of L. This is explained in more detail below.
[0056] Figure 5D shows a diagram of the mapping of one or two EHT-SIG content channels in a 40MHz EHT basic PPDU. The number of EHT-SIG content channels depends on the bandwidth and the value of L, as shown in Figure 5C. A 40MHz channel contains two 20MHz frequency segments. When L=1, there are two EHT-SIG content channels (i.e., EHT-SIG content channel 1 and EHT-SIG content channel 2), transmitted on the first and second 20MHz frequency segments, respectively. When L=2, there is only one EHT-SIG content channel.
[0057] Figure 5E shows the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels (i.e., EHT-SIG content channel 1 and EHT-SIG content channel 2) in an 80MHz EHT basic PPDU. When L=1, in an 80MHz channel containing four 20MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first and third 20MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second and fourth 20MHz frequency segments. When L=2, in an 80MHz channel containing two 40MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is transmitted in the first 40MHz frequency segment, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is transmitted in the second 40MHz frequency segment.
[0058] Figure 5F shows the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels in an 80+80MHz or 160MHz EHT basic PPDU. When L=1, in an 80+80MHz or 160MHz channel containing eight 20MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first, third, fifth, and seventh 20MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth 20MHz frequency segments. When L=2, in an 80+80MHz or 160MHz channel containing four 40MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first and third 40MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second and fourth 40MHz frequency segments.
[0059] Figure 5G shows the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels in a 160+80MHz or 240MHz EHT basic PPDU. When L=1, in a 160+80MHz or 240MHz channel containing 12 20MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first, third, fifth, seventh, ninth, and eleventh 20MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second, fourth, sixth, eighth, tenth, and twelfth 20MHz frequency segments. When L=2, in a 160+80MHz or 240MHz channel containing six 40MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first, third, and fifth 40MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second, fourth, and sixth 40MHz frequency segments.
[0060] Figure 5H shows the mapping of two EHT-SIG content channels in a 160+160MHz or 320MHz EHT basic PPDU. When L=1, in a 160+160MHz or 320MHz channel containing 16 20MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first, third, fifth, seventh, ninth, eleventh, thirteenth, and fifteenth 20MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second, fourth, sixth, eighth, tenth, twelfth, fourteenth, and sixteenth 20MHz frequency segments. When L=2, in a 160+160MHz or 320MHz channel containing eight 40MHz frequency segments, EHT-SIG content channel 1 is duplicated and transmitted in the first, third, fifth, and seventh 40MHz frequency segments, and EHT-SIG content channel 2 is duplicated and transmitted in the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth 40MHz frequency segments.
[0061] According to various embodiments of this disclosure, the U-SIG field 502 includes punctured channel information. There are two options for the punctured channel information conveyed in the U-SIG field 502: (i) the punctured channel information is conveyed in the Punctured Channel Info field, or (ii) the punctured channel information is conveyed in the BW field along with bandwidth information. For example, in option 2, i.e., the punctured channel information and BW information are conveyed in the BW field of the U-SIG field 502, the BW field of the U-SIG field 502 is "0" for 20MHz, "1" for 40MHz, "2" for the 80MHz non-preamble puncturing mode, "3" for the 160MHz and 80+80MHz non-preamble puncturing modes, and 240MHz and 160+80MHz non-preamble puncturing... The setting is "4" for preamble puncturing mode, "5" for 320MHz and 160+160MHz non-preamble puncturing mode, "6" for 80MHz preamble puncturing mode, "7" for 160MHz and 80+80MHz preamble puncturing mode, "8" for 240MHz and 160+80MHz preamble puncturing mode, and "9" for 320MHz and 160+160MHz preamble puncturing mode. Note that preamble puncturing mode is only permitted when the PPDU's BW is 80MHz or higher.
[0062] According to a first embodiment of this disclosure, the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 may include supplemental punctured channel information depending on the transmission mode of the EHT base PPDU 500. For the EHT base PPDU 500 used for full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, the EHT-SIG field 504 does not include supplemental punctured channel information or RU allocation information. For the EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, the EHT-SIG field 504 includes supplemental punctured channel information but does not include RU allocation information, and the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504 together indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. For the EHT base PPDU 500 used for OFDMA transmission, the EHT-SIG field 504 does not include supplemental punctured channel information but does include RU allocation information. The punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 and the RU allocation information in EHT-SIG field 504 together indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. Specifically, the RU allocation information in EHT-SIG field 504 may indicate that one or more 20MHz subchannels are not allocated. One or more unallocated 20MHz subchannels have the same effect as one or more punctured 20MHz subchannels.
[0063] This configuration of the EHT base PPDU, in which U-SIG field 502 contains punctured channel information and EHT-SIG field 504 contains supplemental punctured channel information, allows for the early acquisition of as much punctured channel information as possible, which is advantageous.
[0064] According to a first embodiment of this disclosure, different EHT-SIG compression modes can be enabled depending on the required information contained in the EHT-SIG field 504 of the EHT base PPDU 500. Three different EHT-SIG compression modes may exist: (i) Compression mode 0 used for OFDMA transmission, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 contains RU allocation information but does not contain supplemental punctured channel information; (ii) Compression mode 1 used for full-bandwidth SU or MU-MIMO, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information or supplemental punctured channel information; (iii) Compression mode 2 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information but does contain supplemental punctured channel information. In the following various embodiments, EHT-SIG compression mode 0 refers to no compression of the EHT-SIG field 504.
[0065] In one embodiment, the EHT-SIG compression mode can be indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field and BW field of the U-SIG field 502. Table 2 shows how the various EHT-SIG compression modes are indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field and BW field of the U-SIG field 502. For EHT-SIG compression mode 0 used for OFDMA transmission, the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "0" regardless of the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500. The Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 contains RU allocation information but does not contain supplemental punctured channel information. For EHT-SIG compression mode 1 used for full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", and the value of the BW field is one of "0" to "5" (i.e., non-preamble puncturing mode). The Common field of EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information or supplemental punctured channel information. For EHT-SIG compression mode 2 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", and the value of the BW field is one of "5" to "9" (i.e., preamble puncturing mode). The Common field of EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information but does contain supplemental punctured channel information. [Table 2]
[0066] Furthermore, SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission is indicated through the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field in the U-SIG field 502, if the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to 1. Specifically, a value of "0" in the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field indicates SU transmission.
[0067] Figure 6 shows a flowchart 600 illustrating the processing of a received EHT base PPDU 500 in an AP or STA according to the first embodiment. Processing can begin by determining whether the EHT-SIG Compression field of the U-SIG field 502 of the received EHT base PPDU 500 is set to "1". If it is set to "1", step 608 is executed; otherwise, step 604 is executed. In step 604, the EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is determined, and then in step 606, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT base PPDU 500 can be obtained from the punctured channel information and RU allocation information obtained from the U-SIG field 502 and the EHT-SIG field 504, respectively. Processing can continue by returning to step 608 and determining whether the BW field is set to a value greater than "5". If the BW field is not set to a value greater than "5", step 610 determines EHT-SIG compression mode 1, which indicates full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission; otherwise, step 612 is performed. In step 612, EHT-SIG compression mode 2, which indicates puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, is determined, and then in step 614, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT base PPDU 500 is obtained from the punctured channel information and supplemental punctured channel information obtained from the U-SIG field 502 and EHT-SIG field 504, respectively.
[0068] [Table 3] Returning to EHT-SIG field 504, Table 3 shows an example of the format of the first part of the Common field in EHT-SIG field 504. As shown above, the first part of the Common field contains information common to all scheduled STAs except RU allocation information and contains a predetermined number of data bits which may be the same across all EHT-SIG content channels. Specifically, the first part of the Common field may include the Low Density Parity Code (LDPC) Extra Symbol Segment subfield, the Pre-FEC Padding Factor subfield, the PE Disambiguity subfield, the Doppler subfield, the GI-LTF Size subfield, the EHT-LTF Mode subfield, and the Number of EHT-LTF Symbols and Midamble Periodicity subfield.
[0069] Examples of the format of the second part of the Common field in EHT-SIG field 504 are shown in Tables 9 and 10. The second part of the Common field in EHT-SIG field 504 may contain RU allocation information and / or supplemental punctured channel information, which may differ between EHT-SIG content channels. Similar to punctured channel information and bandwidth information, which may be contained in a single field or two separate fields in U-SIG field 502, RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information may be contained in a single field in the second part of the Common field (e.g., the RU Allocation Or Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field), the size of which depends on the BW and compression mode, as shown in Table 9. Alternatively, RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information can be included in two separate fields in the second part of the Common field (for example, the RU Allocation Info field and the Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field, respectively), in which case the field size of each of the RU Allocation Info and Supplemental Punctured Channel Info fields depends on the BW, as shown in Table 10. Specifically, the second part of the Common field in the EHT-SIG field 504 may contain a bitmap for conveying supplemental punctured channel information, for example, a 3-bit bitmap for an 80MHz BW, a 7-bit bitmap for a 160MHz or 80+80MHz BW, an 11-bit bitmap for a 240MHz or 160+80MHz BW, and a 15-bit bitmap for a 320MHz or 160+160MHz BW. This bitmap shows whether each 20MHz subchannel, other than the primary 20MHz, is punctured.Please note that preamble puncturing mode is only permitted when the BW of the EHT base PPDU is 80 MHz or higher. Also, please note that in EHT-SIG compression mode 1, EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain either RU allocation information or supplemental punctured channel information.
[0070] Examples of the format of the User field in the EHT-SIG field 504 for non-MU-MIMO and MU-MIMO assignments are shown in Tables 4 and 5, respectively. For non-MU-MIMO assignments, the User field may include the STA ID field, EHT MCS field, DCM field, NSTS field, Coding field, and Beamformed field, while for MU-MIMO assignments, the User field may include the STA ID field, EHT MCS field, Spatial Configuration field, and Coding field. Unless otherwise specified herein, it will be apparent to those with ordinary art in this field that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of all fields in the Common and User fields listed in Tables 3-5, 9, and 10 are derived from the 802.11ax specification. [Table 4] [Table 5]
[0071] A user-specific field can consist of one or more user block fields, each user block field containing one or two user fields. For example, as shown in Figures 7A and 7B, a user-specific field can contain three user block fields 1, 2, and 3, where user block field 1 contains two user fields such as user field 1 and user field 2, user block field 2 contains two user fields such as user field 3 and user field 4, and user block field 3 contains one user field 5. Each user block field 1-3 may have one or two user fields appended with a CRC field and a tail bit for error detection. In one embodiment, the final user block may consist of one or two user fields, depending on the total number of user fields allowed in the User Specific field, which indicates an odd or even number.
[0072] According to this disclosure, the first and second portions of the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 or EHT-SIG content channel can be encoded together or separately, resulting in different options for the EHT-SIG field format. Figure 7A shows an example of the EHT-SIG content channel format for the EHT-SIG field 504 where the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the Common field 702 are encoded together (Option 1). In this option, the first portion 702a of the Common field 702 is followed by the second portion 702b of the Common field 702, with a single block of CRC field and tail bits appended to the second portion 702b. Such an EHT-SIG field format with a Common field encoded together reduces the number of CRC field and tail bits used in the EHT-SIG field, and therefore advantageously reduces signaling overhead.
[0073] Figure 7B shows an example of another format for the EHT-SIG content channel or EHT-SIG field 504, in which the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the Common field 702 are encoded separately (Option 2). In this option, the CRC field and tail bit can be included at the end of each separately encoded field, i.e., the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the Common field 702. In one embodiment, when EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is enabled, for example, when the EHT-SIG Compression field of the U-SIG field 502 is set to "1" and the BW field of the U-SIG field 502 is set to one of "0"-"5" indicating full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, the second portion 702b of the Common field, which contains RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information, does not need to be present. In this case, both option 1 and option 2 for the format of EHT-SIG field 504 or EHT-SIG content channel will be the same.
[0074] In yet another embodiment, the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the common field of the EHT-SIG content channel or EHT-SIG field 504 can be encoded separately or together, depending on which compression mode is enabled. When EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is enabled, the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 are encoded separately, while when EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is enabled, the first portion 702a and the second portion 702b of the common field are encoded together to reduce the signaling overhead of the EHT-SIG field.
[0075] According to a second embodiment of this disclosure, when the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, if the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, then supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information. On the other hand, if the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, then the EHT-SIG field 504 includes supplemental punctured channel information, and the supplemental punctured channel information, together with the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, indicates the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500.
[0076] In one embodiment, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can be configured to show all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz). When the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing-type SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, if the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500 is less than or equal to the defined bandwidth, supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information.
[0077] In another embodiment, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can be configured to show all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz) and some of the channel puncturing patterns at bandwidths greater than the defined bandwidth. When the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary if the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500 is less than or equal to the defined bandwidth, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information. If the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is greater than the defined BW, and a portion of the channel puncturing pattern for BWs greater than the defined BW that can be indicated by the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 includes the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, then supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information.
[0078] In yet another embodiment, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can be configured to indicate multiple possible channel puncturing patterns for different BWs. If the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing-type SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, and the multiple channel puncturing patterns for different BWs that the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate include channel puncturing patterns applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, then supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information.
[0079] The effect of implementing this is that compression mode 1 can be enabled in more use cases, and therefore the signaling overhead of the EHT-SIG field can be minimized. Specifically, according to the second embodiment, there may be three different EHT-SIG compression modes for the EHT-SIG field 504 of the EHT base PPDU 500: (i) compression mode 0 (i.e., no compression), in which the common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 contains RU allocation information used for OFDMA transmission but does not contain supplemental punctured channel information; (ii) compression mode 1 used for SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, in which the common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information; (iii) compression mode 2 used for SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, in which the common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information but does contain supplemental punctured channel information.
[0080] In particular, EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is effective for EHT base PPDU 500 used for SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission where supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504 is not required. Examples of use cases include EHT base PPDU 500 used for full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission (Use Case 1), or EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission where the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 (Use Case 2). In EHT-SIG compression mode 1, the Common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain either RU allocation information or supplemental punctured channel information.
[0081] EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is effective for EHT base PPDU 500 used in SU or MU-MIMO transmissions where supplemental punctured channel information in EHT-SIG 504 is required. An example use case is an EHT base PPDU 500 used in SU or MU-MIMO transmissions where the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. In EHT-SIG compression mode 2, the Common field 702b of EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information but does contain supplemental punctured channel information.
[0082] According to the second embodiment, the second use case of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 and the use case of EHT-SIG compression mode 2 differ depending on the content of the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502. For example, assume that the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. Under this assumption, the second use case of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be further divided into two use cases. Specifically, there is the EHT basic PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission when the BW of the EHT basic PPDU 500 is 80 MHz (Use Case 2.1), and the EHT basic PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission when the BW of the EHT basic PPDU 500 is greater than 80 MHz and the 20 MHz subchannel outside the primary 80 MHz is not punctured (Use Case 2.2). On the other hand, the use case for EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is the EHT basic PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission when the BW of the EHT basic PPDU 500 is greater than 80 MHz and at least one 20 MHz subchannel outside the primary 80 MHz is punctured.
[0083] [Table 6] Table 6 shows an example of the format of the U-SIG field 502 of the EHT Basic PPDU 500. The U-SIG field 502 consists of two parts, U-SIG1 and U-SIG2, each containing 26 data bits. U-SIG1 includes all version-independent bits, such as the PHY Version Identifier field, UL / DL Flag field, BSS Color field, TXOP Duration field, and BW field, as well as some version-dependent bits, such as the PPDU Type field, and some EHT-SIG related bits, such as the EHT-SIG Compression field and the EHT-SIG DCM field. U-SIG2 includes the remaining version-dependent bits such as the EHT-SIG EHT MCS field, the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols Or Non-OFDMA Users field, the Spatial Reuse field, and the Punctured Channel Info field, followed by the spare bits, the CRC field, and the tail bit. Unless otherwise specified herein, it will be apparent to those with the common art that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of most of the U-SIG Field 502 fields listed in Table 6 are derived from the 802.11ax specification.
[0084] Specifically, the Punctured Channel Info field is a 4-bit bitmap, of which three least significant bits (LSB) indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and the most significant bit (MSB) indicates whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz that is reserved for the 80MHz BW is punctured. The BW field of U-SIG field 502 is set to "0" for 20MHz, "1" for 40MHz, "2" for 80MHz, "3" for 160MHz and 80+80MHz, "4" for 240MHz and 160+80MHz, and "5" for 320MHz and 160+160MHz.
[0085] In one embodiment, the EHT-SIG compression mode can be indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field, the Punctured Channel Info field, and the BW field of the U-SIG field 502. Table 11 shows how various EHT-SIG compression modes are indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field, the Punctured Channel Info field, and the BW field of the U-SIG field 502. In particular, if the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "0", which indicates OFDMA transmission, EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is enabled regardless of the values of the Punctured Channel Info field and the BW field.
[0086] Table 11 is plotted based on the assumption that the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be enabled in use case 1 regardless of the value of the BW field if the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1" and all non-spare bits in the Punctured Channel Information field are "0", indicating a non-preamble puncturing mode. If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is "2" (BW=80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel in the 80MHz channel that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for punctured SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and therefore EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in use case 2.1.If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", the MSB in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "0", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not a primary 20MHz subchannel is punctured, and no 20MHz subchannels outside the primary 80MHz are punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can also be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and therefore EHT-SIG Compression Mode 1 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in Use Case 2.2.
[0087] If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80 MHz), then at least one 20 MHz subchannel outside the primary 80 MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for punctured SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be determined based on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504, and thus EHT-SIG compression mode 2 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500.
[0088] Furthermore, SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be indicated through the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field in the U-SIG field 502, if the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to 1. Specifically, a value of "0" in the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field indicates SU transmission.
[0089] Examples of the format of the second part of the Common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 are shown in Tables 12 and 13. RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information can be included in a single field (e.g., the RU allocation or Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field) of the second part of the Common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504, as shown in Table 12, and the field size depends on the BW and compression mode. Alternatively, RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information can be included in two separate fields in the second part of the Common field 702b (for example, the RU Allocation Info field and the Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field, respectively), where the field size of each of the RU Allocation Info and Supplemental Punctured Channel Info fields depends on the BW, as shown in Table 13. Specifically, the second part of the Common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 may contain a bitmap for conveying supplemental punctured channel information, for example, 4 bits for a 160 MHz or 80+80 MHz BW, 8 bits for a 240 MHz or 160+80 MHz BW, and 12 bits for a 320 MHz or 160+160 MHz BW. This bitmap shows whether each 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured.
[0090] The first part of Common field 702a and the User field of EHT-SIG field 504 may be identical to those shown in Tables 3 to 5. Unless otherwise specified herein, it will be apparent to those with ordinary art in this field that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of all fields in the Common and User fields listed in Tables 3-5 are derived from the 802.11ax specification.
[0091] Figure 8 shows a flowchart 800 illustrating the processing of a received EHT basic PPDU 500 at an AP or STA according to a second embodiment. Processing can be started in step 802 by determining whether the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "1", indicating SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission. If the EHT-SIG Compression field is not set to "1", in step 804 the EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is determined, and in step 806 the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the RU assignment information in the EHT-SIG field 504, and processing can be terminated.
[0092] If the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "1", step 808 is executed. In step 808, it is determined whether the BW field is set to a value greater than "2" (BW > 80MHz). If the BW field is not set to a value greater than "2", step 810 is executed. In step 810, it is determined whether the BW field is set to "2" (BW = 80MHz) and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1". If BW is not set to "2", or if all three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field are set to "0", in step 812, use case 1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1, i.e., full-band SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, can be determined and processing can be terminated. In step 814, use case 2.1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is determined if the BW field is set to "2" and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel other than the primary 20MHz in the 80MHz channel is punctured.
[0093] Returning to step 808, if it is determined that the BW field is set to a value greater than "2" (BW > 80MHz), step 816 is executed. In step 816, it is further determined whether the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is not set to "1", step 818 determines use case 2.2 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", step 822 determines EHT-SIG compression mode 2. If use case 2.1 or use case 2.2 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is determined in step 814 or step 818, respectively, step 820 is executed. In step 820, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502. On the other hand, if EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is determined in step 822, step 824 is executed. In step 824, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504.
[0094] According to a third embodiment of this disclosure, the puncturing channel signaling described above for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can also be applied to puncturing OFDMA transmission. Specifically, when the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing OFDMA transmission, the EHT-SIG field 504 includes RU allocation information. If the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, the EHT-SIG field 504 does not include supplemental punctured channel information. If the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, the EHT-SIG field 504 includes supplemental punctured channel information. In this case, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504 together represent the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. As a result, less RU allocation information is required in the case of punctured OFDMA transmission, and therefore the signaling overhead of the EHT-SIG field can be reduced.
[0095] In one embodiment, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can be configured to show all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz). When the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing-type SU, MU-MIMO, or OFDMA transmission, if the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500 is less than or equal to the defined bandwidth, supplemental punctured channel information is not required, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information.
[0096] In another embodiment, the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can be configured to show all possible channel puncturing patterns up to a defined bandwidth (e.g., 80 MHz) and some of the channel puncturing patterns at bandwidths greater than the defined bandwidth. When the EHT base PPDU 500 is used for puncturing-type SU, MU-MIMO, or OFDMA transmission, supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary if the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500 is less than or equal to the defined bandwidth, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information. If the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is greater than the defined BW, and a portion of the channel puncturing pattern for BWs greater than the defined BW that can be indicated by the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 includes the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, then supplemental punctured channel information is not necessary, and therefore the EHT-SIG field 504 does not need to include supplemental punctured channel information.
[0097] According to the third embodiment, there may be four different EHT-SIG compression modes for the EHT-SIG field 504 of the EHT base PPDU 500. These are: (i) Compression mode 0, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 includes RU assignment information but does not include supplemental punctured channel information; (ii) Compression mode 1, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not include RU assignment information or supplemental punctured channel information; (iii) Compression mode 2, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 does not include RU assignment information but does include supplemental punctured channel information; and (iv) Compression mode 3, in which the Common field of the EHT-SIG field 504 includes both RU assignment information and supplemental punctured channel information.
[0098] In particular, EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is effective for EHT base PPDU 500 used in OFDMA transmissions where supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504 is not required. Examples of use cases include EHT base PPDU 500 used in full-bandwidth OFDMA transmissions (use case 1 of compression mode 0) and puncturing OFDMA transmissions where the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 (use case 2 of compression mode 0). In EHT-SIG compression mode 0, the Common field of EHT-SIG field 504 contains RU allocation information but does not contain supplemental punctured channel information.
[0099] On the other hand, EHT-SIG compression mode 3 is effective for EHT base PPDU 500 used in puncturing OFDMA transmission where the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. Since the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500, supplemental punctured channel information in EHT-SIG field 504 is required. In EHT-SIG compression mode 3, the Common field of EHT-SIG field 504 includes both RU allocation information and supplemental punctured channel information. Such an implementation of compression mode 3 for puncturing OFDMA transmission can favorably reduce the signaling overhead of the EHT-SIG field because RU allocation information for the punctured (one or more) 20MHz subchannels is not required.
[0100] EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is valid for EHT base PPDU 500 used for SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission where supplemental punctured channel information in EHT-SIG field 504 is not required. Examples of use cases include EHT base PPDU 500 used for full-bandwidth SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission (use case 1 of compression mode 1) and EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission where the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 can indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 (use case 2 of compression mode 1). In EHT-SIG compression mode 1, the common field 702b of EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain either RU allocation information or supplemental punctured channel information.
[0101] EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is effective for EHT base PPDU 500 used in SU or MU-MIMO transmissions where supplemental punctured channel information is required in EHT-SIG 504. An example use case is an EHT base PPDU 500 used in SU or MU-MIMO transmissions where the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 cannot indicate the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500. In EHT-SIG compression mode 2, the Common field 702b of EHT-SIG field 504 does not contain RU allocation information but does contain supplemental punctured channel information.
[0102] The second use case for EHT-SIG compression mode 0 or compression mode 1, and the use case for EHT-SIG compression mode 2 or compression mode 3, depend on the content of the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502. For example, assuming that the punctured channel information in U-SIG field 502 can indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured, then the second use case of EHT-SIG compression mode 0 or 1 can be further divided into two use cases: namely, an EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU, MU-MIMO, or OFDMA transmission when the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is 80MHz (use case 2.1), and an EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU, MU-MIMO, or OFDMA transmission when the BW of the EHT base PPDU 500 is greater than 80MHz and no 20MHz subchannels outside the primary 80MHz are punctured (use case 2.2).
[0103] Table 7 shows an example of the format of the U-SIG field 502 in the EHT Basic PPDU 500. The U-SIG field 502 consists of two parts, U-SIG1 and U-SIG2, each containing 26 data bits. U-SIG1 includes all version-independent bits such as the PHY Version Identifier field, UL / DL Flag field, BSS Color field, TXOP Duration field, and BW field, as well as some version-dependent bits such as the PPDU Type field, and some EHT-SIG related bits such as the EHT-SIG Compression field and the EHT-SIG DCM field. U-SIG2 includes the remaining version-dependent bits such as the EHT-SIG EHT MCS field, the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols Or Non-OFDMA Users field, the Spatial Reuse field, and the Punctured Channel Info field, followed by the spare bits, the CRC field, and the tail bit. Unless otherwise specified herein, it will be apparent to those with the common art that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of most of the U-SIG Field 502 fields listed in Table 7 are derived from the 802.11ax specification. [Table 7]
[0104] Specifically, the Punctured Channel Info field is a 4-bit bitmap, of which three LSBs indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and the MSB indicates whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz that is reserved for the 80MHz BW is punctured. The BW field of U-SIG field 502 is set to "0" for 20MHz, "1" for 40MHz, "2" for 80MHz, "3" for 160MHz and 80+80MHz, "4" for 240MHz and 160+80MHz, and "5" for 320MHz and 160+160MHz.
[0105] In one embodiment, the EHT-SIG compression mode can be indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field, the Punctured Channel Info field, and the BW field of the U-SIG field 502. Table 14 shows how various EHT-SIG compression modes according to a third embodiment of this disclosure are indicated in the EHT-SIG Compression field, the Punctured Channel Info field, and the BW field of the U-SIG field 502. The EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "0" to indicate OFDMA transmission, or to "1" to indicate SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission.
[0106] Table 14 is plotted based on the assumption that the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 can indicate whether each 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured, and whether at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. Regardless of the value of the BW field, EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be enabled in use case 1 when the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1" and all non-spare bits in the Punctured Channel Info field are set to "0", indicating a non-preamble puncturing mode for SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission. If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is "2" (BW=80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel in the 80MHz channel that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for punctured SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and therefore EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in use case 2.1.If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", the MSB in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "0", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel that is not within the primary 80MHz is punctured, and no 20MHz subchannels outside the primary 80MHz are punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can also be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and therefore EHT-SIG compression mode 1 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in use case 2.2.
[0107] If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80 MHz), then at least one 20 MHz subchannel outside the primary 80 MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for punctured SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be determined based on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504, and thus EHT-SIG compression mode 2 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500.
[0108] If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "0" and all non-spare bits in the Punctured Channel Information field are set to "0", indicating a non-preamble puncturing mode for OFDMA transmission, then EHT-SIG compression mode 0 can be enabled in Use Case 1 regardless of the value of the BW field. If the EHT-SIG Compression field is "0", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is "2" (BW=80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel in the 80MHz channel that is not the primary 20MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing OFDMA transmission can be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and thus EHT-SIG compression mode 0 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in use case 2.1. If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "1", at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", the MSB in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "0", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80MHz), then at least one 20MHz subchannel that is not a 20MHz subchannel within the primary 80MHz is punctured, and no 20MHz subchannels outside the primary 80MHz are punctured.In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for puncturing OFDMA transmission can also be determined based solely on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502, and therefore EHT-SIG compression mode 0 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500 in use case 2.2.
[0109] If the value of the EHT-SIG Compression field is "0", the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", and the value of the BW field is greater than "2" (BW > 80 MHz), then at least one 20 MHz subchannel outside the primary 80 MHz is punctured. In this case, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the EHT base PPDU 500 used for punctured OFDMA transmission can be determined based on the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504, and thus EHT-SIG compression mode 3 can be enabled for the EHT base PPDU 500.
[0110] Furthermore, SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission can be indicated through the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field in the U-SIG field 502, if the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to 1. Specifically, a value of "0" in the Number of EHT-SIG Symbols or Non-OFDMA Users field indicates SU transmission.
[0111] Supplemental punctured channel information can be transmitted in the signaling field of the first part of the Common field 702a of the EHT-SIG field 504 (e.g., the Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field), the field size of which depends on the bandwidth of the EHT base PPDU 500. The Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field can contain supplemental punctured channel information for all 20 MHz subchannels outside the primary 80 MHz. One option is that such a Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field is independent of the EHT-SIG content channel, and therefore all EHT-SIG content channels contain the same Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field. This field can contain a bitmap, which is a 4-bit bitmap for 160MHz or 80+80MHz bandwidths, an 8-bit bitmap for 240MHz or 160+80MHz bandwidths, and a 12-bit bitmap for 320MHz or 160+160MHz bandwidths. The bitmap indicates whether each 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured.
[0112] Alternatively, the Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field within the EHT-SIG content channel can include supplemental punctured channel information for a 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz, corresponding only to the EHT-SIG content channel. Such a Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field can be EHT-SIG content channel dependent and therefore different across all EHT-SIG content channels. This field can contain a bitmap, with 2 bits for 160MHz or 80+80MHz bands, 4 bits for 240MHz or 160+80MHz bands, and 6 bits for 320MHz or 160+160MHz bands. Thus, this second implementation option for this field can favorably reduce the signaling overhead of the EHT-SIG field.
[0113] Furthermore, RU allocation can be included in the second part of the Common field 702b of the EHT-SIG field 504 (for example, the RU Allocation Info field), and since RU allocation information for punctured 20 MHz subchannels is not required, its field size is determined by the values of the BW, Punctured Channel Info field, and Supplemental Punctured Channel Info field.
[0114] Figures 9A and 9B show flowcharts 900 illustrating the processing of a received EHT base PPDU 500 at an AP or STA according to a third embodiment. Processing can be initiated in step 902 by determining whether the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "1". If the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "1", indicating SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, step 904 is performed to determine EHT-SIG compression mode 1 or 2. On the other hand, if the EHT-SIG Compression field is set to "0", indicating OFDMA transmission, step 922 is performed to determine EHT-SIG compression mode 0 or 3. Further processing of the received EHT base PPDU 500 used for OFDMA transmission, following step 922, is described in Figure 9B.
[0115] Returning to step 904, it is determined whether the BW field is set to a value greater than "2", where a value of "2" in the BW field indicates that the BW is 80MHz. If the BW field is not set to a value greater than "2", step 906 is performed. In step 906, it is determined whether the BW field is set to "2" and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1". If the BW field is not set to "2", or if all three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field are set to "0", then in step 908, use case 1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1, i.e., full-band SU transmission or MU-MIMO transmission, can be determined and the process can be terminated. In step 910, use case 2.1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is determined if the BW field is set to "2" and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel other than the primary 20MHz in the 80MHz channel is punctured.
[0116] Returning to step 904, if it is determined that the BW field is set to a value greater than "2", step 912 is executed. In step 912, it is further determined whether the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is not set to "1", step 914 determines use case 2.2 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", step 916 determines EHT-SIG compression mode 2. If use case 2.1 or use case 2.2 of EHT-SIG compression mode 1 is determined in step 910 or step 914, respectively, step 918 is executed. In step 918, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502. On the other hand, if EHT-SIG compression mode 2 is determined in step 916, step 920 is performed. In step 920, the channel puncturing pattern applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504.
[0117] Returning to step 922, after determining EHT-SIG compression mode 0 or 3, step 924 is executed. In step 924, it is determined whether the BW field is set to a value greater than "2". If the BW field is not set to a value greater than "2", step 926 is executed. In step 926, it is determined whether the BW field is set to "2" and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1". If BW is not set to "2", or if all three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field are set to "0", in step 928, use case 1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 0, i.e., full-band OFDMA transmission, can be determined and processing can be terminated. In step 930, use case 2.1 of EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is determined if the BW field is set to "2" and at least one of the three LSBs in the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel other than the primary 20MHz in the 80MHz channel is punctured.
[0118] Return to step 924, and if it is determined that the BW field is set to a value greater than "2", perform step 932. In step 932, further determine whether the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", indicating that at least one 20MHz subchannel outside the primary 80MHz is punctured. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is not set to "1", in step 934 determine use case 2.2 for EHT-SIG compression mode 0. If the MSB of the Punctured Channel Info field is set to "1", in step 936 determine EHT-SIG compression mode 3. If use case 2.1 or use case 2.2 for EHT-SIG compression mode 0 is determined in step 930 or step 934, respectively, perform step 938. In step 938, the channel puncturing pattern to be applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502. On the other hand, if EHT-SIG compression mode 3 is determined in step 936, step 940 is performed. In step 940, the channel puncturing pattern to be applied to the received EHT basic PPDU 500 is determined from the punctured channel information in the U-SIG field 502 and the supplemental punctured channel information in the EHT-SIG field 504.
[0119] Figure 10 shows an example of the format of EHT TB PPDU 1000. EHT TB PPDU 1000 has a structure similar to EHT Basic PPDU 500, but lacks the EHT-SIG field 504. EHT TB PPDU 1000 can include L-STF field, L-LTF field, L-SIG field, RL-SIG field, U-SIG field 1002, EHT-STF field, EHT-LTF field, Data field, and PE field. The L-STF field, L-LTF field, L-SIG field, RL-SIG field, and U-SIG field 1002 can be grouped as pre-EHT modulation fields, while the EHT-STF field, EHT-LTF field, Data field, and PE field can be grouped as EHT modulation fields. EHT TB PPDU can be used for trigger-based communication in response to a requested trigger frame. For example, the EHT TB PPDU can be used to transmit BA frames 414,415 by STA 404,406 when the EHT basic PPDU 410 is transmitted to STA 404,406 and includes one or more trigger frames, as shown in Figure 4.
[0120] Table 8 shows an example of the format of the U-SIG field 1002 of the EHT TB PPDU 1000. Similar to the EHT base PPDU 500, the U-SIG field 1002 includes two parts, U-SIG1 and U-SIG2, each containing 26 data bits. In this embodiment, all version-independent bits can be included in U-SIG1. The first part of the U-SIG field 1002, namely U-SIG1, includes the PHY Version Identifier field, the UL / DL Flag field, the BSS Color field, the TXOP Duration field, the BW field, and the PPDU Type field. The PHY Version Identifier field is used to identify the exact PHY version, starting with 802.11be. The second part of U-SIG field 1002, namely U-SIG2, includes the Spatial Reuse 1-4 fields, followed by the CRC field and tail bit. Information on some of the fields in U-SIG field 1002 (e.g., the BW field and Spatial Reuse 1-4 fields) can be copied from the corresponding trigger frame requesting the transmission of the EHT TB PPDU 1000. It will be apparent to those with common art in this field that the standard definitions, protocols, and functions of most of the fields in U-SIG field 1002 of the EHT TB PPDU 1000 are derived from the 802.11ax specification. [Table 8]
[0121] Figure 11 shows the configuration of a communication device 1100 according to various embodiments, for example, an AP. Similar to the schematic example of the communication device 300 shown in Figure 3, the communication device 1100 includes a circuit 1102, at least one radio transmitter 1110, at least one radio receiver 1112, and at least one antenna 1114 (only one antenna is shown in Figure 11 for simplicity). The circuit 1102 may include at least one controller 1108 for use in performing tasks designed for control signaling communications with the assistance of software and hardware. The circuit 1102 may further include a transmit signal generator 1104 and a receive signal processor 1106. At least one controller 1108 can control the transmit signal generator 1104 and the receive signal processor 1106. The transmit signal generator 1104 may include a frame generator 1122, a control signaling generator 1124, and a PPDU generator 1126. The frame generator 1122 can generate MAC frames, such as data frames or trigger frames. The control signaling generator 1124 can generate the control signaling fields of the generated PPDU (e.g., the U-SIG field and EHT-SIG field of the EHT base PPDU). The PPDU generator 1126 can generate a PPDU (e.g., the EHT base PPDU).
[0122] The received signal processor 1106 may include a data demodulator / decoder 1132 capable of demodulating and decoding the data portion of the received signal (e.g., the data field of the EHT basic PPDU or EHT TB PPDU). The received signal processor 1106 may further include a control demodulator / decoder 1134 capable of demodulating and decoding the control signaling portion of the received signal (e.g., the U-SIG field of the EHT basic PPDU or EHT TB PPDU, or the EHT-SIG field of the EHT basic PPDU). At least one controller 1108 may include a control signaling parser 1142 and a scheduler 1144. The scheduler 1144 can determine RU information and user-specific assignment information for downlink SU or MU transmission assignments, as well as trigger information for uplink MU transmission assignments. The control signaling parser 1142 analyzes the control signaling portion of the received signal and trigger information for uplink MU transmission allocation shared by the scheduler 1144, and can assist the data demodulator / decoder 1132 in demodulating and decoding the data portion of the received signal.
[0123] Figure 12 shows the configuration of a communication device 1200 according to various embodiments, for example, an STA. Similar to the schematic example of the communication device 300 shown in Figure 3, the communication device 1200 includes a circuit 1202, at least one radio transmitter 1210, at least one radio receiver 1212, and at least one antenna 1214 (only one antenna is shown in Figure 12 for simplicity). The circuit 1202 may include at least one controller 1208 for use in performing tasks designed for control signaling communications with the assistance of software and hardware. The circuit 1202 may further include a receive signal processor 1206 and a transmit signal generator 1204. At least one controller 1208 can control the receive signal processor 1206 and the transmit signal generator 1204. The receive signal processor 1206 may include a data demodulator / decoder 1232 and a control demodulator / decoder 1234. The control demodulator / decoder 1234 can demodulate and decode the control signaling portion of the received signal (e.g., the U-SIG field and EHT-SIG field of the EHT basic PPDU). The data demodulator / decoder 1232 can demodulate and decode the data portion of the received signal (e.g., the data field of the ETH basic PPDU) according to its own assigned RU information and user-specific assigned information.
[0124] At least one controller 1208 may include a control signaling parser 1242, a scheduler 1244, and a trigger information parser 1246. The control signaling parser 1242 can analyze the control signaling portion of the received signal (e.g., the U-SIG field and EHT-SIG field of the EHT basic PPDU) and assist the data demodulator / decoder 1232 in demodulating and decoding the data portion of the received signal (e.g., the data field of the EHT basic PPDU). The trigger information parser 1248 can analyze trigger information for its own uplink assignment from the received trigger frame contained in the data portion of the received signal. The transmit signal generator 1204 may include a control signaling generator 1224 that can generate the control signaling field of the generated PPDU (e.g., the U-SIG field of the EHT basic PPDU or EHT TB PPDU). The transmit signal generator 1204 may further include a PPDU generator 1226 that generates PPDUs (e.g., EHT basic PPDUs or EHT TB PPDUs). The transmit signal generator 1204 may further include a frame generator 1222 that can generate MAC frames (e.g., data frames).
[0125] As described above, embodiments of the present disclosure provide advanced communication systems, communication methods, and communication devices for control signaling in very high throughput MIMO WLAN networks, thereby improving spectral efficiency in MIMO WLAN networks.
[0126] This disclosure can be implemented by software, by hardware, or by software working in conjunction with hardware. Each functional block used in the description of each embodiment above can be implemented in part or in whole by an LSI such as an integrated circuit, and each process described in each embodiment can be controlled in part or in whole by the same LSI or combination of LSIs. An LSI can be formed individually as multiple chips, or as a single chip containing some or all of the functional blocks. An LSI can include data input / output units coupled to itself. Depending on the degree of integration, LSIs are also called ICs, system LSIs, super LSIs, or ultra LSIs. However, the technology for implementing integrated circuits is not limited to LSIs and can be implemented using dedicated circuits, general-purpose processors, or dedicated processors. Furthermore, a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), which can be programmed after the manufacture of the LSI, or a reconfigurable processor, which can reconfigure the connections and settings of circuit cells located inside the LSI, can also be used. This disclosure can be implemented as digital or analog processing. If future integrated circuit technology replaces LSIs as a result of advancements in semiconductor technology or other derivative technologies, then functional blocks can be integrated using that future integrated circuit technology. Biotechnology can also be applied.
[0127] This disclosure can be implemented by any type of device, apparatus, or system having communication capabilities, referred to as a communication apparatus.
[0128] A communication device may comprise a transceiver and a processing / control circuit. The transceiver may comprise a receiver and a transmitter, and / or may function as both a receiver and a transmitter. The transceiver (as both a transmitter and a receiver) may include an RF (radio frequency) module comprising an amplifier, an RF modulator / demodulator, and one or more antennas.
[0129] Some non-exclusive examples of such communication devices include telephones (e.g., mobile phones, smartphones), tablets, personal computers (PCs) (e.g., laptops, desktops, notebooks), cameras (e.g., digital still / video cameras), digital players (digital audio / video players), wearable devices (e.g., wearable cameras, smartwatches, tracking devices), game consoles, e-readers, telemedicine / telemedicine devices, vehicles providing communication capabilities (e.g., automobiles, airplanes, ships), and various combinations thereof.
[0130] Communication devices are not limited to portable or mobile devices, but may include any type of non-portable or fixed device, device, or system, such as smart home devices (e.g., appliances, lighting, smart meters, control panels), vending machines, and any other "things" in the "Internet of Things (IoT)" network.
[0131] Communication can include exchanging data through, for example, cellular systems, wireless LAN systems, satellite systems, and various combinations thereof.
[0132] A communication device may include devices such as controllers and sensors coupled to a communication device that performs the communication functions described in this disclosure. For example, a communication device may include a controller or sensor that generates control signals or data signals used by the communication device that performs the communication functions of the communication device.
[0133] Communication equipment may further include base stations, access points, and any other devices, devices, or systems that communicate with or control infrastructure equipment, such as the devices in the non-limiting examples above.
[0134] While some characteristics of various embodiments are described with reference to the device, the corresponding characteristics also apply to the methods of the various embodiments, and vice versa.
[0135] Those skilled in the art will understand that the disclosures shown in particular embodiments can be modified in numerous ways without departing from the broadly described spirit or scope of the disclosure. Therefore, the embodiments described herein are intended for illustrative purposes only and should not be considered limiting to the invention. [Table 9] [Table 10] [Table 11] [Table 12] [Table 13] [Table 14]
Claims
1. A communication device comprising: a circuit for generating a physical layer protocol data unit (PPDU) including a first field; and a transmitter for transmitting the PPDU, The first field includes a first portion and a second portion which are distinct from each other, and the first portion and the second portion each include bandwidth information and punctured channel information, The punctured channel information is configured to indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the PPDU based on the bandwidth information. Communication device.
2. The PPDU further includes a second field, When the PPDU is used for orthogonal frequency division multiplex access (OFDMA) transmission, the second field includes resource unit (RU) allocation information. If the PPDU is not used for OFDMA transmission, the second field does not include the RU allocation information. The communication device according to claim 1.
3. When the PPDU is used for OFDMA transmission, the punctured channel information and the RU allocation information jointly indicate the channel puncturing pattern. The communication device according to claim 2.
4. If the PPDU is used for OFDMA transmission and the punctured channel information cannot independently represent the channel puncturing pattern, then the punctured channel information and the supplemental punctured channel information included in the second field jointly represent the channel puncturing pattern. The communication device according to claim 2.
5. A portion of the subfield containing the RU allocation information indicates supplemental punctured channel information. The communication device according to claim 2.
6. The second field includes common fields and user-specific fields. The aforementioned common field includes a first portion, When the PPDU is used for OFDMA transmission, it further includes a second part, If the PPDU is not used for OFDMA transmission, the second portion is not included. The first part includes common information different from the RU allocation information, and the second part includes the RU allocation information. The communication device according to claim 2.
7. The punctured channel information can show all channel puncturing patterns that are permissible for bandwidths below a predetermined bandwidth. The communication device according to claim 1.
8. The punctured channel information can show all channel puncturing patterns that are permissible for bandwidths below a predetermined bandwidth, and a portion of the channel puncturing patterns for bandwidths greater than the predetermined bandwidth. The communication device according to claim 1.
9. The PPDU further includes a second field configured to include supplemental punctured channel information, If the PPDU is used for punctured single-user (SU) or multi-user (MU) multi-input multi-output (MIMO) transmission, and the punctured channel information can indicate the channel puncturing pattern, then the second field does not include the supplemental punctured channel information. The communication device according to claim 1.
10. A receiver that receives a Physical Layer Protocol Data Unit (PPDU), A circuit for processing the PPDU, A communication device equipped with, The PPDU includes a first field, The first field includes a first portion and a second portion which are distinct from each other, and the first portion and the second portion each include bandwidth information and punctured channel information, The punctured channel information is configured to indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the PPDU based on the bandwidth information. Communication device.
11. The steps include generating a physical layer protocol data unit (PPDU) that includes a first field, A communication method comprising the step of transmitting the PPDU, The first field includes a first portion and a second portion which are distinct from each other, and the first portion and the second portion each include bandwidth information and punctured channel information, The punctured channel information is configured to indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the PPDU based on the bandwidth information. Communication method.
12. The steps include receiving a physical layer protocol data unit (PPDU) containing a first field, A communication method comprising the step of processing the PPDU, The first field includes a first portion and a second portion which are distinct from each other, and the first portion and the second portion each include bandwidth information and punctured channel information, The punctured channel information is configured to indicate a channel puncturing pattern applied to the PPDU based on the bandwidth information. Communication method.