Cordless Systems and Wireless Local Loop. Chapter 11

Similar documents
Cordless Systems and Wireless Local Loop. Cordless System Operating Environments. Design Considerations for Cordless Standards

Introduction to Wireless Networking CS 490WN/ECE 401WN Winter 2007

Guide to Wireless Communications, Third Edition Cengage Learning Objectives

WiMAX/ Wireless WAN Case Study: WiMAX/ W.wan.6. IEEE 802 suite. IEEE802 suite. IEEE 802 suite WiMAX/802.16

Wireless WAN Case Study: WiMAX/ W.wan.6

Università degli Studi di Catania Dipartimento di Ingegneria Informatica e delle Telecomunicazioni WiMAX

Introduction to WiMAX Dr. Piraporn Limpaphayom

Wireless WANS and MANS. Chapter 3

Bluetooth BlueTooth - Allows users to make wireless connections between various communication devices such as mobile phones, desktop and notebook comp

Contents. IEEE family of standards Protocol layering TDD frame structure MAC PDU structure

Wireless Broadband Networks

Mobile Communication Systems. Part 7- Multiplexing

Multiplexing Module W.tra.2

Chapter 5: WMAN - IEEE / WiMax. 5.1 Introduction and Overview 5.2 Deployment 5.3 PHY layer 5.4 MAC layer 5.5 Network Entry 5.

Overview of IEEE Broadband Wireless Access Standards. Timo Smura Contents. Network topologies, frequency bands

Chapter 4. Propagation effects. Slides for Wireless Communications Edfors, Molisch, Tufvesson

Wireless Broadband. IST 220, Dr. Abdullah Konak 4/27/ Blake Drive Reading, PA Prepared by: Dennis DeFrancesco

IEEE c-00/40. IEEE Broadband Wireless Access Working Group <

Wireless and Mobile Network Architecture. Outline. Introduction. Cont. Chapter 1: Introduction

Wireless and Mobile Network Architecture

IEEE P Broadband Wireless Access Working Group

IEEE Broadband Wireless Access Working Group < Initial PHY Layer System Proposal for Sub 11 GHz BWA

Adoption of this document as basis for broadband wireless access PHY

Chapter 1 Acknowledgment:

Page 1. Problems with 1G Systems. Wireless Wide Area Networks (WWANs) EEC173B/ECS152C, Spring Cellular Wireless Network

Multiple Access Schemes

PHY Layer NCHU CSE WMAN - 1

RADIO LINK ASPECT OF GSM

CS 218 Fall 2003 October 23, 2003

Direct Link Communication II: Wireless Media. Current Trend

Data and Computer Communications. Tenth Edition by William Stallings

EE 304 TELECOMMUNICATIONs ESSENTIALS HOMEWORK QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

OFDMA and MIMO Notes

3.6. Cell-Site Equipment. Traffic and Cell Splitting Microcells, Picocelles and Repeaters

High Speed E-Band Backhaul: Applications and Challenges

SC - Single carrier systems One carrier carries data stream

Page 1. Overview : Wireless Networks Lecture 9: OFDM, WiMAX, LTE

L-DACS1/2 Data Link Analysis Part I: Functional Analysis

Data and Computer Communications. Tenth Edition by William Stallings

Next: Broadcast Systems

MAHARASHTRA STATE BOARD OF TECHNICAL EDUCATION (Autonomous) (ISO/IEC Certified)

Mobile Communications Chapter 6: Broadcast Systems

(12) Patent Application Publication (10) Pub. No.: US 2007/ A1

CDMA - QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Antenna Performance in Fixed Wireless Broadband Systems. IEEE CVT Luncheon 20 June 2000

IEEE pc-00/04

Data and Computer Communications Chapter 4 Transmission Media

MOBILE COMPUTING 4/8/18. Basic Call. Public Switched Telephone Network - PSTN. CSE 40814/60814 Spring Transit. switch. Transit. Transit.

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R F Radio interface standards for broadband wireless access systems in the fixed service operating below 66 GHz

Improving the Data Rate of OFDM System in Rayleigh Fading Channel Using Spatial Multiplexing with Different Modulation Techniques

Cellular Network. Ir. Muhamad Asvial, MSc., PhD

1) The modulation technique used for mobile communication systems during world war II was a. Amplitude modulation b. Frequency modulation

Introduction to Wireless Networks p. 1 Evolution of Wireless Networks p. 2 Early Mobile Telephony p. 2 Analog Cellular Telephony p.

OBJECTIVES. Understand the basic of Wi-MAX standards Know the features, applications and advantages of WiMAX

ECS455: Chapter 4 Multiple Access

Satellite Communications. Chapter 9

Satellite Communications. Chapter 9

EC 551 Telecommunication System Engineering Mohamed Khedr

DOCSIS 1.0 Micro CMTS

Wireless Networks. Why Wireless Networks? Wireless Local Area Network. Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)

Performance Analysis of WiMAX Physical Layer Model using Various Techniques

Channel partitioning protocols

Chapter 2: Global System for Mobile Communication

UNIT- 7. Frequencies above 30Mhz tend to travel in straight lines they are limited in their propagation by the curvature of the earth.

Politecnico di Milano Facoltà di Ingegneria dell Informazione

An Introduction to Wireless Technologies Part 2. F. Ricci

(650536) Prerequisite: Digital Communications (610533) Instructor: Dr. Abdel-Rahman Al-Qawasmi

Motorola Wireless Broadband Technical Brief OFDM & NLOS

Structure of the Lecture

Mobile Wireless Communications - Overview

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R M.1181

Data and Computer Communications. Tenth Edition by William Stallings

Chapter 2 Overview. Duplexing, Multiple Access - 1 -

9/24/08. Broadcast Systems. Unidirectional distribution systems. Unidirectional distribution. Unidirectional distribution systems DAB Architecture

Department of Computer Science Institute for System Architecture, Chair for Computer Networks

Effective Bandwidth Utilization in WiMAX Network

Technical Aspects of LTE Part I: OFDM

IS-95 /CdmaOne Standard. By Mrs.M.R.Kuveskar.

UTILIZATION OF AN IEEE 1588 TIMING REFERENCE SOURCE IN THE inet RF TRANSCEIVER

Chapter 7 GSM: Pan-European Digital Cellular System. Prof. Jang-Ping Sheu

Overview of Digital Mobile Communications

DDPP 2163 Propagation Systems. Satellite Communication

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R F.756 * TDMA point-to-multipoint systems used as radio concentrators

E-BAND WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY OVERVIEW

Multiple Access Technique Lecture 8

Continuous Phase Modulation for BWA System Implementation

2. LITERATURE REVIEW

Fixed Low-Frequency Broadband Wireless Access Radio Systems

Politecnico di Milano Scuola di Ingegneria Industriale e dell Informazione. Physical layer. Fundamentals of Communication Networks

Direct Link Communication II: Wireless Media. Current Trend

EEE 309 Communication Theory

Chapter 7 Multiple Division Techniques for Traffic Channels

Direct Link Communication II: Wireless Media. Motivation

References. What is UMTS? UMTS Architecture

Long Term Evolution (LTE) and 5th Generation Mobile Networks (5G) CS-539 Mobile Networks and Computing

EE 577: Wireless and Personal Communications

Satellite Basics Term Glossary

The L*IP Access System

Medium Access Control. Wireless Networks: Guevara Noubir. Slides adapted from Mobile Communications by J. Schiller

Multiple Access Techniques

Transcription:

Cordless Systems and Wireless Local Loop Chapter 11

Cordless System Operating Environments Residential a single base station can provide in-house voice and data support Office A single base station can support a small office Multiple base stations in a cellular configuration can support a larger office Telepoint a base station set up in a public place, such as an airport

Design Considerations for Cordless Standards Modest range of handset from base station, so low-power designs are used Inexpensive handset and base station, dictating simple technical approaches Frequency flexibility is limited, so the system needs to be able to seek a lowinterference channel whenever used

Time Division Duplex (TDD) TDD also known as time-compression multiplexing (TCM) Data transmitted in one direction at a time, with transmission between the two directions Simple TDD TDMA TDD

Simple TDD Bit stream is divided into equal segments, compressed in time to a higher transmission rate, and transmitted in bursts Effective bits transmitted per second: R = B/2(T p +T b +T g ) R = effective data rate B = size of block in bits T p = propagation delay-prop, of signal from transmitter to receiver T b = burst transmission time T g = guard time-to turn the channel the around

Simple TDD Actual data rate, A: A = B /T b Combined with previous equation: Tp + T A = 2R 1+ Tb The actual data rate is more than double the effective data rate seen by the two sides g

TDMA TDD Wireless TDD typically used with TDMA A number of users receive forward channel signals in turn and then transmit reverse channel signals in turn, all on same carrier frequency Advantages of TDMA/TDD: Improved ability to cope with fast fading Improved capacity allocation

DECT Frame Format Preamble (16 bits) alert receiver Sync (16 bits) enable receiver to synchronize on beginning of time slot A field (64 bits) used for network control B field (320 bits) contains user data X field (4 bits) parity check bits Guard (60 bits) guard time, T g

A Field Logical Control Channels Q channel used to broadcast general system information from base station to all terminals P channel provides paging from the base station to terminals M channel used by terminal to exchange medium access control messages with base station N channel provides handshaking protocol C channel provides call management for active connections

B Field B field transmits data in two modes Unprotected mode - used to transmit digitized voice Protected mode - transmits nonvoice data traffic

DECT Protocol Architecture Physical layer data transmitted in TDMA-TDD frames over one of 10 RF carriers Medium access control (MAC) layer selects/ establishes/releases connections on physical channels; supports three services: Broadcast Connection oriented Connectionless Data link control layer provides for the reliable transmission of messages using traditional data link control procedures

DECT Protocol Architecture

DECT Protocol Architecture Call Control :manage circuit s/w calls, include connection setup and release. Supplementary services:independent of any call Connectionless mge service:segementing longer mge into smaller blocks for TX and reassemble. Connection oriented mge Mobility management: handles secure provision for DECT.

DECT Protocol Architecture MOBILITY MANAGEMENT: 1. Identity procedure: identify MU to BS 2. Authentication:Establish MU is valid N/w 3. Location: multiple BS track MU 4. Access right:establish MU to specific global n/w 5. Key allocation: Encrypt key for n/w and user info. 6. Parameter retrieval: exchange info about the MU and n/w operation 7. Ciphering: encryption and decryption.

Differential Quantization Speech signals tend not to change much between two samples Transmitted PCM values contain considerable redundancy Transmit difference value between adjacent samples rather than actual value If difference value between two samples exceeds transmitted bits, receiver output will drift from the true value Encoder could replicate receiver output and additionally transmit that difference

Differential PCM (DPCM) Since voice signals change relatively slowly, value of kth sample can be estimated by preceding samples Transmit difference between sample and estimated sample Difference value should be less than difference between successive samples At the receiver, incoming difference value is added to the estimate of the current sample Same estimation function is used

Adaptive Differential PCM (ADPCM) Improve DPCM performance using adaptive prediction and quantization Predictor and difference quantizer adapt to the changing characteristics of the speech Modules Adaptive quantizer Inverse adaptive quantizer Adaptive predictor

ADPCM Encoder

ADPCM Decoder

Subject Measurement of Coder Performance Subjective measurements of quality are more relevant than objective measures Mean opinion score (MOS) group of subjects listen to a sample of coded speech; classify output on a 5-point scale MOS scale is used in a number of specifications as a standard for quality

Wireless Local Loop Wired technologies responding to need for reliable, high-speed access by residential, business, and government subscribers ISDN, xdsl, cable modems Increasing interest shown in competing wireless technologies for subscriber access Wireless local loop (WLL) Narrowband offers a replacement for existing telephony services Broadband provides high-speed two-way voice and data service

WLL Configuration

Advantages of WLL over Wired Approach Cost wireless systems are less expensive due to cost of cable installation that s avoided Installation time WLL systems can be installed in a small fraction of the time required for a new wired system Selective installation radio units installed for subscribers who want service at a given time With a wired system, cable is laid out in anticipation of serving every subscriber in a given area

Propagation Considerations for WLL Most high-speed WLL schemes use millimeter wave frequencies (10 GHz to about 300 GHz) There are wide unused frequency bands available above 25 GHz At these high frequencies, wide channel bandwidths can be used, providing high data rates Small size transceivers and adaptive antenna arrays can be used

Propagation Considerations for WLL Millimeter wave systems have some undesirable propagation characteristics Free space loss increases with the square of the frequency; losses are much higher in millimeter wave range Above 10 GHz, attenuation effects due to rainfall and atmospheric or gaseous absorption are large Multipath losses can be quite high

Fresnel Zone How much space around direct path between transmitter and receiver should be clear of obstacles? Objects within a series of concentric circles around the line of sight between transceivers have constructive/destructive effects on communication For point along the direct path, radius of first Fresnel zone: R = λsd S + D S = distance from transmitter D = distance from receiver

Atmospheric Absorption Radio waves at frequencies above 10 GHz are subject to molecular absorption Peak of water vapor absorption at 22 GHz Peak of oxygen absorption near 60 GHz Favorable windows for communication: From 28 GHz to 42 GHz From 75 GHz to 95 GHz

Effect of Rain Attenuation due to rain Presence of raindrops can severely degrade the reliability and performance of communication links The effect of rain depends on drop shape, drop size, rain rate, and frequency Estimated attenuation due to rain: b A = ar A = attenuation (db/km) R = rain rate (mm/hr) a and b depend on drop sizes and frequency

Effects of Vegetation Trees near subscriber sites can lead to multipath fading Multipath effects from the tree canopy are diffraction and scattering Measurements in orchards found considerable attenuation values when the foliage is within 60% of the first Fresnel zone Multipath effects highly variable due to wind

Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS) Multichannel multipoint distribution service (MMDS) Also referred to as wireless cable Used mainly by residential subscribers and small businesses Local multipoint distribution service (LMDS) Appeals to larger companies with greater bandwidth demands

Advantages of MMDS MMDS signals have larger wavelengths and can travel farther without losing significant power Equipment at lower frequencies is less expensive MMDS signals don't get blocked as easily by objects and are less susceptible to rain absorption

Advantages of LMDS Relatively high data rates Capable of providing video, telephony, and data Relatively low cost in comparison with cable alternatives

802.16 Standards Development Use wireless links with microwave or millimeter wave radios Use licensed spectrum Are metropolitan in scale Provide public network service to fee-paying customers Use point-to-multipoint architecture with stationary rooftop or tower-mounted antennas

802.16 Standards Development Provide efficient transport of heterogeneous traffic supporting quality of service (QoS) Use wireless links with microwave or millimeter wave radios Are capable of broadband transmissions (>2 Mbps)

IEEE 802.16 Protocol Architecture

Protocol Architecture Physical and transmission layer functions: Encoding/decoding of signals Preamble generation/removal Bit transmission/reception Medium access control layer functions: On transmission, assemble data into a frame with address and error detection fields On reception, disassemble frame, and perform address recognition and error detection Govern access to the wireless transmission medium

Protocol Architecture Convergence layer functions: Encapsulate PDU framing of upper layers into native 802.16 MAC/PHY frames Map upper layer s addresses into 802.16 addresses Translate upper layer QoS parameters into native 802.16 MAC format Adapt time dependencies of upper layer traffic into equivalent MAC service

IEEE 802.16.1 Services Digital audio/video multicast Digital telephony ATM Internet protocol Bridged LAN Back-haul Frame relay

IEEE 802.16.3 Services Voice transport Data transport Bridged LAN

IEEE 802.16.1 Frame Format

IEEE 802.16.1 Frame Format Header - protocol control information Downlink header used by the base station Uplink header used by the subscriber to convey bandwidth management needs to base station Bandwidth request header used by subscriber to request additional bandwidth Payload either higher-level data or a MAC control message CRC error-detecting code

MAC Management Messages Uplink and downlink channel descriptor Uplink and downlink access definition Ranging request and response Registration request, response and acknowledge Privacy key management request and response Dynamic service addition request, response and acknowledge

MAC Management Messages Dynamic service change request, response, and acknowledge Dynamic service deletion request and response Multicast polling assignment request and response Downlink data grant type request ARQ acknowledgment

Physical Layer Upstream Transmission Uses a DAMA-TDMA technique Error correction uses Reed-Solomon code Modulation scheme based on QPSK

Physical Layer Downstream Transmission Continuous downstream mode For continuous transmission stream (audio, video) Simple TDM scheme is used for channel access Duplexing technique is frequency division duplex (FDD) Burst downstream mode Targets burst transmission stream (IP-based traffic) DAMA-TDMA scheme is used for channel access Duplexing techniques are FDD with adaptive modulation, frequency shift division duplexing (FSDD), time division duplexing (TDD)