Canonic FFT flow graphs for real-valued even/odd symmetric inputs

Abstract Canonic real-valued fast Fourier transform (RFFT) has been proposed to reduce the arithmetic complexity by eliminating redundancies. In a canonic N-point RFFT, the number of signal values at each stage is canonic with respect to the number of signal values, i.e., N. The major advantage of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yingjie Lao, Keshab K. Parhi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2017-06-01
Series:EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13634-017-0477-9
Description
Summary:Abstract Canonic real-valued fast Fourier transform (RFFT) has been proposed to reduce the arithmetic complexity by eliminating redundancies. In a canonic N-point RFFT, the number of signal values at each stage is canonic with respect to the number of signal values, i.e., N. The major advantage of the canonic RFFTs is that these require the least number of butterfly operations and only real datapaths when mapped to architectures. In this paper, we consider the FFT computation whose inputs are not only real but also even/odd symmetric, which indeed lead to the well-known discrete cosine and sine transforms (DCTs and DSTs). Novel algorithms for generating the flow graphs of canonic RFFTs with even/odd symmetric inputs are proposed. It is shown that the proposed algorithms lead to canonic structures with N 2 + 1 $\frac {N}{2}+1$ signal values at each stage for an N-point real even symmetric FFT (REFFT) or N 2 − 1 $\frac {N}{2}-1$ signal values at each stage for an N-point RFFT real odd symmetric FFT (ROFFT). In order to remove butterfly operations, several twiddle factor transformations are proposed in this paper. We also discuss the design of canonic REFFT for any composite length. Performances of the canonic REFFT/ROFFT are also discussed. It is shown that the flow graph of canonic REFFT/ROFFT has less number of interconnections, less butterfly operations, and less twiddle factor operations, compared to prior works.
ISSN:1687-6180