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UNIT 3 - Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath

Rapid signal strength changes and multipath propagation effects cause small-scale fading over short travel distances. Multipath propagation from surrounding objects leads to Doppler shifts that vary with speed. Transmission bandwidth greater than the coherent bandwidth of the multipath channel causes signal distortion. Multipath delay spread and Doppler spread characterize time dispersion and time variation of mobile radio channels respectively. Direct pulse measurements and frequency domain sounding techniques are used to analyze multipath channel characteristics.

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

UNIT 3 - Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath

Rapid signal strength changes and multipath propagation effects cause small-scale fading over short travel distances. Multipath propagation from surrounding objects leads to Doppler shifts that vary with speed. Transmission bandwidth greater than the coherent bandwidth of the multipath channel causes signal distortion. Multipath delay spread and Doppler spread characterize time dispersion and time variation of mobile radio channels respectively. Direct pulse measurements and frequency domain sounding techniques are used to analyze multipath channel characteristics.

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Priya Darshu
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© © All Rights Reserved
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UNIT 3 - Mobile Radio

Propagation: Small-Scale
Fading and Multipath
Small-Scale Multipath Propagation
• The three most important effects
– Rapid changes in signal strength over a small travel distance or time
interval
– Random frequency modulation due to varying Doppler shifts on different
multipath signals
– Time dispersion caused by multipath propagation delays
• Factors influencing small-scale fading
– Multipath propagation: reflection objects and scatters
– Speed of the mobile: Doppler shifts
– Speed of surrounding objects
– Transmission bandwidth of the signal
• The received signal will be distorted if the transmission bandwidth is greater
than the bandwidth of the multipath channel.
• Coherent bandwidth: bandwidth of the multipath channel.
• Doppler Shift
– A mobile moves at a constant velocity v, along a path segment having
length d between points X and Y.
– Path length difference
l  d cos  vt cos
– Phase change
2l 2vt
   cos 
 
– Doppler shift

1  v
fd    cos 
2 t 
Impulse Response Model of a Multipath Channel
• A mobile radio channel may be modeled as a linear filter with a time
varying impulse response
– time variation is due to receiver motion in space
– filtering is due to multipath

• The channel impulse response can be expressed as h(d,t). Let x(t)


represent the transmitted signal, then the received signal y(d,t) at
position d can be expressed as

y ( d , t )  x (t )  h ( d , t )   
x ( )h(d , t   )d
• For a causal system t
y (d , t )  
x ( )h(d , t   )d
• The position of the receiver can be expressed as
d  vt
• We have
t
y ( vt, t )  
x ( )h( vt, t   )d
• Since v is a constant, y (vt, t ) is just a function of t.
t
y (t ) 
 
x ( )h(vt, t   )d
• In general, the channel impulse response can be expressed h (t , )
– t : time variation due to motion
–  : channel multipath delay for a fixed value of t.
• With the channel impulse responseh (t , ) , we may have the output
t
y (t )  

x ( )h(t , )d  x (t )  h(t , )

• For bandlimited bandpass channel, thenh (t , ) may be equivalently


described by a complex baseband impulse responsehb (t , )
– The equivalent baseband output
1 1 1 1
r (t )  c(t )  hb (t , ) or r (t )  c(t )  hb (t , )
2 2 2 2
x(t )  Rec(t ) exp( jct )
1
r (t )  c(t )  hb (t , )
2
y(t )  Rer (t ) exp( jct )
• Discretize the multipath delay axis  into equal time delay segments
called excess delay bins.
• The baseband response of a multipath channel can be expressed as
N 1
hb (t , )   ai (t , ) exp  j 2f c i (t )  j (t , )  (   i (t ))
i 0

ai (t , :) amplitude of the ith multipath component


 i (t :) excess delay of ith multipath component
• Define i (t , )  2f c i (t )   (t , )
• If the channel impulse response is assumed to be time invariant, the
channel impulse response may be simplified as
N 1
hb ( )   ai exp  j i  (   i )
i 0

• The impulse response may be measured by using a probing pulse p (t )


which approximates a delta function.
p(t )   (t   )
Small-Scale Multipath Measurement

• Multipath channel measurement techniques


– Direct pulse measurements
– Spread spectrum sliding correlator measurements
– Swept frequency measurements
Direct RF Pulse System

• Direct RF pulse system


– This system transmits a repetitive pulse of width bb , and uses a
receiver with a wideband filter with bandwidth BW  2 /  bb
– Envelope detector to detect the amplitude response.
• Minimum resolvable delay  bb

• No phase information can be measured.


Frequency Domain Channel Sounding
• Dual relationship between time domain and frequency domain.
• It is possible to measure the channel impulse response in the
frequency domain.
• Measure the frequency domain response and then converted to the
time domain using inverse discrete Fourier transform (IDFT).
Parameters of Mobile Multipath Channels
• Time dispersion parameters (time domain) (time dispersive nature of
the channel)
• Coherent bandwidth (frequency domain) (time dispersive nature of
the channel)
• Doppler spread and coherent time (time varying nature of the
channel)

• Power delay profiles for different types of channels are different

Indoor
Outdoor
Time Dispersion Parameters
Depends only on the relative amplitude of the multipath components.
• Typical RMS delay spreads
– Outdoor: on the order of microseconds
– Indoor: on the order of nanoseconds
• Maximum excess delay (X dB) is defined to be the time delay during
which multipath energy falls to X dB below the maximum.

excess delay   X   0

 X : maximum delay at which a multipath component is within X dB


 0 : delay for the first arriving signal
• Time dispersion parameters
– mean excess delay
– RMS delay spread
– excess delay spread
• Mean excess delay
 k k
a 2
 P( ) k k
  k
 k

 k
a 2

k
 P( ) k
k

• RMS delay spread

   2  ( 2 )

where
 k k
a 2 2
 k k
P ( ) 2

2  k
 k

 k
a 2

k
 P(
k
k )
Coherent Bandwidth
• Coherent bandwidth, Bc , is a statistic measure of the range of
frequencies over which the channel can be considered to be “flat”.
• Bc is inversely proportional to rms delay spread.
• Two sinusoids with frequency separation greater than Bc are affected
quite differently by the channel.
• If the coherent bandwidth is defined as the bandwidth over which the
frequency correlation function is above 0.9, then the coherent
bandwidth is approximately
1
Bc 
50 
• If the frequency correlation function is above 0.5
1
Bc 
5 
Doppler Spread and Coherent Time
• Doppler spread and coherent time are parameters which describe the
time varying nature of the channel in a small-scale region.
• When a pure sinusoidal tone of f c is transmitted, the received signal
spectrum, called the Doppler spectrum, will have components in the
range f c  f d and f c  f d , where f d is the Doppler shift.

C hannel

fc fc  fd fc fc  fd

• f d is a function of the relative velocity of the mobile, and the angle


between the direction of motion of the mobile and direction of arrival
of the scattered waves
• Coherent time TC is the time domain dual of Doppler spread.
• Coherent time is used to characterize the time varying nature of the
frequency dispersiveness of the channel in the time domain.
1
TC 
fm
f m : maximum Doppler shift given by f m  v / 

• Two signals arriving with a time separation greater than TC are


affected differently by the channel
• A statistic measure of the time duration over which the channel
impulse response is essentially invariant.
• If the coherent time is defined as the time over which the time
corrleation function is above 0.5, then
9
TC 
16f m
Types of Small-Scale Fading

• Multipath delay spread leads to time dispersion and frequency


selective fading.
• Doppler spread leads to frequency dispersion and time selective
fading.
• Multipath delay spread and Doppler spread are independent of one
another.
Flat Fading
• If the channel has a constant gain and linear phase response over a
bandwidth which is greater than the bandwidth of the transmitted
signal, the received signal will undergo flat fading.
• The received signal strength changes with time due to fluctuations in
the gain of the channel caused by multipath.
• The received signal varies in gain but the spectrum of the
transmission is preserved.
• Flat fading channel is also called amplitude varying channel.
• Also called narrow band channel: bandwidth of the applied signal is
narrow as compared to the channel bandwidth.
• Time varying statistics: Rayleigh flat fading.
• A signal undergoes flat fading if
BS  BC
and
TS  
TS : reciprocal bandwidth (symbol period)
BS : bandwidth of the transmitt ed signal
BC : coherent bandwidth
 : rms delay spread
Frequency Selective Fading
• If the channel possesses a constant-gain and linear phase response
over a bandwidth that is smaller than the bandwidth of transmitted
signal, then the channel creates frequency selective fading.
signal spectrum S ( f )

channel response

f
BC

received signal spectrum

f
• Frequency selective fading is due to time dispersion of the
transmitted symbols within the channel.
– Induces intersymbol interference
• Frequency selective fading channels are much more difficult to model
than flat fading channels.
• Statistic impulse response model
– 2-ray Rayleigh fading model
– computer generated
– measured impulse response
• For frequency selective fading
BS  BC
and
TS   
• Frequency selective fading channel characteristic
Fading Effects Due to Doppler Spread
• Fast Fading: The channel impulse response changes rapidly within the
symbol duration.
– The coherent time of the channel is smaller then the symbol period of
the transmitted signal.
– Cause frequency dispersion due to Doppler spreading.
• A signal undergoes fast fading if
TS  TC
and
BS  BD
• Slow Fading: The channel impulse response changes at a rate much
slower than the transmitted baseband signal s(t).
– The Doppler spread of the channel is much less then the bandwidth of
the baseband signal.
• A signal undergoes slow fading if
TS  TC
and
BS  BD
Rayleigh Distributions
• It can be assumed that x and y are Gaussian random variables with
mean equal to zero due to the following reasons
– n is usually very large.
– The individual amplitude ai are random.
– The phases  have a uniform distribution.
i
• Because x and y are independent random variables, the joint distribution
p(x,y) is
1  x2  y2 
p ( x, y )  p ( x ) p( y )  exp   
2 2  2 2 
 
• The distribution p( r ,  ) can be written as a function of p ( x, y )

p(r, )  J p( x, y )
x / r x /  cos   r sin 
J   r
y / r y /  sin  r cos 
Rayleigh Distributions
• We have
r  r2 
p( r,  )  exp   2 
2 2  2 
 
• The Rayleigh distribution has a pdf given by
 r  r2 
2  2 exp   2  r0
p( r )   p( r, )d    2 
 

0

 0 otherwise
: rms value of the received signal before envelop detection
 2: time - average power of the received signal before envelop detection
• The sum of two quadrature Gaussian noise signals
• Used to describe statistical time varying nature of the Rxd
envelope of a flat fading signal
or
the envelope of an individual multipath component.
• Cumulative distribution function (CDF)

R  R2 
P( R)  Pr( r  R)   p( r )dr  1  exp   2 
0
 2 
• The mean value of the Rayleigh distribution is given by
 
rmean  E[r ]   rp( r )dr    1.2533
0 2
• The variance of the Rayleigh distribution is given by
  2
  E[r ]  E [r ]   r p( r )dr 
2
r
2 2 2
0 2
 
   2    0.4292 2
2

 2
Ricean distribution
• When there is a dominant stationary (non fading) signal
component present, such as LOS path, the small scale
fading envelope distribution is Ricean.

• As the dominant signal becomes weaker, the composite


signal resembles a noise that of Rayleigh.

• The dominant path decrease in amplitude, the Ricean


distribution degenerates to a Rayleigh distribution.
Ricean distribution
• By following similar steps described in Rayleigh distribution, we obtain

 r  r 2  A2   Ar 
 exp   I
2  0 2 
A  0, r  0
p( r )   2  2    
 r0
 0
where
 Ar  1 2  Ar cos  
I0  2  
   2
0
exp 
 
2 d

is the modified Bessel function of the first kind and zero-order.
• The Ricean distribution is often described in terms of a parameter K
which is defined as the ratio between the deterministic signal power
and the variance of the multipath. It is given by K  A2 /( 2 2 ) or in
terms of dB

A2
K (dB)  10 log 2 dB
2
Ricean distribution
• The parameter K is known as the Ricean factor and completely
specifies the Ricean distribution.
• As A  0, we have K   dB. The dominant path decrease in
amplitude, the Ricean distribution degenerates to a Rayleigh
distribution.

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