Title: Wireless Communications
1Wireless Communications
It is dangerous to put limits on wireless.
Guglielmo Marconi, 1932 Nobel Prize
Winner Inventor of Radio
2History
- Wired Communications
- 1834 ? Gauss and Weber build telegraph system in
Germany - 1844 ? Morse connects Baltimore and Washington
by telegraph - 1858 ? First transatlantic telegraph cable laid
- 1876 ? Alexander Bell demonstrates telephone
- 1911 ? New York can telephone Denver
- 1918 ? First telephone carrier system with
multi-plexing - 1945 ? First digital computer (ENIAC)
- 1956 ? First transatlantic telephone cable
- 1965 ? First packet switched computer network
(ARPANET) - 1981 ? IBM personal computer
- 1995 ? World Wide Web
- 1998 ? Internet usage expands exponentially
3History
- Wireless Communications ? Not so new
- 1899 ? Marconi sends first radio message across
Atlantic - 1905 ? Hulsmeyer detects ships with radar
- 1927 ? US Europe telephones linked by HF radio
- 1934 ? AM mobile police radios for public safety
widely used - 1935 ? Armstrong demonstrates FM radio system
- 1940 ? First microwave radar
- 1965 ? First commercial communication satellite
- 1968 ? ATT proposes cellular phone system to FCC
- 1983 ? FCC allocates spectrum for analog cellular
service (AMPS) - 1990 ? GSM digital cellular service introduced in
Europe - 1995 ? FCC auctions new PCS licenses in U.S. for
digital services - 1998 ? 40 million cellular phone users in U.S.
(20 of adults) - 2002 ? 62 of U.S. adults own a cell phone
4Cell Phone Useage
1990 ? 8 million worldwide users 2002 ? 700
million worldwide users 2005 ? 2.2 Billion 2010
? 4.6 Billion 2015 ? 6.8 Billion! 97 of World
Population!!
5Frequencies
- RF Radio Frequencies
- 1 MHz to 1 GHz
- general classification, not absolute
- 50 MHz to 1 GHz
- more widely used definition
- Microwave Frequencies
- 1 GHz to 300 GHz ? general
- 1 GHz to 100 GHz ? more widely used
- Trend towards use of higher frequencies
- Greater signal bandwidth (BW)
- Max. BW ? 10 of fc
- More users and/or higher data rates
- More difficult to design !! ? more
- Propagation distance ? as frequency ?
6Wireless Applications
- Mature
- Appliances
- Garage door opener
- Car alarms
- TV/VCR remote
- Cordless phones
- Communications
- Fixed microwave (point-to-point or LOS) ? nearly
20,000 in U.S.! - Satellite to fixed ground stations (TV, phone,
defense, etc.) - Paging
- 1st generation (1G) analog cellular ? AMPS (FM)
- 2nd generation (2G) digital cellular ? IS-95,
IS-136, GSM - 3rd generation (3G) digital cellular ? UMTS,
CDMA2000 - WLAN Wireless Local Area Networks (WiFi)
7Wireless Applications
- Still Developing
- Mobile computers/email (3G/4G)
- Wireless Local Loop (WLL)
- Local phone service via wireless connection
- Very prominent in non-industrialized nations
- Cheaper to install than wired lines
- Local competition from long-distance carriers in
U.S.! - Satellite to mobile ground units ? Land Mobile
Satellite (LMS) - Constellation of 66 satellites in orbit (plus
spares) - Motorola/Iridium ? Bankrupt in 2001! (now Iridium
Communications) - 4G Digital Cellular/PCS ? LTE
- PCS Personal Communication Services
8Wireless Applications
- Long-term trends in mobile communications driven
by - 1) Technology
- Integrated Circuits (ICs) ? cheaper, smaller,
faster, etc. - RF/microwave circuit fabrication ? higher
frequencies (MMICs) - Digital Signal Processing (DSP) chips
- Customized for specific applications (e.g. ASICs)
- Baseband signal processing
- Coding, modulation, encryption, equalization,
etc. - 2) Governments (e.g. FCC)
- Spectrum allocation
- Public use vs. from auctions
- Regulations
- International standards
9U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
PCS
PCS
AMPS
AMPS
Fig. 11.23 pg. 592
PCS
PCS
Reallocated to PCS
802.11b Wi-Fi
802.11a Wi-Fi
10U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- SMR Bands ? Specialized Mobile Radio
- Three 20 MHz bands from 800?900 MHz
- Large number of private licenses nationwide
- Paging/messaging
- Voice dispatch ? taxi, P/F/A
- Data (UPS/Fedex)
- Extended SMR
- Nextel/Motorola partnership ? bought by Sprint
- Purchased SMR licenses all over the country
- Nationwide coverage providing digital
cellular/data service
11U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- ISM Bands ? Industrial/Scientific/Medical
- 902?928 MHz and 2400?2484 MHz
- Unlicensed garbage bands
- Anyone can develop application as long as FCC
guidelines are met - Spread spectrum modulation must be used
- Tx power level lt 1 W
- Remote meter reading
- Wireless medical monitors
- Digital cordless telephones
- 802.11b IEEE WLAN standard _at_ 2.4 GHz
12U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- 1st Generation (1G) Cellular Telephone
- AMPS Advanced Mobile Phone System
- 824?849 MHz
- Reverse Channel Xmit from mobile to base station
(fixed) - 869?894 MHz
- Forward Channel Xmit from base station to mobile
- FCC mandated duopoly in Major Trading Areas
(MTAs) - MTA 51 largest U.S. cities
- Two providers/MTA
- e.g. Cellular One Southwestern Bell Mobile in
K.C. - All MTA providers have upgraded to 2G/3G systems
- 1G AMPS still used only sparsely in rural areas
13U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- Digital PCS Band
- 1.85?1.99 GHz
- FCC Spectrum Auctions 1998 2000 ? 10
Billion!! - 1st time spectrum sold for in U.S.
- A B blocks for MTAs
- Duopoly like AMPS
- C, D, E, F blocks ? Basic Trading Areas (BTAs)
- BTA 492 large rural areas (includes MTAs!)
- 2nd Generation (2G) digital cellular phone
service PCS - PCS messaging, caller ID, voice mail, email,
data, etc. - Compete with analog cellular and SMR services
combined
14U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- 3rd Generation (3G) Cellular Telephone
- ATT (HSPA)
- 850 1900 MHz (AMPS PCS)
- Verizon (CDMA)
- 800 1900 MHz (AMPS PCS)
- T-Mobile (HSPA)
- 1700 MHz (forward link) 2100 MHz (reverse link)
- Sprint (CDMA)
- 850 MHz 1800 MHz (AMPS PCS)
- New 4G network 2.5 - 2.7 GHz (reallocated from
MMDS)
15U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- Analog Broadcast TV Frequencies ? recent
reallocation - Broadcast TV channels 52-69 relinquished in the
switchover to digital - 700 800 MHz
- Split into 5 blocks (A-E) by FCC for 3G/4G use
- Auctioned by FCC for 19.6 billion
- Block A (12 MHz)
- 698 704 728 734 MHz
- Block B (12 MHz)
- 704 710 734 740 MHz
- Block C (22 MHz)
- 746 757 776 787 MHz
- Block D (6 MHz)
- 758 763 788 793 MHz
- Block E (10 MHz)
- 722 728 MHz
16U.S. Mobile Radio Spectrum
- UNII ? Unlicensed National Information
Infrastructure - Allocated in 1997 for public use applications
- 5.15?5.35 GHz 5.725?5.825 GHz
- 300 MHZ of available spectrum
- WLL, wireless internet access, and WLAN
applications - 802.11a IEEE WLAN standard
- Only spectrum in U.S. with enough BW to support
very high data rate services (gt 50 Mbps) - High speed WLAN
- Wireless ATM
- Campus or building applications
- High frequency ? poor signal propagation
geographic coverage - Will NOT support cellular phone applications