Thorough discussion of the theory and application of the Volterra series for impairments compensation in RF circuits and systems
A Volterra Approach to Digital Predistortion: Sparse Identification and Estimation offers a comprehensive treatment of the Volterra series approach as a practical tool for the behavioral modeling and linearization of nonlinear wireless communication systems. Although several perspectives can be considered when analyzing nonlinear effects, this book focuses on the Volterra series to study systems with real-valued continuous time RF signals as well as complex-valued discrete-time baseband signals in the digital signal processing field.
A unified framework provides the reader with in-depth understanding of the available Volterra-based behavioral models; in particular, the book emphasizes those models derived by exploiting the knowledge of the physical phenomena that produce different types of nonlinear distortion. From these distinctive standpoints, this work remarkably contributes to theoretical issues of behavioral modeling.
The book contributes to practical state-of-the-art questions on linearization, granting the reader practical guidance in designing digital predistortion schemes and adopting up-to-date machine learning methods to exploit the sparsity of the identification problem and reducing computational complexity.
Later chapters include information on:
A Volterra Approach to Digital Predistortion: Sparse Identification and Estimation is an essential reference on the subject for engineers and technicians who develop new products for the linearization of wireless transmitters, as well as researchers and students in fields and programs of study related to wireless communications.
Carlos Crespo-Cadenas, PhD, is a Full Professor at the Universidad de Sevilla, Spain.
María José Madero-Ayora, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the Universidad de Sevilla, Spain.
Juan A. Becerra, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the Universidad de Sevilla, Spain.
The authors are members of IEEE and the Microwave Theory and Techniques (MTT) Society and have published over 70 papers and served as reviewers for several research journals and international conferences.