Ultrawideband: UWB Is A Wireless Technology That Transmits Binary Data-The 0's
Ultrawideband: UWB Is A Wireless Technology That Transmits Binary Data-The 0's
Ultrawideband: UWB Is A Wireless Technology That Transmits Binary Data-The 0's
ABSTRACT
Ultra-Wide Band (UWB) transmission has recently received great
attention in both academia and industry for applications in wireless
communications. It was among the CNNs top 10 technologies to watch
in 2004. A UWB system is defined as any radio system that has a 10-
dB bandwidth larger than 20% of its center frequency, or has a 10-dB
bandwidth equal to or larger than 500 MHz, The recent approval of UWB
technology by Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the United
States reserves the unlicensed frequency band between 3.1 and 10.6 GHz
(7.5 GHz) for indoor UWB wireless communication systems. It is expected
that many conventional principles and approaches used for short-range
wireless communications will be reevaluated and a new industrial sector in
short-range (e.g., 10 m) wireless communications with high data rate (e.g.,
400 Mbps) will be formed. Further, industrial standards IEEE 802.15.3a
(high data rate) and IEEE 802.15.4a (very low data rate) based on UWB
technology have been introduced.
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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
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CHAPTER 2
HISTORY
Ultra wide band communication is not a new technology, in fact it was first
employed by Guglielmo Marconi in 1901 to transmit Morse Code sequences across
the Atlantic ocean using spark gap radio transmitters. The United States military re-
invented it under a cloak of secrecy and black projects from the 1960's to the 1990's,
where UWB was particularly well suited for modern RADAR and highly secure
communications. One hundred years after Marconi's first demonstration of wireless
technology across the Atlantic ocean we have wireless history in the making
again. In 1998, the FCC recognized the significance of UWB technology and
began the process of regulatory review. In May of 2000, the FCC issued a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, accepting comments through the current period. Throughout
early 2002, comments and review from the FCC, NTIA, Department of Commerce
and DOD were received. The FCC adopted the formal rule changes permitting
Ultra Wideband to operate on February 14, 2002.
Ultra Wideband (UWB) is only becoming commercially viable now through
decreased costs and recent advancements in chip development, the evolution of the
marketplace, and FCC recognition. What is driving UWB into the consumer market
is the ability to render UWB circuitry into CMOS technology. Therefore as
CMOS scales say from .25 to .18 to .13 micron so does the UWB circuitry. As a
result some call UWB "Moore's Law Radio". Until a few years ago, the circuitry to
implement UWB was power and form factor constrained. With UWB being done in
CMOS this is no longer the case. As a matter of fact we will see smaller and
smaller UWB devices over the next few years.
computers, web-pads, digital video cameras, automobiles and a wide range of consumer
electronics and home appliances with extremely precise, GPS-like positioning Other
advantageous features of UWB are penetration and signal power. In terms of penetration,
for instance, an unfiltered pulse of 200 picoseconds duration, when applied through a
Fourier formula, demonstrates signal energy throughout the spectrum between DC and 5
GHz. Obviously this is not a perfect square wave representation because the pulse is
subject to some coloring from the antenna - and antenna technology is an extremely
important facet of UWB technology - but with proper antenna implementations the
distribution of energy is spread fairly evenly across the spectrum. A UWB receiver
detects the presence of the energy of the pulse in time, not at specific frequencies, so
absorption of specific carriers such as at 1.8GHz or 2.4GHz has little effect, provided
that around 50% of the spectral energy density of the pulse penetrates whatever obstacles
lie in the transmission path. Absorption at any one particular frequency does little to
affect the integrity of the actual pulse.
In terms of signal power, the simplest conceptual demonstration would be to
think of Morse code. Imagine hooking up a microphone to a one-watt transmitter and
speaking into it. Your voice is being used to generate a complex modulation onto an
analog carrier. That same complex modulation must be received and de-modulated at the
receiver. In order to recover your voice at the receiver, the integrity of both the
modulation and the carrier must be maintained. Although the carrier is capable of going
great distances, the modulation is much more fragile and degrades quickly over distance.
Therefore, you might be able to recover the voice modulated signal a mile or more away.
Now, remove the microphone from the one-watt transmitter and attach a Morse code
oscillator to the same one-watt transmitter. All you need to recover are the dots and
dashes, (in essence, is the signal present or not?). These simple pulses can be detected at
increased distances by a factor of over ten relative to a modulated carrier. In Ultra
Wideband, we might radiate a 200 picoseconds (.2 billionths of a second) pulse of one-
watt energy. At any given frequency between DC and 5 GHz the demonstrated energy of
the pulse is beneath the noise floor, hence peaceful co-existence with carrier
technologies.
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CHAPTER 3
ULTRA WIDEBAND
This concept doesn't stand for a definite standard of wireless communication. This is a
method of modulation and data transmission which can entirely change the wireless
picture in the near future.
The traditional modulation is shown above which is called here Narrow Band
(NB). On the left we can see a signal on the time axis and on the right there is its
frequency spectrum, i.e. energy distribution in the frequency band. The most modern
standards of data transmission are Narrow Band standards - all of them work within a
quite narrow frequency band allowing for just small deviations from the base (or
carrier) frequency. Above on the right you can see a spectral energy distribution of a
typical 802.11b transmitter. It has a very narrow (80 MHz for one channel) dedicated
spectral band with the reference frequency of 2.4 GHz. Within this narrow band the
transmitter emits a considerable amount of energy necessary for the following reliable
reception within the designed range of distance (100 m for the 802.11b).
ULTRAWIDEBAND
The range is strictly defined by FCC and other regulatory bodies and
requires licensing. Data are encoded and transferred using the method of frequency
modulation (control of deviation from the base frequency) within the described
channel.
Now take a look at the UWB - here the traditional approach is turned upside down. In
the time space the transmitter emits short pulses of a special form which distributes all
the energy of the pulse within the given, quite wide, spectral range (approximately from
3 GHz to 10 GHz). Data, in their turn, are encoded with polarity and mutual positions
of pulses. With much total power delivered into the air and, therefore, a long distance
of the reliable reception, the UWB signal doesn't exceed an extremely low value (much
lower than that of the NB signals) in each given spectrum point (i.e. in each definite
licensed frequency band). As a result, according to the respective FCC regulation, such
signal becomes allowable although it also takes spectral parts used for other purposes:
ULTRAWIDEBAND
So, the most part of energy of the UWB signal falls into the frequency range from 3.1
to 10.6 GHz. Below 3.1 GHz the signal almost disappears. The more ideal the form of a
pulse formed with the transmitter, the less the energy goes out of the main range. The
spectral range lower than 3.1 GHz is avoided not to create problems for GPS systems.
However, UWB is accurate to within 10 centimeters -- much better than the Global
Positioning System satellites and because it spans the entire frequency spectrum
(licensed and unlicensed), it can be used indoors and underground, unlike GPS. UWB
could replace communications of all types, ending forever our dependence on wires and
making worthless the ownership of radio frequencies.
The total energy of the transmitter which can fit into this band is defined by
the area of the spectral characteristic (see filled zones on the previous picture). In case
of the UWB it's much greater compared to the traditional NB signals such as 802.11b or
802.11a. So, with the UWB we can send data for longer distances, or send more data,
especially if there are a lot of simultaneously working devices located close to each
other. Here is a diagram with the designed maximum density of data transferred per
square meter:
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Density of transferred data able to coexist on the same square meter is much higher for
the UWB compared to the popular NB standards. That is, it will be possible to use the
UWB for the intra system communication or even for an inter chip communication
within one device.
In case of the NB a frequency and width of the dedicated spectral range for the most
part (though the real situation is much more complicated) defines a bandwidth of the
channel, and the transmitter's power defines a distance range. But in the UWB these
two concepts inter wine and we can distribute our capabilities between the distance
range and bandwidth. Thus, at small distances, for example, in case of an inter chip
communication, we can get huge throughput levels without increasing the total
transferred power and without cluttering up the air, i.e. other devices are not impeded.
Look at how the throughput of data transferred in the UWB modulation depends on
distance:
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remember that in a real life information is always transferred in large excess. Beside the
amount of energy, there is the design philosophy which also has an effect. For example,
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a character of modulation, i.e. how stably and losslessly it is received and detected by
the receivers.
this frequency is subtracted from the received signal, and in case of transmission it is
added to the data transferred.
For the UWB the transmitter looks very unsophisticated - we just form a pulse of a
required shape and send it to the antenna. In case of reception we amplify the signal,
pump it through the band filter which selects our working spectrum range and... that's
all - here is our ready pulse.
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Several modulation techniques can be used to create UWB signals, some more
efficiently than others. In its formative years, some of the most popular methods to
create UWB pulse streams used mono-phase techniques such as pulse amplitude
(PAM), pulse position (PPM), or on-off keying (OOK). In these techniques, a 1 is
differentiated from a 0 either by the size of the signal or when it arrives in time but
all the pulses are the same shape. A more efficient approach, bi-phase ultra-wideband,
is also being deployed. Bi-phase differentiates a 1 with a right-side-up pulse and a
0 with an upside-down pulse and works by reading pulses both backwards and
forwards, irrespective of time. Multi-phase UWB is not being deployed today as it is
too cost-prohibitive for the consumer and enterprise markets.
Mono-phase Ultra-wideband: In this approach, all pulses are right side up,
meaning they all look alike. Using pulses in time to create the desired ultra- wideband
waveform, mono-phase ultra-wideband technologies are currently used in select
military applications under a special license from the FCC. All of these deployed
systems are much higher in power and much lower in frequency than the limits
published by the FCC in their recent UWB approval guidelines.
1 Pulse amplitude (PAM)PAM works by separating the tall and the short
waves. By varying the amplitude (height of pulse) the receiver can tell the
difference between 1 and 0, thereby encoding data in the signal.
2 Pulse position (PPM)In PPM, all the pulses (both 1s and 0s) are the same
height. The receiver distinguishes between a 1 or a 0 by when it arrives in time,
or the time lag between pulses. In this case, a long time lag could mean a 1 and a
short time lag could mean a 0.
3 On-Off Keying (OOK)In OOK, a 1 is a pulse and an absence of a pulse is a
0.
Bi-phase Ultra-wideband: In this approach, the pulses can be sent right side up or
upside down, which determines whether the pulse is a 1 or a 0, so pulses can be
sent at a much higher rate.
ON-OFF KEYING
BI-PHASE
CHAPTER 4
The potential data rate over a given RF link is proportional to the bandwidth
of the channel and the logarithm of the signal-to-noise ratio (Shannons Law). RF
design engineers typically have little control over the bandwidth parameter, because
this is dictated by FCC regulations that stipulate the allowable bandwidth of the
signal for a given radio type and application. Bluetooth Technology, 802.11a/g Wi-
Fi, cordless phones, and numerous other devices are relegated to the unlicensed
ULTRAWIDEBAND
frequency bands that are provided at 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.1 GHz. Each
radio channel is constrained to occupy only a narrow band of frequencies, relative
to what is allowed for UWB.
Strict power limits mean the radios themselves must be low power consumers.
Because of the low power requirements, it is feasible to develop cost -effective CMOS
implementations of UWB radios. With the characteristics of low power, low cost, and
very high data rates at limited range, UWB is positioned to address the market for a
high-speed WPAN.
CHAPTER 5
The variety of devices within the entertainment cluster is wide: digital video
disc players (DVDs), HDTVs, STBs, personal video recorders (PVRs), MP3 players
and stereos, digital camcorders and digital cameras, and other CE devices
found throughout the home. For example, UWB could connect a wall-mounted
plasma display or HDTV to an STB or DVD player, without annoying and
unaesthetic cables. UWB can also enable multiple streams to multiple devices,
simultaneously. This would allow picture-in-picture functionality or the ability
to view the same or different content on multiple devices throughout the home.
UWB can also connect devices between the PC and entertainment clusters, such as a
digital camcorder to a media PC for digital video editing or to a large LCD for
viewing. Connect a digital camera to a mobile notebook PC for editing, compiling,
and sending pictures via e- mail to a family member while sitting at a public
hotspot. UWB offers key benefits for these kinds of uses (Table 1, on the next page).
With UWB-enabled WPANs, once the devices are within proximity, they recognize
each other, and streaming occurs when the user presses the Play button.
Universal serial bus (USB) technology has been a popular connection type
for PCs and it's migrating into consumer electronic (CE) and mobile devices. Now
this high-speed and effective connection interface is unwiring to provide the
functionality of wired USB without the burden of cables. This next iteration of USB
technology is the focus of the new Wireless USB Promoter Group, which will define
the specifications that will eventually provide standards for the technology.
Wireless USB will be the first high speed wireless personal interconnect
technology to take advantages of UWB. Building on the success of wired USB, it
will bring USB technology into the wireless world.
To maintain the same usage and architecture as wired USB, the Wireless USB
Promoter Group is defining the wireless USB specification as a high speed host to
device connection. This will enable an easy migration path for todays wired USB
solutions. Targeted bandwidth is 480 Mbps plenty fast for multimedia
streaming and high bandwidth data transfers. With one billion units in the installed
base, USB is already the de facto interconnect for PC and many CE and mobile
devices. With Wireless USB, all the benefits of USB will be realized but without the
wire.
5.3.1 Performance
WUSB performance at launch will provide adequate bandwidth to meet the
requirements of a typical user experience with wired connections. The 480
Mbps initial target bandwidth of WUSB is comparable to the current wired
USB 2.0 standard. With 480 Mbps being the initial target, WUSB specifications will
allow for generation steps of data throughput as the ultra wideband radio
evolves and with future process technologies, exceeding limits of 1 Gbps.
But the wireless future will arrive once WUSB, along with the common ultra
wideband platform, becomes a standard part of every processor and chipset and is
integrated in CMOS silicon.
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
UWB ANTENNAS
The best antennas for UWB are arrays of TEM horns. The higher the
frequency the antennas can be equally small (FIG. 7). In UWB systems,
antenna design is one of key technologies and has been widely investigated by both
academia and industry. The antenna design considerations are strongly dependent on
the modulation scheme, which the UWB systems are using, and applications.
CHAPTER 8
802.11 should also remain as the most effective technology for public access
and enterprise markets, where power consumption issues are less important and
data is still more important than multimedia. Many people feel this could change
if the FCC loosens the reigns on UWB, but nobody can really be sure.
Because of the projected growth of 802.11 systems by the time that higher-
powered UWB may be available, 802.ll will represent a relatively large
installed wireless LAN base. As a result, many homeowners and companies
will likely continue to support 802.11. The possible introduction of UWB as a
new physical layer within the 802.11 suite of standards, however, would provide
another option for new wireless LAN deployments and a possible migration
path from existing
802.11b/g and 802.11a systems.
As far as the release dates for UWB products go, there is some uncertainty.
Many systems are already in the testing and demonstration phase, but actual
consumer release dates are still sketchy. Predictions range from the fourth quarter
of 2003 to two years out. Whenever the products hit the shelves, it will definitely
be interesting to watch things develop, though. Only time will tell whether
UWB will totally dominate the wireless world or just play its near-term, WPAN
role.
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CHAPTER 9
As far as WLANs are concerned, UWB is not in an immediate position to take over.
This has to so with the power limitations imposed by the FCC, but even if the
limitations are lightened some say that it could take at least five years before UWB
will become a dominant player in the wireless LAN market.
There has been discussion of using UWB to provide cheap, fast, last mile
wireless access systems, which would solve the interference issues that plague
current spread spectrum-based Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs). These UWB
systems could be set up in rural areas, bringing never seen before high-speed
connectivity to those users.
Right now the best killer application for UWB is home multimedia
networking systems, where high bandwidth is crucial. UWB can support multiple
channel multimedia streaming of broadcast quality video, making it the preferred
technology to use when setting up a wireless home multimedia network.
UWB could connect virtually every multimedia device in your home without using any
wires. Digital cameras and camcorders could wirelessly stream images and video to your
TV or PC, DVD players and TV's could stream videos throughout your home, and flat
screen monitors could wirelessly connected to computers, DVD players, or any other
ULTRAWIDEBAND
source you desire. UWB will very likely revolutionize the home multimedia scene and
eliminate the mounds of tangled wires found behind home entertainment centers.
CHAPTER 10
The FCC first initiated a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) in September of 1998, which
solicited feedback from the industry regarding the possibility of allowing UWB
emissions on an unlicensed basis following power restrictions described in the FCC Part
15 rules. The FCC part 15 rules place emission limits on intentional and unintentional
radiators in unlicensed bands. These emission limits are defined in terms of microvolts
per meter (uV/m), which represent the electric field strength of the radiator. In order to
express this in terms of radiated power (terms that are better understood by
communications engineers), the following formula can be used. The emitted power from
a radiator is given by the following:
where 0 E represents the electric field strength in terms of V/m, R is the radius of the
sphere at which the field strength is measured, and . is the characteristic impedance of a
vacuum where . = 377 ohms. For example, the FCC Part 15.209 rules limit the emissions
for intentional radiators to 500uV/m measured at a distance of 3 meters in a 1MHz
bandwidth for frequencies greater than 960MHz. This corresponds to an emitted power
Initially, the main concern about UWB was whether or not they would
interfere with existing RF systems that provide essential military, aviation, fire,
police, and rescue services. Because of this, the FCC spent two years evaluating the
proposed UWB specifications and concluded that there will be no major interference.
The Department of Defense reviewed the tests and issued statements that it was
satisfied with the current restrictions being placed on UWB as well.
ADVANTAGES
Minimum complexity.
Low cost.
Highly secure.
Apart from low-power usage, inherent security and minimal noise generation,
UWB doesnt suffer from multi-path interference (where signals reach the receiver after
traveling through two or more paths). Something similar happens when your car is at an
intersection surrounded by tall buildings. Your radio might not give a clear reception as
its receiving both direct signals and those that have bounced off the buildings. Often,
the static disappears when you move ahead or backwards. Hence, it can be used in
densely built-up places, or where numbers of users are more than what is supported by
Wi-Fi, Blue-tooth etc.
CHAPTER 13
DISADVANTAGES
UWB technologys carrier less transmission property has the disadvantage of not
supporting super-resolution beam forming .although with UWB pulsed systems there is
no carrier and therefore no carrier phase for fine resolution in terms of phase coherency,
there is certainly the potential at least for the baseband equivalent of coherency using
pulse sequences .
UWB technologys very short pulse width property has the disadvantage of producing a
very large number of multipath components.
UWB technologys very short pulse width property has the disadvantage that pulse
coding of signals involves relatively long synchronization times.
UWB technologys multipath persistence property has the disadvantage that there is a
significant scatter in the angle of arrival.
UWB technologys very wide bandwidth property has the disadvantage of causing
interference to existing systems and of being subject to interference from existing
systems.
UWB is not a long range system for data transmission at higher rate.
APPLICATIONS
Communication Applications
UWB devices can be used for a variety of communications applications
involving the transmission of very high data rates over short distances without suffering
the effects of multi-path interference. UWB communication devices could be used to
wirelessly distribute services such as phone, cable, and computer networking
throughout a building or home.
Positioning Applications
UWB devices can be used to measure both distance and position. UWB
positioning systems could provide real time indoor and outdoor precision tracking for
many applications. Some potential uses include locator beacons for emergency services
and mobile inventory, personnel and asset tracking for increased safety and security,
and precision navigation capabilities for vehicles and industrial and agricultural
equipment.
Radar Applications
1. Disaster Rescue: UWB technology has been used for some time in Ground
Penetrating Radar (GPR) applications and is now being developed for new types of
imaging systems that would enable police, fire and rescue personnel to locate persons
hidden behind a wall or under debris in crises or rescue situations. By
2. Bouncing UWB pulses, rescuers can detect people through rubble, earth or even
walls using equipment similar to radar. Construction and mineral exploration
industries may also benefit.
3. Radars: The US military has already been using this technology for military
radars and tracking systems for the last 15 years.
CONCLUSION
Ultra wide band has the potential to become a viable and competitive
technology for short-range high-rate WPANs as well as lower-rate and low-power
consuming low-cost devices and networks with the capability to support a truly a
pervasive user-centric and thus personal wireless world.
Now, visualize what happens when you heave a large rock into a small pond. It
splashes out the water in one go (as seen with our naked eyes). If captured as a still
photo, well see the millions of water droplets that splash out in a fraction of a second
and make the splash we see. If ripples are like normal transmission of data between
wireless devices (as in blue-tooth or Wi-Fi), UWB promises to be the huge rock in
data transmission.
ACRONYMS
Web sites:
http://www.uwb.org
http://www.ultrawidebandplanet.com
http://www.intel.co m/techno logy/ultrawideban
d http://www.uwbinsider.com
http://forums.80211-planet.com/