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Introduction To Wireless Communication: CS5440 Wireless Access Networks

The document provides an introduction to wireless communication systems. It outlines the key elements of a wireless system including the transmitter, transmission medium, and receiver. The transmitter components discussed are frequency spectrum, modulation, and antennas. Issues around propagation, attenuation, and constraints in the transmission medium are also covered. The document then provides a brief history of wireless technologies and summarizes common wireless services and applications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views55 pages

Introduction To Wireless Communication: CS5440 Wireless Access Networks

The document provides an introduction to wireless communication systems. It outlines the key elements of a wireless system including the transmitter, transmission medium, and receiver. The transmitter components discussed are frequency spectrum, modulation, and antennas. Issues around propagation, attenuation, and constraints in the transmission medium are also covered. The document then provides a brief history of wireless technologies and summarizes common wireless services and applications.

Uploaded by

BALA A
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Introduction to Wireless

Communication
CS5440 Wireless Access Networks

Dilum Bandara
[email protected]
Outlines
 Elements of a wireless system
 Transmitter
 Frequency spectrum
 Modulation
 Antenna
 Medium
 Propagation
 Attenuation
 Receiver
 Antenna
 Demodulation
 Issues & constraints
2
Wireless Communication
 Transfer of data between 2+ points that aren’t
connected by an electrical conductor
 Typically use electromagnetic waves

 Why wireless?
 Running cables not always possible
 Low footprint
 Rapid (re)configuration
 Low cost

3
Wireless History
 Ancient systems – Smoke Signals, Carrier Pigeons, etc.
 Radio invented in 1880s by Marconi
 Many sophisticated military radio systems developed
during & after WW2
 Exponential growth in Cellular systems since 1988
 Ignited wireless revolution
 Voice, data, & multimedia ubiquitous
 6.8 billion subscribers worldwide as of Feb. 2013 (source ITU)
 Use in 3rd-world countries growing rapidly
 3.5 billion subscribers in Asia Pacific in 2013
 Wi-Fi enjoying tremendous success & growth
 Wide area networks (e.g., WiMax) & short-range systems other
than Bluetooth (e.g., UWB) less successful 4
5
Future Wireless Networks
Ubiquitous communication
among People & Devices
Next-generation Cellular
Wireless Internet Access
Wireless Multimedia
Sensor Networks
Smart Homes/Spaces
Automated Highways
In-Body Networks
IoT

Source: Andrea Goldsmith, “Cross


Layer Design in Wireless 6
Networks”, Stanford University
Wireless Services
 Telemetry control & traffic control systems
 Infrared & ultrasonic remote control devices
 Professional LMR (Land Mobile Radio) & SMR (Specialized
Mobile Radio)
 Used by business, industrial & public safety entities
 Consumer 2-way radio
 Airband & radio navigation equipment
 Amateur Radio Service (Ham radio)
 Cellular telephones & pagers
 Global Positioning System (GPS)
 Cordless computer peripherals
 Cordless phones
 Satellite television 7
Source: www.access.kth.se
Elements of a Wireless System
Receiver 1

Medium Receiver 2
Transmitter

Receiver n

Source: www.mikroe.com/old/books/rrbook/chapter2/chapter2.htm
Transmitter

AM Transmitter

 Elements depend on transmission technology


 Frequency & wavelength, c = f λ
 Modulation
 Antenna
9
Exercise
 Wavelength of an electromagnetic wave travelling
in space is 60 cm. What is its frequency?
 Assume speed of light is 3×108 m/s

a) 500 MHz
b) 3 GHz
c) 5 GHz
d) 15 GHz

10
Frequency Spectrum
 Range of available frequencies
 To avoid interference, various wireless
technologies use distinct frequency bands
 Signal power is well controlled
 Assigned by regulatory agencies
 e.g., FCC, ITU, TRC

11
Source: www.cosmosportal.org
Government license not
required
Industrial, Scientific, &
Medical (ISM) band
VLF – very low frequency
LF – low frequency
MF – medium frequency
HF – high frequency
VHF – very high frequency
UHF – ultra-high frequency
SHF – super-high frequency
EHF – extremely high frequency

12

Source: P. Zheng et al., Wireless Networking Complete


Key Frequency Bands
 AM – 520 - 1650.5 KHz
 FM – 87.5 - 108 MHz
 Direct broadcast satellite – 10.9 - 12.75 GHz
 Global System for Mobile (GSM)
 890 - 960 MHz & 1710 - 1880 MHz
 Referred as 900 & 1800 bands
 Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
 900 & 1800 bands
 3G wideband CDMA (UMTS)
 1900 - 1980, 2020 - 2025, & 2110 - 2190 MHz bands
 Wireless LAN (IEEE 802.11)
 902 - 928 MHz, 2400 - 2483 MHz, 5.15 - 5.725 GHz
ISM band – 2.4 GHz in US
13

Key Frequency Bands (Cont.)
 Bluetooth – 2.402 - 2.480 GHz in US
 WiMax – 2 - 11 GHz (includes both licensed &
unlicensed)
 Ultra-wideband (UWB) – 1.1 - 10.6 GHz
 Radio-frequency IDentification (RFID)
 LF (120 – 140 KHz), HF (13.56 MHz), UHF (868 – 956 MHz), &
Microwave (2.4 GHz)
 IrDA – 100 GHz
 Wireless sensors
 300 - 1000 MHz & 2.4 GHz ISM band
 Global Positioning System (GPS)
 1575.42 MHz (referred to as L1) & 1227.60 MHz (L2)
14
Antenna
 Converts signal to electromagnetic waves
 Size must be consistent with wavelength
 Types
 Directional
 Satellite communication
 Omnidirectional
 Cell phones, car radios
 MIMO
 Wireless routers

15
Source: www.flann.com
Antenna Gain
 How well an antenna converts input power into
radio waves headed in a specified direction
 Depends on antenna's directivity & electrical
efficiency
 Gain
 Ratio of power produced by antenna to power
produced by a hypothetical lossless isotropic antenna
 Unitless
 Usually expressed in decibels (dB)
 Directional  high gain
 Omnidirectional  low gain
16
Attenuation
 Reduction in signal strength with distance,
propagation medium, & atmospheric conditions
 Typically high for high frequencies
 Friis free-space equation

PT GT G R 2
PR ( d ) =
( 4 ) 2 d 2
 PR, PT – Power at receiver (in Watts or Milliwatts)
 GT, GR – gain of antenna
 λ – wavelength (in meters)
 d – distance (in meters) 17
Example
 Transmission frequency is 881.52 MHz & antenna gains
are 8 dB & 0 dB for base station & mobile station
 What is the signal attenuation at a distance of 1,500 m?
 c = 299 792 458 m/s PT GT GR 2
PR (d ) =
 Solution (4 ) 2 d 2
 c = f λ  λ = 299 792 458/881.52×106 = 0.34 m PR (d ) GT GR 2
=
PT (4 ) 2 d 2
 8 dB = 100.8 = 6.3
PR (d ) 6.3 × 1× 0.34 2
 0 dB = 100 = 1 =
PT (4 ) 21500 2
 Loss = PT – PR
PR (d ) 6.3 × 1× 0.34 2
 Loss = 86.89 dB =
PT (4 ) 21500 2
PR (d )
= 2.0497 × 10 -9
PT
PT
= 4.8788 × 108
PR (d ) 18
Attenuation (Cont.)
 Based on empirical evidence, more reasonable to
model PR as a log-distance path-loss model
PR (d )  P0 (d 0 )  10n p log( d / d 0 )   
 np – path loss exponent
 Xσ – zero-mean Gaussian random variable with STD σ
 All power values are in dBm

Source: S. Rao, “Estimating the ZigBee


19
transmission-range ISM band,” EDN, May 2007.
Complex Attenuation
 When signal encounters obstacles
 High-frequency signals experience
1. Absorption
2. Shadowing
 When object >> λ
3. Reflection
 When object >> λ
4. Refraction
5. Diffraction
6. Scattering
 When object ≤ λ
20
Complex Attenuation (Cont.)

Absorption Shadowing

Source: http://computer-help- Source: http://elmag.org/en/propagation-modeling-


tips.blogspot.com/2011/04/radio-frequency- of-shadowing-by-vegetation-for-mobile-satcom-%26-
behaviors.html satnav-systems
21
Complex Attenuation (Cont.)

Reflection
Source: http://wireless.navigator.co.uk/radio_link.htm

Refraction
Source: http://computer-help-
tips.blogspot.com/2011/04/radio-frequency-
behaviors.html

22
Complex Attenuation (Cont.)
Source: http://www.astrosurf.com/luxorion/qsl-
propa.htm

Diffraction

Source: http://newhorizons.bg/blog/2010/12/wireless-
101-terminology-part-2-implementing-cisco-unified-
Scattering 23

wireless-networking-essentials-iuwne/
Example – Attenuation Experienced by
Mobile Phones

Source: www.intechopen.com/books/matlab-a-fundamental-tool-for-scientific-computing-and-engineering-
applications-volume-2/mobile-radio-propagation-prediction-for-two-different-districts-in-mosul-city

24
Exercise
 Reflection of wireless signals occurs when
a) wavelength is constant
b) object size << wavelength
c) object size ≈ wavelength
d) object size >> wavelength

25
Noise
 Disturbances introduced to wireless signals

Source: 26
www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/video/ps8806/ps5684/ps2209/prod_white_paper0900aecd805738f5.html
Noise (Cont.)
 Sources
 Thermal (white) noise
 From electronic circuit
 PThermal = KTB
 K – Boltzmann constant, T - Ambient temperature, B - receiver BW
 Intermodulation noise
 When 2 frequencies of signals are transmitted over same medium

Source:
2 signals at 270 & 275 MHz http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter
modulation

27
Noise (Cont.)
 Crosstalk between channels
 Impulse noise
 Due to instantaneous electromagnetic changes

Source: www.chalmers.se/en/departments/s2/research/ Source: http://volpefirm.com/impact-of-


Pages/Hardware-constrained-communication.aspx impulse-noise-on-adaptive-pre-equalization-
part-ii/impulse-noise/

28
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
 To cope with noise, transmitted signal > noise
 High Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)

 Or use spread spectrum technology


 Embed signal over wide range of frequencies with low power

29
Example
 PT = 10 W, free space loss 117 dB, antenna gains 8 dB
& 0 dB, total system losses 8 dB, receiver antenna
temperature 290 K, & receiver bandwidth 1.25 MHz
 Find PR
 Find thermal noise, K = 1.38×10-23 W/Kelvin-Hz
 Find SNR at receiver
 Solution
 PR = -107 dBW
 PThermal = KTB = 1.38×10-23 × 290 × 1.25×106 = -143 dBW
 SNR = -107 + 143 = 36 dB

30
Multipath Propagation
 Receive same signal through different paths
 Different arrival times
 Inter Symbol Interference (ISI)
 Different levels of attenuation
 Different levels of distortion

Source: http://www.ni.com/white-paper/6427/en/
31
Signal Propagation
 Amplitude domain
 Amplitude change with
time
 Frequency domain
 Frequency change
with time
 Phase domain
 Phase change with
time Source: www.ni.com/white-paper/4805/en
 Frequency & phase
modulation require high-
frequency carriers 32
AM & FM

Amplitude Modulation

Frequency Modulation
33
Phase Modulation

34
Phase Modulation (Cont.)
 Amplitude-Shift Keying (ASK)
 Binary ASK
 1 – By presence of a signal
 0 – No signal
 Pros
 Bandwidth efficient
 Simple to implement
 Cons
 Low power efficiency
 Susceptible to noise & multipath propagation
 Unclear absence of a signal vs. binary 0

35
Phase Modulation (Cont.)
 Frequency-Shift Keying (FSK)
 Binary FSK
 1 – High frequency
 0 – Low frequency
 Pros
 Better SNR
 Simple decoding
 Long distance
 Cons
 Slightly less bandwidth efficient than ASK & PSK
 More complicated circuitry than ASK

36
Phase Modulation (Cont.)
 Phase-Shift Keying (PSK)
 Encode based on phase of carrier wave
 Binary PSK
 1 – 180o
 0 – 0o
 Quadrature PSK
 0o, 90o, 180o, 270o
 Pros
 Power efficient
 Cons
 Low-bandwidth efficiency
 More complicated circuitry than FSK
37
Phase Modulation (Cont.)
 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM)
 Combines ASK & PSK
 Widely used

Source:
Source: www.scicos.org/ScicosModNum/modnum_web/sr
www.physics.udel.edu/~watson/scen103/projec c/modnum_421/interf/scicos/help/eng/htm/MODQ
38
ts/96s/thosguys/qam.html AM_f.htm
Multiplexing
 Transmitting multiple signals simultaneously
 Maximize capacity
 Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
 Multiple channels occupy same frequency in
alternating slices
 Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
 Use different carrier frequencies
 Code Division Multiplexing (CDM)
 Same frequency & same time but different codes
 Code – like Tx & Rx speak different languages
39
Multiplexing (Cont.)

Source: http://m.ztopics.com/Time%20division%20multiple%20access/ 40
CDMA

Source: http://electronicdesign.com/communications/fundamentals-communications-access-technologies-
fdma-tdma-cdma-ofdma-and-sdma

41
Source:
www.umtsworld.com/technology/cdmabasics.htm
Exercise
 Which of the following multiplexing technique
allow signals to use different frequencies at the
same time?
a) Amplitude Division Multiplexing
b) Frequency Division Multiplexing
c) Code Division Multiplexing
d) Time Division Multiplexing

42
Narrowband Transmission

Source: www.tapr.org
 Pros
 Efficient use of frequency
 Cons
 Require regulation
43
 Easier to intercept & jam
Spread Spectrum

www.intercomsonline.com/Spread-Spectrum-Technology_a/162.htm

 Spread signal over a large range of frequencies


 Low power density (power per frequency)
 Signal appear as background noise 44
Spread Spectrum (Cont.)
 Only receivers that know the spreading scheme
can reconstruct original signal
 Spreading scheme defined by a code
 Only designated receiver knows the code
 Pros
 Improved channel capacity
 Resistance against interference
 Security against tapping & jamming
 Cons
 Complex circuits
45
Signal With & Without Noise

Source: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0888327009003756

46
Types of Spread Spectrum Systems
1. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)
2. Frequency-Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS)
3. Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing
(OFDM)

47
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)
 Spread signal over
broader frequency
band
 Chipping technique to
spread signal
 Transmitter & receiver
needs to be
synchronized
 Used in WiFi

Source: www.maximintegrated.com/app-notes/index.mvp/id/1890

48
Frequency-Hopping Spread Spectrum
(FHSS)
 Hoping sequence of
frequencies
 Only subset of the available
frequencies are used to hop
 Transmitter & receiver needs
to be synchronized
 Relatively simple to implement
than DSSS
 Relatively easier to recover Tx
signal than DSSS
 Relatively less robust to signal
Source: www.maximintegrated.com/app- distortion & multipath effects
notes/index.mvp/id/1890
 Used in Bluetooth 49
Orthogonal Frequency-Division
Multiplexing (OFDM)
 Utilize orthogonal multiple subcarriers in parallel
 Much higher data rates
 Low multipath interference
 Used in IEEE 802.11 a/g

50
Source: http://wiki.hsc.com//Main/OFDM
Challenges
 Wireless channels are a difficult & capacity-
limited communications medium
 Typically less efficient
 Traffic patterns, user locations, & network
conditions are constantly changing
 Applications are heterogeneous with hard
constraints that must be met by networks

51
More Challenges
 Network challenges
BT
 Scarce spectrum FM/XM

 Demanding/diverse applications GPS


Cellular
 Reliability
DVB-H
 Ubiquitous coverage
 Seamless indoor/outdoor operation Apps WLAN
Processor
 Device challenges
Media Wimax
 Size, power, cost Processor

 Multiple antennas in Silicon


 Multi-radio Integration
 Coexistance
52
Careful what you wish for…

Source: FCC Source: Unstrung Pyramid Research 2010

Growth in mobile data, massive spectrum deficit & stagnant revenues 53


require technical & political breakthroughs for ongoing success of cellular
Software-Defined (SD) Radio
Is this the solution to the device challenges?
BT A/D
FM/XM

Cellular GPS
A/D
DVB-H

Apps DSP
Processor WLAN A/D
Media
Processor Wimax A/D

 Wideband antennas & A/Ds span BW of desired signals


 DSP programmed to process desired signal: no specialized
HW
Today, this isn’t cost, size, or power efficient
54
Summary
 Bandwidth & QoS is in demand
 Many applications & services
 Spectrum is scare
 Many elements & solutions
 Still not enough
 It’s only going to be even more interesting...

55

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