Title: Wireless Communication Systems
1Wireless Communication Systems
- Lecture 1
- Overview of Wireless Communications
2 - Wireless is an old name for radio being used
again to describe a wide variety of portable
devices that rely on radio links for connectivity.
3Types of Wireless Communications
- Microwave Link
- Satellite Link
- Mobile Cellular
- Infrared Links
- ISM applications
- Cordless phones
- Wireless LANs
- Military
- Marine
- Scientific
4Why Wireless?
- Human freedom
- Portability and Mobility
- Objective anything, anytime, anywhere
- Mobility
- Size, weight, power
- Functionality
- Infrastructure required
- Cost
5Definitions
- Definition of mobility
- user mobility users communicate anytime,
anywhere, with anyone - device portability devices can be connected
anytime, anywhere to the network - Definition of wireless
- Un-tethered, no physical wire attachment
- The need for mobility creates the need for
integration of wireless networks into existing
fixed network environments - local area networks standardization of IEEE
802.11 - Internet Mobile IP extension of the internet
protocol IP - wide area networks e.g., internetworking of 3G
and IP
6Technological Trends
- Advances in Technology
- more computing power in smaller devices
- flat, lightweight displays with low power
consumption - user interfaces suitable for small dimensions
- higher bandwidths
- multiple wireless interfaces wireless LANs,
wireless WANs, home RF, wireless PANs - New Electronic Computing Devices
- small, cheap, portable, replaceable and most
important of all USABLE!
7Why is Wireless Hard?The Wireless Channel
- Fundamentally Low Capacity C lt B log(1SNR)
- Spectrum scarce and expensive
- Received power diminishes with distance
- Self-interference due to multipath
- Multipath delayed more than a bit time causes
self-interference (ISI) - Channel changes as users move around
- Signal blocked by objects (cars, people, etc.)
- Broadcast medium everyone interferes
8And The Wireless Network
Wireline Backbone
- Multiple access hard to coordinate
- Routing often multihop over multiple
wireless/wired channels - Topology is dynamic
- Link characteristics are dynamic
- Hard to allocate network resources according to
needs - Proliferation of standards and systems
9An Integrated View
ad hoc
GSM, 3G, WLAN, Bluetooth, ...
PDA, laptop, cellular phones, GPS, sensors
10(No Transcript)
11Wireless vs Fixed
- Higher loss-rates due to interference
- other EM signals, objects in path (multi-path,
scattering) - Limited availability of useful spectrum
- frequencies have to be coordinated
- lower transmission rates
- local area 2 11 Mbit/s, -gt 50 - 70Mbit/s
- wide area 9.6 19.2 kbit/s -gt 384 - 2000Kbit/s
- Higher delays, higher jitter
- connection setup time for cellular in the second
range, several hundred milliseconds for wireless
LAN systems - Lower security, simpler active attacking
- radio interface accessible for everyone
- base station can be simulated, thus attracting
calls from mobile phones - Always shared medium
- secure access mechanisms important
12Wireless LANs Standards
- 802.11 (2M) -gt 802.11b (11M) -gt 802.11a (50-70M)
-gt 802.11g (54M) - Wider spectrum -gt Higher bit rates
- Generally used with access points
- Ad hoc component not used, has flaws
- Poor support for real-time communications
- HiperLAN
- European standard for high bit rate (25M) local
transmission in 5GHz range over 50-300m
13Infrastructure vs Adhoc
infrastructure network
AP Access Point
AP
AP
wired network
AP
ad-hoc network
14Wireless Devices
Infrastructure
Pager
Satellite
Direct Broadcast Satellite Receiver
Interconnections may be copper, fiber, coax, or
wireless
Wireless Phone (cellular, PCS, satellite)
Cellular, PCS, Paging, Fixed Wireless
Public Switched Telephone Network
Fixed Broadband Wireless (gt10 Mbps)
Wireless Local Loop
Wireless systems have a whole lot of wire!
Portable Networking
15Wireless Subscribers Worldwide
SOURCE UMTS FORUM
16Radio waves are described by a frequency or
wavelength
- Frequency (f) is the number of oscillations
(cycles) per second. Unit is Hertz or Hz - Wavelength (l) is the distance covered by one
oscillation (cycle) as the wave travels through
space
Transmit
l Wavelength
Receive
Transmit
1 second, f 5 cycles per second or 5 Hz
17Electromagnetic Spectrum
LIGHT
HARMFUL RADIATION
RADIO
SOUND
VHF VERY HIGH FREQUENCY UHF ULTRA HIGH
FREQUENCY SHF SUPER HIGH FREQUENCY EHF EXTRA
HIGH FREQUENCY
18Wireless systems transmit and receive waveforms
that are outside of the spectrum of visible light
-- from about 800 to 30,000 MHz
Cellular, PCS, and Fixed Wireless Operate in this
range
19(No Transcript)
20Antennas
- All wireless devices have at least one antenna
most use the same antenna to transmit and receive - The antenna must be at least one quarter
wavelength in size to work well. - So, no matter how small you make a cellular
phone, the antenna is going to have to be about
this size!
21Wireless Telephony
WIRELESS
AIR LINK
WIRED
PUBLIC SWITCHED TELEPHONE NETWORK
22Cell Clusters
CELL 1 OVERLAPS 6 OTHERS DIFFERENT
FREQUENCIES MUST BE USED IN ADJACENT CELLS SEVEN
DIFFERENT SETS OF FREQUENCIES REQUIRED
SOURCE IEC.ORG
23Hubs hand off the user as it passes from one
cell to the next. The Hub Base Stations transmit
the call back to the wired public switched
telephone network.
Public Switched Telephone Network
24Cell Sizes
GSM 100m - 50 km 250 km/hr
25Cellular Generations
- First
- Analog, circuit-switched (AMPS)
- Second
- Digital, circuit-switched (GSM, Palm) 10 Kbps
- Advanced second
- Digital, circuit switched, Internet-enabled (WAP)
10 Kbps - 2.5
- Digital, packet-switched, TDMA (GPRS,
EDGE)40-400 Kbps - Third
- Digital, packet-switched, wideband CDMA
(UMTS)0.4 2 Mbps - Fourth
- Data rate 100 Mbps achieves telepresence
26Wireless LAN
- Idea just a LAN, but without wires
- Not as easy since signals are of limited range
- Uses unlicensed frequencies, low power
- 2.4 GHz
- IEEE 802.11 (wireless ethernet)
- WaveLAN 2 Mbps moving to 11 Mbps
- 5.2 GHz
- OFDM (orthogonal FDMA) modem technology (30 Mbps)
IEEE 802.11
27(No Transcript)
28Wireless LAN Configurations
CLIENT AND ACCESS POINT
WIRELESS PEER-TO-PEER
BRIDGING WITH DIRECTIONAL ANTENNAS
MULTIPLE ACCESS POINTS ROAMING
UP TO 17 KM !
SOURCE PROXIM.COM
29Bluetooth
- A standard permitting for wireless connection of
- Personal computers
- Printers
- Mobile phones
- Handsfree headsets
- LCD projectors
- Modems
- Wireless LAN devices
- Notebooks
- Desktop PCs
- PDAs
30Bluetooth Characteristics
- Operates in the 2.4 GHz Industrial-Scientific-Me
dical (ISM) (unlicensed)! band. Packet
switched. 1 milliwatt. Low cost. - 10m to 100m range
- Uses Frequency Hop (FH) spread spectrum, which
divides the frequency band into a number of hop
channels. During connection, devices hop from
one channel to another 1600 times per second - Bandwidth 1-2 megabits/second
- Supports up to 8 devices in a piconet (two or
more Bluetooth units sharing a channel). - Built-in security.
- Non line-of-sight transmission through walls
and briefcases. - Easy integration of TCP/IP for networking.
31Bluetooth Devices
ALCATEL One TouchTM 700 GPRS, WAP
ERICSSON R520 GSM 900/1800/1900
ERICSSON BLUETOOTH CELLPHONE HEADSET
NOKIA 9110 FUJI DIGITAL CAMERA
ERICSSON COMMUNICATOR
32WiMax
- WiMax, which is based on the IEEE 802.16
standard, offers greater bandwidth and range than
the 802.11 family of standards. - Where Wi-Fi is intended to cover small areas,
such as offices, homes, and hot spots. - WiMax can theoretically extend a 70M-bps
connection up to 50 km from a base station
capable of supporting thousands of users (city
hot zones).
33802.16 for Broadband Wireless Access
- DSL complement
- DSL is not available, e.g. poor copper
infrastructure - DSL OPEX too high, e.g. low population density
- Central Office is too far away for DSL
- CLEC bypassing incumbent
- DSL competition
- If DSL is available, hard to beat
802.16
34WPAN
- Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)
- Cable replacement
- Low-cost, short range networking scheme for PCs,
laptops, PDA connectivity - Benefits
- Expands connectivity users, locations and cost
- Provides mobility to users
- Quick installation
- Cost effective
- Scalable
35- IEEE 802.15.3a
- An Ultrawideband (UWB) scheme.
- Up to 480 Mbps transfers.
- Only 3 meter radius for IEEE 802.15.3a.
- Provides for applications such as very fast
digital camera to PCs transfers, connections
between large screen TV monitors and your media
centers and DVD camcorders, not general network
use. - The frequency spectrum considered is the 3.1 to
10.6 GHz band, well above the fray where 802.11b
and 802.11g reside. - UWB may become a BIG DEAL. The concept is nothing
short of using a UWB system to eliminate
communication wiring! Wire may be on its way out.
36Relative coverage, mobility, and data rates of
generations of cellular systems and local
broadband and ad hoc networks.
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47(No Transcript)
48(No Transcript)
49(No Transcript)
50(No Transcript)
51(No Transcript)
52(No Transcript)
53(No Transcript)
54Multiple Access Systems
- Mobile phone systems must fit more and more users
into limited spectrum. There are three main
approaches - Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) users
transmit on different frequencies - Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) users
transmit at different times - Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) users have
different codes like several conversations
in same room in different languages
These three approaches are incompatible and the
source of much debate
55Transmission Fundamentals
56Electromagnetic Signal
- Function of time
- Can also be expressed as a function of frequency
- Signal consists of components of different
frequencies
57Analog and Digital Waveforms
58Time-Domain Concepts
- Analog signal - signal intensity varies in a
smooth fashion over time - No breaks or discontinuities in the signal
- Digital signal - signal intensity maintains a
constant level for some period of time and then
changes to another constant level - Periodic signal - analog or digital signal
pattern that repeats over time - s(t T ) s(t ) - ? lt t lt ?
- where T is the period of the signal
59Examples of Periodic Signals.
60Time-Domain Concepts
- Aperiodic signal - analog or digital signal
pattern that doesn't repeat over time - Peak amplitude (A) - maximum value or strength of
the signal over time typically measured in volts - Frequency (f )
- Rate, in cycles per second, or Hertz (Hz) at
which the signal repeats
61Time-Domain Concepts
- Period (T ) - amount of time it takes for one
repetition of the signal - T 1/f
- Phase (?) - measure of the relative position in
time within a single period of a signal - Wavelength (?) - distance occupied by a single
cycle of the signal - Or, the distance between two points of
corresponding phase of two consecutive cycles
62Sine Wave Parameters
- General sine wave
- s(t ) A sin(2?ft ?)
- Figure 2.3 shows the effect of varying each of
the three parameters - (a) A 1, f 1 Hz, ? 0 thus T 1s
- (b) Reduced peak amplitude A0.5
- (c) Increased frequency f 2, thus T ½
- (d) Phase shift ? ?/4 radians (45 degrees)
- note 2? radians 360 1 period
63Sine Wave Parameters
64Time vs. Distance
- When the horizontal axis is time, as in Figure
2.3, graphs display the value of a signal at a
given point in space as a function of time - With the horizontal axis in space, graphs display
the value of a signal at a given point in time as
a function of distance - At a particular instant of time, the intensity of
the signal varies as a function of distance from
the source
65Frequency-Domain Concepts
- Fundamental frequency - when all frequency
components of a signal are integer multiples of
one frequency, its referred to as the
fundamental frequency - Spectrum - range of frequencies that a signal
contains - Absolute bandwidth - width of the spectrum of a
signal - Effective bandwidth (or just bandwidth) - narrow
band of frequencies that most of the signals
energy is contained in
66Frequency-Domain Concepts
- Any electromagnetic signal can be shown to
consist of a collection of periodic analog
signals (sine waves) at different amplitudes,
frequencies, and phases - The period of the total signal is equal to the
period of the fundamental frequency
67Relationship between Data Rate and Bandwidth
- The greater the bandwidth, the higher the
information-carrying capacity - Conclusions
- Any digital waveform will have infinite bandwidth
- BUT the transmission system will limit the
bandwidth that can be transmitted - AND, for any given medium, the greater the
bandwidth transmitted, the greater the cost - HOWEVER, limiting the bandwidth creates
distortions
68Data Communication Terms
- Data - entities that convey meaning, or
information - Signals - electric or electromagnetic
representations of data - Transmission - communication of data by the
propagation and processing of signals
69Examples of Analog and Digital Data
- Analog
- Video
- Audio
- Digital
- Text
- Integers
70Analog Signals
- A continuously varying electromagnetic wave that
may be propagated over a variety of media,
depending on frequency - Examples of media
- Copper wire media (twisted pair and coaxial
cable) - Fiber optic cable
- Atmosphere or space propagation
- Analog signals can propagate analog and digital
data
71Acoustic Spectrum of Speech and Music
72Digital Signals
- A sequence of voltage pulses that may be
transmitted over a copper wire medium - Generally cheaper than analog signaling
- Less susceptible to noise interference
- Suffer more from attenuation
- Digital signals can propagate analog and digital
data
73Attenuation of Digital Signals
74Analog Signaling
75Digital Signaling
76Reasons for Choosing Data and Signal Combinations
- Digital data, digital signal
- Equipment for encoding is less expensive than
digital-to-analog equipment - Analog data, digital signal
- Conversion permits use of modern digital
transmission and switching equipment - Digital data, analog signal
- Some transmission media will only propagate
analog signals - Examples include optical fiber and satellite
- Analog data, analog signal
- Analog data easily converted to analog signal
77Analog Transmission
- Transmit analog signals without regard to content
- Attenuation limits length of transmission link
- Cascaded amplifiers boost signals energy for
longer distances but cause distortion - Analog data can tolerate distortion
- Introduces errors in digital data
78Digital Transmission
- Concerned with the content of the signal
- Attenuation endangers integrity of data
- Digital Signal
- Repeaters achieve greater distance
- Repeaters recover the signal and retransmit
- Analog signal carrying digital data
- Retransmission device recovers the digital data
from analog signal - Generates new, clean analog signal
79About Channel Capacity
- Impairments, such as noise, limit data rate that
can be achieved - For digital data, to what extent do impairments
limit data rate? - Channel Capacity the maximum rate at which data
can be transmitted over a given communication
path, or channel, under given conditions
80Concepts Related to Channel Capacity
- Data rate - rate at which data can be
communicated (bps) - Bandwidth - the bandwidth of the transmitted
signal as constrained by the transmitter and the
nature of the transmission medium (Hertz) - Noise - average level of noise over the
communications path - Error rate - rate at which errors occur
- Error transmit 1 and receive 0 transmit 0 and
receive 1
81Nyquist Bandwidth
- For binary signals (two voltage levels)
- C 2B
- With multilevel signaling
- C 2B log2 M
- M number of discrete signal or voltage levels
82Signal-to-Noise Ratio
- Ratio of the power in a signal to the power
contained in the noise thats present at a
particular point in the transmission - Typically measured at a receiver
- Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR, or S/N)
- A high SNR means a high-quality signal, low
number of required intermediate repeaters - SNR sets upper bound on achievable data rate
83 Effect of Noise on a Digital Signal.
84Shannon Capacity Formula
- Equation
- Represents theoretical maximum that can be
achieved - In practice, only much lower rates achieved
- Formula assumes white noise (thermal noise)
- Impulse noise is not accounted for
- Attenuation distortion or delay distortion is not
accounted
85Example of Nyquist and Shannon Formulations
- Spectrum of a channel between 3 MHz and 4 MHz
SNRdB 24 dB - Using Shannons formula
86Example of Nyquist and Shannon Formulations
- How many signaling levels are required?
87Classifications of Transmission Media
- Transmission Medium
- Physical path between transmitter and receiver
- Guided Media
- Waves are guided along a solid medium
- E.g., copper twisted pair, copper coaxial cable,
optical fiber - Unguided Media
- Provides means of transmission but does not guide
electromagnetic signals - Usually referred to as wireless transmission
- E.g., atmosphere, outer space
88Unguided Media
- Transmission and reception are achieved by means
of an antenna - Configurations for wireless transmission
- Directional
- Omnidirectional
89General Frequency Ranges
- Microwave frequency range
- 1 GHz to 40 GHz
- Directional beams possible
- Suitable for point-to-point transmission
- Used for satellite communications
- Radio frequency range
- 30 MHz to 1 GHz
- Suitable for omnidirectional applications
- Infrared frequency range
- Roughly, 3?1011 to 2?1014 Hz
- Useful in local point-to-point multipoint
applications within confined areas
90Terrestrial Microwave
- Description of common microwave antenna
- Parabolic "dish", 3 m in diameter
- Fixed rigidly and focuses a narrow beam
- Achieves line-of-sight transmission to receiving
antenna - Located at substantial heights above ground level
- Applications
- Long haul telecommunications service
- Short point-to-point links between buildings
91Broadcast Radio
- Description of broadcast radio antennas
- Omnidirectional
- Antennas not required to be dish-shaped
- Antennas need not be rigidly mounted to a precise
alignment - Applications
- Broadcast radio
- VHF and part of the UHF band 30 MHZ to 1GHz
- Covers FM radio and UHF and VHF television
92Optical Telepoint LOS Cellular System