Title: UWB Propagation Phenomena
1Project IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless
Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission
Title Status report of the 802.15.4a channel
modeling subgroup Date Submitted 8 January,
2004 Source Andreas F. Molisch Company
Mitsubishi Electric Address 201 Broadway,
Cambridge, MA Voice 617 621 7558 E-Mail
Andreas.Molisch_at_ieee.org Re Contributions on
UWB Channel Models Abstract This contribution
describes the status of the IEEE 802.15.4a
channel modeling subgroup, the currently
envisioned generic model structure, and an
outlook for future work Purpose Notice This
document has been prepared to assist the IEEE
P802.15. It is offered as a basis for discussion
and is not binding on the contributing
individual(s) or organization(s). The material in
this document is subject to change in form and
content after further study. The contributor(s)
reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw
material contained herein. Release The
contributor acknowledges and accepts that this
contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may
be made publicly available by P802.15.
2Contents
- Background
- Radio Environments
- Generic Model Structure
- Future workplan
- Interaction with SG4a plenary
3Background
- Subgroup established in Singapore (Sept. 2003)
- Mandate establish a channel model for system
evaluation of a 802.15.4a standard - Timeline finish by May 2004
- Considered bandwidth 2-10 GHz
- Model has to work for UWB as well as non-UWB
proposals that fulfill the CFA requirements - UWB will be among the proposals
- Any UWB model can be downfiltered to a narrowband
system - 2.45 GHz ISM band should be included in the
considered range - Working mode biweekly teleconferences
- Very informal approach (within the rules of
IEEE) participants always welcome
4Radio Environments
- Follow from CFA (Nov. 2003, Albuquerque)
- List of 10 radio environments established by
subgroup - 1. Indoor office
- 2. Indoor residential
- 3. Indoor industrial
- 4. Indoor open spaces
- 5. Warehouses
- 6. Body-worn devices
- 7. Out door hand held peer to peer device
- 8. Hand held communicating to fixed location
devices - 9. Agricultural areas/farms
- 10. Sport stadiums
- 11. Disaster areas (houses filled with rubble,
avalanches, .)
5Generic model structure
- Why not reuse 802.15.3a? (i) operating
environments are different, (ii) longer range,
(iii) more measurements are now available in the
literature - First step time-continuous model that is valid
within the considered bandwidth - Explicit discretization rules will follow later,
together with a possible MATLAB implementation - Basic structure (tentative, status Jan. 8th)
- Saleh-Valenzuela model multiple clusters, with
discrete multipaths in each of them, plus a
diffuse component - Number of clusters is assumed fixed (no random
variable) - Movement not modeled explicitly, but rather via
angular spectrum. That allows separation of
effects due to movement of MS and movement of
scatterers
6Generic model structure (contd.)
- Parameterization of
- Pathloss and shadowing (including frequency
dependence) - Arrival rates of multipath components (delay
dependent?) - Average power delay profiles (per-cluster delay
spreads) - Average angular spectra (including dependence on
delay) - Small-scale fading statistics (Rayleigh,
lognormal, or Nakagami)
7Future workplan
- Finalization of generic model structure end of
Feb. 2004 - Measurement campaigns to establish parameters
Dec. 2003-April 2004 - Parameter extraction March-May 2004
- Presentation of model (2004)
- Writing of MATLAB program for general use
(optional) May-June 2004
8Interaction with SG4a plenary
- Minutes of teleconferences are sent out to SG4a
reflector - Status reports at every 4a meeting
- We need more input from SG4a!!!
- Without the model, no proper selection of
candidate PHY layers can be made - Any radio environment for which we do not have
sufficient data will be eliminated from the list.
In that case, the suitability of the PHY layer
for a specific application cannot be tested - At the moment, most work is being done by just a
few participants. We need a fair distribution of
the workload. - We have a unique chance to get the channel model,
and thus the basis for 4a, to a good start. Lets
not waste that chance!