Title: Multiplexing
1Multiplexing
- The combining of two or more information channels
onto a common transmission medium. - Basic forms of multiplexing
- Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM).
- Time-division multiplexing (TDM)
- Code-division multiplexing (CDM)
2FDM
- Frequency Division Multiplexing
- The deriving of two or more simultaneous,
continuous channels from a transmission medium by
assigning a separate portion of the available
frequency spectrum to each of the individual
channels. - FDMA (frequency-division multiple access) The
use of frequency division to provide multiple and
simultaneous transmissions.
3- Transmission is organized in frequency channels,
assigned for an exclusive use by a single user at
a time - If the channel is not in use, it remains idle and
cannot be used by others - There are channeling frequency plans elaborated
to avoid mutual co-channel and adjacent-channel
interference among neighboring stations - The use of a radio channel or a group of radio
channels requires authorization (license) - for each individual station or for group of
stations
4FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing)
Power
FDMA
Frequency
Frequency
Time
Bc
Bm
Time
Frequency channel
Example Telephony Bm 3-9 kHz
5FDD
- Frequency division duplexing
- 2 radio frequency channels for each duplex link
(1 up-link 1 down-link or 1 forward link and 1
reverse link)
6Transmitter Emissions
- Transmitter output components
- Fundamental (wanted) signal
- Harmonic emissions
- Master oscillator (fundamental harmonics)
- Non-harmonically related spurious
- Noise
Ideal
Real
7Receiver response
- Fundamental channel
- Spurious channels
- Intermediate frequency
- Image frequency
- Channels received via LO harmonics
- Intermodulation channels
Ideal
8Intermodulation
- 2 or more signals, nonlinear circuit
- Intermodulation products Fi SCkFk
- Ck positive/negative integers or zero
- Fk frequencies of signals applied
- Order of Intermod. Product SCk
- 3rd order (2F1-F2, 2F2-F1), also 5th and 7th
9- Non-ideal wideband linear systems are frequently
treated by expressing the output (Y) of the
system as a power series - where X is the total input signal, and the
coefficients a are presumed to be real and
independent on X. - Assume, for simplicity, that input consists of
three elementary signals
10- Some simple calculations will show that the
output of the system Y, in addition to the
linearly transposed input signals, contains the
following spectral components - 1st order
- Multiplied version of the input signal
-
11- 2nd order
- a) Distorted version of the modulating signals
-
- b) 2nd harmonics
-
- c) Sum and difference
-
12- 3rd order
- a) Distorted modulating signal
- b) 3rd harmonics
- Crossmodulation
- d) Intermodulation
-
13Non-essential channels
F
Y
X
14F-D Separation Concept
15Theoretical Cells Cell Clusters
Various combinations possible
16Power Transfer
Prec Ptot F(f) F(d) F(Q,F)
F(d) Transmission loss
17Desired signal
18Interfering signal
19 20Emission attenuation mask
21Receiver selectivity mask
22LOS propagation
Doc 1B/17/95
23FDR Calculation process
Spectrum
Substract requ.margin
Margin
Multiply
Integrate
Normalize
Calc. FDR
Selectivity
?f
d
Inverse propagation
FDR
f
24Frequency and Distance Separation
Separation acceptable
LFDR?
Distance separation
Separation unacceptable
Frequency separation
25F-D Separation 1D (Line)
Separation by (reuse distance) 1 zone ? 2 channels
26F-D Separation 2D (Surface)
- Reuse distance 1 ? 4 channels
Reuse distance 2 ? 9 channels
n zones ? (n 1)2 channels
2
27Cell clusters
7
3
Various combinations possible
28F-D Separation 3D (Space)
1 zone ? 8 channels
2 zone ? 27 channels
29Ideal Lattices
- Bound-less, regular, plane lattice
- Each station located at a node
- All nodes occupied (no "holes")
- All stations identical (omnidirectional)
- Uniform propagation (no terrain obstacles)
- Uniform EM environment
- One set of channels regularly re-used
30Frequency-distance separation (2)
H(f)
P(f)
?f
(f) - relative
31Equipment deficiency example Spectrum
blocked by typical UHF-TV terrestrial
transmitter due to receivers deficiencies (FCC
Taboos)
Area No. of channels ideal
1 co-ch 23 other 77
Dixon64
32OFDM
?F1 ?F2 ?FN
Sub-Ch 1
- Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
(OFDM) - The channel is split into a number of
sub-channels - Each sub-channel transmits a part of the original
information - Each sub-channel adjusted to its environment
(S/N) - Reduces multipath selective fading
- Allows for higher speeds
- Requires smart signal processing
- Used in 802.11a(USA), DTTB(Eu), Hyperplan(Eu),
Power Line Coms. standards.
Sub-Ch 2
Demodulation Signal Processing Serial-to-Parallel
Converter
Serial-to-Parallel Converter
Sub-Ch N
Digital Modulation
Delogne P, Bellanger M The Impact of Signal
Processing on an Efficient Use of the Spectrum,
Radio Science Bulletin June 1999, 23-28 LeFloch
B, Alard M, Berrou C Coded Orthogonal Frequency
Division Multiplex, Proc of IEEE June 1995,
982-996
33TDM
- Time Division Multiplex A single carrier
frequency channel is shared by a number of users,
one after another. Transmission is organized in
repetitive time-frames. Each frame consists of
groups of pulses - time slots. - Each user is assigned a separate time-slot.
- TDD Time Division Duplex provides the forward
and reverse links in the same frequency channel.
34TDM
Power density
TDM
Time-frame
Frequency
Time
Frequency
Time
Time slot
Example DECT (Digital enhanced cordless phone)
Frame lasts 10 ms, consists of 24 time slots
(each 417?s)
35SDM
- Space Division Multiple Access controls the
radiated energy for each user in space using
directive antennas - Sectorized antennas
- Adaptive antennas
36CDMA or SS
- Code Division Multiple Access or Spread Spectrum
communication techniques - FH frequency hoping (frequency synthesizer
controlled by pseudo-random sequence of numbers) - DS direct sequence (pseudo-random sequence of
pulses used for spreading) - TH time hoping (spreading achieved by randomly
spacing transmitted pulses) - Other techniques
- Hybrid combination of the above techniques (radar
and other applications) - Random noise as carrier
37CDMA - FH SS
Power density
Frequency
CDMA
Bm
Bc
Frequency
Time
Transmission is organized in time-frequency
slots. Each link is assigned a sequence of the
slots, according to a specific code. Used e.g. in
Bluetooth system
Time
Time-frequency slot
38DS SS communications basics
Spreading
Original information
Original signal
Transmission
Propagation effects
Unwanted signals Noise
Reconstructed information
De-spreading
Reconstr. signal
39SS basic characteristics
- Signal spread over a wide bandwidth gtgt minimum
bandwidth necessary to transmit information - Spreading by means of a code independent of the
data - Data recovered by de-spreading the signal with a
synchronous replica of the reference code - TR transmitted reference (separate data-channel
and reference-channel, correlation detector) - SR stored reference (independent generation at T
R pseudo-random identical waveforms,
synchronization by signal received, correlation
detector) - Other (MT T-signal generated by pulsing a
matched filter having long, pseudo-randomly
controlled impulse response. Signal detection at
R by identical filter correlation computation)
40DS SS transmitter
Antenna
Modulator
X
A(t), ?(t) Information
g1(t)
Modulated signal S1(t) A(t) cos(?0t
?(t)) band Bm Hz
Spread signal g1(t)S1(t) band Bc Hz Bc gtgt Bm
Carrier cos(?0t)
gi(t) pseudo-random noise (PN) spreading
functions that spreads the energy of S1(t) over a
bandwidth considerably wider than that of S1(t)
ideally gi(t) gj(t) 1 if i j and gi(t) gj(t)
0 if i ? j
41DS SS-receiver
Correlator bandpass filter
antenna
X
To demodulator
Linear combination g1(t)S1(t) g2(t)S2(t) . gn(t)
Sn(t) N(t) (noise) S(t)
g1(t) g1(t)S1(t) g1(t) g2(t)S2(t) . g1(t)
gn(t)Sn(t) g1(t) N(t) g1(t) S(t)
Spreading function g1(t)
S1(t)
42SS-receivers Input
Unwanted signals SS s. g2(t)S2(t)
gn(t)Sn(t) Other s. S(t) Noise N(t)
W/Hz
Wanted (spread) signal g1(t)S1(t)
Hz
Bc
(S/ I)in S/ I(?)Bc
Signal-to-interference ratio
Bc Input correlator bandwidth I(?) Average
spectral power density of unwanted signals in
Bc S Power of the wanted signal
43SS-correlator/ filter output
Wanted (correlated) signal de-spread to its
original bandwidth as g1(t) g1(t)S1(t) S1(t)
with g1(t) g1(t) 1
Bm
Uncorrelated (unwanted) signals spread rejected
by correlator noise g1(t) S(t) g1(t) N(t)
g1(t) gj(t)Sj(t) 0 as gi(t) gj(t) 0 for i ? j
Signal-to-interference ratio
(S/ I)out S/ I(?)Bm
Bc Input correlator bandwidth Bm Output
filter bandwidth I(?) Average spectral power
density of unwanted signals noise in Bm S
power of the wanted signal at the correlator
output
Bc
Spreading reducing spectral power density
44SS Processing Gain
(S/ I)in/ (S/ I)out Bc/ Bm
Example GPS signal RF bandwidth Bc 2MHz Filter
bandwidth Bm 100 Hz Processing gain 20000
(43 dB) Input S/N -20 dB (signal power 1
of noise power) Output S/N 23 dB (signal
power 200 x noise power)
(GPS Global Positioning System)
45SS systems attributes (1)
- Low spectral density of the signal
- LPI low probability of intercept
- LPPF low probability of position fix
- LPSE low probability of signal exploitation
- Privacy
- Covert operations capabilities
- Low interference potential
46SS systems attributes (2)
- AJ anti-jamming/ anti-interference capability
- Security
- Natural cryptographic capabilities
- Multiple-user random access communications with
selective addressing (CDMA) - High time resolution (1/B multi-path
suppression)
47Summary
- To illustrtae the nature of the multiple access
techniques consider a number of guests at a
cocktail party. The aim is for all the guests to
hold an intelligible conversation. In this case
the resource available is the house itself - FDMA each guest has a separate room to talk to
their partner - TDMA everyone is in a common room and has a
limited time slot to hold the conversation - FH-CDMA the guests run from room to room to talk
- DS-CDMA everyone is in a common room talkim at
the same time, but each pair talks in a different
language
48Access Control to Radio Resources
- Distributed wireless networks (e.g. packet radio,
ad hoc networks) have no central control. - Centralized wireless networks (e.g. WLAN,
Cellular) control the use of radio channel
various approaches exist - Slotted systems (e.g. TDMA) require wide network
synchronization for use of discrete time slots
49Packet Radio Protocols
50Packet Radio
- In packet radio access techniques, many user
attempt to access a single channel, which may led
to collisions. - Protocols aim at limiting collisions
- ALOHA is the oldest, classic protocol, developed
in 1970 in Hawaii as an extension of TDMA and
FDMA
51ALOHA
- If 2 or more users transmit at the same time so
that receiver receives more than one packet, the
receiver is unable to separate the packets since
they are not orthogonal in time (like in TDMA) or
in frequency (like in FDMA). - The vulnerable period is the time interval during
which the packets are susceptible to collisions
with transmissions from other users
Packet B
Packet C
Transmitter 1
Packet A
Transmitter 2
t1
T12?
52- In pure ALOHA, the vulnerable period is 2 packet
durations. A user transmits whenever it has a
packet to deliver. If no acknowledgment (ACK) is
received, the user waits a random time and
retransmit the packet. The throughput is T
Re-2R, R being the normalized channel traffic in
Erlangs (Tmax 0.184 at R 0.5) - In slotted ALOHA, time is divided into equal time
slots of length greater than the packet duration.
The users have synchronized clocks and transmit
messages only at the beginning of a new time
slot. This prevent partial collisions where one
packet collides with a portion of another. The
vulnerable period is only one packet duration.
The throughput is T Re-R (Tmax 0.368 at R
1) - ALOHA protocols do not listen to the channel
before transmission, and do not exploit
information about the other users.
53- Carrier Sense Multiple Access (CSMA) protocols
base on monitoring the channel. If the channel is
idle (no carrier is detected), then the user is
allowed to transmit. Important are detection
delay and propagation delay. - Reservation protocols certain packet slots are
assigned with priority
54References
- Coreira LM, Wireless Flexible Personalized
Communications, J Wiley - Dunlop J, Smith DG, Telecommunication
Engineering, Chapman Hall - Reed JH, Software Radio, Prentice Hall
- Taub H, Shilling DL, Principles of Communication
Systems, McGraw Hill