Advanced Wireless Communications
Advanced Wireless Communications
Advanced Wireless Communications
Next-Gen Cellular/WiFi
Smart Homes/Spaces
Autonomous Cars
Smart Cities
Body-Area Networks
Internet of Things
All this and more …
Wireless History
Ancient Systems: Smoke Signals, Carrier Pigeons,
…
Radio invented in the 1880s by Marconi
Many sophisticated military radio systems were
developed during and after WW2
Exponential growth in cellular use since 1988:
approx. 8B worldwide users today
Ignited the wireless revolution
Voice, data, and multimedia ubiquitous
Use in 3rd world countries growing rapidly
Wifi also enjoying tremendous success and growth
Bluetooth pervasive, satellites also widespread
Future Wireless Networks
Ubiquitous Communication Among People and Devices
Next-Gen Cellular/WiFi
Smart Homes/Spaces
Autonomous Cars
Smart Cities
Body-Area Networks
Internet of Things
All this and more …
Challenges
Network/Radio Challenges 5-6G AdHoc
DVB-H
A/D
Apps DSP
Processor WLAN A/D
Media
Wimax
Processor A/D
Source: FCC
On the Horizon,
the Internet of Things
What is the Internet of Things:
BS
Reuse introduces
Cellular Systems:
Reuse channels to maximize capacity
Geographic region divided into cells
Freq./timeslots/codes/space reused in different cells (reuse 1 common).
Interference between cells using same channel: interference mitigation key
Base stations/MTSOs coordinate handoff and control functions
Shrinking cell size increases capacity, as well as complexity, handoff, …
BASE
STATION
MTSO
4G/LTE Cellular
Much higher data rates than 3G (50-100
Mbps)
3G systems has 384 Kbps peak rates
Greater spectral efficiency (bits/s/Hz)
More bandwidth, adaptive OFDM-MIMO,
reduced interference
Flexible use of up to 100 MHz of spectrum
10-20 MHz spectrum allocation common
Low packet latency (<5ms).
Reduced cost-per-bit (not clear to customers)
5G Upgrades from 4G
Future Cellular Phones
Burden for this
Everything performance
wireless is on the backbone network
in one device
San Francisco
BS
BS
BS
802.11ac
• Streaming video
• Gbps data rates
• High reliability Wireless HDTV
• Coverage inside and out and Gaming
Wireless LAN Standards
802.11b (Old – 1990s)
Standard for 2.4GHz ISM band (80 MHz)
Direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)
Speeds of 11 Mbps, approx. 500 ft range Many
WLAN
cards
have many
802.11a/g (Middle Age– mid-late 1990s) generations
Standard for 5GHz band (300 MHz)/also 2.4GHz
OFDM in 20 MHz with adaptive rate/codes
Speeds of 54 Mbps, approx. 100-200 ft range
- Channel Selection
SoN
- Power Control
Controller
- etc.
Emerging Systems
New cellular system architectures
mmWave/massive MIMO communications
Software-defined network architectures
Ad hoc/mesh wireless networks
Cognitive radio networks
Wireless sensor networks
Energy-constrained radios
Distributed control networks
Chemical Communications
Applications of Communications in Health, Bio-
medicine, and Neuroscience
Main Points
The wireless vision encompasses many exciting applications
Technical challenges transcend all system design layers
5G networks must support higher performance for some
users, extreme energy efficiency and/or low latency for
others
Cloud-based software to dynamically control and optimize
wireless networks needed (SDWN)
Innovative wireless design needed for 5G cellular/WiFi,
mmWave systems, massive MIMO, and IoT connectivity
Standards and spectral allocation heavily impact the
evolution of wireless technology
Backup Slides:
Emerging Systems
Rethinking “Cells” in Cellular
How should cellular
Coop Small
MIMO Cell systems be designed for
Relay
- Capacity
- Coverage
DAS - Energy efficiency
- Low latency
Hundreds
of antennas
Freq.
Freq. Power Self QoS
QoS CS
CS
Allocation
ICIC Opt. Threshold
Allocation Control Healing Opt. Threshold
Network Optimization
UNIFIED CONTROL PLANE
HW layer
Distributed Antennas
Peer-to-peer communications
No backbone infrastructure or centralized control
Routing can be multihop.
Topology is dynamic.
Fully connected with different link SINRs
Open questions
Fundamental capacity region
Resource allocation (power, rate, spectrum, etc.)
Routing
Cognitive Radios
CRTx CRRx
IP
NCR
NCR CR CR NCRRx
NCRTx
Multiple paradigms
(MIMO) Underlay (interference below a threshold)
Interweave finds/uses unused time/freq/space slots
Overlay (overhears/relays primary message while
Wireless Sensor Networks
Data Collection and Distributed Control
• Smart homes/buildings
• Smart structures
• Search and rescue
• Homeland security
• Event detection
• Battlefield surveillance
• Wireless-power transfer
• Poorly understood, especially at large distances and with
high efficiency
ECoG