Title: NETW 701:Wireless Communications
1NETW 701Wireless Communications
- Course Instructor Tallal Elshabrawy
- Instructor Office C3.321
- Instructor Email tallal.el-shabrawy_at_guc.edu.eg
- Teaching Assistants Eng. Phoebe Edward
- Emails phoebe.edward2_at_guc.edu.eg,
-
2Text Book and References
- Text Book
- Wireless Communications Principles and Practice
2nd Edition, T. S. Rappaport, Prentice Hall,
2001 - Reference Books
- Modern Wireless Communications, S. Haykin and,
M. Moher, Prentice Hall, 2004 - Mobile Wireless Communications, M. Schwartz
Cambridge University Press, 2005
3Course Pre-Requisites
- Review communication theory COMM 502
4Course Instructional Goals
- Build an understanding of fundamental components
of wireless communications - Investigate the wireless communication channel
characteristics and modeling - Discuss different access techniques to the shared
broadcast wireless medium - Highlight measures of performance and capacity
evaluation of wireless communication networks - Provide an insight to different practical
wireless communication networks
5Course Contents Overview
6Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
Power
PT
Frequency
d (Km)
7Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
Frequency
d (Km)
8Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
- Lognormal Shadowing
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
Frequency
d (Km)
9Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
- Lognormal Shadowing
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
Frequency
d (Km)
10Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
- Lognormal Shadowing
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
Frequency
d (Km)
11Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
- Lognormal Shadowing
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
PTPL(d)X
Frequency
d (Km)
12Wireless Communication Channels
Signal Interference
- Large-Scale Parameters
- Distance Pathloss
- Lognormal Shadowing
- Small-Scale Parameters
- Multi-Path Fading
Power
PT
PTPL(d)
PTPL(d)X
Frequency
d (Km)
13Wireless Communication Channels
Distance Pathloss Mobile Speed 3
Km/hr PL137.744 35.225log10(DKM)
d
Lognormal Shadowing Mobile Speed 3 Km/hr ARMA
Correlated Shadow Model
d
Small-Scale Fading Mobile Speed 3 Km/hr Jakess
Rayleigh Fading Model
d
14Wireless Medium Access Techniques
- FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access)
- Channel bandwidth divided into frequency bands
- At any given instant each band should be used by
only one user - TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)
- System resources are divided into time slots
- Each user uses the entire bandwidth but not all
the time - CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
- Each user is allocated a unique code to use for
communication - Users may transmit simultaneously over the same
frequency band - SDMA (Space Division Multiple Access)
- System resources are reused with the help of
spatial separation
15Signal Reception and SINR
Signal Interference
Reliable Signal Reception requires adequate SINR
(Signal to Interference and Noise Ratio)
- Factors influencing SINR
- Number of Interferers
- Identity of Interferers
- Interference Power
- Interference Channels
S
I
16Signal Reception and SINR
Signal Interference
Reliable Signal Reception requires adequate SINR
(Signal to Interference and Noise Ratio)
- Factors influencing SINR
- Number of Interferers
- Identity of Interferers
- Interference Power
- Interference Channels
S
I
17Signal Reception and SINR
Signal Interference
Reliable Signal Reception requires adequate SINR
(Signal to Interference and Noise Ratio)
I
- Factors influencing SINR
- Number of Interferers
- Identity of Interferers
- Interference Power
- Interference Channels
18System Capacity
- Maximum number of customers that may be
satisfactorily supported within the wireless
network - Example Criteria for a Satisfied-User
- Number of Interfering sessions lt N
- Outage Probability lt ?TH
19Advances in Wireless Comm. Multi-Carrier
Modulation
- Subdivide wideband bandwidth into multiple
Orthogonal - narrowband sub-carriers
- Each sub-carrier approximately displays Flat
Fading - characteristics
- Flexibility in Power Allocation Sub-carrier
Allocation to increase system capacity
20Advances in Wireless Comm. MIMO
- Frequency and time processing are at limits
- Space processing is interesting because it does
not increase bandwidth - MIMO technology is evolving in different wireless
technologies - Cellular Systems
- WLAN
21Wireless Communications Channels Large-Scale
Pathloss
22Isotropic Radiation
- An Isotropic Antenna
- An antenna that transmits equally in all
directions - An isotropic antenna does not exist in reality
- An isotropic antenna acts as a reference to which
other antennas are compared
Power Flux Density
d
From Wireless Communications Edfors, Molisch,
Tufvesson
23Power Reception by an Isotropic Antenna
Power Received by Antenna
AeARx? Effective Area of Antenna
Power Received by Isotropic Antenna
From Wireless Communications Edfors, Molisch,
Tufvesson
LP? Free-space Path-loss between two isotropic
antennas
24Directional Radiation
- A Directional Antenna
- Transmit gain Gt is a measure of how well an
antenna emits radiated energy in a certain
direction relative to an isotropic antenna. - Receive gain Gr is a measure of how well the
antenna collects radiated energy in a given area
relative to an isotropic antenna.
Maximum (Peak) Antenna Gain
Main Lobe
Maximum transmit or receive antenna Gain
3 dB Beam Width
Side Lobes
Antenna Pattern for Parabolic (dish-shaped)
antenna
25The Friis Equation
Friis Equation
- The received power falls off as the square of the
T-R separation distance - The received power decays with distance at a rate
of 20 dB/decade - Valid for Line of Sight (LOS) satellite
communications - The Friis free-space model is only valid for
values of d in the far field. The far field is
defined as the region beyond the far field
distance df
D is the largest linear dimension of the
transmitting antenna aperture
Note df must also satisfy dfgtgtD, dfgtgt?
26PR(d) in the Far Field
- The Friis equation is not valid at d0
- PR(d) could be related to a power level PR(d0)
that is measured at a close in distance d0 that
is greater than df
27Relating Power to Electric Field
- Alternative formula for power flux density
Power Flux Density
where E depicts the electric field strength and
? is the intrinsic impedance of free-space
Power Received by Antenna