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Slide Project: IEEE P82.5 Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks N (WPANs( WPANs) Title: [Impulsive Direct-Sequence UWB Wireless Networks with Node Cooperation Relaying ] Date Submitted: [January, 25] Source: [ Honggang Zhang, Xiaofei Zhou, Iacopo Carreras, Sandro Pera, Imrich Chlamtac ] Company [ Create-Net ] Address [Via Solteri 38, 38 Trento, Italy], Voice: [+39-46-828584 ], FAX: [+39-46-4257 ] E-Mail: [ honggang.zhang@create-net.it, xiaofei.zhou@create-net.it, iacopo.carreras@create-net.it, sandro.pera@createnet.it, imrich.chlamtac@create-net.it ] Source: [() Zheng Zhou, (2) Frank Zheng ] Company [ () China UWB Forum (CUF) & Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, (2) China UWB Forum (CUF) & Chinese Academy of Sciences] Address [() Inner Box 96, BUPT, Beijing 876, China, (2) No. 6-3, 572 Bibo Road, Pudong, Shanghai 223, China ] Voice: [()86--62282463, (2) 86-2-5872 ] E-Mail: [() zzhou@bupt.edu.cn, (2) xjzheng@ict.ac.cn ] Re: [IEEE P82.5 Low Rate Alternative PHY Call For Proposals] Abstract: [For the Low Rate Alternative PHY standardization in 82.5.4a task group, impulsive direct-sequence UWB wireless system with multiple node cooperation has been investigated. ] Purpose: [ Proposal submission to IEEE 82.5.4a Task Group by Create-Net and China UWB Forum (C&C) ] Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P82.5. 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 P82.5.

Impulsive Direct-Sequence UWB Wireless Networks with Node Cooperation Relaying Honggang ZHANG, Xiaofei ZHOU, Iacopo CARRERAS, Sandro PERA, and Imrich CHLAMTAC Create-Net Zheng ZHOU China UWB Forum & Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications Frank ZHENG China UWB Forum & Chinese Academy of Sciences Slide 2

Presentation outline Technical background and requirements of IEEE 82.5.4a Impulsive direct-sequence UWB proposal for IEEE 82.5.4a Multiple nodes cooperation strategies Conclusion remarks Slide 3

Technical background and technical requirements of IEEE 82.5.4a Typical link bit rate shall be kb/s (low data rate) at least, while the aggregated bit rate at a data collector shall be Mb/s (high data rate). Communication range 3 meters, optionally up to longer range. Low cost, low power and low complexity - power consumption is a crucial requirement for which any device must operate while supporting a battery life of months or years without intervention. Location-awareness (tens of centimeters) - a mandatory characteristic and precision ranging must be provided by the alt-phy itself without support by external features. Robustness and interference resistance - strongly desirable (better than 82.5.4.) Mobility a key feature for which the nodes shall be capable of reliable communication while in moving, at least for tracking. Form factor being compatible with the needs of sensor networks or RF tags applications. Slide 4

Impulsive direct-sequence UWB transceiver Transmitter Receiver Pulse generator PA RF Base band PRF (pulse repetition frequency )Tens of MHz Slide 5

Frequency band plan for the proposed impulsive DS-UWB wireless networks 5 GHz W-LAN Power (dbm/mhz) 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 f Multiple systems coexistence, robustness and interference resistance ( e.g., 82. a/b/g, 82.5.3a, Bluetooth) Slide 6

Impulsive DS-UWB operating bands Low Band (3.-4., 4.-5. GHz) High Band (6.-.GHz) () (2) (3) (4) 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 GHz GHz Each 82.5.4a transceiver operates in one of two bands Low band (below U-NII, 3. to 4. and 4. to 5. GHz) High band (optional, above U-NII, 6. to. GHz) Bandwidth of low band: GHz Bandwidth of high band: 2 GHz Slide 7

Key points of impulsive DS-UWB proposal Data modulation scheme: BPSK Low data rate > Kbps High data rate (aggregated) > Mbps Classical spread spectrum approach: Direct-sequence with ternary spreading codes Ternary complementary codes achieving spread gain, coding and space diversity Mutually orthogonal ternary code sets for multiple users scenario Operating frequency bandwidth: GHz in low band group and 2 GHz in high band group Pulse shaping: general RRC pulse with advanced PSWF (Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions) pulses as options Slide 8

Impulsive DS-UWB transceiver architecture Antenna Transmitter BPF PA Pulse generator Modulation & spreading Data Tx/Rx Switch Digital processing unit LPF GA ADC BPF Receiver LNA I /9 Q Local oscillator LPF GA Sync. ADC Signal acquisition Demodulation Decoding Tracking Ranging Data Slide 9

Impulsive DS-UWB signal generation Input Data BPSK Bit-to-Code Mapping (Ternary coding) Pulse Shaping BPF/PA Variable spread code lengths provide scalable data rates Variable spread codes are suitable for coexistence and robust to inband interference Ternary complementary code sets Center Frequency Ternary complementary code sets can be used to achieve processing gain as well as code cooperation diversity for enhanced performance. Mutually orthogonal ternary complementary code sets can be used for multiple users environment. BPSK modulation scheme for simplified transmission and receiving processing Slide

Slide Design mutually orthogonal (MO) ternary complementary code sets } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n

Slide 2 } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n } { 4, m c m n Design mutually orthogonal (MO) ternary complementary code sets (cont.)

Slide 3 } { 7, m c m n Design mutually orthogonal (MO) ternary complementary code sets (cont.) Mutually orthogonal ternary codes can be further extended to code lengths of 6, 32, 64, 28, 256, 52 and 24.

Advantages of the impulsive DS-UWB proposal High robustness against the noise, multipath fading and in-band interference Improved interoperability and coexistence with 82..a/b/g, Bluetooth and even 82.5.3a Frequency, code and space diversity for various QoS requirements Low complexity and low power consumption with simplified AD converter ( or 2-bit) Variable data transmission for a number of application scenarios High ranging accuracy related to effective pulse width Slide 4

Slide 5 Multiple nodes cooperation strategies Embedded UWB networks of sensors and actuators: Low cost, low power emission and consumption, disposable devices Single antenna Simple detection (e.g. non-coherent) and decoding (hard-decision) High spatial density, but low node activity cycle Spatial diversity: Multipath fading can be mitigated using space diversity (e.g. antenna arrays) Multiple antenna system is too cumbersome for 82.5.4a Basic philosophy is to achieve cooperative space, frequency and code diversity in a dense network of low-cost devices, each with a single antenna Virtual multiple antennas for a number of nodes Cooperation relaying among the nodes by using distributed Space- Timing coding scheme Emphasis on low cost solutions A cross-layer (MAC/PHY) approach

Multiple nodes cooperation scenarios N 2 D N Slide 6

Various nodes cooperation schemes Relaying Source Source Source 2 Destination Destination Destination 2 Multipath relay channel Cooperative diversity with cooperative coding Source Destination Parallel relay channel Source Destination Multi-hop diversity Slide 7

Various nodes cooperation schemes (cont.) Slide 8

Virtual antenna array in impulsive DS-UWB With virtual multiple antennas, the antenna elements are widely spaced (attached to different nodes) but are not connected by any backbone. Virtual connection achieved by cross-layer design Decentralized cooperation (relaying) achieving space diversity Transmitter Virtual Connection Repeater node Repeater node 2 Slide 9

Node cooperation by utilizing virtual distributed Space-Time coding scheme Slide 2

Performance improvement realized by regenerative and non-regenerative relaying Slide 2

Performance improvement realized by Space- Timing cooperation among multiple nodes Slide 22

Conclusion remarks Impulsive direct-sequence UWB wireless networks proposal has been investigated for IEEE 82.5.4a task group. We have also proposed the multiple nodes cooperation scheme for the impulsive DS-UWB to achieve the space, frequency and code diversity. Scalable and adaptive performance improvement can be expected by utilizing the impulsive DS-UWB proposal as well as the node cooperation scheme. Slide 23