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WCN-Wireless Communications and Networks

This document provides information about the Wireless Communications and Networks (WCN) course being taught by Huma Israr. It includes the class schedule, required textbooks, course objectives, topics to be covered, and some background that students should already have. The course will cover topics such as the history of wireless communication, digital and analog systems, multiple access techniques, cellular network evolution, and wireless local and personal area networks.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views35 pages

WCN-Wireless Communications and Networks

This document provides information about the Wireless Communications and Networks (WCN) course being taught by Huma Israr. It includes the class schedule, required textbooks, course objectives, topics to be covered, and some background that students should already have. The course will cover topics such as the history of wireless communication, digital and analog systems, multiple access techniques, cellular network evolution, and wireless local and personal area networks.

Uploaded by

laiba noor
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WCN- Wireless

Communications and Networks

Huma Israr
Department Of Computer Science (CS), KICSIT
[email protected]
SPRING 2021, BSCS-VIII
2

Class Schedule

Lecture Hours (Theory)


Monday ( 11:30 to 12:30 )
Wednesday (1:50 to 3:50 )

Semester Calendar
3
“ Web is the Greenest Book”

Books
 Wireless Communication and Networks 2nd Edition
by William Stallings

 Data Communication and Networks 4th Edition, by


Behrouz A. Forouzan
4

Books
 Wireless Communication by Rapaport

 Mobile Communication by Jochen Schiller


At the End of the Course :

You Should be able to know


 What is wireless communication.
 What are the current wireless trends.
 How would the future look like for wireless communication.
 What are the different issues and challenges in future wireless
and mobile communication.
What You Should Already know:
 OSI Model
 TCP/IP Model
 Packet and Circuit Switching
 Multiplexing
 Types of Medium and their characteristics
 Basics of Transmission e.g. models of transmission, types etc.
 WiFi and Ethernet etc.
 Delays and its types -----------??
 Addressing and its types -----------??
 IP and its versions -------------------??
Grading Policy:
 All deadlines to be strictly followed
 There will be marks deduction for late submission.
 Rechecking can be requested after grade reporting, with in
2 days only.
Topics to be covered in the course:
 Short History.
 Overview of a Communication System
 Digital vs. Analog Communications
 Examples of Wireless Communication Systems
 Why Wireless is Different ?
 Wireless System Architecture
 Multiple Access Techniques
 Evolution of Cellular Networks (1G ~ 3G)
 Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs), Bluetooth and
Personal Area Networks (PANs)
Cone of learning

Short History:

 Use of light in ancient times


 Smoke signals (150 BC)
 Start of electromagnetic waves in 1830s
 Marconi (1874-1937) demonstration of wireless telegraphy in
1895
 First radio broadcast in 1906
 1907, commercial transatlantic connections were setup (huge
antennas were used). he sent telegraphic signals across the Atlantic Ocean
from Cornwall to St. John's Newfoundland; a distance of about 3200 km.
Short History:
 Over the last century, advances in wireless technologies have
led to the radio, the television, the mobile telephone, and
communications satellites
 1915 – first wireless voice setup between Washington and San
Francisco.
 1920 – first commercial radio (still huge antennas and high
power)
 1920 – Marconi discover short waves (reflection – ionosphere)
 1926 – First telephone on train between Berlin-Hamburg
 1927 – first commercial car radio
Short History:
 1927 – TV broadcast starts Up until 1933, amplitude
modulation was used – poor quality due to interference
 1933 – frequency modulation by E.H. Armstrong
 1958 – first wireless network in Germany was analog A-Netz,
carrier frequency of 160MHz,
 Connection establishment from mobile station only

 1971 – A-Netz had 80% coverage with 11,000 customers


Short History:
 1972 – B-Netz using the same frequency 160MHz
 Connection establishment from fixed phones as well

 1979 – Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden agreed on


Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) …….. 450 MHz
 Latter on NMT 900MHz in 1986
 1982 – pan European Mobile Phone system aiming at
 New spectrum at 900MHz
 Allow roaming through out Europe
 Be fully digital
 Offer voice and data services
 Global system for Mobile (GSM) was founded
Short History:
 1983 – AMPS- Advance Mobile Phone System working at
850MHz (IS-88)
 1984 - CT1 – Cordless telephones (followed by its
predecessors CT0 -1980)
 1985-90 – C-Netz
 1991 – fully digital systems
 DECT – Digital European Cordless Telephones
 100-500 meters range
 120 duplex channels
 1.2Mbps for data transmission
 Support several 10,000 users/km2
 Used in more than 40 countries
 Renamed as Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecomm
Short History:
 1991 –
 AMPS Advanced Mobile Phone System . This network offers a
data service using the Cellular Digital Packet Data (CDPD)
 GSM The key second-generation wireless systems are the
Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM),
 TDMA
 CDMA
The Broadband:
 Wi-Fi (Wireless Fidelity), the very popular wireless LAN
technology based on the IEEE 802.11
 WiMAX is similar to Wi-Fi. Both create hot spots, but while Wi-
Fi can cover several hundred meters, WiMAX has a range of 40
to 50 km. (Cable alternative)
 Mobile-Fi is similar to the mobile version of WiMAX in terms
of technology. The objective with Mobile-Fi is to provide
Internet access to mobile users at data rates even higher than
those available in today's home broadband links. (traveling in
a moving car or train)
Broadband Conti….
 ZigBee functions at a relatively low data rate over relatively
short distances, compared to Wi-Fi. The objective is to
develop products that are very low cost, with low power
consumption and low data rate (communication among thousands of
tiny sensors)

 Ultrawideband serves a very different purpose than the other


technologies mentioned above. Ultrawideband enables the
movement of massive files at high data rates over short
distances. (Transfer hours of video from a PC to a TV)
Some Milestones in Wireless Communications
Next Generation Wireless Networks?
Next Generation Mobile phones ?
Transmission Fundamentals
 Signal
 Time Domain
 Frequency Domain
 Amplitude, Frequency, Phase, Time Period, Wavelength
Data Transmission .
 We define data as entities that convey meaning, or
information.
 Signals are electric or electromagnetic representations of
data.
 Transmission is the communication of data by the propagation
and processing of signals.
Signal.
To be transmitted, data must be transformed to electromagnetic
signals

 In this Course, we are concerned with electromagnetic signals


used as a means to transmit information.
 An electromagnetic signal is a function of time, but it can also
be expressed as a function of frequency;
Time Domain Concepts
 Viewed as a function of time, an electromagnetic signal can be
either analog or digital.
 An analog signal is one in which the signal intensity varies in a
smooth fashion over time. In other words, there are no breaks
or discontinuities in the signal.
 A digital signal is one in which the signal intensity maintains a
constant level for some period of time and then changes to
another constant
Analog and Digital Waveforms
Periodic Signals:
Periodic Signals:
 In data communications, we commonly use periodic analog
signals and non-periodic / Apriodic digital signals.
 Periodic analog signals can be classified as simple or
composite. A simple periodic analog signal, a sine wave,
cannot be decomposed into simpler signals. A composite
 periodic analog signal is composed of multiple sine waves.
Signal:
 The sine wave is the fundamental analog signal. A general sine
wave can be represented by three parameters:
 Peak Amplitude :is the maximum value or strength of the
signal over time; typically, this value is measured in volts.
 Frequency : is the rate [in cycles per second, or Hertz (Hz)] at
which the signal repeats. (An equivalent parameter is the
period of a signal, which is the amount of time it takes for one
repetition)
 Phase: is a measure of the relative position in time within a
single period of a signal
Transmission Fundamentals
Amplitude:
 Two signals with the same phase and frequency, but different amplitudes
Frequency :

 Two signals with the same amplitude and phase, but different
frequencies
Frequency:
 Frequency is the rate of change with respect to time.
 Change in a short span of time means high frequency.
 Change over a long span of time means low frequency.
 If a signal does not change at all, its frequency is zero.
 If a signal changes instantaneously, its frequency is infinite.
Units of period and frequency:
Frequency & Period::
 Frequency and period are the inverse of each other.

 The power we use at home has a frequency of 60 Hz. The


period of this sine wave can be determined as follows:
Phase:
 Phase describes the position of the waveform relative to time
0.

Three sine waves with the same


amplitude and frequency, but
different phases
Wave length:
 The wavelength (A) of a signal is the distance occupied by a
single cycle, or, put another way, the distance between two
points of corresponding phase of two consecutive cycles.

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