Title: Mobile Communications
1Mobile Communications
- Prof. Dr.-Ing. Rolf Kraemer
- Lehrstuhl für Systeme, BTU Cottbus
- Abteilungsleiter Drahtlose Systeme, IHP
- kraemer_at_ihp-microelectronics.com
- Tel 49 335 5625 342
2Overview of the lecture
- Introduction
- Use-cases, applications
- Definition of terms
- Challenges, history
- Wireless Transmission
- frequencies regulations
- signals, antennas, signal propagation
- multiplexing, modulation, spread spectrum,
cellular system - Media Access
- motivation, SDMA, FDMA, TDMA (fixed, Aloha, CSMA,
DAMA, PRMA, MACA, collision avoidance, polling),
CDMA
- Wireless LANs
- Basic Technology
- IEEE 802.11a/b/g,
- IEEE802.15.1/.3/.4
- Bluetooth
3Institute Building
Summer 2001
4IHP in a Nutshell
- (Re)founded 1992
- Re-establish region as high tech area
- Create high tech jobs
- Budget 20 Mio , National Research Lab
- Third Party Funding 13 Mio
- About 250 employees
- Since 1996 focus on wireless and broadband
communication technologies - System Design (50)
- RF Circuit Design (30)
- Technology
- Pilot Line (80)
- Process Research (20)
- Materials, Diagnosticsand Prototyping (10)
- Material Research (15)
5IHP-Structure
6IHP IC Prototyping and Production Services
- MPW-Shuttle runs (Multi Project Wafer)
- Have a low cost entry into your chip realization
- Starting with 2500/mm2 up to 7000/mm2
- Share cost with others
- Have regular tape outs and sample delivery
- 50 samples you get per run additional samples
on mutual agreement - Engineering Run
- Have you own run with your own mask set
- Get 6 wafers with your own designs
- Allow cost effective re-ordering of wafers
- Start the run whenever you wish
7Cleanroom
8Strategy
IHPs Technology Focus More than Moore
THz Electronics
Si Photonics
SoC
IHP
- Scaling Down
- E-Beam (Mix-Match)
- CMOS Cooperation
- LETI, IMEC and/or
- Companies
Source ITRS Roadmap
9MPW Offering
C 5
C 11
C 14
C 12
C 13
C 19
C 18
C 10
C 16
C 15
C 7
C 8
C 17
C 9
C 6
10CD Groups
mm-Wave Wireless-Transceivers (Scheytt)
Broadband Mixed- Signal (Gustat)
Ultra-Low-Power Wireless-Transceivers
(Fischer)
11Projects
- mm-Wave Wireless 100 GHz and beyond
- Benchmarking (internal)
- Communication building blocks up to gt100 GHz
- Feasibility of communication building blocks in
SiGe technologies - Operating frequencies up to gt ½ fT, fmax
- TeraCom (Leibniz excellence project, started Jan.
2008) - Wireless frontend for THz communication 100
Gbps_at_250 GHz - Short range communication, WPAN, wireless data
sync
Slow-wave transmission line
95 GHz frequency divider
115 GHz to 180 GHz VCO
94 to 180 GHz LNAs
12Projects
- mm-Wave Radar
- KOKON (BMBF, ended Q2 / 2007)
- 77...81 GHz VCO, PA, Radar RX Frontend in SiGe
- Automotive Radar, Adaptive Cruise Control
- 24 GHz Radar (internal industry, Q2 / 2007
transferred to spin-off) - 24 GHz radar components, radar frontend
- Autmotive radar, ultra-low cost radar for
security applications
77 GHz Mixer
77 81 GHz VCO w. PA, Layout Plot
79 GHz Radar Receiver Frontend
13Projects
- Integrated Frequency Synthesizers
- SiMS, 3020 (ESA), SiSSi (DLR)
- 10 GHz, 19 GHz DSM fractional-N synthesizer PLLs
- Fully-integrated, radiation-hard
- Broadband satellite communication
- MxMobile (BMBF)
- Fully-integrated synthesizer in SiGe BiCMOS for
0.7 4.4 GHz - Multi-standard / multi-band basestations,
software-defined radio (SDR) - Easy-A, WIGWAM (BMBF)
- Fully-integrated 56 GHz Synthesizer
- Fully-integrated 48 GHz Synthesizer
- 60 GHz WPAN
Chip photo 19 GHz Synthesizer
Layout Plot 19 GHz Synthesizer
56 GHz Synthesizer
48 GHz Synthesizer
14Projects
- Low-Power Wireless Frontends
- Pulsers II (EU FP6)
- 3 to 10 GHz Impulse Ultra-Wide-Band Frontend
with localization - Sensor networks, localization
- Homeplane (BMBF)
- 5 GHz WLAN Transceiver 802.11a/p
- WLAN, car-2-car communication
- GPS LNA (industry)
- Low-cost, low-noise GPS LNA
- GPS in cell phones
- MiMAX (EU FP7, started Jan. 2008)
- MIMO Frontend with analog combining
- High-performance low-power WLAN
UWB RX IC
UWB test board
15Wireless Systems Roadmap (Source Fettweis)
16Organisation of the department
Wireless Systems Prof. R. Kraemer
Main Projects HomePlaneOMEGA Galaxy MIMAX EASY-A
Terahertz
Main Projects Tandem WSAN4CIP RealFlex FeuerWhere
Matrix SMART Secure Sensornode
Main Projects Libraries for 0.25 mm and 130
nm Radiation hard designs Test Methodologies Proce
ssors DEDIS SATIS
17Wireless Engine
Non Functional Requirements
Appl
Appl. Eng.
Prot. Eng.
Power Mang.
Test Eng.
TCP/IP
DLC
Management Plane
BB
RF
BB
DLC
Phy
Basic Communication Processing
18Single-Chip Modem for embedded Applications
- Main Components
- 5 GHz Analog Frontend (Superhet., 810 MHz IF)
- A/D and D/A Converters (7 Instances)
- OFDM Baseband Processor with Synchronisation and
Channel Estimation - MAC-Processor (MIPS-4kE) with Hardware-Accelerator
- PCMCIA (CardBus) Interface plus 2x UART and 1x
I2C-Bus Interface - Cache-Memory for MIPS und Data Buffers (44 kByte
in total) - Built-in Self-Test (BIST) with various specific
test-modi - EMI protection n-well Ring, GND-Ring,Buried
Layer inside AFE
- Main Parameters
- Chip-Area ca. 90 mm2
- No. of Pins 240
- Power dissipation 2W (simulated)
- Clock frequency 80 MHz
-
19Video Supply in Trains, Busses, Aircraft
- Combination of two Radios needed to achieve 100
coverage - High rate (60 GHz) system and secondary system
(UWB, 802.11x) for video supply - Data Shower 60 GHz only required for downlink
- Water-filling The secondary system covers only
the gaps left by the 60 GHz - Secondary system can also be used as
feedback/control/management channel
20PHY Parameters
RF band before and after first down-conversion
21Architecture of Basisbandprocessors, Status
22Constellation Diagram of 60 GHz OFDM Link
- OFDM, 16 QAM, - r 3/4, 720 Mbit/s -
TX-Power lt 0 dBm - Distance ca. 10 cm Use of
commercial Signal Generator and Vector Signal
Analyzer H/W in the loop approach with software
synchronizer BB-receiver
23Enhanced Demonstrator at France Telecom
World first UWB at 60 GHz demonstration Hybrid
mode supported
Up to 200 Mb/s (3m) transmission speed
24Distributed Control
Speech Input
CharacteristicsEach component is
self-supporting Communication as a result of
function calls by other modules AdvantagesSimple
modular scalabilityIdentical communication
structureLocal Intelligence DisadvantagesPotent
ially higher cost
Headset
Step counter
Distributed Control
Distributed Middleware
Display
MP3 Player
Pulse meter
25Example of a body area system
Distributed Middleware
26BAN Node Architecture
Serial
UART
I- SPRAM
DMA
IRQ
CPU
EJTAG
AMBA AHB
APB
EC
GPIO
Bridge
Bridge
GPIO
Protocol Processor
Memory Controller
Flash
D- SPRAM
SRAM
AES
Transceiver
iRAM
Antenna
27TCP_2 Processor (WI, MBE)
Chip Photo of TCP_2 area 54
mm² transistors 4,300,000 memory 62
kByte SRAM speed 33 MHz (CardBus
clock) package LQFP-256 / 244 pins used
- Block Diagram of TCP_2 Implementation
- - power control via sleep mode possible
28HW Accelerators Dual2 Crypto Chip
- Dual Crypto Support
- Secret Key Cryptography Advanced Encryption
Standard (128 bit) - Public Key Cryptography Elliptic Curve
Cryptography (233 bit) - Dual Interface
- PCCard
- Cardbus
- Characteristics
29Advertisement
- We are continuously searching for
- Student Workers in different research projects
- Master and Diploma Students for scientific thesis
- Bachelor Student for scientific thesis
- Scientific Member of staff for PhD qualification
in research projects
30Introduction and History
31Mobile communication
- Two aspects of mobility
- user mobility
- users communicate (wireless) anytime, anywhere,
with anyone - device portability
- devices can be connected anytime, anywhere to the
network - Wireless vs. mobile Examples
- no no stationary computer
- no yes notebook in a hotel (more and more
wireless access) - yes no wireless LANs in historic buildings
- yes yes Personal Digital Assistant (PDA),
Smartphone - The demand for mobile communication creates the
need for integration of wireless networks into
existing fixed networks - local area networks standardization of IEEE
802.11, ETSI (HIPERLAN) - Internet Mobile IP extension of the internet
protocol IP - wide area networks e.g., internetworking of GSM
and ISDN
32Applications I
- Vehicles (car-2-X)
- transmission of news, road condition, weather,
music via DAB - personal communication using GSM
- position via GPS
- local ad-hoc network with vehicles close-by to
prevent accidents, guidance system, redundancy - vehicle data (e.g., from busses, high-speed
trains) can be transmitted in advance for
maintenance - Emergencies
- early transmission of patient data to the
hospital, current status, first diagnosis - replacement of a fixed infrastructure in case of
earthquakes, hurricanes, fire etc. - crisis, war, ...
33Typical application road traffic
34Location dependent services
- Location aware services
- what services, e.g., printer, fax, phone, server
etc. exist in the local environment - Follow-on services
- automatic call-forwarding, transmission of the
actual workspace to the current location - Information services
- push e.g., current special offers in the
supermarket - pull e.g., where is the Black Forrest Cherry
Cake? - Support services
- Caches, intermediate results, state information
etc. follow the mobile device through the fixed
network - Privacy
- who should gain knowledge about the location
35Wireless networks in comparison to fixed networks
- Higher loss-rates due to interference
- emissions of, e.g., engines, lightning
- Restrictive regulations of frequencies
- frequencies have to be coordinated, useful
frequencies are almost all occupied - Low transmission rates
- local some Mbit/s, regional currently, e.g., 53
kbit/s with GSM/GPRS - Higher delays, higher jitter
- connection setup time with GSM in the second
range, several hundred milliseconds for other
wireless 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
36Early history of wireless communication
- Many people in history used light for
communication - heliographs, flags (semaphore), ...
- 150 BC smoke signals for communication(Polybius,
Greece) - 1794, optical telegraph, Claude Chappe
- Here electromagnetic waves areof special
importance - 1831 Faraday demonstrates electromagnetic
induction - J. Maxwell (1831 - 79) theory of electromagnetic
Fields, wave equations (1864) - H. Hertz (1857 - 94) demonstrateswith an
experiment the wave characterof electrical
transmission through space(1888, in Karlsruhe,
Germany, at thelocation of todays University of
Karlsruhe)
37History of wireless communication I
- 1896 Guglielmo Marconi
- first demonstration of wirelesstelegraphy
(digital!) - long wave transmission, hightransmission power
necessary (gt 200 kW) - 1907 Commercial transatlantic connections
- huge base stations(30100m high antennas)
- 1915 Wireless voice transmission New York - San
Francisco - 1920 Discovery of short waves by Marconi
- reflection at the ionosphere
- smaller sender and receiver, possible due to the
invention of the vacuum tube (1906, Lee DeForest
and Robert von Lieben) - 1926 Train-phone on the line Hamburg Berlin
- wires parallel to the railroad track
38History of wireless communication II
- 1928 many TV broadcast trials (across Atlantic,
color TV, TV news) - 1933 Frequency modulation (E. H. Armstrong)
- 1958 A-Netz in Germany
- analog, 160 MHz, connection setup only from the
mobile station, no handover, 80 coverage, 1971
11000 customers - 1972 B-Netz in Germany
- analog, 160 MHz, connection setup from the fixed
network too (but location of the mobile station
has to be known) - available also in A, NL and LUX, 1979 13000
customer in D - 1979 NMT at 450 MHz (Scandinavian countries)
- 1982 Start of GSM-specification
- goal pan-European digital mobile phone system
with roaming - 1983 Start of the American AMPS (Advanced Mobile
Phone System, analog) - 1984 CT-1 standard (Europe) for cordless
telephones
39History of wireless communication III
- 1986 C-Netz in Germany
- analog voice transmission, 450 MHz, hand-over
possible, digital signaling, automatic location
of mobile device - Was in use until 2000, services FAX, modem,
X.25, e-mail, 98 coverage - 1991 Specification of DECT
- Digital European Cordless Telephone (today
Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications) - 1880 1900 MHz, 100 500 m range, 120 duplex
channels, 1.2 Mbit/s data transmission, voice
encryption, authentication, up to several 10000
user/km2, used in more than 50 countries - 1992 Start of GSM
- in D as D1 and D2, fully digital, 900 MHz, 124
channels - automatic location, hand-over, cellular
- roaming in Europe - now worldwide in more than
200 countries - services data with 9.6 kbit/s, FAX, voice, ...
40History of wireless communication IV
- 1994 E-Netz in Germany
- GSM with 1800 MHz, smaller cells
- As Eplus in D (1997 98 coverage of the
population) - 1996 HiperLAN (High Performance Radio Local Area
Network) - ETSI, standardization of type 1 5.15 - 5.30 GHz,
23.5 Mbit/s - recommendations for type 2 and 3 (both 5 GHz)
and 4 (17 GHz) as wireless ATM-networks (up to
155 Mbit/s) - 1997 Wireless LAN - IEEE802.11
- IEEE standard, 2.4 - 2.5 GHz and infrared, 2
Mbit/s - already many (proprietary) products available in
the beginning - 1998 Specification of GSM successors
- for UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunication
System) as European proposals for IMT-2000 - Iridium
- 66 satellites (6 spare), 1.6 GHz to the mobile
phone
41History of wireless communication V
- 1999 Standardization of additional wireless LANs
- IEEE standard 802.11b, 2.4 - 2.5 GHz, 11 Mbit/s
- Bluetooth for piconets, 2.4 Ghz, lt 1 Mbit/s
- Decision about IMT-2000
- Several members of a family UMTS, cdma2000,
DECT, - Start of WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) and
i-mode - First step towards a unified Internet/mobile
communicaiton system - Access to many services via the mobile phone
- 2000 GSM with higher data rates
- HSCSD offers up to 57.6 kbit/s
- First GPRS trials with up to 50 kbit/s (packet
oriented!) - UMTS auctions/beauty contests
- Hype followed by disillusionment (100 B DM payed
in Germany for 6 licenses!) - 2001 Start of 3G systems
- Cdma2000 in Korea, UMTS tests in Europe, Foma
(almost UMTS) in Japan
42 Wireless systems Overview of the development
wireless LAN
cordlessphones
cellular phones
satellites
1980CT0
1981 NMT 450
1982 Inmarsat-A
1983 AMPS
1984CT1
1986 NMT 900
1987CT1
1988 Inmarsat-C
1989 CT 2
1991 DECT
1991 D-AMPS
1991 CDMA
199x proprietary
1992 GSM
1992 Inmarsat-B Inmarsat-M
1993 PDC
1997 IEEE 802.11
1994DCS 1800
1998 Iridium
1999 802.11b, Bluetooth
2000 IEEE 802.11a
2000GPRS
analogue
2001 IMT-2000
digital
200? Fourth Generation (Internet based)
4G fourth generation when and how?
43Mobile phone subscribers worldwide
44Development of mobile telecommunication systems
CT0/1
FDMA
AMPS
CT2
NMT
IMT-FT DECT
IS-136 TDMA D-AMPS
EDGE
IMT-SC IS-136HS UWC-136
TDMA
GSM
GPRS
PDC
IMT-DS UTRA FDD / W-CDMA
IMT-TC UTRA TDD / TD-CDMA
CDMA
IMT-TC TD-SCDMA
IS-95 cdmaOne
IMT-MC cdma2000 1X EV-DO
cdma2000 1X
1X EV-DV (3X)
1G
2G
3G
2.5G
45Areas of research in mobile communication
- Wireless Communication
- transmission quality (bandwidth, error rate,
delay) - modulation, coding, interference
- media access, regulations
- ...
- Mobility
- location dependent services
- location transparency
- quality of service support (delay, jitter,
security) - ...
- Portability
- power consumption
- limited computing power, sizes of display, ...
- Usability
- ...
46Development of Mobile Access Speed
- Source VTC-2007, Fettweis
47Simple reference model used here
Application
Application
Transport
Transport
Network
Network
Data Link
Data Link
Data Link
Data Link
Physical
Physical
Physical
Physical
Medium
Radio
48Influence of mobile communication to the layer
model
- service location
- new applications, multimedia
- adaptive applications
- congestion and flow control
- quality of service
- addressing, routing, device location
- hand-over
- authentication
- media access
- multiplexing
- media access control
- encryption
- modulation
- interference
- attenuation
- frequency
- Application layer
- Transport layer
- Network layer
- Data link layer
- Physical layer
49Physical Layer Issues
50Frequencies for communication
coax cable
twisted pair
optical transmission
1 Mm 300 Hz
10 km 30 kHz
100 m 3 MHz
1 m 300 MHz
10 mm 30 GHz
100 ?m 3 THz
1 ?m 300 THz
visible light
VLF
LF
MF
HF
VHF
UHF
SHF
EHF
infrared
UV
- VLF Very Low Frequency UHF Ultra High
Frequency - LF Low Frequency SHF Super High Frequency
- MF Medium Frequency EHF Extra High
Frequency - HF High Frequency UV Ultraviolet Light
- VHF Very High Frequency
- Frequency and wave length
- ? c/f
- wave length ?, speed of light c ? 3 x 108 m/s,
frequency f
51Signals I
- physical representation of data
- function of time and location
- signal parameters parameters representing the
value of data - classification
- continuous time/discrete time
- continuous values/discrete values
- analog signal continuous time and continuous
values - digital signal discrete time and discrete
values - signal parameters of periodic signals period T,
frequency f 1/T, amplitude A, phase shift ? - sine wave as special periodic signal for a
carrier s(t) At sin(2 ? ft t ?t)
52Fourier representation of periodic signals
1
1
0
0
t
t
ideal periodic signal
real composition (based on harmonics)
53Signals II
- Different representations of signals
- amplitude (amplitude domain)
- frequency spectrum (frequency domain)
- phase state diagram (amplitude M and phase ? in
polar coordinates) - Composed signals transferred into frequency
domain using Fourier transformation - Digital signals need
- infinite frequencies for perfect transmission
- modulation with a carrier frequency for
transmission (analog signal!)
54Antennas isotropic radiator
- Radiation and reception of electromagnetic waves,
coupling of wires to space for radio transmission - Isotropic radiator equal radiation in all
directions (three dimensional) - only a
theoretical reference antenna - Real antennas always have directive effects
(vertically and/or horizontally) - Radiation pattern measurement of radiation
around an antenna - Is used as reference for measuring of antennas
(EIRP Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power)
z
z
y
ideal isotropic radiator
y
x
x
55Antennas simple dipoles
- Real antennas are not isotropic radiators but,
e.g., dipoles with lengths ?/4 on car roofs or
?/2 as Hertzian dipole? shape of antenna
proportional to wavelength - Example Radiation pattern of a simple Hertzian
dipole - Gain maximum power in the direction of the main
lobe compared to the power of an isotropic
radiator (with the same average power) - Gain measure in dBi ( 10log10P1/P2)
Metallic Surface
56Antennas directed and sectorized
- Often used for microwave connections or base
stations for mobile phones (e.g., radio coverage
of a valley)
y
y
z
directed antenna
x
z
x
side view (xy-plane)
side view (yz-plane)
top view (xz-plane)
z
z
sectorized antenna
x
x
top view, 3 sector
top view, 6 sector
57(passive) Antennas diversity
- Grouping of 2 or more antennas
- multi-element antenna arrays
- Antenna diversity
- switched diversity, selection diversity
- receiver chooses antenna with largest output
- diversity combining
- combine output power to produce gain
- co-phasing needed to avoid cancellation
?/2
?/2
?/4
?/2
?/4
?/2
ground plane
58Signal propagation ranges
- Transmission range
- communication possible
- low error rate
- Detection range
- detection of the signal possible
- no communication possible
- Interference range
- signal may not be detected
- signal adds to the background noise
sender
transmission
distance
detection
interference
59Signal propagation
- Propagation in free space always like light
(straight line) - Receiving power proportional to 1/d² (d
distance between sender and receiver) - Receiving power additionally influenced by
- fading (frequency dependent H2O resonance at 2.5
GHz O2 Resonance at 60 GHz) - shadowing
- reflection at large obstacles
- refraction depending on the density of a medium
- scattering at small obstacles
- diffraction at edges
refraction
reflection
scattering
diffraction
shadowing
60Real world example
61Friis free-space equation in logarithmic form
- Prcvd(d) PtxGtGrPL in dB
- path loss in free space
- PL 10log10(4pdf/c)2 20log10(f)
20log10(d) -20log10(c/4p) - D Distance between Sender and Receiver
- f Frequency
- c Speed of light (300000km/s)
- First Fresnel Zone considerations for antenna
highs and reference distance
d0
62Multipath propagation
- Signal can take many different paths between
sender and receiver due to reflection,
scattering, diffraction - Time dispersion signal is dispersed over time
(delay spread) - ? interference with neighbor symbols, Inter
Symbol Interference (ISI) - The signal reaches a receiver directly and phase
shifted ? distorted signal depending on the
phases of the different parts
multipath pulses
LOS pulses
signal at sender
signal at receiver
63Multiplexing
- Multiplexing in 4 dimensions
- space (si)
- time (t)
- frequency (f)
- code (c)
- Goal multiple use of a shared medium
- Important guard spaces needed!
SM
64Frequency multiplex
- Separation of the whole spectrum into smaller
frequency bands - A channel gets a certain band of the spectrum for
the whole time - Advantages
- no dynamic coordination necessary
- works also for analog signals
- Disadvantages
- waste of bandwidth if the traffic is
distributed unevenly - inflexible
- guard spaces
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
c
f
t
65Time multiplex
- A channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain
amount of time - Advantages
- only one carrier in themedium at any time
- throughput high even for many users
- Disadvantages
- precise synchronization necessary
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
c
f
t
66Time and frequency multiplex
- Combination of both methods
- A channel gets a certain frequency band for a
certain amount of time - Example GSM
- Advantages
- better protection against tapping
- protection against frequency selective
interference - higher data rates as compared tocode multiplex
- but precise coordinationrequired
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
c
f
t
67Code multiplex
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
k1
- Each channel has a unique code
- All channels use the same spectrum at the same
time - Advantages
- bandwidth efficient
- no coordination and synchronization necessary
- good protection against interference and tapping
- Disadvantages
- lower user data rates
- more complex signal regeneration
- Implemented using spread spectrum technology
c
f
t
68Modulation
- Digital modulation
- digital data is translated into an analog signal
(baseband) - ASK, FSK, PSK - main focus in this chapter
- differences in spectral efficiency, power
efficiency, robustness - Analog modulation
- shifts center frequency of baseband signal up to
the radio carrier - Motivation
- smaller antennas (e.g., ?/4)
- Frequency Multiplexing
- medium characteristics
- Basic schemes
- Amplitude Modulation (AM)
- Frequency Modulation (FM)
- Phase Modulation (PM)
69Modulation and demodulation
analog baseband signal
digital data
digital modulation
analog modulation
radio transmitter
101101001
radio carrier
analog baseband signal
digital data
analog demodulation
Synchronization/digital Demodulation/decision
radio receiver
101101001
radio carrier
70Digital modulation
- Modulation of digital signals known as Shift
Keying - Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
- very simple
- low bandwidth requirements
- very susceptible to interference
- Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)
- needs larger bandwidth
- Phase Shift Keying (PSK)
- more complex
- robust against interference
71Advanced Phase Shift Keying
- BPSK (Binary Phase Shift Keying)
- bit value 0 sine wave
- bit value 1 inverted sine wave
- very simple PSK
- low spectral efficiency
- robust, used e.g. in satellite systems
- QPSK (Quadrature Phase Shift Keying)
- 2 bits coded as one symbol
- symbol determines shift of sine wave
- needs less bandwidth compared to BPSK
- more complex
- Often also transmission of relative, not absolute
phase shift DQPSK - Differential QPSK (IS-136,
PHS)
72Quadrature Amplitude Modulation
- Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) combines
amplitude and phase modulation - it is possible to code n bits using one symbol
- 2n discrete levels, n 2 identical to QPSK
- bit error rate increases with n, but less errors
compared to comparable PSK schemes -
- Example 16-QAM (4 bits 1 symbol)
- Symbols 0011 and 0001 have the same
phase, but different amplitude. 0000 and
1000 have different phase, but same
amplitude. - Used in several high speed systems
Q
0010
0001
0011
0000
I
1000
73Hierarchical Modulation
- DVB-T modulates two separate data streams onto a
single DVB-T stream - High Priority (HP) embedded within a Low Priority
(LP) stream - Multi carrier system, about 2000 or 8000 carriers
(OFDM) - QPSK, 16 QAM, 64QAM
- Example 64QAM
- good reception resolve the entire 64QAM
constellation - poor reception, mobile reception resolve only
QPSK portion - 6 bit per QAM symbol, 2 most significant
determine QPSK - HP service coded in QPSK (2 bit), LP uses
remaining 4 bit
Q
10
I
00
000010
010101
74Multi Carrier Modulation (MCM)
- With Multi Carrier Modulation (MCM) the data
stream is spilt into several concurrent
communication streams using different frequencies
- Example of MCM are ADSL and OFDM where each
frequency is further modulated using BPSK or QAM - For IEEE802.11a/g and Hiperlan-2, LTE OFDM is
used - OFDM uses orthogonal frequencies to avoid inter
carrier interference - It uses long symbols to reduce ISI and to avoid
complex equalization - The initial symbol rate n can be divided onto m
carriers such that the symbol rate/carrier is
n/m. - The distance between symbols (in the time domain)
becomes larger and thus the ISI smaller.
75MCM model for transmission
Ts T N(2(k-1)/Rb)
Rb ? bit rate (bps)
FFT
76Fourier transform of a single puls
F
T/2
FT
-T/2
rect(T) si(T) sin(T)/T
77OFDM model for transmission (contd)
Modulation factor
Constant phase
Fourier Transform
How do we select an appropiate value for ?f ?
78OFDM model for transmission (contd)
?f 0.8/T
f T
We find ICI (Inter-Carrier-Interference)
?f 1.2/T
f T
79OFDM model for transmission (contd)
?f 1/T
f T
No ICI We have orthogonality between the
different subcarriers
80Components of a real OFDM system
Transmitter
Channel Coding
Modulation Interleaving
FFT
D/A
RF- Transmission
Receiver
Channel Decoding
Demodulation Deinterleaving
IFFT
A/D
RF- Reception
Synchronizer
Channel Estimator
81Required Signal/Noise at the Receiver
- During transmission and reception noise will be
added to the signal - Thermal noise (Bolzmann noise)
- Receiver Noise (Noise Figure)
- Transmitter Noise caused by non linearities
- etc.
- The effect for the received signal is that in the
constellation diagram the not a signal point but
a cloud of points around the expected point are
received. - Due to these noise and distortion impacts the
signal/noise (S/N) ratio to receive a signal
correctly is at least around gt6 dB. - The S/N is dependant on the modulation and the
transmission type - For 64 QAM the S/N is at least 4 dB higher than
for 16 QAM etc.
825 GHz Analog-Transceiver Blocks
83Spread spectrum technology
- Problem of radio transmission frequency
dependent fading can wipe out narrow band signals
for duration of the interference - Solution spread the narrow band signal into a
broad band signal using a special code - Side effects
- coexistence of several signals without dynamic
coordination - tap-proof
- Alternatives Direct Sequence, Frequency Hopping
signal
interference
spread signal
power
power
spread interference
detection at receiver
f
f
84Effects of spreading and interference
dP/df
dP/df
user signal broadband interference narrowband
interference
i)
ii)
f
f
sender
dP/df
dP/df
dP/df
iii)
iv)
v)
f
f
f
receiver
85Spreading and frequency selective fading
narrowband channels
narrow bandsignal
spread spectrum channels
By spreading the effect of the fading channel is
equally distributed to all users! How can we
avoid interference of the chips?
86DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum) I
- XOR of the signal with pseudo-random number
(chipping sequence) - many chips per bit (e.g., 128, best known 11)
result in higher bandwidth of the signal - Advantages
- reduces frequency selective fading
- in cellular networks
- base stations can use the same frequency range
- several base stations can detect and recover the
signal - soft handover
- Disadvantages
- precise power control necessary
- Precise synchronization necessary(multi
correlators can take advantagefrom multi-path
propagation (Rake-receiver)
Spreading Factor s tb/tc
tb
user data
0
1
XOR
tc
chipping sequence
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
resulting signal
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
tb bit period tc chip period
87DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum) II
spread spectrum signal
transmit signal
user data
X
modulator
chipping sequence
radio carrier
transmitter
correlator
lowpass filtered signal
sampled sums
products
received signal
data
demodulator
X
integrator
decision
radio carrier
chipping sequence
receiver
88Example Barker Code
89FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) I
- Discrete changes of carrier frequency
- sequence of frequency changes determined via
pseudo random number sequence - Two versions
- Fast Hopping several frequencies per user bit
- Slow Hopping several user bits per frequency
- Advantages
- frequency selective fading and interference
limited to short period - simple implementation
- uses only small portion of spectrum at any time
- Disadvantages
- not as robust as DSSS
- simpler to detect
90FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) II
tb
user data
0
1
0
1
1
t
f
td
f3
slow Hopping tblttd (3 bits/hop)
f2
f1
t
td
f
f3
fast Hopping tbgttd (3 hops/bit)
f2
f1
t
tb bit period td dwell time
91FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) III
spread transmit signal
narrowband signal
user data
Digital modulator
Analog modulator
transmitter
hopping sequence
frequency synthesizer
narrowband signal
received signal
data
Digital demodulator
Analog demodulator
hopping sequence
frequency synthesizer
receiver
92Example Bluetooth Frequency Hopping
- Bluetooth uses a slow frequency hopping scheme
- The frequency is changed every slot (625 ms) so
approximately 1600 hops/s - For multi-slot packets the frequency is changed
with the next packet - The hopping sequence is determined by the master
(derived from the bluetooth MAC address) - During inquiry and paging the the master MAC and
timing offset is exchanged with the slaves - The slot are enumerated from 0 to 2 27 1
- The master uses always the even slot
- The slot size is 1, 3 or 5
93Master / Slave Communication
B
D
Ma
SCO
A
E
C
ACL
f(k)
f(k2)
f(k4)
f(k6)
f(k8)
f(k10)
f(k14)
f(k12)
f(k16)
f(k20)
f(k18)
f(k22)
f(k24)
A
B
C
D
E
t
SCO 1
SCO 2
SCO 1
SCO 2
SCO 1
ACL
ACL
ACL
ACL
94UWB-System
- Definition A signal is considered to be Ultra
Wide Band if the Bandwidth of the signal is at
least 25 of the carrier frequency - Special definition of FCC For the UWB-Bands it
is sufficient if the channel bandwidth is 500 MHz
in the spectrum between 3.1 and 10.6 GHz - Currently most systems use narrow band or wide
band channels - UWB spread the signal power over a very broad
band and interferes therefore minimally with
existing narrowband/wideband systems - Spreading makes the system more stable against
fading channel influences - More bandwidth allow more data-rate
- More bandwidth allows more accurate location
determination
95UWB Spectrum
- FCC ruling permits UWB spectrum overlay
Bluetooth, 802.11b Cordless Phones Microwave Ovens
802.11a
Emitted Signal Power
PCS
Part 15 Limit
-41 dBm/MHz
UWB Spectrum
1.6
1.9
2.4
3.1
5
10.6
Frequency (Ghz)
- FCC ruling issued 2/14/2002 after 4 years of
study public debate - FCC believes current ruling is conservative
96Theoretical Data Rates over Range
UWB shows significant throughput potential at
short range
97What is Ultra Wideband?
- Radio technology that modulates impulse based
waveforms instead of continuous carrier waves
98Information Modulation
Pulse length 200 ps Energy concentrated in 2
6 GHz band Voltage swing 100 mV Power 10 µW
- Pulse Position Modulation (PPM)
- Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM)
- On-Off Keying (OOK)
- Bi-Phase Modulation (BPSK)
99Related Standards
- IEEE 802.15 Wireless Personal Area Network
(WPAN) - IEEE 802.15.1 Bluetooth, 1 Mbps
- IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN/high rate, 50 Mbps
- IEEE 802.15.3a WPAN/Higher rate, 500 Mbps, UWB
- IEEE 802.15.3c WPAN Ultra High Data Rates 2 - 10
Gb/s - IEEE 802.15.4 WPAN/low-rate, low-power, mW
level, 200 kbps - IEEE 802.15.4a WPAN/low-rate, low-power,
distance measurement UWB
100Cell structure
- Implements space division multiplex base station
covers a certain transmission area (cell) - Mobile stations communicate only via the base
station - Advantages of cell structures
- higher capacity, higher number of users
- less transmission power needed
- more robust, decentralized
- base station deals with interference,
transmission area etc. locally - Problems
- fixed network needed for the base stations
- handover (changing from one cell to another)
necessary - interference with other cells
- Cell sizes from some 100 m in cities to, e.g., 35
km on the country side (GSM) - even less for
higher frequencies
101Frequency planning I
- Frequency reuse only with a certain distance
between the base stations - Standard model using 7 frequencies
- Fixed frequency assignment
- certain frequencies are assigned to a certain
cell - problem different traffic load in different
cells - Dynamic frequency assignment
- base station chooses frequencies depending on the
frequencies already used in neighbor cells - more capacity in cells with more traffic
- assignment can also be based on interference
measurements
102Frequency planning II
f3
f7
f2
f5
f2
f4
f6
f5
3 cell cluster
f1
f4
f3
f7
f1
f2
f3
f6
f2
f5
7 cell cluster
3 cell cluster with 3 sector antennas
103Cell breathing
- CDM systems cell size depends on current load
- Additional traffic appears as noise to other
users - If the noise level is too high users drop out of
cells
104Mobile CommunicationsChapter 3 Media Access
- Motivation
- SDMA, FDMA, TDMA
- Aloha
- Reservation schemes
- Collision avoidance, MACA
- Polling
- CDMA
- SAMA
- Comparison
105Motivation
- Can we apply media access methods from fixed
networks? - Example CSMA/CD
- Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision
Detection - send as soon as the medium is free, listen into
the medium if a collision occurs (original method
in IEEE 802.3) - Problems in wireless networks
- signal strength decreases proportional to (at
least) the square of the distance - the sender would apply CS and CD, but the
collisions happen at the receiver - it might be the case that a sender cannot hear
the collision, i.e., CD does not work - furthermore, CS might not work if, e.g., a
terminal is hidden
106Motivation - hidden and exposed terminals
- Hidden terminals
- A sends to B, C cannot receive A
- C wants to send to B, C senses a free medium
(CS fails) - collision at B, A cannot receive the collision
(CD fails) - A is hidden for C
- Exposed terminals
- B sends to A, C wants to send to another terminal
(not A or B) - C has to wait, CS signals a medium in use
- but A is outside the radio range of C, therefore
waiting is not necessary - C is exposed to B
B
A
C
107Motivation - near and far terminals
- Terminals A and B send, C receives
- signal strength decreases (at least) proportional
to the square of the distance - the signal of terminal B therefore drowns out As
signal - C cannot receive A
- If C for example was an arbiter for sending
rights, terminal B would drown out terminal A
already on the physical layer - Also severe problem for CDMA-networks - precise
power control needed!
A
B
C
108Access methods SDMA/FDMA/TDMA
- SDMA (Space Division Multiple Access)
- segment space into sectors, use directed antennas
- cell structure
- MIMO, Beam steering
- FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access)
- assign a certain frequency to a transmission
channel between a sender and a receiver - permanent (e.g., radio broadcast), slow hopping
(e.g., GSM, Bluetooth), or fast hopping (FHSS,
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) - TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)
- assign the fixed sending frequency to a
transmission channel between a sender and a
receiver for a certain amount of time - CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
- Different orthogonal codes are used for
independent communication - The multiplexing schemes presented in chapter 2
are now used to control medium access!
109Duplexing
- The duplex mode describes how the two
communication directions are handled. - Common examples are
- TDD Time division duplex
- FDD Frequency division duplex
110FDD/FDMA - general scheme, example GSM
f
960 MHz
124
200 kHz
1
935.2 MHz
20 MHz
915 MHz
124
1
890.2 MHz
t
fu 890 MHz i0.2 MHz fd fu 45 MHz
FDD (frequency division duplex)
111TDD/TDMA - general scheme, example DECT
417 µs
1
2
3
11
12
1
2
3
11
12
t
downlink
uplink
10ms
112Aloha/slotted aloha
- Mechanism
- random, distributed (no central arbiter),
time-multiplex - Slotted Aloha additionally uses time-slots,
sending must always start at slot boundaries - Aloha
- Slotted Aloha
collision
sender A
sender B
sender C
t
collision
sender A
sender B
sender C
t
113Aloha performance
114Slotted Aloha performance
115MACA - collision avoidance
- MACA (Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance)
uses short signaling packets for collision
avoidance - RTS (request to send) a sender request the right
to send from a receiver with a short RTS packet
before it sends a data packet - CTS (clear to send) the receiver grants the
right to send as soon as it is ready to receive - Signaling packets contain
- sender address
- receiver address
- packet size
- Variants of this method can be found in
IEEE802.11 as DFWMAC (Distributed Foundation
Wireless MAC)
116MACA examples
- MACA avoids the problem of hidden terminals
- A and C want to send to B
- A sends RTS first
- C waits after receiving CTS from B
- MACA avoids the problem of exposed terminals
- B wants to send to A, C to another terminal
- now C does not have to wait for it cannot
receive CTS from A
RTS
CTS
CTS
B
RTS
RTS
CTS
B
117Mobile Communications Chapter 4 Wireless LANs
- Characteristics
- IEEE 802.11
- PHY
- MAC
- Roaming
- .11a, b, g, h, i
118Characteristics of Wireless LANs
- Advantages
- Very flexible within the reception area
- Ad-hoc networks without previous planning
possible - (almost) no wiring difficulties (e.g. historic
buildings, firewalls) - More robust against disasters like, e.g.,
earthquakes, fire - or users pulling a plug... - Disadvantages
- Typically very low bandwidth compared to wired
networks (1 - 10 Mbit/s) - Many proprietary solutions, especially for higher
bit-rates, standards take their time (e.g. IEEE
802.11) - Products have to follow many national
restrictions if working wireless, it takes a vary
long time to establish global solutions like,
e.g., IMT-2000
119Design Goals for Wireless LANs
- Global, seamless operation
- Low power for battery use
- No special permissions or licenses needed to use
the LAN - Robust transmission technology
- Simplified spontaneous cooperation at meetings
- Easy to use for everyone, simple management
- Protection of investment in wired networks
- Security (no one should be able to read my data),
privacy (no one should be able to collect user
profiles), safety (low radiation) - Transparency concerning applications and higher
layer protocols, but also location awareness if
necessary
120Comparison Infrared vs. Radio Transmission
- Infrared
- Uses IR diodes, diffuse light, multiple
reflections (walls, furniture etc.) - Advantages
- Simple, cheap, available in many mobile devices
- No licenses needed
- Simple shielding possible
- Disadvantages
- Interference by sunlight, heat sources etc.
- Many things shield or absorb IR light
- Low bandwidth
- Example
- IrDA (Infrared Data Association) interface
available everywhere
- Radio
- Typically using the license free ISM band at 2.4
GHz (5.2 GHz, 17 GHz, 60 GHz) - Advantages
- Experience from wireless WAN and mobile phones
can be used - Coverage of larger areas possible (radio can
penetrate walls, furniture etc.) - Disadvantages
- Very limited license free frequency bands
- Shielding more difficult, interference with other
electrical devices - Example
- WaveLAN, HIPERLAN, Bluetooth
121Comparison Infrastructure vs. Ad-hoc Networks
infrastructure network
AP Access Point
AP
AP
wired network
AP
ad-hoc network
122802.11 - Architecture of an Infrastructure Network
802.11 LAN
- Station (STA)
- Terminal with access mechanisms to the wireless
medium and radio contact to the access point - Basic Service Set (BSS)
- Group of stations using the same radio frequency
- Access Point
- Station integrated into the wireless LAN and the
distribution system - Portal
- Bridge to other (wired) networks
- Distribution System
- Interconnection network to form one logical
network (EES Extended Service Set) based on
several BSS
802.x LAN
STA1
BSS1
Access Point
Access Point
ESS
BSS2
STA2
STA3
802.11 LAN
123IEEE Standard 802.11
fixed terminal
mobile terminal
infrastructure network
application
application
access point
TCP
TCP
IP
IP
LLC
LLC
LLC
802.11 MAC
802.3 MAC
802.3 MAC
802.11 MAC
802.11 PHY
802.3 PHY
802.3 PHY
802.11 PHY
124802.11 - Layers and Functions
- PLCP Physical Layer Convergence Protocol
- Clear channel assessment signal (carrier sense)
- PMD Physical Medium Dependent
- Modulation, coding
- PHY Management
- Channel selection, MIB
- Station Management
- Coordination of all management functions
- MAC
- Access mechanisms, fragmentation, encryption
- MAC Management
- Synchronization, roaming, MIB, power management
Station Management
LLC
DLC
MAC
MAC Management
PLCP
PHY Management
PHY
PMD
125802.11 - MAC Layer I Distributed Foundation
Wireless MAC (DFWMAC)
- Traffic services
- Asynchronous Data Service (mandatory)
- Exchange of data packets based on best-effort
- Support of broadcast and multicast
- Time-Bounded Service (optional)
- Implemented using PCF (Point Coordination
Function) - Access methods
- DFWMAC-DCF CSMA/CA (mandatory)
- Collision avoidance via randomized back-off
mechanism - Minimum distance between consecutive packets
- ACK packet for acknowledgements (not for
broadcasts) - DFWMAC-DCF w/ RTS/CTS (optional)
- Avoids hidden terminal problem
- DFWMAC- PCF (optional)
- Access point polls terminals according to a list
126802.11 - MAC Layer II
- Priorities
- Defined through different inter frame spaces
- No guaranteed, hard priorities
- SIFS (Short Inter Frame Spacing)
- Highest priority, for ACK, CTS, polling response
- PIFS (PCF IFS)
- Medium priority, for time-bounded service using
PCF - DIFS (DCF, Distributed Coordination Function IFS)
- Lowest priority, for asynchronous data service
DIFS
DIFS
PIFS
SIFS
medium busy
next frame
contention
t
direct access if medium is free ? DIFS
127802.11 - CSMA/CA Access Method I
contention window (randomized back-offmechanism)
DIFS
DIFS
medium busy
next frame
t
direct access if medium is free ? DIFS
slot time
- Station ready to send starts sensing the medium
(Carrier Sense based on CCA, Clear Channel
Assessment) - If the medium is free for the duration of an
Inter-Frame Space (IFS), the station can start
sending (IFS depends on service type) - If the medium is busy, the station has to wait
for a free IFS, then the station must
additionally wait a random back-off time
(collision avoidance, multiple of slot-time) - If another station occupies the medium