42 research outputs found

    Sleep Period Optimization Model For Layered Video Service Delivery Over eMBMS Networks

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    Long Term Evolution-Advanced (LTE-A) and the evolved Multimedia Broadcast Multicast System (eMBMS) are the most promising technologies for the delivery of highly bandwidth demanding applications. In this paper we propose a green resource allocation strategy for the delivery of layered video streams to users with different propagation conditions. The goal of the proposed model is to minimize the user energy consumption. That goal is achieved by minimizing the time required by each user to receive the broadcast data via an efficient power transmission allocation model. A key point in our system model is that the reliability of layered video communications is ensured by means of the Random Linear Network Coding (RLNC) approach. Analytical results show that the proposed resource allocation model ensures the desired quality of service constraints, while the user energy footprint is significantly reduced.Comment: Proc. of IEEE ICC 2015, Selected Areas in Communications Symposium - Green Communications Track, to appea

    Studies on Mobile Terminal Energy Consumption for LTE and Future 5G

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    Antenna tuning for WCDMA RF front end

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    Modern mobile handsets or so called Smart-phones are not just capable of communicating over a wide range of radio frequencies and of supporting various wireless technologies. They also include a range of peripheral devices like camera, keyboard, larger display, ash-light etc. The provision to support such a large feature set in a limited size, constraints the designers of RF front ends to make compromises in the design and placement of the antenna which deteriorates its performance. The surroundings of the antenna especially when it comes in contact with human body, adds to the degradation in its performance. The main reason for the degraded performance is the mismatch of impedance between the antenna and the radio transceiver which causes part of the transmitted power to be reflected back. The loss of power reduces the power amplifier efficiency and leads to shorter battery life. Moreover the reflected power increases the noise floor of the receiver and reduces its sensitivity. Hence the over performance of the radio module in terms of Total Radiated Power and Total Isotropic Sensitivity, gets substantially degraded in the face of these losses. This thesis attempts to solve the issue of impedance mismatch in RF front-ends by introducing an adaptive antenna tuning system between the radio module and the antenna. Using tunable reactive components and by intelligently controlling them through a tuning algorithm, this system is able to compensate the impedance mismatch to a large extent. The improvement in the output power and the reduction in the Return Loss observed in the measurements carried out for WCDMA, as part of this thesis work, confirm this. However, the antenna tuner introduces an insertion loss and hence degrades the performance in perfect match conditions. The overall conclusion is that the adaptive antenna tuner system improves the performance much more than it degrades it. Hence it is an attractive solution to be included in mobile terminals on a commercial scale

    AN EFFICIENT INTERFERENCE AVOIDANCE SCHEME FOR DEVICE-TODEVICE ENABLED FIFTH GENERATION NARROWBAND INTERNET OF THINGS NETWOKS’

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    Narrowband Internet of Things (NB-IoT) is a low-power wide-area (LPWA) technology built on long-term evolution (LTE) functionalities and standardized by the 3rd-Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). Due to its support for massive machine-type communication (mMTC) and different IoT use cases with rigorous standards in terms of connection, energy efficiency, reachability, reliability, and latency, NB-IoT has attracted the research community. However, as the capacity needs for various IoT use cases expand, the LTE evolved packet core (EPC) system's numerous functionalities may become overburdened and suboptimal. Several research efforts are currently in progress to address these challenges. As a result, an overview of these efforts with a specific focus on the optimized architecture of the LTE EPC functionalities, the 5G architectural design for NB-IoT integration, the enabling technologies necessary for 5G NB-IoT, 5G new radio (NR) coexistence with NB-IoT, and feasible architectural deployment schemes of NB-IoT with cellular networks is discussed. This thesis also presents cloud-assisted relay with backscatter communication as part of a detailed study of the technical performance attributes and channel communication characteristics from the physical (PHY) and medium access control (MAC) layers of the NB-IoT, with a focus on 5G. The numerous drawbacks that come with simulating these systems are explored. The enabling market for NB-IoT, the benefits for a few use cases, and the potential critical challenges associated with their deployment are all highlighted. Fortunately, the cyclic prefix orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (CPOFDM) based waveform by 3GPP NR for improved mobile broadband (eMBB) services does not prohibit the use of other waveforms in other services, such as the NB-IoT service for mMTC. As a result, the coexistence of 5G NR and NB-IoT must be manageably orthogonal (or quasi-orthogonal) to minimize mutual interference that limits the form of freedom in the waveform's overall design. As a result, 5G coexistence with NB-IoT will introduce a new interference challenge, distinct from that of the legacy network, even though the NR's coexistence with NB-IoT is believed to improve network capacity and expand the coverage of the user data rate, as well as improves robust communication through frequency reuse. Interference challenges may make channel estimation difficult for NB-IoT devices, limiting the user performance and spectral efficiency. Various existing interference mitigation solutions either add to the network's overhead, computational complexity and delay or are hampered by low data rate and coverage. These algorithms are unsuitable for an NB-IoT network owing to the low-complexity nature. As a result, a D2D communication based interference-control technique becomes an effective strategy for addressing this problem. This thesis used D2D communication to decrease the network bottleneck in dense 5G NBIoT networks prone to interference. For D2D-enabled 5G NB-IoT systems, the thesis presents an interference-avoidance resource allocation that considers the less favourable cell edge NUEs. To simplify the algorithm's computing complexity and reduce interference power, the system divides the optimization problem into three sub-problems. First, in an orthogonal deployment technique using channel state information (CSI), the channel gain factor is leveraged by selecting a probable reuse channel with higher QoS control. Second, a bisection search approach is used to find the best power control that maximizes the network sum rate, and third, the Hungarian algorithm is used to build a maximum bipartite matching strategy to choose the optimal pairing pattern between the sets of NUEs and the D2D pairs. The proposed approach improves the D2D sum rate and overall network SINR of the 5G NB-IoT system, according to the numerical data. The maximum power constraint of the D2D pair, D2D's location, Pico-base station (PBS) cell radius, number of potential reuse channels, and cluster distance impact the D2D pair's performance. The simulation results achieve 28.35%, 31.33%, and 39% SINR performance higher than the ARSAD, DCORA, and RRA algorithms when the number of NUEs is twice the number of D2D pairs, and 2.52%, 14.80%, and 39.89% SINR performance higher than the ARSAD, RRA, and DCORA when the number of NUEs and D2D pairs are equal. As a result, a D2D sum rate increase of 9.23%, 11.26%, and 13.92% higher than the ARSAD, DCORA, and RRA when the NUE’s number is twice the number of D2D pairs, and a D2D’s sum rate increase of 1.18%, 4.64% and 15.93% higher than the ARSAD, RRA and DCORA respectively, with an equal number of NUEs and D2D pairs is achieved. The results demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed scheme. The thesis also addressed the problem where the cell-edge NUE's QoS is critical to challenges such as long-distance transmission, delays, low bandwidth utilization, and high system overhead that affect 5G NB-IoT network performance. In this case, most cell-edge NUEs boost their transmit power to maximize network throughput. Integrating cooperating D2D relaying technique into 5G NB-IoT heterogeneous network (HetNet) uplink spectrum sharing increases the system's spectral efficiency and interference power, further degrading the network. Using a max-max SINR (Max-SINR) approach, this thesis proposed an interference-aware D2D relaying strategy for 5G NB-IoT QoS improvement for a cell-edge NUE to achieve optimum system performance. The Lagrangian-dual technique is used to optimize the transmit power of the cell-edge NUE to the relay based on the average interference power constraint, while the relay to the NB-IoT base station (NBS) employs a fixed transmit power. To choose an optimal D2D relay node, the channel-to-interference plus noise ratio (CINR) of all available D2D relays is used to maximize the minimum cell-edge NUE's data rate while ensuring the cellular NUEs' QoS requirements are satisfied. Best harmonic mean, best-worst, half-duplex relay selection, and a D2D communication scheme were among the other relaying selection strategies studied. The simulation results reveal that the Max-SINR selection scheme outperforms all other selection schemes due to the high channel gain between the two communication devices except for the D2D communication scheme. The proposed algorithm achieves 21.27% SINR performance, which is nearly identical to the half-duplex scheme, but outperforms the best-worst and harmonic selection techniques by 81.27% and 40.29%, respectively. As a result, as the number of D2D relays increases, the capacity increases by 14.10% and 47.19%, respectively, over harmonic and half-duplex techniques. Finally, the thesis presents future research works on interference control in addition with the open research directions on PHY and MAC properties and a SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) analysis presented in Chapter 2 to encourage further study on 5G NB-IoT

    Over-The-Air (OTA) Measurement Method for MIMO-enabled Mobile Terminals

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    Over-The-Air (OTA) test methods for performance evaluation play an important role in the certification process of commercial User Equipment (UE) and for admission of UE to cellular networks. Novel OTA test methods and metrics are required for state-of-the-art mobile communication standards such as 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Long Term Evolution (LTE) due to the extensive use of Multiple Input – Multiple Output (MIMO) transmission techniques. The variety of different MIMO operating modes and the almost unlimited choice of possible multi-path channel conditions under which UE performance may be evaluated is not accounted for by established Single Input – Single Output (SISO) OTA performance metrics like Total Isotropic Sensitivity (TIS) and Total Radiated Power (TRP). As pointed out in this dissertation, meaningful metrics and cost effective, low complexity measurement methods can nevertheless be derived by focusing on characterization of the physical attributes of UE and by adopting statistical metrics. Starting from an overview of existing OTA measurement methods for SISO devices, extensions which are necessary to evaluate UE performance in the different MIMO operating modes which are foreseen in the 3GPP LTE standard are discussed. Relations between UE implementation attributes and the UE performance which is observed in different MIMO operating modes are derived using generic antenna and propagation models. Based on these models existing proposals for OTA test methods are reviewed. Their suitability and the relevance of different implementation aspects therein are discussed. The main result of this dissertation is a novel MIMO OTA test plan which focuses on the characterization of relevant UE attributes and meets the goals of low complexity and high reproducibility. Two complementary metrics and corresponding measurement procedures for evaluation of MIMO OTA performance are developed in order to address the diversity of possible propagation scenarios. The theoretical results are supported by extensive measurements using preliminary implementations of the proposed method. These include results from an international round-robin measurement campaign for High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) devices and results from a variety of measurements on LTE devices which were performed at different test sites. Additional validation and investigation of specific aspects is addressed by simulation.Over-The-Air (OTA) Messverfahren für MIMO-fähige mobile Endgeräte Over-The-Air (OTA) Testverfahren für die Bewertung der Qualität von kommerziellen Endgeräten (User Equipment (UE)) sind von großer Bedeutung im Rahmen der Zertifizierung von UE und der Zulassung zu Mobilfunknetzwerken. Im Zusammenhang mit den aktuellen mobilen Kommunikationsstandards, wie etwa dem 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Standard Long Term Evolution (LTE), sind, aufgrund der Verwendung von Multiple Input – Multiple Output (MIMO) Übertragungstechniken neuartige Metriken und Messverfahren erforderlich. Die Vielfalt der verschiedenen MIMO Betriebsarten und die fast unbegrenzte Auswahl möglicher Kanalbedingungen (Mehrwegeausbreitung), unter denen die Qualität von UE bewertet werden kann, wird von den etablierten Single Input – Single Output (SISO) OTA Metriken Total Isotropic Sensitivity (TIS) und Total Radiated Power (TRP) nicht abgedeckt. Wie in dieser Arbeit gezeigt wird, lassen sich durch Fokussierung auf die Charakterisierung der maßgeblichen physikalischen Eigenschaften des UE sowie Einführung statistischer Metriken dennoch aussagekräftige Metriken und kostengünstige Messmethoden geringer Komplexität gewinnen. Ausgehend von einem Überblick existierender OTA Testverfahren für SISO Endgeräte werden die Erweiterungen diskutiert, die notwendig sind, um die Qualität von Endgeräten unter den verschiedenen MIMO Betriebsarten, die der Standard 3GPP LTE vorsieht, bewerten zu können. Unter Verwendung generischer Modelle für Antennen und Ausbreitungsszenarien werden Beziehungen zwischen den Eigenschaften von UE und der in den verschiedenen MIMO Betriebsarten zu beobachtenden Emfangsqualität abgeleitet. Darauf aufbauend werden existierende Vorschläge für OTA Testverfahren untersucht. Deren Eignung und die Relevanz der verschiedener Aspekte in ihrer Implementierung werden diskutiert. Das wesentliche Ergebnis dieser Arbeit ist ein neuartiges MIMO OTA Testkonzept, bei dem die Charakterisierung der relevanten UE Eigenschaften im Mittelpunkt steht und welches den Anforderungen geringer Komplexität und hoher Reproduzierbarkeit genügt. Es werden zwei einander ergänzende Metriken definiert und die zugehörigen Testvorschriften vorgestellt, mit dem Ziel die Vielfalt der möglichen Übertragungszenarien abzudecken. Der theoretische Herleitungen werden durch umfangreiche Messungen mit vorläufigen Implementierungen des vorgeschlagenen Testkonzeptes unterstüzt. Dazu gehören Ergebnisse aus einer internationalen Round-Robin-Messkampagne für High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA)-Endgeräte und Ergebnisse aus zahlreichen Messungen an LTE Endgeräten, die in verschiedenen Laboren durchgeführt wurden. Eine Zusätzliche Validierung sowie die Untersuchung einiger spezifischer Aspekte erfolgt mit Hilfe von Simulationen

    The 30/20 GHz flight experiment system, phase 2. Volume 2: Experiment system description

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    A detailed technical description of the 30/20 GHz flight experiment system is presented. The overall communication system is described with performance analyses, communication operations, and experiment plans. Hardware descriptions of the payload are given with the tradeoff studies that led to the final design. The spacecraft bus which carries the payload is discussed and its interface with the launch vehicle system is described. Finally, the hardwares and the operations of the terrestrial segment are presented

    Energy Efficiency in Communications and Networks

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    The topic of "Energy Efficiency in Communications and Networks" attracts growing attention due to economical and environmental reasons. The amount of power consumed by information and communication technologies (ICT) is rapidly increasing, as well as the energy bill of service providers. According to a number of studies, ICT alone is responsible for a percentage which varies from 2% to 10% of the world power consumption. Thus, driving rising cost and sustainability concerns about the energy footprint of the IT infrastructure. Energy-efficiency is an aspect that until recently was only considered for battery driven devices. Today we see energy-efficiency becoming a pervasive issue that will need to be considered in all technology areas from device technology to systems management. This book is seeking to provide a compilation of novel research contributions on hardware design, architectures, protocols and algorithms that will improve the energy efficiency of communication devices and networks and lead to a more energy proportional technology infrastructure

    Nanosatellite Store-and-Forward Communication Systems for Remote Data Collection Applications

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    Due to compact design, cost-effectiveness and shorter development time, a nanosatellite constellation is seen as a viable space-based data-relay asset to collect data from remote places that are rather impractical to be linked by terrestrial means. While nanosatellites have these advantages, they have more inherent technical limitations because of limited space for subsystems and payloads. Nanosatellite S&F communication systems are notably challenging in this respect due to requirements on antennas, transceivers, and signal processing. Although nanosatellites can be scaled up for better resources and capabilities, smaller platforms (i.e., ≤6U CubeSat) tend to be used for cost-effectiveness and lower risk. This thesis dealt with the problem of designing a nanosatellite S&F communication system for delay-tolerant remote data collection applications considering: (a) technical constraints in hardware, processing capabilities, energy budget and space in both the nanosatellite and ground sensor terminal (GST) sides; (b) physical communication layer characteristics and constraints such as limited available bandwidth, LEO channel Doppler, attenuation and fading/shadowing effects, low transmit power and data rate, and multi-user interference among asynchronously transmitting terminals. We designed, developed, and operated an amateur radio payload with S&F communication and APRS-DP capabilities, and performed a post-launch communication failure investigation. We also investigated suitability of E-SSA protocol for IoT/M2M terminals to nanosatellite communication by analyzing performance and energy efficiency metrics. The thesis comprises nine chapters. Chapter 1 describes the research background, problem, objectives, state of research, potential contributions of this thesis, and a gist of methodology detailed in later chapters. Chapter 2 and 3 provide an extensive literature review. Chapter 2 reviews the previous research works on using nanosatellites for S&F communication for remote data collection, and the previous nanosatellite S&F missions. Such research works and nanosatellite missions were undertaken primarily in the context of non-commercial/civil applications. Then, Chapter 2 surveys the recent commercial nanosatellite IoT/M2M players and examines their proposed systems in terms of satellite platform, constellation design, communication technology, targeted applications, requirements, and performance. Chapter 3 presents a literature review on communication system architecture, physical layer and random-access schemes, protocols, and technologies relevant to satellite IoT/M2M systems. In the context of IoT/M2M applications, the constraints in energy budget, transmit power and available bandwidth limit the system’s capacity in terms of amount of data that can be received and number of GSTs that can be supported. In both nanosatellite and GST sides, there are stringent limitations in hardware complexity, processing capabilities and energy budget. Addressing these challenges requires a simple, spectrally and energy efficient asynchronous random-access communication protocol. This research investigated using the enhanced spread spectrum Aloha (E-SSA) protocol for satellite IoT/M2M uplink (terminal to satellite) communication and analyzed its performance and suitability for the said application. Chapter 4 discusses the BIRDS-2 CubeSat S&F remote data collection system, payload design, development, tests, and integration with the BIRDS-2 CubeSats. Chapter 5 discusses the investigation on communication design issues of BIRDS-2 CubeSat S&F payload, tackling both the methodology and findings of investigation. It is noted that there are only a few satellites that have carried an APRS-DP payload but even some of these failed due to communication, power, or software issues. In BIRDS-2 Project, considering tight constraints in a 1U CubeSat equipped with other subsystems and payloads, we developed a S&F/APRS-DP payload and integrated it with each of the three 1U CubeSats of participating countries. After launching the CubeSats from the ISS, several amateur operators confirmed reception downlink beacon messages, but full two-way communication failed due to uplink communication failure. Thus, this research not only studied the design and development of a S&F/APRS-DP payload suitable for a CubeSat platform, but also systematically investigated the causes of communication failure by on-orbit observation results and ground-based tests. We found that uplink failure was caused by two design problems that were overlooked during development, namely, the poor antenna performance and increased payload receiver noise floor due to satellite-radiated EMI coupled to the antenna. Chapter 6 first describes the enhanced spread spectrum Aloha (E-SSA) based nanosatellite IoT/M2M communication model implemented in Matlab and derives the mathematical definitions of packet loss rate (PLR), throughput (THR) and energy efficiency (EE) metrics. Then, it tackles the formulated baseband signal processing algorithm for E-SSA, including packet detection, channel estimation, demodulation and decoding. Chapter 7 presents the simulation results and discussion for Chapter 6. Chapter 8 tackles the S&F nanosatellite constellation design for global coverage and presents the results and findings. Chapter 9 describes the laboratory setups for validating the E-SSA protocol and then presents the findings. Finally, Chapter 9 also gives the summary, conclusions, and recommendations. Simulation results showed that for E-SSA protocol with the formulated algorithm, THR, PLR and EE metrics are more sensitive to MAC load G, received power variation σLN and Eb/N0, due to imperfect detection and channel estimation. With loose power control (σLN=3dB), at Eb/N0=14 dB, the system can be operated up to a maximum load of 1.3 bps/Hz, achieving a maximum THR of 1.25 bps/Hz with PLR<0.03. Without power control (σLN=6dB,9dB), at Eb/N0=14 dB, maximum load is also 1.3 bps/Hz, but achievable THR is lower than ~1 bps/Hz and PLR values can be as high as ~0.23. Worse PLR results are attributed to misdetection of lower power packets and demodulation/decoding errors. Both are caused by the combined effects of MUI, channel estimation errors, imperfect interference cancellation residue power, and noise. The PLR and THR can be improved by operating with higher Eb/N0 at the expense of lower energy efficiency. Then, laboratory validation experiments using a SDR-based platform confirmed that with G=0.1, Eb/N0=14dB, σLN=6dB, the formulated algorithm for E-SSA protocol can still work even with inaccurate oscillator (±2 ppm) at GSTs, obtaining experimental PLR result of 0.0650 compared to simulation result of 0.0352. However, this requires lowering the detection thresholds and takes significantly longer processing time. For the S&F nanosatellite constellation design, it was found that to achieve the target percent coverage time (PCT) of more than 95% across all latitudes, a 9x10 Hybrid constellation or a 10x10 Walker Delta constellation would be required.九州工業大学博士学位論文 学位記番号:工博甲第506号 学位授与年月日:令和2年9月25日1: Introduction|2: Nanosatellite S&F Research, Missions and Applications|3: Satellite S&F Communication Systems and Protocols|4: BIRDS-2 CubeSat S&F Data Collection System, Payload Design and Development|5: Investigation on Communication Design Issues of BIRDS-2 CubeSat APRS-DP/S&F Payload, Results and Discussion|6: E-SSA-based Nanosatellite IoT/M2M Communication System Model and Signal Processing Algorithm|7: Simulation Results and Discussion for E-SSA-based Nanosatellite IoT/M2M Communication System|8: Nanosatellite Constellation for Global Coverage|9: Experimental Laboratory Validation for E-SSA Protocol, Research Summary, Conclusions and Recommendations九州工業大学令和2年

    D2.2 Draft Overall 5G RAN Design

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    This deliverable provides the consolidated preliminary view of the METIS-II partners on the 5 th generation (5G) radio access network (RAN) design at a mid-point of the project. The overall 5G RAN is envisaged to operate over a wide range of spectrum bands comprising of heterogeneous spectrum usage scenarios. More precisely, the 5G air interface (AI) is expected to be composed of multiple so-called AI variants (AIVs), which include evolved legacy technology such as Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) as well as novel AIVs, which may be tailored to particular services or frequency bands.Arnold, P.; Bayer, N.; Belschner, J.; Rosowski, T.; Zimmermann, G.; Ericson, M.; Da Silva, IL.... (2016). D2.2 Draft Overall 5G RAN Design. https://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.17831.1424
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