Title: Rake Span Requirements for Multi-band UWB Systems
1Project IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless
Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title
Rake Span Requirements for Multi-band UWB
Systems Date Submitted 14 May, 2003 Source
Jaiganesh Balakrishnan et al. Company Texas
Instruments Address 12500 TI Blvd, MS 8649,
Dallas, TX 75243 Voice214-480-3756, FAX
972-761-6966, E-Mailjai_at_ti.com Re
Abstract This document describes the rake
span requirements for multi-band UWB
systems. Purpose For discussion by IEEE 802.15
TG3a. 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.
2Rake Span Requirements for Multi-band UWB
Systems
- Jaiganesh Balakrishnan, Anuj Batra Anand Dabak,
Jerry Lin, Ranjit Gharpurey, and Simon Lee - Texas Instruments12500 TI Blvd, MS 8649Dallas,
TX - May 14, 2003
3Outline
- Overview of multi-path energy capture.
- RAKE design parameters.
- RAKE design no group delay variations.
- RAKE design group delay variations.
- Buildability issues with multiple RX chains.
- Conclusions.
4Multi-path Energy Capture
- In multi-path environments, the RMS delay spreads
for a UWB channel can be large (14 ns for CM3, 25
ns for CM4). - Uncaptured multi-path energy results in loss in
performance of the UWB device. - One method for energy collection is to use a RAKE
receiver.
5RAKE Design Parameters
- There are two main parameters that need to be
considered when designing a RAKE receiver for a
multi-band system - The total number of RAKE fingers (see also
03/210r0) - Span of the RAKE receiver.
- The total number of RAKE fingers determines the
RX digital complexity. - Span of the RAKE receiver determines the number
of analog RX chains needed. - Optimal RAKE finger placement does not need to be
contiguous. - Ex 2 RAKE fingers can be separated by a
considerable number of samples.
6Design of a RAKE
- Assumption
- System 1 A 7-band multi-band system that
transmits a 3.9 ns pulse once every 7.8 ns in
each sub-band (132 Msps). - System 2 A 7-band multi-band system that
transmits a 3.9 ns pulse once every 3.9 ns in
each sub-band (264 Msps). - Impact of ISI is expected to be negligible and
hence not considered. - A smaller RAKE span results in loss of collected
multi-path energy. - Inherent trade-off
- Number of RX chains vs. multi-path energy
collection.
Symbol Rate Rake Span for 1 RX Chain Rake Span for 2 RX Chains Rake Span for 3 RX Chains
132 Msps 7.8 ns 15.6 ns 23.4 ns
264 Msps 3.9 ns 7.8 ns 11.7 ns
7RAKE Design No Group Delay (1)
- Assumption
- Synchronous hopping across the sub-bands.
- No group delay due to front-end filtering.
- Optimal timing is typically not feasible with a
single receive chain - Reason optimal sampling time for RAKE in
sub-bands 2 and 3 overlap. Impossible to do
with a single receive chain.
8RAKE Design No Group Delay (2)
- To ensure that multi-path energy is collected
across all sub-bands, we need to constrain the
RAKE fingers to be in the same location
regardless of the sub-band. - Location is chosen to maximize the overall
received energy.
9RAKE Design No Group Delay (3)
- Assumptions
- Ideal channel estimation.
- No front-end group delay variations.
- Zero switching time.
- Sample timing chosen to maximize collected energy
for symbol spaced sampling (264 MHz). - Normalized the channel impulse responses to unity
to remove effects of shadowing/fading. - Captured energy averaged over 100 channel
realizations.
10RAKE Design No Group Delay (4)
- Captured energy versus RAKE span for CM2 channel
environment - A 3 dB performance loss ? 30 loss in range.
- Conclusion to achieve less than 3 dB performance
loss in CM2 - Need 2 receive chains for a 132 Msps systems
- Need 3 receive chains for a 264 Msps systems.
Loss In Captured Multi-path Energy Number of RX Chains for 132 Msps System Number of RX Chains for 264 Msps System
5.3 dB 1 1
3.9 dB 1 2
3.0 dB 2 3
2.4 dB 2 4
1.9 dB 3 5
1.5 dB 3 6
11RAKE Design No Group Delay (5)
- Captured energy versus RAKE span for CM3 channel
environment - A 3 dB performance loss ? 30 loss in range.
- Conclusion to achieve less than 3 dB performance
loss in CM3 - Need 3 receive chains for a 132 Msps systems
- Need 5 receive chains for a 264 Msps systems.
Loss In Captured Multi-path Energy Number of RX Chains for 132 Msps System Number of RX Chains for 264 Msps System
7.4 dB 1 1
5.1 dB 1 2
4 dB 2 3
3.3 dB 2 4
2.8 dB 3 5
2.4 dB 3 6
12RAKE Design Group Delay (1)
- Consider a multi-band system whose operating
bandwidth includes the U-NII band. - If a notch filter is used to suppress the
interference from the U-NII band, then there
could be significant group delay variations on
sub-bands on either side of the notch. - Notch filter is one of the components that will
result in group delay variations. Other
components include antenna, LNA, etc.
13RAKE Design Group Delay (2)
- Assumption
- CM1 channel environment.
- Synchronous hopping across the sub-bands.
- Due to group delay variations, impulse response
for sub-bands 4 and 6 are delayed by 3.9 ns
relative to the other sub-bands. - Conclusions
- With one RAKE finger, the loss in performance is
nearly 1 dB. - However, as the number of RAKE fingers increases
the additional degradation due to group delay
variations is small (also true for CM2, CM3, and
CM4).
14Buildability Issues with Multiple RX Chains
- Hardware penalty for multiple receive chains.
- Need to duplicate entire receive chain after LNA,
including mixer, VGA, channel select filter, and
ADC. - Increased die size, power consumption, and cost.
- Analog section does not scale with improvements
in technology node. - Potential issues
- LNA loading results in a trade-off between
bandwidth, power, and noise figure. - Cross-talk between receiver chains.
- Increased design time.
15Conclusions
- Studied RAKE span requirements for multi-band UWB
systems. - Multi-band UWB systems need multiple RX chains
for CM2, CM3 and CM4 environments. - If more than 1 Rx chain is used, the impact due
to group delay variations is negligible. - Multiple receive chains results in a hardware
penalty and has potential implementation issues.