Fundamental of Interference PDF
Fundamental of Interference PDF
1.0 Introduction
As wireless systems proliferate worldwide, the number one enemy of wireless systems designers and service providers is signal interference. Interference hampers coverage and capacity, and limits the effectiveness of both new and existing systems. It is an unavoidable fact that wireless communications systems must coexist in extremely complicated signal environments. These environments are comprised of multiple operating wireless networks ranging from mobile communication services to specialized mobile radio and paging/broadcast systems. At the same time, wireless local area networks (WLANs) and digital video broadcasting are introducing new technologies and signal sources that further threaten to disrupt wireless communications service. Compounding the problem are regulatory and environmental restrictions which have effectively limited the number of suitable new base station transceiver sites that can be put in place. Hence, many wireless service providers are now faced with co-location issues further contributing to the potential for signal interference as more antennae are placed on individual cell towers. This application note presents the subject of interference and its degrading effects on the performance of wireless networks. It provides a brief theory of operation of communications receivers and antennae, as well as instructions on how to locate and identify an interfering signal. It also reviews the operating principles of the Anritsu Spectrum Master MS2711B and some of its functional routines which make it an ideal interference troubleshooting tool. With the information contained in this Application Note and a complementary note, Practical Tips on Measuring Interference (referred to here as Measurements Note, Anritsu Publication number 11410-00303), you will understand the basic facts about what causes interference, how it sneaks into a typical affected system receiver, and how you can locate and identify typical sources of those interfering signals. A Glossary of Terms useful for interference measurements is included in the Measurements Note.
Application Note
Application Note
Affected
En Si ter de s lob e
s[
e]
Figure 1. Virtually any real-life system (Affected System in this picture) is subject to a variety of continuous or intermittent interfering signals.
Interference results from a variety of sources, usually other transmitters in the area, both licensed and unlicensed. Whether licensed or unlicensed, sources of interference cause the same resultsimpaired system performance. The only difference is that there are more potential uncontrolled sources of interference in the unlicensed bands. Figure 1 diagrams a variety of possible interferers. The Affected System, a microwave link for an Ethernet data bridge in the 2.4 2.5 GHz ISM band, is shown in the center. When signals from other systems (shown as Figures 1 [a], [b], [c], [d], [e] and [f]) reduce the affected systems carrier/interference ratio (C/I) below its specification margins, the radios data processing fails. [a] is a high-power broadcast signal. [b] is a leaking microwave oven in the ISM band. [c] is a similar system whose transmitter signal overflies its own receiver. [d], [e], and [f] have signals that enter by reflection, sidelobes or backlobes. Each of these interferer modes will be explained individually in Section 3.2.
Application Note
Antenna
RF Filter Pre-selector
Mixer
Local Oscillator
(a)
IF Frequency
IF Frequency
Data Passband
Image
Frequency
RF Filter Passband
(b)
L.O. Frequency
Figure 2(a) shows how system signals from the receiving antenna are first filtered with an RF pre-selector (bandpass filter), then mixed with a local oscillator (LO) frequency to yield an intermediate frequency (IF). The frequency chart of Figure 2(b) shows that the LO and mixer function accepts two different reception channels spaced on either side of the LO frequency by the amount of the IF frequency. One is the system design channel (usually the one below the LO frequency) and the other is called the image. The pre-selector filter rejects signals in the unwanted image response.
Figure 2(a). A simplified block diagram of a super-heterodyne data receiver. Figure 2(b). A pre-selector bandpass filter rejects signals in the image passband and other bands.
Modulation Most modern data systems use some form of digital phase modulation for transporting the data on the RF or microwave carrier. The simplest, binary-phase-shift-keying (BPSK), switches the phase of the transmitted carrier between 0 degree phase and 180 degrees to signify a bit zero or bit one. Other typical digital formats include QPSK (quadra-, or 4-phase, -shift-keying), 16 QAM (quadrature-amplitude-modulation, with 16 phase states), or even 256 QAM. Many other popular modulation formats may be employed, such as QPR (quadrature-partial response), OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplex), etc. Spread Spectrum For the ISM bands, manufacturers have relied on spread-spectrum modulation techniques to make their systems less susceptible to interference from other in-band ISM signals. There are two basic techniques for spreading a transmit spectrum, frequency hopped spread spectrum (FHSS) and directsequence-spread-spectrum (DSSS). Both achieve considerable insensitivity to in-channel noise and single source interferers, e.g., microwave ovens in the 2.4 GHz ISM band. The wireless, cellular, and PCS communications sector has also introduced its own version of DSSS which is called code-division-multiple-access (CDMA). This alternate system modulation strategy offers the advantage of supporting multiple channels in the same band allocations. Antennas In general, antennas fall into two categories: 1) omnidirectional, used in an office wireless-LAN where even coverage is needed, and 2) directional, used in point-to-point applications where you want all transmitted power aimed at a single receiver station.
Application Note
The most basic antenna, called an isotropic emitter, is shown in Figure 3(a). It transmits equal power in every direction of a spherical space around it, much like a light bulb at a distance. The term omni-directional is similar to isotropic. It emits in all directions equally, but usually is taken to mean in azimuth (horizontal, 360 directions). In most communications systems, the owner doesnt wish to pay for power that heads toward the sky, so the pattern is flattened as shown in Figure 3(b). This not only forces the transmit signal direction down to ground level but also produces a 5 6 dB antenna gain improvement in the process.
Emitter
Ground Plane
Emitter
Ground Plane
(a)
330
(b)
0 30
300
60
90
240
120
210 180
150
(c)
Figure 3(a). An elevation view of an isotropic emitter. Figure 3(b). Adjusting the emitting elements can flatten the sky-bound pattern of (a). Figure 3(c). Adding a parabolic reflector produces an antenna pattern with a highly-directive main-lobe of desired power. Figure 3(d). A polar (azimuth) plot of a wireless-LAN antenna.
(d)
For fixed point-to-point applications, the directional antenna is ideal because transmit power is focused toward the receive antenna and the directional performance helps eliminate interferers. Figure 3(c) shows two typical signal patterns of directional antennas plotted on a polar scale to indicate their directional performance. Plot (P) is an antenna product which is specified to have a beam-width (B/W) of 7 in the frequency band of 2.4-2.5 GHz. It provides an antenna gain of approximately 26 dB and requires a 4-foot diameter parabolic reflector. Plot (F) is a product which is specified to have a B/W of 24, also in the 2.4-2.5 GHz band, with a gain of 16 dB, but which requires only a 1-foot sized flat panel antenna. It is pretty easy to see that the greater the dish size, the sharper the antenna beam focus. In polar patterns, the direction of the main lobe is called the boresight direction. The radius of the plot is usually calibrated in dB from the center. Upon closer examination of the plots of Figure 3(c), it can be seen that an interferer system which is positioned at a considerable angle off boresight of the directional beam still can enter the affected receiver, with only 10 or 15 dB of angle rejection. Usually the main lobe is specified as shown by the -3 dB power curve, meaning that the power at those points is only down 50% from the boresight level. Sidelobes and backlobes vary from 15-30 dB below the main lobe and can allow interfering signals to enter from the side or back directions. Figure 3(d) shows a polar plot pattern of an actual wireless LAN system antenna. These are commonly mounted on the ceilings of office configurations where uniform signal coverage is needed around the office to interconnect mobile laptop computers. Signal polarization is an antenna characteristic which can furnish added signal rejection capability. Electromagnetic (EM) signals can be horizontally or vertically polarized, and sometimes, circularly polarized. Two similar systems operating, one vertically- and one horizontally-polarized, can exhibit considerable isolation from each other, typically 20 dB.
Application Note
Application Note
While modulation designs are supposed to offer some rejection of interference due to different frequencyhopping parameters or different DSSS code patterns, it is possible that the interfering signal levels at the affected receiver might still overwhelm the rejection tolerance of the modulation scheme. It should be noted that even if the antenna pattern lobes of the affected system are relatively narrow (high gain), there is still considerable sensitivity to signals that are as much as 20 to 30 degrees off boresight. Backlobes and Sidelobes As shown in Figure 3(c), there are sidelobe and backlobe characteristics in every antenna. This means that interfering signals might cause problems if they enter one of the sidelobes or the backlobe of the affected system as in Figure 1 [e] and [f]. Typical sidelobe and backlobe sensitivity is only 15 30 dB down from the main lobe. Reflections and Fading The affected system often operates in signal environments which affect its system signals. Heavy rainfall attenuates microwave frequencies. Buildings, hills, and other natural obstructions bend or cause multiple paths to form between transmitter and receiver. These multiple paths, or multipaths, lead to destructive signal cancellations and cause random fades in signal strength. Other buildings, Figure 1 [D], might reflect interference into the side of the affected antennas main lobe. Low flying airplanes can cause a moving reflection which might degrade data randomly. Cellular Antenna Overlap Cellular systems, with their theoretical hexagonal base station cell pattern spacing, take advantage of frequency band re-use by assigning the same frequencies to cells that are spaced just one cell distance away. As such, any given cell antenna that happens to be misadjusted for tilt can easily overfly the adjacent cell and impinge on an affected receiver two cells over where the signal frequency assignments are the same.
Application Note
10 kHz
Figure 4. A spectrum analyzers shape factor is defined as the ratio of its IF bandwidths at 60 and 3 dB, in this case 11:1.
Application Note
Shape Factor A spectrum analyzers shape factor defines the ratio of the 60 dB bandwidth to the 3 dB bandwidth of the IF amplifiers. In the Figure 4 example, the 10 kHz RBW filter has a typical shape factor of 11:1, with a resultant 60 dB bandwidth of 110 kHz and a half-bandwidth value of approximately 60 kHz. If two signals are separated by 60 kHz, but one of them is 60 dB lower in amplitude, it will be almost buried in the selectivity skirt of the main signal. Accuracy The measurement accuracy of any spectrum analyzer results from the addition of many different accuracy components. Measurement accuracy is important when comparing measured values on unknown signals to published specifications of a system under test. Luckily, when making typical interference measurements, the user is looking for ratios, such as C/I, which determines the operating margin of the desired carrier over the interfering signal in the same operating bandwidth. Thus, absolute accuracy is less critical than relative accuracy.
Application Note
Display Capture A very important feature of the MS2711B spectrum analyzer is the ability to capture spectrum displays that are encountered during a long day in the field. The Save Display function permits the operator to take many measurements, name them for the measured situation, and bring the instrument back to the office where they can be downloaded or printed out. Figure 5 in Section 5.3 (page 13) is an example of a field-captured display, with all its annotated data. The Recall Display key brings an index list to the screen for selecting and calling back saved waveforms. In the MS2711B, up to 180 screen displays may be stored for later use. Preamplifier and Input Attenuator For most field interference applications, signals will be relatively weak. The preamplifier feature offers a selectable, full-spectrum amplification of 20 dB. The preamplifier has a very low noise figure, meaning that it does not add appreciable noise to the signal it amplifies. The preamplifier can handle 20 mW (+13 dBm) without damage, and if it goes into saturation, an annotated SAT indicator shows on the display. The input attenuator is a standard feature of all spectrum analyzers that protects the relatively delicate front end mixer and preamplifier stage. The standard input of the analyzer can handle 200 mW (+23 dBm) without damage, so good practice dictates that you first set the input attenuator to 40 or 50 dB if you expect unknown signals with high amplitude. Then adjust the attenuator setting for less attenuation after the signals appear on screen. Max Hold In a number of measurements, the randomness of an interfering signal will make the display jump and difficult to visualize. It is helpful in such situations to use the MS2711Bs Max Hold function. This feature digitally processes the display trace such that it always remembers and displays the highest signal level at every point on the display. Demodulator For additional power in identifying interferer signals, sometimes an audio demodulation of the waveform can assist. The MS2711B features an AM function plus two FM demodulator functions, narrowband and wideband. The audio output can be heard on accessory earphones or through the built-in speaker on the front panel. The analyzer must be set to zero span in order to use the demodulator feature, as explained in the Application Note Practical Tips on Measuring Interference Anritsu Publication number 11410-00303. Occupied Bandwidth and Channel Power The Spectrum Master MS2711B features two computational modes which are very powerful for measurements on wideband data channels such as ISM data links. Occupied Bandwidth (OBW) allows the operator to define the band edges of an occupied band, such as the 20 dBc power points. After the measurement, the M1 and M2 markers show as annotated frequencies on the display and define the band edge frequencies where the signal is 20 dB relative to the carrier. Channel PowerChannel Power arithmetically computes the integrated power contained in a wideband spectrum after its defined bandwidth is set into the analyzer. This mode is particularly useful in measuring system power in an ISM spread spectrum communications signal, and is described further in the Practical Tips on Measuring Interference Anritsu Publication number 11410-00303. Antenna Accessories Many field interference measurements will be made with an independent antenna, i.e., not the communication systems operating antenna. The most versatile kind of independent antenna is the so-called whip design. A whip antenna is a linear conductor connected to the MS2711B coaxial input connector. Whip antennas are sized for 1/4 wavelength at the specified center frequency. Whip designs are omnidirectional, and insensitive to directional effects. For additional diagnostic power on certain interference measurements, the operator will sometimes need to use a directional antenna. Microwave data systems are an example where the system antenna directional performance is highly critical. In those cases, a directional antenna attached to the spectrum analyzer can determine the direction of the interfering signal. Directional antenna kits are commercially available for common application bands.
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Application Note
Field Strength Calibrations The MS2711B features the ability to annotate and display spectrum profiles in terms of field strength quantities, such as dBm/meter. This can be useful when affected receivers have specifications in terms of field strength and an interferer signal can be measured with reasonable accuracy with calibrated antennas. When using the MS2711B, its data processing function can make corrections for antenna pattern characteristics which highly improves the accuracy of the measured results. To use this powerful and important function, the specific antenna sensitivity factor data is uploaded from a PC using available Software Tools furnished by Anritsu with the product. Multiple antenna data is easily stored and called up in the field using the menudriven selection process.
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Application Note
Name Analog Cellular AMPS/NAMPS Digital Cellular TDMA CDMA GSM DCS 1800
Title/Spec Reference Adv Mobile Phone Syst IS-54/136 IS-95 Global Syst Mobile Comm Dig Comm Syst
Frequency band MHz MS 824 849 BS 869 - 894 MS 824 849 BS 869 894 MS 824 849 BS 869 894 MS 880 915 BS 925 960 MS 1710 1785 BS 1805 - 1880 MS 1850 1910 BS 1930 1990 MS 1850 1910 BS 1930 - 1990 MS 1850 1910 BS 1930 - 1990 1880 1900
Personal Communications Systems PCS-TDMA PCS-CDMA PCS-1900 Based on IS-136 Based on IS-95 Based on GSM
Note: The bands shown are the US transmitter frequency allocations for Base Station (BS) or Mobile Station (MS). Table 1. Some Frequency Allocations for Typical Wireless Applications.
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Application Note
North American Digital Cellular (NADC, now IS-136) This is one of the original rollouts of the new cellular technology. It was designed to utilize the existing 30 kHz channel of the Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) cellular technology. Its spectrum profile fills the 30 kHz channel with a relatively flat top spectrum characteristic. Code-Division-Multiple-Access (CDMA) CDMA is a very innovative technology that exploits the idea of interleaving hundreds of individual digitized voice signals into one fast digital data stream. That data stream, combined with a special encoding data stream, then modulates the RF carrier. The effect of this is to spread the spectrum over the entire 1.23 MHz frequency allocation for the service, and essentially explains why 798 users can fit into the one 1.23 MHz channel.
REF LVL 40.00 dBm RBW 10 kHz VBW 3 kHz
A typical CDMA spectrum profile looks like the flat-topped characteristic of Figure 5. The profile is 1.23 MHz wide with relatively sharp slopes at the band edges. If a CDMA signal is interfering with another signal, it can be identified by that 1.23 MHz wide profile. Wideband-CDMA (W-CDMA) This 3GPP system is the third generation wide-band version of CDMA which utilizes channels approximately 5 MHz wide. It is a very sophisticated modulation system, intended for higher data rate connectivity. The 3GPP2 is a parallel project and a collaborative effort of multiple country telecommunications organizations; ARIB (Japan), TIA (North America), CWTS (China), TTA (Korea) and TTC (Japan).
Pos Peak MAX HOLD AMP SWP TIME START 1.931GHz RECALL START= 1.931 000 000 GHz STOP= 1.937 000 000 GHz
STOP 1.937GHz
Figure 5. Three adjacent CDMA channels of 1.23 MHz each in the 1900 MHz PCS band.
RBW 10 kHz
VBW 3 kHz
Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) GSM is an international wireless standard which is used heavily outside of the US. GSM is assigned two frequency bands at 900 and 1800 MHz. Each band supports 124 channels at 200 kHz spacing and each is broken into 8 time slots operating in a TMDA (timedivision-multiple-access) mode. The modulation type is Gaussian Minimum Shift Keyed (GMSK). See Figure 6.
Avg Det MAX HOLD AMP SWP TIME START 931.638MHz RECALL START= 931.638 960 MHz STOP= 931.838 960 MHz
STOP 931.838MHz
Figure 6. TDMA technology of the GSM system shows 4 of 8 users in a 200 kHz channel.
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Application Note
Personal Communications Systems (PCS) The Personal Communications System (PCS) is a name given to wireless communications systems in the 1800 1900 MHz frequency band. PCS was supposed to be a more comprehensive specification than the earlier cellular specification at 800 MHz. However, the only technologies that were implemented were upbanded cellular standards. Thus, the change was simply one of expanding the available spectrum by using the same signal formats at the higher 1800 MHz band. Now consumers rarely know whether their cellular phone is operating in the cellular or PCS band. PCS1900 - Upbanded GSM cellular TIA/EIA-136 Upbanded TDMA digital cellular (ANSI-136) TIA/EIA-95 or IS-2000 Upbanded CDMA digital cellular (ANSI-95, cdmaOne or cdma2000) All PCS systems are digital. The PCS frequency allocation in the US is three 30 MHz allocations and two 10 MHz allocations in the 1850 - 1990 MHz frequency band.
Table 2 shows some popular ISM-allocated bands. In addition to a myriad of unlicensed applications like microwave ovens and atomic particle accelerators, they now support thousands of unlicensed data communications systems. Customers often prefer these systems because of their inexpensive nature and the ability to install them without a tedious licensing process. They are popular for point-to-point and point-to-multipoint data link applications such as Ethernet bridging for intracompany data bridges. Recent Bluetooth technology promises to further fill the spectrum with close-range personal data applications. Wireless LANs Wireless LAN technology in the ISM band was conceived for short-range connectivity systems. Its uses include laptop computers and data management within buildings. Both WLAN technologies, frequencyhopping (FHSS) and direct-sequence (DSSS), depend on spread spectrum technology for data modulation. These schemes trade wider bandwidth for transmission reliability. To a narrow band system, spread spectrum signals just look like random noise. The typical FHSS system utilizes a 1 MHz power spectrum which is frequency-hopped three times per second across a 75 MHz channel. A typical DSSS system utilizes a constant 25 MHz wide spectrum, from a 1 Watt (+30 dBm) transmitter, which translates to +16 dBm per MHz. When ISM interference from another similar system brings down a affected receiver, it is highly likely that the interferer is completely legal. It is then up to the affected to determine how to arrange other elements like antennas or perhaps modulation alternatives to solve the problem. There is no appeal to official regulators since these are unlicensed bands.
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Application Note
ISM Microwave Data Links ISM-band systems provide fast installation for applications such as Ethernet-bridges which connect backbone data systems with new wireless base stations without the need for digging underground cables. ISM data links at 5725 5850 MHz have considerable advantage over UNII (Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure) systems because they are allowed higher output powers and very high gain antennas. These often give them a 48 dB interference advantage. Here are the FCC bands:
Part 15.247 Part 15.407 Technical requirements for intentional radiators 5725 5850 MHz Emission B/W 20 dB points Technical requirements for UNII 5150 5250 MHz UNII-1 Emission B/W 26 dB points 5250 5350 MHz UNII-2 same 5725 5825 MHz UNII-3 same
6.0 Conclusion
One of the industry trade associations web sites shows statistics which estimate that worldwide ownership of wireless devices exceeded 800 million in 2002.[1] Does anyone wonder that competing wireless systems will continue to interfere with each other in regions of high density installations? Understanding the characteristics of your affected receivers modulated signal and the effect that noise or interference has on that signal is the first step in detecting interference within your communications system. Selecting the appropriate test equipment, such as the Anritsu Spectrum Master MS2711B, and employing proper measurement techniques can enhance the likelihood of locating and identifying sources of interference within your system. A companion application note from Anritsu Company, Practical Tips on Measuring Interference, pn: 11410-00303 offers actual measurement examples and practical routines used by field technicians who search for interference as a lifes work. It also explains the advantages of Anritsus Spectrum Master MS2711B that is designed to simplify your search for interfering signals. For those with deeper interest or questions about antennas, there are plenty of Internet resources for further study. The footnote lists the National Spectrum Management Association (NSMA) website www.nsma.org. A typical antenna manufacturer website www.gabrielnet.com is also listed.
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Footnote:
[1] Cellular Networking Perspectives Ltd. See their very useful, impartial and informative web-site: www.cnp-wireless.com. It contains a super-comprehensive acronym list of wireless terminology.
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