LOCO Codes: Lexicographically-Ordered Constrained Codes
Line codes make it possible to mitigate interference, to prevent short pulses, and to generate streams of bipolar signals with no direct-current (DC) power content through balancing. Thus, they find applications in magnetic recording (MR) devices, in Flash devices, in optical recording devices, in addition to some computer standards. This paper introduces a new family of fixed-length, binary constrained codes, namely, lexicographically-ordered constrained codes (LOCO codes) for bipolar non-return-to-zero signaling. LOCO codes are capacity achieving, the lexicographic indexing enables simple, practical encoding and decoding, and this simplicity is demonstrated through analysis of circuit complexity. LOCO codes are easy to balance, and their inherent symmetry minimizes the rate loss with respect to unbalanced codes having the same constraints. Furthermore, LOCO codes that forbid certain patterns can be used to alleviate inter-symbol interference in MR systems and inter-cell interference in Flash systems. Experimental results demonstrate a gain of up to 10 run-length limited codes designed for the same purpose. Simulation results suggest that it is possible to achieve channel density gains of about 20 systems by using a LOCO code to encode only the parity bits of a low-density parity-check code before writing.
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