17 research outputs found

    IEEE 802.11ax: challenges and requirements for future high efficiency wifi

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    The popularity of IEEE 802.11 based wireless local area networks (WLANs) has increased significantly in recent years because of their ability to provide increased mobility, flexibility, and ease of use, with reduced cost of installation and maintenance. This has resulted in massive WLAN deployment in geographically limited environments that encompass multiple overlapping basic service sets (OBSSs). In this article, we introduce IEEE 802.11ax, a new standard being developed by the IEEE 802.11 Working Group, which will enable efficient usage of spectrum along with an enhanced user experience. We expose advanced technological enhancements proposed to improve the efficiency within high density WLAN networks and explore the key challenges to the upcoming amendment.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Feedback Mechanisms for Centralized and Distributed Mobile Systems

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    The wireless communication market is expected to witness considerable growth in the immediate future due to increasing smart device usage to access real-time data. Mobile devices become the predominant method of Internet access via cellular networks (4G/5G) and the onset of virtual reality (VR), ushering in the wide deployment of multiple bands, ranging from TVWhite Spaces to cellular/WiFi bands and on to mmWave. Multi-antenna techniques have been considered to be promising approaches in telecommunication to optimize the utilization of radio spectrum and minimize the cost of system construction. The performance of multiple antenna technology depends on the utilization of radio propagation properties and feedback of such information in a timely manner. However, when a signal is transmitted, it is usually dispersed over time coming over different paths of different lengths due to reflections from obstacles or affected by Doppler shift in mobile environments. This motivates the design of novel feedback mechanisms that improve the performance of multi-antenna systems. Accurate channel state information (CSI) is essential to increasing throughput in multiinput, multi-output (MIMO) systems with digital beamforming. Channel-state information for the operation of MIMO schemes (such as transmit diversity or spatial multiplexing) can be acquired by feedback of CSI reports in the downlink direction, or inferred from uplink measurements assuming perfect channel reciprocity (CR). However, most works make the assumption that channels are perfectly reciprocal. This assumption is often incorrect in practice due to poor channel estimation and imperfect channel feedback. Instead, experiments have demonstrated that channel reciprocity can be easily broken by multiple factors. Specifically, channel reciprocity error (CRE) introduced by transmitter-receiver imbalance have been widely studied by both simulations and experiments, and the impact of mobility and estimation error have been fully investigated in this thesis. In particular, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have asymmetric behavior when communicating with one another and to the ground, due to differences in altitude that frequently occur. Feedback mechanisms are also affected by channel differences caused by the user’s body. While there has been work to specifically quantify the losses in signal reception, there has been little work on how these channel differences affect feedback mechanisms. In this dissertation, we perform system-level simulations, implement design with a software defined radio platform, conduct in-field experiments for various wireless communication systems to analyze different channel feedback mechanisms. To explore the feedback mechanism, we then explore two specific real world scenarios, including UAV-based beamforming communications, and user-induced feedback systems

    SplitBeam: Effective and Efficient Beamforming in Wi-Fi Networks Through Split Computing

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    Modern IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) networks extensively rely on multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) to significantly improve throughput. To correctly beamform MIMO transmissions, the access point needs to frequently acquire a beamforming matrix (BM) from each connected station. However, the size of the matrix grows with the number of antennas and subcarriers, resulting in an increasing amount of airtime overhead and computational load at the station. Conventional approaches come with either excessive computational load or loss of beamforming precision. For this reason, we propose SplitBeam, a new framework where we train a split deep neural network (DNN) to directly output the BM given the channel state information (CSI) matrix as input. We formulate and solve a bottleneck optimization problem (BOP) to keep computation, airtime overhead, and bit error rate (BER) below application requirements. We perform extensive experimental CSI collection with off-the-shelf Wi-Fi devices in two distinct environments and compare the performance of SplitBeam with the standard IEEE 802.11 algorithm for BM feedback and the state-of-the-art DNN-based approach LB-SciFi. Our experimental results show that SplitBeam reduces the beamforming feedback size and computational complexity by respectively up to 81% and 84% while maintaining BER within about 10^-3 of existing approaches. We also implement the SplitBeam DNNs on FPGA hardware to estimate the end-to-end BM reporting delay, and show that the latter is less than 10 milliseconds in the most complex scenario, which is the target channel sounding frequency in realistic multi-user MIMO scenarios.Comment: Presented at the 43rd IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS 2023

    Langattoman tehtävädatansiirtojärjestelmän suunnittelu lentokoneympäristöön

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    This thesis is about designing wireless mission data transfer system for the Finnish Air Force's Grob 115E elementary training aircraft. This thesis explains the use case of the mission data system, and how the wireless implementation for the mission data transfer would change the operation. The target was to design a system that is capable of transferring data wirelessly between the ground station and the Grob aircraft. The biggest challenge for the implementation was the vast amount of data that was needed to be transferred from the aircraft to the ground station after the flight. Also, the time window during which the transfer had to be completed was very limited. Two WLAN standards, IEEE's 802.11ac and 802.11ax were considered as potential techniques for the implementation. In this thesis the WLAN security was also examined, and two additional methods outside of WLAN standards were suggested for gaining better security for the data transmission. Wireless system utilizing the 802.11ac standard was tested and OpenSSH and OpenVPN were examined as potential techniques to strengthen the communication security. The results showed that the 802.11ac standard performs well with the communication distances of the wireless mission data transfer system. 802.11ac however has one drawback that will reduce its potential as the communication standard for the task

    Modeling Multi-User WLANs Under Closed-Loop Traffic

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    Contention resolution in wi-fi 6-enabled internet of things based on deep learning

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    Internet of Things (IoT) is expected to vastly increase the number of connected devices. As a result, a multitude of IoT devices transmit various information through wireless communication technology, such as the Wi-Fi technology, cellular mobile communication technology, low-power wide-area network (LPWAN) technology. However, even the latest Wi-Fi technology is still ready to accommodate these large amounts of data. Accurately setting the contention window (CW) value significantly affects the efficiency of the Wi-Fi network. Unfortunately, the standard collision resolution used by IEEE 802.11ax networks is nonscalable; thus, it cannot maintain stable throughput for an increasing number of stations, even when Wi-Fi 6 has been designed to improve performance in dense scenarios. To this end, we propose a CW control strategy for Wi-Fi 6 systems. This strategy leverages deep learning to search for optimal configuration of CW under different network conditions. Our deep neural network is trained by data generated from a Wi-Fi 6 simulation system with some varying key parameters, e.g., the number of nodes, short interframe space (SIFS), distributed interframe space (DIFS), and data transmission rate. Numerical results demonstrated that our deep learning scheme could always find the optimal CW adjustment multiple by adaptively perceiving the channel competition status. The finalized performance of our model has been significantly improved in terms of system throughput, average transmission delay, and packet retransmission rate. This makes Wi-Fi 6 better adapted to the access of a large number of IoT devices. © 2014 IEEE

    Low-Complexity Multi-User MIMO Algorithms for mmWave WLANs

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    Very high throughput and high-efficiency wireless local area networks (WLANs) have become essential for today's significant global Internet traffic and the expected significant global increase of public WiFi hotspots. Total Internet traffic is predicted to expand 3.7-fold from 2017 to 2022. In 2017, 53% of overall Internet traffic used by WiFi networks, and that number is expected to increase to 56.8% by 2022. Furthermore, 80% of overall Internet traffic is expected to be video traffic by 2022, up from 70% in 2017. WiFi networks are also expected to move towards denser deployment scenarios, such as stadiums, large office buildings, and airports, with very high data rate applications, such as ultra-high definition video wireless streaming. Thus, in order to meet the predicted growth of wireless traffic and the number of WiFi networks in the world, an efficient Internet access solution is required for the current IEEE 802.11 standards. Millimeter wave (mmWave) communication technology is expected to play a crucial role in future wireless networks with large user populations because of the large spectrum band it can provide. To further improve spectrum efficiency over mmWave bands in WLANs with large numbers of users, the IEEE 802.11ay standard was developed from the traditional IEEE 802.11ad standard, aiming to support multi-user MIMO. Propagation challenges associated with mmWave bands necessitate the use of analog beamforming (BF) technologies that employ directional transmissions to determine the optimal sector beam between a transmitter and a receiver. However, the multi-user MIMO is not exploited, since analog BF is limited to a single-user, single-transmission. The computational complexity of achieving traditional multi-user MIMO BF methods, such as full digital BF, in the mmWave systems becomes significant due to the hardware constraints. Our research focuses on how to effectively and efficiently realize multi-user MIMO transmission to improve spectrum efficiency over the IEEE 802.11ay mmWave band system while also resolving the computational complexity challenges for achieving a multi-user MIMO in mmWave systems. This thesis focuses on MAC protocol algorithms and analysis of the IEEE 802.11ay mmWave WLANs to provide multi-user MIMO support in various scenarios to improve the spectrum efficiency and system throughput. Specifically, from a downlink single-hop scenario perspective, a VG algorithm is proposed to schedule simultaneous downlink transmission links while mitigating the multi-user interference with no additional computational complexity. From a downlink multi-hop scenario perspective, a low-complexity MHVG algorithm is conducted to realize simultaneous transmissions and improve the network performance by taking advantage of the spatial reuse in a dense network. The proposed MHVG algorithm permits simultaneous links scheduling and mitigates both the multi-user interference and co-channel interference based only on analog BF information, without the necessity for feedback overhead, such as channel state information (CSI). From an uplink scenario perspective, a low-complexity user selection algorithm, HBF-VG, incorporates user selection with the HBF algorithm to achieve simultaneous uplink transmissions for IEEE 802.11ay mmWave WLANs. With the HBF-VG algorithm, the users can be selected based on an orthogonality criterion instead of collecting CSI from all potential users. We optimize the digital BF to mitigate the residual interference among selected users. Extensive analytical and simulation evaluations are provided to validate the performance of the proposed algorithms with respect to average throughput per time slot, average network throughput, average sum-rate, energy efficiency, signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR), and spatial multiplexing gain
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