MObile 4 Finalcse
MObile 4 Finalcse
1 Mm 10 km 100 m 1m 10 mm 100 µm 1 µm
300 Hz 30 kHz 3 MHz 300 MHz 30 GHz 3 THz 300 THz
∞ ∞
1
g (t ) = c + ∑ an sin( 2πnft ) + ∑ bn cos(2πnft )
2 n =1 n =1
1 1
0 0
t t
ideal periodic signal real composition
(based on harmonics)
t[s] ϕ
I= M cos ϕ
ϕ f [Hz]
z
y z
y x ideal
x isotropic
radiator
• Real antennas are not isotropic radiators but, e.g., dipoles with lengths
λ/4 on car roofs or λ/2 as Hertzian dipole
Î shape of antenna proportional to wavelength
λ/4 λ/2
simple
x z x dipole
side view (xy-plane) side view (yz-plane) top view (xz-plane)
directed
x z x antenna
z
z
x
sectorized
x antenna
+ +
ground plane
• Transmission range
– communication possible
– low error rate
• Detection range
– detection of the signal
possible sender
– no communication
possible transmission
• Signal can take many different paths between sender and receiver due
to reflection, scattering, diffraction
multipath
LOS pulses pulses
signal at sender
signal at receiver
– distance to sender
– obstacles further away
Î slow changes in the average power
received (long term fading)
t
short term fading
– space (si) k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
– time (t)
– frequency (f) c
– code (c) t c
t
• Goal: multiple use s1
f
of a shared medium s2
f
c
• Important: guard spaces needed!
t
s3
f
• Advantages:
• only one carrier in the
medium at any time
• throughput high even k1 k2 k3 k4 k5 k6
for many users
c
• Disadvantages: f
• precise
synchronization
necessary
• Digital modulation
– digital data is translated into an analog signal (baseband)
– ASK, FSK, PSK - main focus in this chapter
– differences in spectral efficiency, power efficiency, robustness
• Analog modulation
– shifts center frequency of baseband signal up to the radio carrier
• Motivation
– smaller antennas (e.g., λ/4)
– Frequency Division Multiplexing
– medium characteristics
• Basic schemes
– Amplitude Modulation (AM)
– Frequency Modulation (FM)
– Phase Modulation (PM)
analog
baseband
digital
signal
data digital analog
101101001 modulation modulation radio transmitter
radio
carrier
analog
baseband
digital
signal
analog synchronization data
demodulation decision 101101001 radio receiver
radio
carrier
1 0 1
• Frequency Shift Keying (FSK):
– needs larger bandwidth
t
• bandwidth needed for FSK depends on the distance between the carrier
frequencies
• special pre-computation avoids sudden phase shifts
Î MSK (Minimum Shift Keying)
• bit separated into even and odd bits, the duration of each bit is doubled
• depending on the bit values (even, odd) the higher or lower frequency,
original or inverted is chosen
• the frequency of one carrier is twice the frequency of the other
• Equivalent to offset QPSK
1 0 1 1 0 1 0
data bit
even 0101
even bits odd 0011
MSK
signal
t
No phase shifts!
Mobile Communications SS2003
Advanced Phase Shift Keying
11 10 00 01
Q 0010
0001 Example: 16-QAM (4 bits = 1 symbol)
0011 Symbols 0011 and 0001 have the same
0000
phase, but different amplitude. 0000 and
I 1000 have different phase, but same
1000 amplitude.
Î used in standard 9600 bit/s modems
f f
• protection against narrowband interference
• Side effects:
– coexistence of several signals without dynamic coordination
– tap-proof
• Alternatives: Direct Sequence, Frequency Hopping
dP/df dP/df
user signal
i) ii) broadband interference
narrowband interference
f f
sender
dP/df dP/df dP/df
iii) iv) v)
f f f
receiver
channel
quality
1 2 5 6
narrowband channels
3
4
frequency
narrow band guard space
signal
channel
quality
2
2 spread spectrum channels
2
2
2
1
spread frequency
spectrum
spread
spectrum transmit
user data signal signal
X modulator
chipping radio
sequence carrier
transmitter
correlator
lowpass sampled
received filtered products sums
signal signal data
demodulator X integrator decision
radio chipping
carrier sequence
receiver
tb
user data
0 1 0 1 1 t
f
td
f3 slow
f2 hopping
(3 bits/hop)
f1
td t
f
f3 fast
f2 hopping
(3 hops/bit)
f1
narrowband spread
signal transmit
user data signal
modulator modulator
frequency hopping
synthesizer sequence
transmitter
narrowband
received signal
signal data
demodulator demodulator
hopping frequency
sequence synthesizer
receiver
• Frequency reuse only with a certain distance between the base stations
• Standard model using 7 frequencies:
f3
f5 f2
f4 f6 f5
f1 f4
f3 f7 f1
f2
• Fixed frequency assignment:
– certain frequencies are assigned to a certain cell
– problem: different traffic load in different cells
• Dynamic frequency assignment:
– base station chooses frequencies depending on the frequencies already
used in neighbor cells
– more capacity in cells with more traffic
– assignment can also be based on interference measurements
f3 f3 f3
f2 f2
f1 f1 f1 f2 f3 f7
f3 f3
f2 f2 f2
3 cell cluster f5 f2
f4 f6 f5
f1 f1 f1 f4
f3 f3 f3 f3 f7 f1
f2 f3
f6 f5 f2
7 cell cluster
f2 f2 f2
f1 f f1 f f1 f
3 h 3 h 3
h 2 h 2 3 cell cluster
g2 1 h3 g2 1 h3 g2
g1 g1 g1
g3 g3 g3 with 3 sector antennas