Title: ICOM 6505: Wireless Networks The Physical Layer
1ICOM 6505 Wireless Networks- The Physical Layer
-
- By Dr. Kejie Lu
- Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering
- Spring 2008
2Outline
- Fundamentals
- Propagation model
- Basic concepts
- Large-scale model
- Small-scale model
- Advanced technologies
- OFDM
- MIMO
- UWB
3A Generic Model
Transmitter
Channel
Receiver
Propagation Fading Multipath Path-loss
Modulation Channel coding Antenna design o
Beamforming o Directional Antenna MIMO
Channel Estimation Synchronization Equalization De
modulation Decoding Antenna design o
Beamforming o Directional Antenna MIMO
4Type of Wave
5Propagation Modes of EM Waves
- Three types
- Ground-wave propagation
- Sky-wave propagation
- Space (Line-of-sight) propagation (our focus)
6Radio Frequency Bands
7Ground Wave Propagation
8Ground Wave Propagation
- Follows contour of the earth
- Can propagate considerable distances
- Frequencies up to 3 MHz
- Example
- AM radio broadcasting uses MF band
9Sky Wave Propagation
10Sky Wave Propagation
- At HF bands, the ground waves tend to be absorbed
by the earth. The waves that reach ionosphere
(100-500km above earth surface), are refracted
and sent back to earth.
11Space Wave Propagation (Our Focus)
- VHF Transmission
- Waves follow more direct paths
- LOS Line-of-Sight Communication
- Directional antennas can be used
- Reflected wave interfere with the original signal
12Basics of Propagation
- Waves behave more like light at higher
frequencies - Difficulty in passing obstacles
- More direct paths
- They behave more like radio at lower frequencies
- Can pass obstacles
13Propagation Models
- We are interested in propagation characteristics
and models for waves with frequency in range few
MHz to a few GHz (most likely space wave) - Modeling radio channel is important for
- Determining the coverage area of a transmitter
- Determine the transmitter power requirement
- Determine the battery lifetime
- Finding modulation and coding schemes to improve
the channel quality - Determine the maximum channel capacity
14Radio Propagation Models
- Transmission path between sender and receiver
could be - Line-of-Sight (LOS)
- Obstructed by buildings, mountains and foliage
- Even speed of motion effects the fading
characteristics of the channel
15Radio Propagation Mechanisms
- The physical mechanisms that govern radio
propagation are complex and diverse, but
generally attributed to the following three
factors - Reflection
- Diffraction
- Scattering
16Reflection
- Occurs when waves impinges upon an obstruction
that is much larger in size compared to the
wavelength of the signal - Example reflections from earth and buildings
- These reflections may interfere with the original
signal constructively or destructively
17Diffraction
- Occurs when the radio path between sender and
receiver is obstructed by an impenetrable body
and by a surface with sharp irregularities
(edges) - Explains how radio signals can travel urban and
rural environments without a line-of-sight path
18Scattering
- Occurs when the radio channel contains objects
whose sizes are on the order of the wavelength or
less of the propagating wave and also when the
number of obstacles are quite large - They are produced by small objects, rough
surfaces and other irregularities on the channel - Causes the transmitter energy to be radiated in
many directions - Lamp posts and street signs may cause scattering
19Illustration of Radio Propagation
20Impact of Radio Propagation
- As a mobile moves through a coverage area, these
3 mechanisms have an impact on the instantaneous
received signal strength. - If a mobile does have a clear line of sight path
to the base-station, then diffraction and
scattering will not dominate the propagation. - If a mobile is at a street level without LOS,
then diffraction and scattering will probably
dominate the propagation.
21Radio Propagation Models
- As the mobile moves away from the transmitter
over larger distances, the local average received
signal will gradually decrease. This is called
large-scale path loss - Typically the local average received power is
computed by averaging signal measurements over a
measurement track. (For PCS, this means 1m-10m
track) - The models that predict the mean signal strength
for an arbitrary-receiver transmitter (T-R)
separation distance are called large-scale
propagation models - Useful for estimating the coverage area of
transmitters
22Radio Propagation Models
- As the mobile moves over small distances, the
instantaneous received signal will fluctuate
rapidly due to small-scale fading - The reason is that the signal is the sum of many
contributors coming from different directions and
since the phases of these signals are random, the
sum behave like a noise (Rayleigh fading). - In small scale fading, the received signal power
may change as much as 3 or 4 orders of magnitude
(30dB or 40dB), when the receiver is only moved a
fraction of the wavelength.
23What is Decibel (dB)
- What is dB (decibel)
- A logarithmic unit that is used to describe a
ratio - Suppose we have two values P1 and P2. The
difference (ratio) between them can be expressed
in dB and is computed as follows - 10 log (P1/P2) dB
- Example
- Transmit power P1 100W
- Received power P2 1 W
- The difference is 10log(100/1) 20dB
24dB
- dB unit can describe very big ratios with numbers
of modest size. - See some examples
- Tx power 100W, Received power 1W
- Tx power is 100 times of received power
- Difference is 20dB
- Tx power 100W, Received power 1mW
- Tx power is 100,000 times of received power
- Difference is 50dB
- Tx power 1000W, Received power 1mW
- Tx power is million times of received power
- Difference is 60dB
25dBm
- For power differences, dBm is used to denote a
power level with respect to 1mW as the reference
power level. - Let say Tx power of a system is 100W.
- Question What is the Tx power in unit of dBm?
- Answer
- Tx_power(dBm) 10log(100W/1mW)
10log(100W/0.001W) 10log(100,0000) 50dBm
26dBW
- For power differences, dBW is used to denote a
power level with respect to 1W as the reference
power level. - Let say Tx power of a system is 100W.
- Question What is the Tx power in unit of dBW?
- Answer
- Tx_power(dBW) 10log(100W/1W) 10log(100)
20dBW.
27Decibel (dB) versus Power Ratio
28Large-Scale Propagation Models
- Free-space model
- Long distance path loss model
- Log-normal shadowing model
29Free-Space Propagation Model
- Used to predict the received signal strength when
transmitter and receiver have clear, unobstructed
LOS path between them. - The received power decays as a function of T-R
separation distance raised to some power. - Path Loss Signal attenuation as a positive
quantity measured in dB and defined as the
difference (in dB) between the effective
transmitter power and received power.
30Free-Space Propagation Model
- Free space power received by a receiver antenna
separated from a radiating transmitter antenna by
a distance d is given by Friis free space
equation - Pr (PtGtGrl2) / (4pd)2 Equation
1 - Pt is transmitted power
- Pr is the received power
- Gt is the transmitter antenna gain
(dimensionless quantity) - Gr is the receiver antenna gain (dimensionless
quantity) - d is T-R separation distance in meters
- l is wavelength in meters
31Free-Space Propagation Model
- The gain of an antenna G is related to its
affective aperture Ae by - G 4pAe / l2 Equation 2
- The effective aperture of Ae is related to the
physical size of the antenna - l is related to the carrier frequency by
- l c/f Equation 3
- f is carrier frequency in Hertz
- c is speed of light in meters/sec
32Free-Space Propagation Model
- An isotropic radiator is an ideal antenna that
radiates power with unit gain uniformly in all
directions. It is as the reference antenna in
wireless systems. - The effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP) is
defined as - EIRP PtGt Equation 4
- Antenna gains are given in units of dBi (dB gain
with respect to an isotropic antenna) or units of
dBd (dB gain with respect to a half-wave dipole
antenna) - Unity gain means
- G is 1 or dBi 0
33Free-Space Propagation Model
- Path loss, which represents signal attenuation as
positive quantity measured in dB, is defined as
the difference (in dB) between the effective
transmitted power and the received power - Lf(dB) 10 log (Pt/Pr) -10log(GtGrl2)/(4pd)2
Equation 5 - We can can drive this from Equation 1
- If antennas have unity gains, then we have
- Lf(dB) 10 log (Pt/Pr) -10logl2/(4pd)2
Equation 6
34Another Expression
35Path Loss vs. Distance
- Free space propagation model does not apply in a
mobile environment and the propagation path loss
not only depends on the distance and the
wavelength, but also on other factors such as
local terrain characteristics
36Free-Space Propagation Model
- For Friis equation to hold, distance d should be
in the far-field of the transmitting antenna. - The far-field, or Fraunhofer region, of a
transmitting antenna is defined as the region
beyond the far-field distance df given by - df 2D2/l Equation 7
- D is the largest physical dimension of the
antenna. - Additionally, df gtgt D and df gtgt l
37Reference Distance d0
- It is clear the Equation 1 does not hold for d
0. - For this reason, models use a close-in distance
d0 as the receiver power reference point. - d0 should be gt df
- d0 should be smaller than any practical distance
a mobile system uses - Received power Pr(d), at a distance d gt d0 from a
transmitter, is related to Pr at d0, which is
expressed as Pr(d0) - The power received in free space at a distance
greater than d0 is given by - Pr(d) Pr(d0)(d0/d)2 , d gt d0 gt
df Equation 8
38Free-Space Propagation Model
- Expressing the received power in dBm and dBW
- Pr(d) (dBm) 10 log Pr(d0)/0.001W
20log(d0/d)where d gt d0 gt df and Pr(d0) is in
units of watts. Equation 9 - Pr(d) (dBW) 10 log Pr(d0)/1W
20log(d0/d)where d gt d0 gt df and Pr(d0) is in
units of watts. Equation
10 - Reference distance d0 for practical systems
- For frequncies in the range 1-2 GHz
- 1 m in indoor environments
- 100m-1km in outdoor environments
39Example Question
- A transmitter produces 50W of power.
- A) Express the transmit power in dBm
- B) Express the transmit power in dBW
- C) If d0 is 100m and the received power at that
distance is 0.0035mW, then find the received
power level at a distance of 10km. - Assume that the transmit and receive antennas
have unity gains.
40Solution
- A)
- Pt(W) is 50W.
- Pt(dBm) 10logPt(mW)/1mW)
10log(50x1000) 47 dBm - B)
- Pt(dBW) 10logPt(W)/1W)
10log(50) 17 dBW
41Solution
- Pr(d) Pr(d0)(d0/d)2
- Substitute the values into the equation
- Pr(10km) Pr(100m)(100m/10km)2Pr(10km)
0.0035mW(10-4)Pr(10km) 3.5x10-10W - Pr(10km) dBm 10log(3.5x10-10W/1mW)
10log(3.5x10-7) -64.5dBm
42Two Main Channel Design Issues
- Communication engineers are generally concerned
with two main radio channel issues - Link Budget Design
- Link budget design determines fundamental
quantities such as transmit power requirements,
coverage areas, and battery life - It is determined by the amount of received power
that may be expected at a particular distance or
location from a transmitter - Time dispersion
- It arises because of multi-path propagation where
replicas of the transmitted signal reach the
receiver with different propagation delays due to
the propagation mechanisms that are described
earlier. - Time dispersion nature of the channel determines
the maximum data rate that may be transmitted
without using equalization.
43Link Budget Design Using Path Loss Models
- Radio propagation models can be derived
- By use of empirical methods collect measurement,
fit curves. - By use of analytical methods
- Model the propagation mechanisms mathematically
and derive equations for path loss - Long distance path loss model
- Empirical and analytical models show that
received signal power decreases logarithmically
with distance for both indoor and outdoor
channels
44Long Distance Path Loss Model
- The average large-scale path loss for an
arbitrary T-R separation is expressed as a
function of distance by using a path loss
exponent n - The value of n depends on the propagation
environment for free space it is 2 when
obstructions are present it has a larger value.
Equation 11
45Path Loss Exponent for Different Environments
46Selection of Free Space Reference Distance
- In large coverage cellular systems
- 1km reference distances are commonly used
- In microcellular systems
- Much smaller distances are used such as 100m or
1m. - The reference distance should always be in the
far-field of the antenna so that near-field
effects do not alter the reference path loss.
47Log-normal Shadowing
- Depending on the environment and the
surroundings, and the location of objects, the
received signal strength for the same distance
from the transmitter will be different. - Equation 11 does not consider the fact the
surrounding environment may be vastly different
at two locations having the same T-R separation - This leads to measurements that are different
than the predicted values obtained using the
above equation. - Measurements show that for any value d, the path
loss Lf(d) in dBm at a particular location is
random and distributed normally.
48Log-normal Shadowing- Path Loss
Then adding this random factor
Equation 12
denotes the average large-scale path loss (in dB)
at a distance d.
Xs is a zero-mean Gaussian (normal) distributed
random variable (in dB) with standard deviation
s (also in dB).
is usually computed assuming free space
propagation model between transmitter and d0 (or
by measurement).
Equation 12 takes into account the shadowing
affects due to cluttering on the propagation
path. It is used as the propagation model for
log-normal shadowing environments.
49Log-normal Shadowing- Received Power
- The received power in log-normal shadowing
environment is given by the following formula
(derivable from Equation 12) -
- The antenna gains are included in Lf(d).
Equation 12
50Log-normal Shadowing, n and s
- The log-normal shadowing model indicates the
received power at a distance d is normally
distributed with a distance dependent mean and
with a standard deviation of s - In practice the values of n and s are computed
from measured data using linear regression so
that the difference between the measured data and
estimated path losses are minimized in a mean
square error sense
51Example of determining n and s
- Assume Pr(d0) 0dBm and d0 is 100m
- Assume the receiver power Pr is measured at
distances 100m, 500m, 1000m, and 3000m, - The table gives the measured values of received
power
52Example of determining n and s
- We know the measured values.
- Lets compute the estimates for received power at
different distances using long-distance path loss
model. (Equation 11) - Pr(d0) is given as 0dBm and measured value is
also the same. - mean_Pr(d) Pr(d0) mean_Lf(from_d0_to_d)
- Then mean_Pr(d) 0 10logn(d/d0)
- Use this equation to computer power levels at
500m, 1000m, and 3000m.
53Example of determining n and s
- Average_Pr(500m) 0 10logn(500/100)
-6.99n - Average_Pr(1000m) 0 10logn(1000/100) -10n
- Average_Pr(3000m) 0 10logn(3000/100)
-14.77n - Now we know the estimates and also measured
actual values of the received power at different
distances - In order to approximate n, we have to choose a
value for n such that the mean square error over
the collected statistics is minimized.
54Example of determining n and s MSE (Mean Square
Error)
The mean square error (MSE) is given with the
following formula
Equation 14
Since power estimate at some distance depends on
n, MSE(n) is a function of n. We would like to
find a value of n that will minimize this MSE(n)
value. We We will call it MMSE minimum mean
square error. This can be achieved by writing
MSE as a function of n. Then finding the value of
n which minimizes this function. This can be done
by derivating MSE(n) with respect to n and
solving for n which makes the derivative equal to
zero.
55Example of determining n
MSE (0-0)2 (-5-(-6.99n))2 (-11-(-10n)2
(-16-(-14.77n)2 MSE 0 (6.99n 5)2 (10n
11)2 (14.77n 16)2 If we open this, we get
MSE as a function of n which as second order
polynomial. We can easily take its derivate and
find the value of n which minimizes MSE. ( I
will not show these steps, since they are
trivial).
56Example of determining s
We are interested in finding the standard
deviation about the mean value For this, we will
use the following formula
Equation 14.1
Equation 14.2
57Some Statistics Knowledge Computation of mean
(m), variance (s2) and standard deviation (s)
Assume we have k samples (k values) X1, X2, , Xk
The mean is denoted by m. The variance is
denotes by s. The standard deviation is denotes
by s2. The formulas to computer m, s, and s2 is
given below
Equation 15
Equation 16
Equation 17
58Small Scale Fading
- Describes rapid fluctuations of the amplitude,
phase of multipath delays of a radio signal over
short period of time or travel distance - Caused by interference between two or more
versions of the transmitted signal which arrive
at the receiver at slightly different times. - These waves are called multipath waves and
combine at the receiver antenna to give a
resultant signal which can vary widely in
amplitude and phase
59Small Scale Multipath Propagation
- Effects of multipath
- Rapid changes in the signal strength
- Over small travel distances, or
- Over small time intervals
- Random frequency modulation due to varying
Doppler shifts on different multiples signals - Time dispersion (echoes) caused by multipath
propagation delays - Multipath occurs because of
- Reflections
- Scattering
60Multipath
- At a receiver point
- Radio waves generated from the same transmitted
signal may come - with different propagation delays
- with (possibly) different amplitudes (random)
- with (possibly) different phases (random)
- with different angles of arrival (random).
- These multipath components combine vectorially at
the receiver antenna and cause the total signal - to fade
- to distort
61Multipath Components
Radio Signals Arriving from different directions
to receiver
Component 1
Component 2
Component N
Receiver may be stationary or mobile.
62Mobility
- Other objects in the radio channels may be mobile
or stationary - If other objects are stationary
- Motion is only due to mobile
- Fading is purely a spatial phenomenon (occurs
only when the mobile receiver moves) - The spatial variations as the mobile moves will
be perceived as temporal variations - Dt Dd/v
- Fading may cause disruptions in the communication
63Factors Influencing Small Scale Fading
- Multipath propagation
- Presence of reflecting objects and scatterers
cause multiple versions of the signal to arrive
at the receiver - With different amplitudes and time delays
- Causes the total signal at receiver to fade or
distort - Speed of mobile
- Cause Doppler shift at each multipath component
- Causes random frequency modulation
- Speed of surrounding objects
- Causes time-varying Doppler shift on the
multipath components
64Factors Influencing Small Scale Fading
- Transmission bandwidth of the channel
- The transmitted radio signal bandwidth and
bandwidth of the multipath channel affect the
received signal properties
65Doppler Effect
- Whe a transmitter or receiver is moving, the
frequency of the received signal changes, i.e. it
is different from the frequency of transmissin.
This is called Doppler Effect. - The change in frequency is called Doppler Shift.
- It depends on
- The relative velocity of the receiver with
respect to transmitter - The frequency (or wavelenth) of transmission
- The direction of traveling with respect to the
direction of the arriving signal.
66Doppler Shift Transmitter is moving
The frequency of the signalthat is received in
front of the transmitter will be bigger
The frequency of the signalthat is received
behind the transmitter will be smaller
67Doppler Shift Recever is moving
S
Dl
X
Y
q
d
v
A mobile receiver is traveling from point X to
point Y
68Doppler Shift
- The Dopper shift is positive
- If the mobile is moving toward the direction of
arrival of the wave, i.e., cos? gt0 - The Doppler shift is negative
- If the mobile is moving away from the direction
of arrival of the wave, i.e., cos? lt0
69Impulse Response Model of a Multipath Channel
- The wireless channel charcteristics can be
expressed by impulse response function - The channel is a linear time varying channel when
the receiver is moving. - Lets assume first that time variation due
strictly to the receiver motion (t d/v)
70Impulse Response of Unit Impulse
LTI System
d(t)
h(t)
d(t) is the unit impulse
h(t) is called the impulse response of the
system. We denote
By time invariance
71Response of a LTI System to arbitrary continuous
time signal x(t)
Convolution Properties
72Impulse Response Model of a Multipath Channel
d vt
v
d
A receiver is moving along the ground at some
constant velocity v. The multipath components
that are received at the receiver will have
different propagation delays depending on d
distance between transmitter and receiver. Hence
the channel impulse response depends on d. Lets
x(t) represents the transmitter signal
y(d,t) represents the received signal at position
d. h(d,t) represents the channel impulse
response which is dependent on d
(hence time-varying dvt).
73Multipath Channel Model
Building
Multipath Channel
2nd MC
Base Station
1st MC
Mobile 2
Building
Building
1st MC
4th MC
Multipath Channel
2nd MC
Mobile 1
Building
3rd MC (Multipath Component)
74Impulse Response Model of a Multipath Channel
Wireless Multipath Channel h(d,t)
x(t)
y(d,t)
The channel is linear time-varying channel, where
the channel characteristics changes with
distance (hence time, t d/v)
75Impulse Response Model
We assume v is constant over short time. x(t)
transmitted waveform y(t) received
waveform h(t,?) impulse response of the channel.
Depends on d (and therefore td/v) and
also to the multiple delay for the channel for a
fixed value of t. t is the multipath
delay of the channel for a fixed value of t.
76Relationship between Bandwidth and Receiver Power
- What happens when two different signals with
different bandwidths are sent through the
channel? - What is the receiver power characteristics for
both signals?
77Bandwidth of Baseband Signals
Highbandwidth (Wideband) Signal
Lowbandwidth (Narrowband) Signal
Continuous Wave (CW) Signal
t
78Received Power of Wideband Signals
If all the multipath components of a transmitted
signal is received at the receiver then The
average small scale received power is simply the
sum of received powers in each multipath
component.
In practice, the amplitudes of individual
multipath components do not fluctuate widely in
a local area (for distance in the order of
wavelength or fraction of wavelength). This
means the average received power of a wideband
signal do not fluctuate significantly when the
receiver is moving in a local area.
79Received Power of Narrowband SIgnals
Over a local area (over small distance
wavelengths), the amplitude a multipath
component may not change signicantly, but the
phase may change a lot.For example - if
receiver moves l meters then phase change is
2p. In this case the component may add up
posively to the total sum S. - if receiver
moves l/4 meters then phase change is p/2 (90
degrees) . In this case the component may add
up negatively to the total sum S, hence the
instantaneous receiver power.
Therefore for a CW (continuous wave, narrowband)
signal, the small movements may cause large
fluctuations on the instantenous receiver power,
which typifies small scale fading for CW signals.
80Wideband vs. Narrowband Signals
However, the average received power for a CW
signal over a local area is equivalent to the
average received power for a wideband signal on
the local area. This occurs because the phases
of multipath components at different locations
over the small-scale region are independently
distributed (IID uniform) over 0,2p.
In summary
- Received power for CW signals undergoes rapid
fades over small distances - Received power for wideband signals changes very
little of small distances. - However, the local area average of both signals
are nearly identical.
81Parameters of Mobile Multipath Channels
- Time Dispersion Parameters
- Quantify the multipath channel
- Determined from Power Delay Profile
- Parameters include
- Mean Access Delay
- RMS Delay Spread
- Excess Delay Spread (X dB)
- Coherence Bandwidth
- Doppler Spread and Coherence Time
82Measuring PDPs
- Power Delay Profiles
- Plots of relative received power as a function of
excess delay, which is defined as the relative
delay of the i-th multiple path component as
compared to the first arriving component. - They are found by averaging intantenous power
delay measurements over a local area - Local area no greater than 6m outdoor
- Local area no greater than 2m indoor
83Timer Dispersion Parameters
Determined from a power delay profile.
Mean excess delay( )
Rms delay spread (st)
Where ?k and ?k are the real amplitude and
excess delay of the kth multipath component.
84Timer Dispersion Parameters
Maximum Excess Delay (X dB) Defined as the
time delay value after which the multipath energy
falls to X dB below the maximum multipath energy
(not necesarily belonging to the first arriving
component). It is also called excess delay
spread.
85Delay Spread
86Noise Threshold
- The values of time dispersion parameters also
depend on the noise threshold (the level of power
below which the signal is considered as noise). - If noise threshold is set too low, then the noise
will be processed as multipath and thus causing
the parameters to be higher.
87Coherence Bandwidth (BC)
- Range of frequencies over which the channel can
be considered flat (i.e. channel passes all
spectral components with equal gain and linear
phase). - It is a definition that depends on RMS Delay
Spread. - Two sinusoids with frequency separation greater
than Bc are affected quite differently by the
channel.
f1
Receiver
f2
Multipath Channel
Frequency Separation f1-f2
88Coherence Bandwidth
If we define Coherence Bandwidth (BC) as the
range of frequencies over which the frequency
correlation is above 0.9, then
s is rms delay spread.
If we define Coherence Bandwidth as the range of
frequencies over which the frequency correlation
is above 0.5, then
This is called 50 coherence bandwidth
89Coherence Bandwidth
- Example
- For a multipath channel, s is given as 1.37ms.
- The 50 coherence bandwidth is given as 1/5s
146kHz. - This means that, for a good transmission from a
transmitter to a receiver, the range of
transmission frequency (channel bandwidth) should
not exceed 146kHz, so that all frequencies in
this band experience similar channel
characteristics. - Equalizers are needed in order to use
transmission frequencies that are separated
larger than this value. - This coherence bandwidth is enough for an AMPS
channel (30kHz band needed for a channel), but is
not enough for a GSM channel (200kHz needed per
channel).
90Coherence Time
- Delay spread and Coherence bandwidth describe the
time dispersive nature of the channel in a local
area. - Doppler Spread and Coherence time are parameters
which describe the time varying nature of the
channel in a small-scale region.
91Doppler Spread
- Measure of spectral broadening caused by motion
- We know how to compute Doppler shift fd
- Doppler spread, BD, is defined as the maximum
Doppler shift fm v/l - If the baseband signal bandwidth is much greater
than BD then effect of Doppler spread is
negligible at the receiver.
92Coherence Time
Coherence time is the time duration over which
the channel impulse response is essentially
invariant. If the symbol period of the baseband
signal (reciprocal of the baseband signal
bandwidth) is greater than the coherence time,
then the signal will distort, since channel will
change during the transmission of the signal .
TS
Coherence time (TC) is defined as
TC
f2
f1
Dtt2 - t1
t1
t2
93Coherence Time
Coherence time is also defined as
Coherence time definition implies that two
signals arriving with a time separation greater
than TC are affected differently by the channel.
94Types of Small-scale Fading
95Flat Fading
- Occurs when the amplitude of the received signal
changes with time - For example according to Rayleigh Distribution
- Occurs when symbol period of the transmitted
signal is much larger than the Delay Spread of
the channel - Bandwidth of the applied signal is narrow.
- May cause deep fades
- Increase the transmit power to combat this
situation
96Flat Fading
h(t,t)
r(t)
s(t)
t ltlt TS
0
TS
0
t
0
TSt
Occurs when BS ltlt BC and TS gtgt st
BC Coherence bandwidthBS Signal bandwidth TS
Symbol periodst Delay Spread
97Frequency Selective Fading
- Occurs when channel multipath delay spread is
greater than the symbol period. - Symbols face time dispersion (echoes)
- Channel induces Intersymbol Interference (ISI)
- Bandwidth of the signal s(t) is wider than the
channel impulse response.
98Frequency Selective Fading
h(t,t)
r(t)
s(t)
t gtgt TS
TS
0
TSt
t
TS
0
0
Causes distortion of the received baseband
signal Causes Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI)
Occurs when BS gt BC and TS lt st
99Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI)
100Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI)
101Fast Fading
- Due to Doppler Spread
- Rate of change of the channel characteristics
is larger than theRate of change
of the transmitted signal - The channel changes during a symbol period.
- The channel changes because of receiver motion.
- Coherence time of the channel is smaller than the
symbol period of the transmitter signal
Occurs when BS lt BD and TS gt TC
BS Bandwidth of the signalBD Doppler
Spread TS Symbol PeriodTC Coherence Time
102Slow Fading
- Due to Doppler Spread
- Rate of change of the channel characteristics
is much smaller than theRate of
change of the transmitted signal
Occurs when BS gtgt BD and TS ltlt TC
BS Bandwidth of the signalBD Doppler
Spread TS Symbol PeriodTC Coherence Time
103Slow Fast fading
Fast fading
Slow fading
104Different Types of Fading
TS
Flat Fast Fading
Flat Slow Fading
Symbol Period of Transmitting Signal
st
Frequency Selective Slow Fading
Frequency Selective Fast Fading
(delay spread)
TC
(coherence time)
TS
Transmitted Symbol Period
With Respect To SYMBOL PERIOD
105Different Types of Fading
BS
Frequency Selective Fast Fading
Frequency Selective Slow Fading
Transmitted Baseband Signal Bandwidth
BC
(Coherence bandwidth)
Flat Fast Fading
Flat Slow Fading
BD
(doppler spread)
BS
Transmitted Baseband Signal Bandwidth
With Respect To BASEBAND SIGNAL BANDWIDTH
106Fading Distributions
- Describes how the received signal amplitude
changes with time. - Remember that the received signal is combination
of multiple signals arriving from different
directions, phases and amplitudes. - With the received signal we mean the baseband
signal, namely the envelope of the received
signal (i.e. r(t)) - It is a statistical characterization of the
multipath fading - Two distributions
- Rayleigh Fading
- Ricean Fading
107Rayleigh and Ricean Distributions
- Rayleigh Describes the received signal envelope
distribution for channels, where all the
components are non-LOS - i.e. there is no line-ofsight (LOS) component
- Ricean Describes the received signal envelope
distribution for channels where one of the
multipath components is LOS component - i.e. there is one LOS component
108Rayleigh Fading
109Rayleigh
Rayleigh distribution has the probability density
function (PDF) given by
- s2 is the time average power of the received
signal before envelope detection. - s is the rms value of the received voltage signal
before envelope detection
110Rayleigh
- The probability that the envelope of the received
signal does not exceed a specified value of R is
given by the CDF
111Rayleigh PDF
0.6065/s
mean 1.2533s
median 1.177s
variance 0.4292s2
5s
s
2s
3s
4s
112Ricean Distribution
- When there is a stationary (non-fading) LOS
signal present, then the envelope distribution is
Ricean. - The Ricean distribution degenerates to Rayleigh
when the dominant component fades away.