Coding (which is a controlled redundancy) and interleaving across sub-carriers protects OFDM signals from a narrow band interferer (CW) that could destroy one subcarrrier. It provides a kind of frequency diversity
Suppose we have an AWGN channel , a coded OFDM signal with a certain modulation and coding scheme at a low coding rate and a certain corresponding sensitivity.
Suppose now that this signal is hit with a strong inband CW destroying one subcarrier, would the protection provided by coding and interleaving allow reception of this signal at the same sensitivity level when it was exposed to AWGN only?