4.7 Article

Hardware Implementation for Belief Propagation Flip Decoding of Polar Codes

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCSI.2020.3042597

Keywords

Polar codes; belief propagation (BP) decoding; bit-flipping; hardware implementation

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFB2205503]
  2. NSFC [61871115]
  3. Jiangsu Provincial NSF [BK20180059]
  4. Six Talent Peak Program of Jiangsu Province [2018-DZXX-001]
  5. Distinguished Perfection Professorship of Southeast University
  6. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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The paper proposed an advanced BPF (A-BPF) scheme that reduces decoding latency and improves error-correction performance with the help of a critical bit and a joint detection criterion. At the hardware level, an optimized sorting network is applied to improve area efficiency.
Belief propagation (BP) decoding has natural advantages in throughput for polar codes to meet high-speed and low-latency requirements. The soft outputs of BP decoding can be utilized further for joint detection and decoding in the baseband communication system. However, its error-correction performance is not comparable with the successive cancellation list (SCL) decoding. Belief propagation flip (BPF) decoding is recently proposed to improve the error-correction performance of BP decoding and indicates the potential to compete with SCL decoding. In this paper, we propose an advanced BPF (A-BPF) scheme that reduces the decoding latency with the help of one critical bit and improves the error-correction performance by the proposed joint detection criterion. To improve area efficiency in the hardware level, an optimized sorting network is proposed and applied for the A-BPF decoder. The decoder is implemented on 65 nm CMOS technology for length-1024 and rate-1/2 polar codes, and the results show that the proposed decoder can achieve a close frame error rate performance to the SCL decoder with four lists and deliver a throughput of 5.17 Gb/s at E-b/N-0 = 4.0 dB.

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