Zero Forcing Equalizer refers to a form of linear equalizationalgorithm used in communication systems which applies the inverse of the frequency response of the channel. This form of equalizer was first proposed by Robert Lucky. The Zero-Forcing Equalizer applies the inverse of the channel frequency response to the received signal, to restore the signal after the channel. It has many useful applications. For example, it is studied heavily for IEEE 802.11n where knowing the channel allows recovery of the two or more streams which will be received on top of each other on each antenna. The name Zero Forcing corresponds to bringing down the intersymbol interference to zero in a noise free case. This will be useful when ISI is significant compared to noise. For a channel with frequency response the zero forcing equalizer is constructed by. Thus the combination of channel and equalizer gives a flat frequency response and linear phase. In reality, zero-forcing equalization does not work in most applications, for the following reasons:
At some frequencies the received signal may be weak. To compensate, the magnitude of the zero-forcing filter grows very large. As a consequence, any noise added after the channel gets boosted by a large factor and destroys the overall signal-to-noise ratio. Furthermore, the channel may have zeroes in its frequency response that cannot be inverted at all..
This second item is often the more limiting condition. These problems are addressed in the linear MMSE equalizer by making a small modification to the denominator of :, where k is related to the channel response and the signal SNR.
Algorithm
If the channel response for a particular channel is H then the input signal is multiplied by the reciprocal of it. This is intended to remove the effect of channel from the received signal, in particular the intersymbol interference. The zero-forcing equalizer removes all ISI, and is ideal when the channel is noiseless. However, when the channel is noisy, the zero-forcing equalizer will amplify the noise greatly at frequencies f where the channel response H has a small magnitude in the attempt to invert the channel completely. A more balanced linear equalizer in this case is the minimum mean-square error equalizer, which does not usually eliminate ISI completely but instead minimizes the total power of the noise and ISI components in the output.