Unit 1 - Part1
Unit 1 - Part1
Unit 1 - Part1
CSE
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Why Wireless?
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Limitations
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Range of Wireless Systems
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History of Mobile Radio Communications
• Cellular WANU
WASU
Transceiver
• Satellite
• Microcellular Air TWLL
Trunk Switch WLL AM Interface
PSTN
• Other names function Controller HLR
• Radio In The Loop (RITL)
• Fixed-Radio Access (FRA).
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A general WLL setup
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WLL services
• Business related, eg: Conference calling
• Calling cards, coin phones
• MODEM
• ISDN (64kbps)(Integrated Services Digital Network)
• Toll-quality service
• Expand from a central office to about 8 kms
• Low license cost
• Subscriber costs equivalent or better than copper
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Cellular system
• Provide connection to the PSTN
for any user location within the
radio range of the system.
• Characteristic:
– Large number of users
– Large Geographic area
– Limited frequency spectrum
– Reuse of the radio frequency by
the concept of “cell’’.
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Hexagonal Clusters
• Honey Comb Structure is used.
• Concept of Frequency Reuse can be implemented
• Why Hexagon:
• hexagon structure provide no overlap and no gap
structure with maximum coverage.
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Speed, Wavelength, Frequency
• Frequency and wave length: λ = c/f wave length λ,
• speed of light c ≅ 3x108m/s, frequency f
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Radio Frequency Bands
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Frequencies for communication
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Frequencies for mobile communication
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Signals
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Signals
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Antennas
• Radiation and reception of electromagnetic waves,
coupling of wires to space for radio transmission
• Isotropic radiator: equal radiation in all directions
(three dimensional) - only a theoretical reference
antenna
• Real antennas are not isotropic radiators but, e.g.,
dipoles with different lengths. Eg: λ/4 on car roofs
• directed and sectorized antennas are Often used for
microwave connections or base stations for mobile
phones. E.g., radio coverage of a valley.
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Signal propagation ranges
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Signal propagation
• Receiving power of signal is proportional to 1/d² in vacuum, It depends
much more in real environments (d = distance between sender and receiver.)
• It is additionally influenced by:
Fading (Frequency Dependent)
Shadowing
Reflection At Large Obstacles
Refraction Depending On The Density Of A Medium
Scattering At Small Obstacles
Diffraction At Edges
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Free-space Propagation
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Multipath propagation
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Multiplexing Techniques
k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
• Multiplexing in 3 dimensions c
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Narrowband versus Wideband
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Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
• Separation of the whole spectrum into smaller frequency bands
• A channel gets a certain band of the spectrum for the whole time – orthogonal system
• Advantages:
• no dynamic coordination
necessary, i.e., sync. and
k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
framing c
• works also for analog signals
f
• Disadvantages:
• waste of bandwidth
if the traffic is
distributed unevenly
• inflexible
• guard bands
• narrow filters
t
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Example 6.2
6.27
Solution
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,
as shown in Figure.
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Time Division Multiplexing (TDM)
• A channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain amount of time – orthogonal system
• Advantages:
• only one carrier in the
medium at any time
• throughput high - supports bursts
• flexible – multiple slots k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
• no guard bands ?!
• Disadvantages: c
• Framing and precise f
synchronization
necessary
• high bit rates
at each
Tx/Rx is required. t
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Space Division Multiple Access (SMDA)
• more than one user can be
allocated to the same physical
communications channel
simultaneously in the same
cell
spread
detection at interference
receiver
f f
• Side effects:
• coexistence of several signals without dynamic coordination
• tap-proof
• Alternatives: Direct Sequence, Frequency Hopping
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Figure 6.27 Spread spectrum
6.33
Code Division Multiplexing (CDM)
• Each channel has a unique code k 1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
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Types of CDM I
Time
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Types of CDM II
B A B A
A B
B A B
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Figure 6.28 Frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS)
6.38
Figure 6.29 Frequency selection in FHSS
6.39
Figure 6.30 FHSS cycles
6.40
Figure 6.31 Bandwidth sharing
6.41
FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread
Spectrum)
• Discrete changes of carrier frequency
• sequence of frequency changes determined via pseudo random number sequence
• Two versions
• Fast Hopping:
several frequencies per user bit
• Slow Hopping:
several user bits per frequency
• Advantages
• frequency selective fading and interference limited to short period
• simple implementation
• uses only small portion of spectrum at any time
• Disadvantages
• not as robust as DSSS
• simpler to detect MWC (ESC-CSE-308G)
2.32.1
42
Figure 6.32 DSSS
6.45
DS-SS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum)
• XOR of the signal with pseudo-random number (chipping sequence)
• many chips per bit (e.g., 128) result in higher bandwidth of the signal
tb
• Advantages
user data
• reduces frequency selective
0 1 XOR
fading tc
• in cellular networks chipping
• base stations can use the sequence
0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1
same frequency range =
• soft handover 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0
• Digital modulation
• digital data is translated into an analog signal (baseband)
• ASK, FSK, PSK - main focus in this chapter
• differences in spectral efficiency, power efficiency, robustness
• Analog modulation
• shifts center frequency of baseband signal up to the radio carrier
• Basic schemes
• Amplitude Modulation (AM)
• Frequency Modulation (FM)
• Phase Modulation (PM)
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Modulation and Demodulation
analog
baseband
digital
signal
data digital analog
101101001 modulation modulation radio transmitter
radio
carrier
analog
baseband
digital
signal
analog synchronization data
demodulation decision 101101001 radio receiver
radio
carrier
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Digital Modulation
• Modulation of digital signals known as Shift Keying 1 0 1
1 0 1
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Advanced Frequency Shift Keying
• bandwidth needed for FSK depends on the distance between the
carrier frequencies
• special pre-computation avoids sudden phase shifts
MSK (Minimum Shift Keying)
• bit separated into even and odd bits, the duration of each bit is
doubled
• depending on the bit values (even, odd) the higher or lower
frequency, original or inverted is chosen
• the frequency of one carrier is twice the frequency of the other
• even higher bandwidth efficiency using a Gaussian low-pass filter
GMSK (Gaussian MSK), used in GSM
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Advanced Phase Shift Keying
• BPSK (Binary Phase Shift Keying): Q
• CDM has a soft capacity. The more users the more codes that are used. However as more codes
are used the signal to interference (S/I) ratio will drop and the bit error rate (BER) will go up for all
users.
• CDM requires tight power control as it suffers from far-near effect. In other words, a user close to
the base station transmitting with the same power as a user farther away will drown the latter’s
signal. All signals must have more or less equal power at the receiver.
• Rake receivers can be used to improve signal reception. Time delayed versions (a chip or more
delayed) of the signal (multipath signals) can be collected and used to make bit level decisions.
• Soft handoffs can be used. Mobiles can switch base stations without switching carriers. Two base
stations receive the mobile signal and the mobile is receiving from two base stations (one of the
rake receivers is used to listen to other signals).
• Burst transmission - reduces interference
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