Quick Introduction to Communication Systems

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Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 1/26 Quick Introduction to Communication Systems Aly I. El-Osery, Ph.D. elosery@ee.nmt.edu Department of Electrical Engineering New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Socorro, NM 87801

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 2/26 Communication System Transmitter Receiver Information Input Signal Processing Modulation Channel Demodulation Signal Processing Information Output

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 3/26 Why Modulate? Reduce noise and interference. Channel assignment. Multiplexing or transmission of several messages over a single channel. Overcome equipment limitation.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 4/26 Modulation x c (t) = A(t) cos[ω c t + φ(t)] (1) where ω c is known as the carrier frequency, A(t) is the instantaneous amplitude, and φ(t) is the instantaneous phase deviation. If A(t) is linearly related to the modulated signal, we have linear modulation.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 5/26 AM, PM and FM 4 3 message transmitted signal 1.5 message transmitted signal 1.5 message transmitted signal 1 1 2 1 0.5 0.5 0 0 0 1 0.5 0.5 2 3 1 1 4 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 1.5 0 5 10 15 1.5 0 5 10 15

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 6/26 Why Digital Communication? Inexpensive digital circuits may be used. Privacy by using data encryption. Greater dynamic range. In long-distance systems, noise does not accumulate from repeater to repeater. Errors may be corrected.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 7/26 Binary Data Transmission Principles of Communications, 5/E by Rodger Ziemer and William Tranter Copyright c 2002 John Wiley & Sons. Inc.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 8/26 Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) Principles of Communications, 5/E by Rodger Ziemer and William Tranter Copyright c 2002 John Wiley & Sons. Inc.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 9/26 Synchronization Carrier synchronization. Bit synchronization. Frame or word synchronization.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 10/26 Information Capacity What is the bandwidth required to convey the information? In 1948, Claude Shannon proved that the information capacity of a communication channel was related to the bandwidth, and signal-to-noise ratio in the channel by the equation ( capacity = bandwidth log 2 1 + P ) signal P noise (2)

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 11/26 Information Measure The information sent from a digital source when the jth message was transmitted is given by I j = log 2 ( 1 P j ) bits (3) where P j is the probability of transmitting the jth message.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 12/26 Coding Automatic repeat request (ARQ) When a receiver detects parity errors in a block of data, it sends a request for the data to be retransmitted. Forward error correction (FEC) The transmitted data are encoded so that the receiver can detect and correct errors.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 13/26 FEC Block codes A Block code is a memoryless device that maps k input binary symbols to n output binary symbols, where n > k. Convolutional codes A convolutional code is produced by a coder that has memory.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 14/26 Multiplexing Power Time Power Time FDMA TDMA Frequency Frequency Power Time CDMA Frequency

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 15/26 Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) The signal is spread to occupy a wider bandwidth and is buried among noise-like signals. Power Message signal Power Other users Spread Signal (a) Frequency (b) Frequency To despread the signal, the received signal is multiplied by the same pseudorandom code (assuming perfect synchronization) Power Message signal Other users Frequency

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 16/26 IEEE Standards http://standards.ieee.org/wireless/overview.html 802.11 Wireless Local Area Networks. 802.15 Wireless Personal Area Networks. 802.16 Broadband Wireless Access. 1451 Wireless Sensor Standards.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 17/26 IEEE 802.11 Standard for Wireless Local Area Networking (WLAN) in the US. Specifies the Physical (PHY) layer and the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer. Offers two variations of PHY, namely, DSSS and FSSS.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 18/26 MAC layer The Mac layer is responsible for channel allocation, access procedures, protocol data unit addressing, and error checking.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 19/26 ZigBee/IEEE 802.15.4 ZigBee is a technology that addresses the market needs for cost effective wireless networking solutions based on IEEE 802.15.4 standard. IEEE 802.15.4: Wireless MAC and PHY specifications for low-rate wireless personal area networks (WPANs). http://www.ieee802.org/15/pub/tg4expert.html Data rates of 250 kbps, 40 kbps, and 20 kbps. CSMA-CA channel access. Automatic network establishment by the coordinator. Fully handshaked protocol for transfer reliability. Power management to ensure low power consumption. 16 channels in the 2.4GHz ISM band, 10 channels in the 915MHz I and one channel in the 868MHz band.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 20/26 IEEE 802.15.4 Architecture Upper Layers IEEE 802.15.4 LLC IEEE 802.2 LLC IEEE 802.15.4 MAC IEEE 802.14 IEEE 802.14 868/915 PHY 2400MHz PHY

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 21/26 Radio Transmission Very low frequency (VLF) (f 0 < 0.3MHz): The earth and the ionosphere form a waveguide for the electromagnetic waves. Medium frequency (MF) (0.3 < f 0 < 3MHz): Waves propagate as ground waves up to a distance of 160km. High frequency (HF) (3 < f 0 < 30MHz): The waves are reflected by the ionosphere at an altitude that may vary between 50 and 400km. Very high frequency (VHF) (30 < f 0 < 300MHz): The signal propagate through the ionosphere with small attenuation. Ultra high frequency (UHF) (300MHz < f 0 < 3GHz)

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 22/26 Mobile Radio Propagation Large-scale fading It represents the average signal power attenuation or path loss over large distances. In practice, the environment between the transmitter and the receiver is changing due to the different terrain contours such as forests, hills, buildings, etc., between the transmitter and the receiver. This is known as shadowing. Base Station Buildings Mobile station

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 23/26 Mobile Radio Propagation (cont.) The average path loss can be expressed as P L(d) d α 10 η/10, (4) where P L(d) is the average path loss as a function of distance, α is the path loss exponent usually taken to be 4, η is a normally distributed variable with zero mean and variance σ 2 s. The value of σ 2 s, which is affected by the configuration of the terrain, ranges from 5 to 12, with 8 as a typical value.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 24/26 Mobile Radio Propagation (cont.) Small-scale fading is caused by multipath reflection of the transmitted wave by local scatters such as man-made structures. The small-scale fading is usually Rayleigh distributed. Rayleigh distribution has a probability density function given by p(r) = ( ) σ r exp r2 2σr 2 (0 r ), 0 (r < 0), { r (5) where σ r is the rms value of the received voltage signal, and r(t) is the complex envelope of the received signal.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 25/26 Glossary Baud: Measure of data rate. FCC: Federal Communications Commission. The U.S. government agency responsible for allocating radio spectrum for communication services. Latency: Measure of how much time it takes for a packet of data to get from one point to another. SAW: Surface acoustic wave devices. These devices use the piezoelectric effect inherent in a crystal to transform EM energy to acoustic energy and back. Fingers specially placed on a surface of a SAW devices act as wave energy filters yielding bandpass filter effects that can t be obtained with RCL filters. Throughput: Measure of the number of useful data characters sent, received, and processed per second.

Quick Introduction to Communication Systems p. 26/26 Trade-Offs Bandwidth efficiency Power efficiency Performance System complexity Cost