Title: Wireless specifics
1Wireless specifics
2A Wireless Communication System
Antenna
3Technologies for Cell phones to Handle Multiple
Users
- Unique feature for voice communications
- FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access) in 1G
cellular phone technology - TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access, e.g.,
GSMGlobal Service for Mobile communications and
IS-54, both use TDMA and FDMA) - CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access, e.g., IS-95,
WCDMA, CDMA2000)
4Technologies for Cell Phones to Handle Up and
Down Links
- TDD (Time Division Duplex) forward (down link)
and reverse (up link) channels use the same
frequency band but alternating time slots - FDD (Frequency Division Duplex) forward and
reverse channels use different carrier frequencies
5Technology used by WiFi, etc. to handle multiple
users
- It is a time division method.
- Unlike the TDMA in cell phones, in WiFi no
specific time slots are assigned to users.
Instead, it is basically a first-come-first-served
policyusers form a queue waiting for their
turns to use the connection. Its very much like
the rule used in a bank or a computer network. - It is good for data transmission, but not that
ideal for voice transmission.
6Techniques used by all
- Spread Spectrum Transmission
- FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum)
- DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum)
- OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing)
7What is Spread Spectrum Transmission
- The traditional transmitted signal has a
bandwidth of the same order as the information
signal at the baseband. For example, the
bandwidth of a voice signal is about 4 kHz (the
baseband). After modulation, as it being
transmitted it still occupies several thousand Hz
but at a much higher frequency. - The spread spectrum signal occupies a much larger
bandwidth.
8Why spread spectrum
- It is robust against frequency selective fading
in urban and indoor environments. - It is robust against interference emitted by
machines, microwave ovens, etc. - It can provide additional security.
- It can provide greater operational flexibility
and system capacity, as in CDMA. - It is required by regulation to use spread
spectrum in unlicensed ISM (Industrial,
Scientific and Medical) bands.
9Spread spectrum methods
- Frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS)
- The transmitter constantly, often randomly,
shifts the center frequency of the transmitted
signal. - Only the machine that knows the hopping pattern
can receive the signal. - Direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)
- Each transmitted bit is spread into N smaller
pulses (chips) before transmission. - Only the machine that knows the pattern of the
spread can retrieve the signal.
10FHSS
- Invented by Austrian-born movie star Hedy Lamarr
to protect guided torpedoes from jamming - The shifts in frequency (hops) occur according to
a random pattern that is known only to the
transmitter and the receiver. (Actually it is
pseudo random It is generated by an algorithm,
so it is not really random but to a person who
does not know the pattern, it looks random.) - If the center frequency moves among 100 different
frequencies, the required transmission bandwidth
is at least 100 times as large as the original
transmission bandwidth.
11Example of FHSS
12FHSS and GSM (p.115, Example 3.14)
- If the channel coincides with a deep frequency
selective fading or when the cochannel interfence
from another cell using the same frequency is
excessive, the distortion in the received voice
signal will be large. A slow frequency hopping
of 217.6 hops per second can be used in GSM to
tackle these problems.
13FHSS in 802.11 or WiFi (p. 115, Example 3.15)
- Uses 78 hopping channels each separated by 1 MHz.
These frequencies are divided into three
patterns of 26 hops each corresponding to channel
numbers (0, 3, 6, 9, , 75), (1, 4, 7, 10, ,
76), (2, 5, 8, 11, , 77). These choices are
available for three different systems to coexist
without any hop collision. - 2.5 hops per second
14FHSS in Bluetooth (p.129, Example 3.24)
- Uses a fast frequency hopping (1,600 hops per
second) over 79 MHz of bandwidth. That is, it
hops over 79 channels each separated by 1 MHz.
15DSSS
- The transmitter spreads one bit, say a one or a
zero (you either have a one or a zero in the
digital world), into many (N) smaller chips (they
are a sequence of zeros and ones) according to a
code known to the transmitter and the receiver. - The receiver, using the code and a correlator,
put the spread chips together to get the original
bit. - The bandwidth of the original signal will be N
times wider after the spreading because the chip
rate is N times faster than the bit rate.
Therefore the signal will be more robust against
interference and fading. - The code used for spreading and de-spreading can
be secret, if only the transmitter and the
receiver know it, thus providing a security
measure.
16DSSS in 802.11
- The code (called Baker code) used in 802.11 to
spread the data bits is given by 1, 1, 1, -1,
-1, -1, 1, -1, -1, 1, -1. So one bit of data is
spread to become 11 chips. - The Baker code is not a secret code, so its not
used for security. Its used to spread the
bandwidth.
17DSSS in 802.11 (p. 117, Fig. 3.23)
18More about DSSS
- The bandwidth of the transmitted DSSS signal is N
times as large as that of the original signal. - CDMA uses DSSS. Each user is given a unique code
that other users dons know. Although a user can
receive the signals sent to other users by the
transmitter, in the de-spreading process only the
signal sent to that user can be detected. The
interference generated by other users is very
small.
19OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing)
20What is OFDM
- Assume we need to send data at a speed of R
symbols/sec. - We break the data sequence into N (an integer,
say, 48) sub-sequences. The data rate of each
sub-sequence will be R/N, much slower than the
original sequence. - N carriers are used, each having a different
frequency and each sending one sub-sequence. - At the receiver end, the N sub-sequences are put
together to get the original data sequence.
21Advantages of OFDM
- Robust against multipath interference because
- In each sub-sequence the symbols are N times
longer than the original symbols. - The longer the symbol, the weaker the multipath
interference (the signals representing the same
symbol but coming from multiple paths will be
close enough compared with the width of the
symbol so they dont interfere with each other).
22Advantages of OFDM
- Robust against frequency selective fading
- To battle the frequency selective fading (signals
at certain frequencies might be much weaker than
that of other frequencies), error-control coding
can be used in each subchannel. - If the signal for a particular subchannel(s) is
weak, the transmitting power of that subchannel
can be increased to compensate for the fading. - High spectral efficiency (high bit rate to
bandwidth ratio)
23Drawbacks of OFDM
- Complexity you need to put together N signals to
rebuild the original one. - Sensitive to Doppler Shift. When receiver is
moving at a high speed, the received frequency
will shift, too, and that can cause problem for
OFDM. - High peak-to-average-power ratio (PAPR) and thus
lower efficiency.
24Example OFDM in 802.11a (p.109)
- 64 subchannels are used, among which 48 are used
for data transmission, the remaining 16 are for
other purposes. - The symbol rate of each channel is 250 kilo
symbols per second (ksps). - The actual data rate for the user is 48X250 ksps
12 Msps. - The overall bandwidth is 20 MHz.
25SOFDMA (Scalable Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiple Access)
- Used in 802.16e (WiMax for mobile users)
- The same OFDM technique will be used, but each
user may only get a part of the spectrum,
depending on the application the user is running.
TDMA is also used. - In 802.16-2004 (WiMax for fixed users) OFDM is
used and a user get all the available spectrum.
Users are separated by TDMA.
26Assigning sub-channels
27Diversity
- Time diversity
- Frequency diversity
- Space diversity
28Time diversity DSSS and RAKE receiver
- Using the signals from different paths to get one
stronger signal. Signals from different paths
arrive at the receiver at different time
instances. Longer paths create longer delays. - Due to multiple paths, each bit sent by the
transmitter can create several peaks at the
output of the correlator (Fig. 3.25, p. 122). - The RAKE receiver is designed to put the peaks
together. (p. 124, Fig. 3.26)
29Time diversity (contd.)
- Multipath reception in CDMA
- Chip rate 1.25 Mcps, symbol rate 4,800 Sps
- Can resolve multipath components 1/1.25 Mcps
800 ms apart. - A multipath spread of up to 1/4800 bps 2.08 ms
cannot cause ISI.
30Frequency diversity
- Frequency selective fading (p. 128, Fig. 3.30)
- Frequency hopping and IEEE 802.11
- Frequency hopping and GSM
31Space diversity
- Four methods to take advantage of space diversity
(p. 132, Fig. 3.32) - Trisectored antennas for CDMA
32Coding techniques
- Error control coding
- Coding for spread spectrum (CDMA)
- Orthogonal codes
33Voice-oriented and data-oriented networks
- Voice-oriented networks use the so-called
fixed-assignment methods. Each user is assigned
a slot of time, a portion of frequency band, or a
specific code for the entire length of the
conversation. - Data-oriented networks use random-access methods.
Users share the same medium (air or wire). Since
data arrive at random instances, the medium will
be assigned to each user in a random fashion.
34Comparison of two methods
- Fixed assignment ensures constant connection,
which is needed for voice communication, but can
have low utilization rate. - Random access method is more suitable for data
communication, because data arrive in bursts.