OFDM Multiple Antennas Cognitive Radio Relay CDMA Synchronization Channel Estimation Spectrum Sharing Interference Cancellation Full duplex Spectrum Sensing Resource Allocation Neural Networks Stochastic Geometry Equalizer Bi-Directional Feedback Femtocell Energy Harvesting Heterogeneous Networks Device-to-Device (D2D) Cross-link interference Cell Search Idle cells NOMA HetNet Ultra-dense small cell networks Spectral efficiency FBMC SINR mismatch problem Dynamic TDD interference management Sub-band filtering Mobility eigen decomposition outage probability Railway selection diversity Handoff Asynchronous Transmission flexible duplex 5G achievable sum rate interference mitigation Preamble Deep learning Grant-free Transmission MLP in-band full-duplex system sensing duration Correlated MIMO Simultaneous Sensing and Transmission transmission capacity (TC) Two-way communications Filtered OFDM automatic repeat request (ARQ) UWB full-duplex cellular OQAM bursty traffic model mode selection Bi-directional full-duplex Heterogeneous channel estimation capability Cognitive relay networks Channel estimation error multi-spectral pilot signal resource size control interference to noise ratio link reliability Coexistence scenarios mixed numerology Cooperative systems Resource management LTE-based V2V Vehicle-to-vehicle communication CP-OFDM full-spreading NOMA massive connectivity non-orthogonal multiple access Singular Vale Decomposition prototype filter Vehicle-to-Vehicle Reliability C-V2V Intentional frequency offset (IFO) B5G Multiple access Asynchronism Degree of freedom (DoF) Asynchronous non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) TDD configuration 6G Cell-free tabu-search Complexity Computation offloading Full-duplex Coexisting network Edge computing HST
Status : Published 
Date : 2006-04 
Title : Known-postfix based Cell Search Technique for OFDM Cellular Systems 
Authors : Younghyun Jeon, Jongkyung Kim, Hyunkyu Yu, Jonghyung Kwun, Sanghoon Lee, Jongsoo Seo, and Daesik Hong 
Journal : IEICE Transactions on Communications 
Abstract : A cell search technique utilizing a known postfix for OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplexing) cellular systems is described. The known postfix is generated in the time domain by inserting pilots in the frequency domain and plays the role of the cyclic prefix in general OFDM systems. Since it demonstrates good correlation properties, it can be facilitated to synchronize each symbol with an identified postfix. In this paper, two different known postfixes are allocated to each cell. One is used for cell identification and symbol synchronization, which is designed to be different among neighboring cells. The other is used for frame synchronization and is the same for all cells. In the simulation, the cell search is accomplished with a probability greater than 10–3 at –27 dB in a vehicular channel. Even at –30 dB, the cell search probability is greater than 10–2 in a pedestrian channel as well as 10–3 in the AWGN (additive white gaussian noise) channel. 
URL : http://search.ieice.org/bin/summary.php?id=e89-b_4_1405 

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List of Articles
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2 [Other Journals] Hyunkyu Yu, Youngju Kim, Takki Yu, Sungmook Lim, and Daesik Hong, "A New Preamble-based Cell Search Algorithm for Asynchronous MC-CDMA Systems", Int'l Journal of Elec. and Comm., Aug 2008 Published  2008-08 
» [IEICE Trans. Commun.] Younghyun Jeon, Jongkyung Kim, Hyunkyu Yu, Jonghyung Kwun, Sanghoon Lee, Jongsoo Seo, and Daesik Hong, "Known-postfix based Cell Search Technique for OFDM Cellular Systems", IEICE Trans. Comm., Apr 2006 Published  2006-04