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Bandwidth Utilization

Bandwidth utilization techniques like multiplexing and spreading allow multiple signals to be transmitted simultaneously over the same communication channel. Multiplexing combines signals by having each signal use a different carrier frequency (FDM), wavelength (WDM), or time slot (TDM). Spreading expands the bandwidth of each signal by modulating it across multiple frequencies (FHSS) or bits (DSSS), providing security against interference and eavesdropping. The goal is to efficiently utilize the available bandwidth while enabling privacy and resilience of wireless transmissions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
173 views29 pages

Bandwidth Utilization

Bandwidth utilization techniques like multiplexing and spreading allow multiple signals to be transmitted simultaneously over the same communication channel. Multiplexing combines signals by having each signal use a different carrier frequency (FDM), wavelength (WDM), or time slot (TDM). Spreading expands the bandwidth of each signal by modulating it across multiple frequencies (FHSS) or bits (DSSS), providing security against interference and eavesdropping. The goal is to efficiently utilize the available bandwidth while enabling privacy and resilience of wireless transmissions.

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Bandwidth Utilization

• Links are with limited bandwidth, need to use


bandwidth wisely.
How?
– Combine several low-bandwidth channels to one large
bandwidth.
– Expand the bandwidth of a channel.
• Bandwidth utilization techniques: Multiplexing
and spreading
• Goal of multiplexing: combine several channels
into one to achieve greater efficiency.
• Goal of Spreading- privacy and antijamming by
expanding the bandwidth of a channel and insert
redundancy.
Multiplexing
• Whenever the bandwidth of a medium linking
two devices is greater than the bandwidth
needs of the devices, the link can be shared.
• Multiplexing is the set of techniques that
allows the simultaneous transmission of
multiple signals across a single data link.
• There are three basic multiplexing techniques:
frequency-division multiplexing, wavelength-
division multiplexing, and time-division
multiplexing.
• The first two are techniques designed for
analog signals, the third, for digital signals.
Frequency Division Multiplexing
• This technique that can be applied when the
bandwidth of a link (in hertz) is greater than the
combined bandwidths of the signals to be
transmitted.
• In FDM, signals generated by each sending
device modulate different carrier frequencies.
• These modulated signals are then combined into a
single composite signal that can be transported by
the link.
• Carrier frequencies are separated by sufficient
bandwidth to accommodate the modulated signal.
• Channels can be separated by strips of unused
bandwidth-guard bands-to prevent signals
from overlapping.

• FDM is an analog multiplexing technique that


combines analog signals.
Multiplexing Process
• Each source generates a signal of a similar
frequency range.
• Inside the multiplexer, these similar signals
modulates different carrier frequencies (/1,12,
and h).
• The resulting modulated signals are then
combined into a single composite signal that is
sent out over a media link that has enough
bandwidth to accommodate it.
Demultiplexing Process
• The demultiplexer uses a series of filters to
decompose the multiplexed signal into its
constituent component signals.
• The individual signals are then passed to a
demodulator that separates them from their
carriers and passes them to the output lines
Multiplexed Signal

Individual
Signals
Example:
• Five channels, each with a 100-kHz
bandwidth, are to be multiplexed together.
• What is the minimum bandwidth of the link if
there is a need for a guard band of 10 kHz
between the channels to prevent interference?
Soln:
• For five channels, we need at least four guard
bands. This means that the required bandwidth
is at least
5 × 100 + 4 × 10 = 540 kHz,
Applications of FDM:
• Radio broadcasting
• Television broadcasting
• Cellular telephones.
Wavelength Division Multiplexing
• Wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) is
designed to use the high-data-rate capability of fiber-
optic cable.
• The optical fiber data rate is higher than the data rate
of metallic transmission cable.
• Using a fiber-optic cable for one single line wastes
the available bandwidth.
• The combining and splitting of light sources
are easily handled by a prism.

• Multiplexer can be made to combine several


input beams of light, each containing a narrow
band of frequencies, into one output beam of a
wider band of frequencies.
• One application of WDM is the SONET
network in which multiple optical fiber lines
are multiplexed and demultiplexed.
Time-Division Multiplexing
• Time-division multiplexing (TDM) is a digital
process that allows several connections to
share the high bandwidth of a line.
• Instead of sharing a portion of the bandwidth
as in FDM, time is shared.
• Each connection occupies a portion of time in
the link.
• TDM is a digital multiplexing technique for
combining several low-rate channels into one
high-rate one.
Time Slots and Frames
• The data flow of each input connection is divided
into units, where each input occupies one input
time slot.
• A unit can be 1 bit, one character, or one block of
data.
• Each input unit becomes one output unit and
occupies one output time slot.
• The duration of an output time slot is n times
shorter than the duration of an input time slot.
• If an input time slot is T s, the output time slot is
Tin s, where n is the number of connections.
• In other words, a unit in the output connection
has a shorter duration.
Synchronous TDM
Spread Spectrum
• Multiplexing combines signals from several
sources to achieve bandwidth efficiency.
• The available bandwidth of a link is divided
between the sources.
• In spread spectrum the signals are combined
from different sources to fit into a larger
bandwidth, but goals are different.
• Spread spectrum is designed to be used in
wireless applications (LANs and WANs).
• In wireless applications, all stations use air (or a
vacuum) as the medium for communication.
• Stations must be able to share this medium
without interception by an eavesdropper and
without being subject to jamming from a
malicious intruder.
• Spread spectrum techniques add redundancy, they
spread the original spectrum needed for each
station.
• If the required bandwidth for each station is B,
spread spectrum expands it to Bss' such that Bss »
B.
• The expanded bandwidth allows the source to
wrap its message in a protective envelope for a
more secure transmission.
Spread spectrum achieves its goals through two
principles:
1. The bandwidth allocated to each station needs
to be, by far, larger than what is needed. This
allows redundancy.
2. The expanding of the original bandwidth B to
the bandwidth Bss must be done by a process
that is independent of the original signal i.e.,
the spreading process occurs after the signal is
created by the source.
• There are two techniques to spread the
bandwidth: frequency hopping spread
spectrum (FHSS) and direct sequence spread
spectrum (DSSS).
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS)
• The frequency hopping spread spectrum
(FHSS) technique uses M different carrier
frequencies that are modulated by the source
signal.
• The signal modulates one carrier frequency; at
the next moment, the signal modulates another
carrier frequency.
• The bandwidth occupied by a source after
spreading is BpHSS »B.
FHSS
• A pseudorandom code generator, called
pseudorandom noise (PN), creates a k-bit
pattern for every hopping period Tn
• The frequency table uses the pattern to find the
frequency to be used for this hopping period
and passes it to the frequency synthesizer.
• The frequency synthesizer creates a carrier
signal of that frequency, and the source signal
modulates the carrier signal.
For 8 hopping frequencies, k=3.
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum
• In DHSS data bit is replaced with n bits using a
spreading code.
• Each bit is assigned a code of n bits, called chips,
where the chip rate is n times that of the data bit.
• In wireless LAN the most commonly used sequence
is Barker sequence where n=11.
• If the original signal rate is N, the rate of the
spread signal is 11N.
• This means that the required bandwidth for the
spread signal is 11 times larger than the
bandwidth of the original signal.
• The spread signal can provide privacy if the
intruder does not know the code.
• It can also provide immunity against
interference if each station uses a different
code.

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