Title: BROADBAND CDMA
1WLAN
2Unlicensed Spectrum At 2.4 GHz
Maximum Power
1 watt
- The band can be used anywhere indoor or Outdoor
- The technology is designed for indoor. Its
efficiency decreases with large delays
Indoor
Frequency
2.400
2.483 GHz
3Unlicensed Spectrum At 5 GHz
1 watt
INDOOR/Outdoor
OUTDOOR
250 mw
INDOOR
50 mw
5.15
5.25
5.35
5.725
5.825 GHz
45 GHz Allocations in USA/Japan/Europe
5Some Observations
- Free spectrum is a strong drive for private
WLANs - Security is the biggest worry of private WLANs
- Free spectrum could mean high interference
- WLANs are satisfying the need for Indoor
Wireless Internet - WLAN is trying to get OUTSIDE while 3G is trying
to get INSIDE
6IEEE802.11 Wireless LAN
Wired 802.3
Server
Router
Wireless 802.11
Portal
AP
AP
AP
7Brief History of IEEE802.11
IEEE 802.11 e QoS
IEEE 802.11 b 5.5 / 11 Mbps
First complete standard from the IEEE802.11
committee
IEEE 802.11 i security
DS-SS
IEEE 802.11 g 22 Mbps
DS-SS
FH-SS
DS-SS
5 GHz IEEE 802.11 a 54 Mbps
FCC Allocated the 2.4 GHz Unlicensed Band
Slow Progress
Very Fast
OFDM
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
8IEEE 802.11 (First Version)
DS-CDMA
- Late in 1999 the IEEE 802.11 standard jumped from
1 2 Mbps rate up to 11 Mbps - Now most commercial systems offer a standard 11
Mbps - The Access is Direct Sequence CDMA
Fall 1999
9Current IEEE802.11 Family of Standards
10Channels of the 802.11b,g in 2.4 GHz
Only Three Non-Overlapping Channels
11802.11 Channels
12802.11a channel plan
13802.11 Structure
Basic Service Set BSS
Independent BSS
Infrastructure BSS
14Basic Service Set (BSS)
- Single cell
- Typically with Access Point (AP)
- BSS terminals AP A set of signaling rules
15Extended Service Set ESS
Backbone Structure
AP
AP
- Multiple APs form what is known as ESS
- AP s periodically transmit beacons
- Wireless terminals scan and discover
- Authentication and association
- Adjacent AP s use different radio channels
16802.11 Structure (continue)
17Basic Operation
- Power ON
- Search for Beacon
- Acquire timing
- Initiate association
- Authentication
- Complete association
- Idle (power saving)
18IEEE 802 Family
- The LLC layer is common to all 802 standards
- Several MAC and Physical standards share the same
LLC 802.2
19IEEE 802 Family continue
- The most common MAC is the normal ETHERNET which
is known as Carrier Sense Multiple Access with
collision detection CSMA/CD - CSMA/CD is known as 802.3
- Other relevant 802 standards are
- 802.11 Wireless LAN
- 802.15 Wireless PAN
- 802.16 Wireless WAN
- 802.8 Fiber Optics
- 802.10 Network Security
20Media Access Control (MAC)
Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision
Avoidance
CSMA/CA
Plus Back-Off Mechanism
FHSS Frequency-Hopped Spread Spectrum
DSSS Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum
OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
IR Infra Red
21Basic Protocol
MAC
New Packet
Listen
N
N
Y
Idle?
Timed out?
Failed
Y
Back-off
Send RTS
Ready to Send
Upper Layers
N
CTS?
Clear to Send
N
Y
Y
ACK?
Send Data
Success
22Efficient Wireless Operation
- Collision Avoidance
- Packet Interlacing
- Optional Fragmentation/Assembly at the MAC
- Power Saving Mode
- Enhanced Security
23Packet Interlacing
A new packet can be sent while the current packet
is backed-off
24Collision Avoidance
Collision Avoidance is used instead of the usual
Collision Detection
CTS
RTS
Tx
Rx
BSS
Tx Neighborhood
Rx Neighborhood
25Accommodating Continuous Traffic
- Normal traffic must wait DIFS sec before
contending for access - The Access Point has privilege access at shorter
time PIFS. It uses that access to poll real-time
traffic - The PIFS privilege is known as Point Coordination
Function
26WLAN Security
Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)
- Network Access Protection
- Authentication Password and Current key
- Eavesdropping
- The WEP Algorithm
- Pseudo Random Number Generator (PRNG) initialized
by shared secret key - Reasonably strong different PRNG for each frame
- Message-to-message self synchronization
27802.11 Frame Structure
2
2
6
6
6
6
2
Frame Control
Duration
Address 1
Address 2
Address 3
Sequence
Address 4
MAC Header
Preamble for physical synchronization
Preamble
Header
MAC Header
Data
FCS
6
0-2312
physical Header
All lengths are given in Octets
1
1
1
2
28Physical Preamble/Header
New All Standards
Old 1 2 Mbps Standard
29Overview of Modulation/Coding
Old
Current
New
1 2 Mbps
Up to 11 Mbps
Up to 54 Mbps
FH-SS
DS-SS
DS-SS
PBCC QPSK/8PSK
CCK BPSK/QPSK
DS-SS
Barker Code BPSK/QPSK
PBCC BPSK/QPSK
OFDM
30FH-SS
31FH-SS (continue)
321 2 Mbps DS-SS
Data _at_ 1 Mbps
BPSK
BC
De-MUX
QPSK
11 MHz
BC
Data _at_ 2 Mbps
11-chip Barker Code (BC)
-
-
-
-
-
-
335.5 11 Mbps CCK DS-SS 802.11 b
34802.11 b High Performance Option
PBCC Packet Binary Convolutional Code
11 MHz
35Measured Attenuation at 2.4 GHz
36Speed vs. Distance 802.11ab
Measured Performance of 5-GHz 802.11a Wireless
LAN Systems
By James C. Chen, Ph.D., Jeffrey M. Gilbert,
Ph.D., Atheros Communications, Inc. 529 Almanor
Ave. Sunnyvale, CA 94085 (408)773-5200
www.atheros.com
37Throughput vs. Distance TCP/IP/802.11ab
30
802.11 a
25
20
15
Throughput in Mbps
802.11 b
10
5
0
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
200
225
Range in Feet
38Frequency Re-use
39Throughput of 8-Cell System
30
802.11 a No CCI
25
802.11 b No CCI
20
15
Throughput in Mbps
802.11 b With CCI
10
5
0
0
25
50
75
100
125
Cell Radius in Feet
40System Capacity vs. Coverage Area
41802.11 version "a"
- The push for higher data rates
- Distortion and physical limitations
- Solution through OFDM modulation/Access
- 54 Mbps LANs based on OFDM physical layer
- Cost and performance of high speed 802.1
- Limitations of 802.11
- Interoperability between 802.11 and 1X-EV
standard
42802.11 version a
- When the required data speed is too high, the
spread spectrum option becomes LESS attractive - Invariably, these days, the alternative to SS is
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing OFDM
43Classic OFDM
- When the data rate is high, two problems arise
- There may not be room for spectrum spreading
- Distortion due to multipath distortion
- In OFDM, the data stream is split into many
parallel streams, each of which is too slow to
exhibit any significant multipath distortion
44Basic OFDM Modulator
45The OFDM Composite Spectrum
46Modulating Each Sub-Carrier
47Mapping Data Onto Sub-Carriers
48Inverse Fourier Transform Implementation
49Basic OFDM Receiver
50Other OFDM Properties
- One OFDM channel could be shared by neighboring
cells - Offers the same flexibility as CDMA
- No theoretical limit on how many sub-channels
- Data can be increased as long as power is
available - Sensitive to non-linearity's
- Easy processing with FFTs
51OFDM for IEEE802.11 a
- Number of sub-carriers N 52
- Number of Pilot sub-carriers 4
- Number of Data sub-carriers 48
- Bandwidth per subcarrier Df 300 kHz
- Total bandwidth 20 MHz
- Modulation methods
- BPSK / QPSK / 16QAM / 64QAM
- Coding 1/2 and 3/4
- Data rate per carrier 125 kbps to 1.5 Mbps
52IEEE802.11a Frequency Plan
312.5 kHz
16.25 MHz
52 Carriers/channel
8 channels
GHz
5.150
5.180
5.200
5.220
5.240
5.260
5.280
5.300
5.320
5.350
53What is WiMax?
- WiMax is an industrial forum that promotes
deployments of Broadband Wireless Networks - It supports IEEE801.16 family of standards
- Certify interoperability of products and
technology - Global drive for acceptance of broadband wireless
54LOS Fresnel Zone
Wimax Optimized for non line of sight (NLOS)
coverage Up to 50 km LOS Up to 8 km NLOS
55Why NLOS
- antenna height restrictions
- easier to install below the eaves)
56What makes NLOS possible
- OFDM
- Sub-channelization
- Directional antennas
- Tx and rx diversity
- Adaptive modulation
- Error control coding
- Power control
57Adaptive Modulation
58IEEE802.16 Family
2 66 GHz Revision of 802.16 and
802.16a Compatibility to e
10 66 GHz WiMax System profiles
2 6 GHz Support for Mobile and Nomadic
computing
10 66 GHz Point-to-Point
2 11 GHz Point-to-Multi-Point Extension
802.16 REVd
802.16
802.16c
802.16a
802.16e
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
59Future Trends
60Major Differences
WLAN
Cellular
61Major Differences (continued)
WLAN
Cellular
Free Air
62Trends in WLAN and Cellular Technologies
Cellular
W-LAN
W-LAN
63Difficulties Facing Outdoor WLAN
- WLAN's access protocols are designed for small
propagation delays
- Outdoor WLAN's is subjected to external
interference
- Hard to convince wireless operator to build
networks in an unlicensed band