Week01 Fundamentals
Week01 Fundamentals
Electromagnetic Wave
Two important properties
Propagate : They travel in the space from the sender to a receiver
Antenna
Made of conducting material
Applying a current to an antenna creates an electric field around the antenna As the current of the antenna changes, so does the electric field Radio waves hitting an antenna cause electrons to flow in the conductor and create current
Spectrum
Multipath fading
Multipath: the propagation phenomenon that results in radio signals reaching the receiving antenna by two or more paths
Radio waves can be propagated and receiving power is influenced in different ways:
Reflection at large obstacles
reflection
Diffraction at edges
diffraction
Path Loss
is the reduction in power density (attenuation) of signal as it propagates through space
Can be identified as the ratio of the power of the transmitted signal to the power of the same signal received by the receiver
Shadowing effect
Shadowing is the effect that the received signal power fluctuates due to objects obstructing the propagation path between transmitter and receiver.
Interference
Adjacent channel interference: interfered by signals in nearby frequencies. Solved by the guard bands.
Co-channel interference: narrow-band interference due to other systems using the same frequency. Solved by Multiuser detection mechanisms Directional antennas Dynamic channel allocation methods.
Multiplexing in 4 dimensions
frequency (f) time (t) code (c) space (si)
k1 c
k2
k3
k4
k5
k6
t s1
f s2 c f
s3
1- Frequency Multiplexing
Separation of the whole spectrum into smaller frequency bands A channel gets a certain band of the spectrum for the whole time k k k k k Advantages:
1 2 3 4 5
k6
c f
Disadvantages:
waste of bandwidth if the traffic is distributed unevenly inflexible guard spaces
t
2- Time Multiplexing
A channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain amount of time Advantages:
only one carrier in the medium at any time throughput high even for many users
k1 c f k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
Disadvantages:
precise synchronization necessary
t
k6
protection against frequency selective interference higher data rates compared to code multiplex but: precise coordination required
t
c f
3- Code Multiplexing
Each channel has a unique code
k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
All channels use the same spectrum at the same time Advantages:
bandwidth efficient no coordination and synchronization necessary good protection against interference
Disadvantages:
lower user data rates more complex signal regeneration
Spread spectrum
spread-spectrum techniques are methods by which a signal generated with a particular bandwidth is deliberately spread in the frequency domain, resulting in a signal with a wider bandwidth. These techniques are used for a variety of reasons
including the establishment of secure communications increasing resistance to natural interference, noise, jamming, and to prevent detection,
Examples are:
Frequency-Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)
Two versions Slow Hopping: several user bits per frequency Fast Hopping: several frequencies per user bit
tb
user data 0 f f3 f2 f1 f f3 f2 f1 t 1 0 1 1 t
td
slow hopping (3 bits/hop)
td
t
fast hopping (3 hops/bit)
Advantages
frequency selective fading and interference limited to short period simple implementation uses only small portion of spectrum at any time
Disadvantages
not as robust as DSSS simpler to detect
0
tc
XOR
chipping sequence
01101010110101
= resulting signal
01101011001010
Advantages reduces frequency selective fading in cellular networks base stations can use the same frequency range several base stations can detect and recover the signal Disadvantages Requires synchronization
1- Range
Transmission range
communication possible low error rate
Detection range
detection of the signal possible no communication possible
sender transmission distance detection interference
Interference range
signal may not be detected signal adds to the background noise
Transmission range is closely tied up with throughput and output (transmit) power.
Wireless connection maintains a link that supports a data rate close to the maximum the transmitter and receiver can support
2- Throughput
Throughput falls as the range increases and the Bit Error Rate (BER) rises
Is usually measured in bits/second To get highest throughput wireless standards tries to gather a lot of information into each transmitted bit by using complex coding schemes
4- Power consumption
Many wireless products are designed to run on batteries There are different modes
Discussion
What is your biggest complaint about current wireless technology? In what application areas do you see wireless networks succeeding? In what application areas do you see wireless networks failing? What do you see as the motivating factors for using wireless as opposed to wired networks?