9 research outputs found

    Desarrollo de una forma de onda GFDM con radio definida por software

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    In this paper the performance of a Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing waveform is evaluated when compared to an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing signal. For the development of the previous waveforms, the GNU radio software and the Software Defined Radio (SDR) equipment USRP N210 are used. Through a spectrum analyzer the power of both waveforms are measured and the Out-of-Band Radiation is analyzed. Then, the results obtained are compared and the advantages and disadvantages of the implementation of GFDM as a waveform within the fifth generation systems are exposed.En este documento se evalúa el desempeño de una forma de onda GFDM (Generalized Frequency Division Multiplexing) que es comparada con una señal OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing). Para el desarrollo de las anteriores formas de onda se utilizan el software GNU radio y los equipos de Radio Definida por Software (SDR) USRP N210. Mediante un analizador de espectros se mide la potencia de ambas formas de onda y se analiza la Radiación Fuera de Banda (OOB). Luego, se comparan los resultados obtenidos y se exponen las ventajas e inconvenientes de la implementación de GFDM como forma de onda dentro de los sistemas de quinta generación

    A novel design approach for 5G massive MIMO and NB-IoT green networks using a hybrid Jaya-differential evolution algorithm

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    Our main objective is to reduce power consumption by responding to the instantaneous bit rate demand by the user for 4th Generation (4G) and 5th Generation (5G) Massive MIMO network configurations. Moreover, we present and address the problem of designing green LTE networks with the Internet of Things (IoT) nodes. We consider the new NarrowBand-IoT (NB-IoT) wireless technology that will emerge in current and future access networks. In this context, we apply emerging evolutionary algorithms in the context of green network design. We investigate three different cases to show the performance of the new proposed algorithm, namely the 4G, 5G Massive MIMO, and the NB-IoT technologies. More specifically, we investigate the Teaching-Learning-Optimization (TLBO), the Jaya algorithm, the self-adaptive differential evolution jDE algorithm, and other hybrid algorithms. We introduce a new hybrid algorithm named Jaya-jDE that uses concepts from both Jaya and jDE algorithms in an effective way. The results show that 5G Massive MIMO networks require about 50% less power consumption than the 4G ones, and the NB-IoT in-band deployment requires about 10% less power than guard-band deployment. Moreover, Jaya-jDE emerges as the best algorithm based on the results

    Low-Power Wide Area Network Technologies for Internet-of-Things: A Comparative Review

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    The rapid growth of Internet-of-Things (IoT) in the current decade has led to the the development of a multitude of new access technologies targeted at low-power, wide area networks (LP-WANs). However, this has also created another challenge pertaining to technology selection. This paper reviews the performance of LP-WAN technologies for IoT, including design choices and their implications. We consider Sigfox, LoRaWAN, WavIoT, random phase multiple access (RPMA), narrow band IoT (NB-IoT) as well as LTE-M and assess their performance in terms of signal propagation, coverage and energy conservation. The comparative analyses presented in this paper are based on available data sheets and simulation results. A sensitivity analysis is also conducted to evaluate network performance in response to variations in system design parameters. Results show that each of RPMA, NB-IoT and LTE-M incurs at least 9 dB additional path loss relative to Sigfox and LoRaWAN. This study further reveals that with a 10% improvement in receiver sensitivity, NB-IoT 882 MHz and LoRaWAN can increase coverage by up to 398% and 142% respectively, without adverse effects on the energy requirements. Finally, extreme weather conditions can significantly reduce the active network life of LP-WANs. In particular, the results indicate that operating an IoT device in a temperature of -20∘C can shorten its life by about half; 53% (WavIoT, LoRaWAN, Sigfox, NB-IoT, RPMA) and 48% in LTE-M compared with environmental temperature of 40C

    Performance of narrow band internet of things (NBIoT) networks

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    Narrow Band Internet of Things (NBIoT) is a Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) technology that has been standardised by 3GPP in Release 13 to work in cellular networks [15]. The main characteristics of NBIoT are its extended coverage compared to other cellular technologies such as LTE; its high capacity is due to its narrow channel bandwidth of 180 KHz, which also supports the possibility of these devices having a long battery life of up to 10 years, as well as low device complexity - all of which result in low device costs [2]. NBIoT can be deployed in one of three different options, namely: a) standalone, b) in-band and c) guard band deployment mode. These characteristics of NBIoT makes it very useful in the IoT industry, allowing the technology to be used in a wide range of applications, such as health, smart cities, farming, wireless sensor networks and many more [1] [25]. NBIoT can be used to realise the maximum possible spectral efficiency, thereby increasing the capacity of the network. Penetration of NBIoT in the market has dominated other LPWANs like Sigfox and LoRA, with NBIoT having a technology share of close to 50 percent [31]. This study is aimed at exploring the deployment options of NBIoT and determining how network operators can realise the greatest value for their investment by efficiently utilising their allocated spectrum. The main target is to derive the best parameter combination for deployment of the NBIoT network with acceptable error rates in both the uplink and the downlink. Different characteristics of NBIoT were discussed in this study, and the performance of the various approaches investigated to determine their efficiency in relation to the needs of the IoT industry. The error rates of NBIoT, when used in an existing LTE network, were the main focus of this study. Software simulations were used to compare the different parameter settings to see which options provide the best efficiency and cost trade-offs for structuring an NBIoT network. The results of the tests done in this study showed that the error rates are lower for standalone deployment mode than for in-band mode, which is mainly due to less interference in standalone mode than in in-band mode. The results also show that data transmitted in smaller Transport Block Size (TBS) in the Down Link (DL) has less errors than if it’s transmitted in larger blocks. The results also show that the error rate gets lower as the number of subframe repetition increases in the downlink, which is mainly due to the redundancy in sending the same data multiple times. However in the uplink, the results show that the error rates are comparable when the signal has poor quality

    Non-orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing with Index Modulation

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    Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a well-established technique in wired and wireless communications due to its high spectral efficiency compared to other multicarrier transmission schemes. However, the explosion of Internet of Things (IoT) has demanded a more spectrally-efficient technique to utilize small bandwidths, on which numerous low-power low-rate devices operate. This thesis aims to provide solutions for this problem. First, the integration of index modulation to fast-OFDM, which is a special variant of OFDM, is investigated. The highest obtainable bit rate of this system is derived, which demonstrates enhancements compared to OFDM systems in the low-power low-rate regions. Furthermore, an improved one-dimension constellation is found to optimize the overall bit error rate (BER) of this system. Numerical results show that the proposed system exhibits enhancements in both bit rate and error performance, leading to higher spectral efficiency compared to OFDM in the low-power regions. The second part of the thesis is concerned with reducing the bandwidth consumed by multicarrier transmissions. This results in the mutual orthogonality among subchannels being relaxed, yielding a Non-orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (NFDM) system. The main contribution in this part includes a novel and feasible design for NFDM systems, which is capable of eliminating inter-channel interference (ICI), which is the major limitation of the conventional NFDM system. Because ICI is completely eliminated, the BER performance of the proposed system is the same as that of an OFDM system over additive white Gaussian noise channels. The power spectrum density (PSD) of the proposed system is also investigated, leading to design guidelines and tradeoffs between the PSD shape and the system's bit rate. Finally, index modulation is incorporated in the proposed NFDM systems. Thanks to our ICI-free design of NFDM, this combined system (NFDM-IM) and fast-OFDM-IM share a similar simple two-stage signal detection mechanism. Improved QAM constellations are found for NFDM-IM systems to optimize their overall BER. Obtained results show that with low modulation orders such as 8-QAM (Quadrature Amplitude Modulation), NFDM-IM systems employing the improved constellation achieve BER performance close to that of NFDM in the low BER regions. With equivalent occupied bandwidth and error performance, an NFDM-IM system with optimal 8-QAM constellation produces better spectral efficiency than the one using the conventional hexagonal constellation

    Evaluación de la calidad de la señal transmitida en sistemas de misión crítica de cuarta generación

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    Este trabajo fin de máster analiza las posibilidades de la señal de cuarta generación como solución en despliegues de misión crítica. Esto consiste en evaluar cómo le afecta a dicha señal emplear las técnicas definidas en el estándar que posibilitan su uso como solución en escenarios críticos, donde que las comunicaciones de todos los usuarios no caigan en ningún momento es vital.El trascurso del trabajo aborda diferentes fases, desde una inicial de planteamiento de posibles escenarios de misión crítica donde evaluar la señal de cuarta de generación, hasta la creación de bancos de pruebas hardware donde testear esas señales.Para completar dichas tareas se emplean las librerías de MATLAB para poder generar de manera software todas las señales, con las modificaciones pertinentes para salvar las limitaciones de estas. Las señales se validan sobre montajes reales en el laboratorio, donde se prepara una cadena transmisora de radiofrecuencia con hardware especializado de comunicaciones. Esta cadena puede trabajar en varios puntos, es decir, emitir con diferentes potencias por lo que se hace un barrido de todas ellas, que sumado a las muchas variaciones de potencia planteadas aumentará de manera notable la casuística de supuestos probados. También se verificarán técnicas de predistorsión digital que mejoren los resultados de distorsión dentro y fuera de banda.Además se estudia lo que ocurre cuando a esa señal de cuarta generación se suma una señal específica de comunicaciones críticas, la cual se evalúa según su proximidad frecuencial a la de cuarta generación o según la potencia con la que es transmitida.Todos estos resultados dan buena cuenta de cómo un sistema de cuarta generación comercial puede explotarse en un despliegue en comunicaciones críticas, concluyendo al final con sus beneficios y perjuicios a tener en cuenta para hacer que la comunicación sea posible en los niveles de exigencia que una situación crítica demanda.<br /

    Low-Complexity Multicarrier Waveform Processing Schemes fo Future Wireless Communications

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    Wireless communication systems deliver enormous variety of services and applications. Nowa- days, wireless communications play a key-role in many fields, such as industry, social life, education, and home automation. The growing demand for wireless services and applications has motivated the development of the next generation cellular radio access technology called fifth-generation new radio (5G-NR). The future networks are required to magnify the delivered user data rates to gigabits per second, reduce the communication latency below 1 ms, and en- able communications for massive number of simple devices. Those main features of the future networks come with new demands for the wireless communication systems, such as enhancing the efficiency of the radio spectrum use at below 6 GHz frequency bands, while supporting various services with quite different requirements for the waveform related key parameters. The current wireless systems lack the capabilities to handle those requirements. For exam- ple, the long-term evolution (LTE) employs the cyclic-prefix orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (CP-OFDM) waveform, which has critical drawbacks in the 5G-NR context. The basic drawback of CP-OFDM waveform is the lack of spectral localization. Therefore, spectrally enhanced variants of CP-OFDM or other multicarrier waveforms with well localized spectrum should be considered. This thesis investigates spectrally enhanced CP-OFDM (E-OFDM) schemes to suppress the out-of-band (OOB) emissions, which are normally produced by CP-OFDM. Commonly, the weighted overlap-and-add (WOLA) scheme applies smooth time-domain window on the CP- OFDM waveform, providing spectrally enhanced subcarriers and reducing the OOB emissions with very low additional computational complexity. Nevertheless, the suppression perfor- mance of WOLA-OFDM is not sufficient near the active subband. Another technique is based on filtering the CP-OFDM waveform, which is referred to as F-OFDM. F-OFDM is able to provide well-localized spectrum, however, with significant increase in the computational com- plexity in the basic scheme with time-domain filters. Also filter-bank multicarrier (FBMC) waveforms are included in this study. FBMC has been widely studied as a potential post- OFDM scheme with nearly ideal subcarrier spectrum localization. However, this scheme has quite high computational complexity while being limited to uniformly distributed sub- bands. Anyway, filter-bank based waveform processing is one of the main topics of this work. Instead of traditional polyphase network (PPN) based uniform filter banks, the focus is on fast-convolution filter banks (FC-FBs), which utilize fast Fourier transform (FFT) domain processing to realize effectively filter-banks with high flexibility in terms of subcarrier bandwidths and center frequencies. FC-FBs are applied for both FBMC and F-OFDM waveform genera- tion and processing with greatly increased flexibility and significantly reduced computational complexity. This study proposes novel structures for FC-FB processing based on decomposition of the FC-FB structure consisting of forward and inverse discrete Fourier transforms (DFT and IDFT). The decomposition of multirate FC provides means of reducing the computational complexity in some important specific scenarios. A generic FC decomposition model is proposed and analyzed. This scheme is mathematically equivalent to the corresponding direct FC imple- mentation, with exactly the same performance. The benefits of the optimized decomposition structure appear mainly in communication scenarios with relatively narrow active transmis- sion band, resulting in significantly reduced computational complexity compared to the direct FC structure. The narrowband scenarios find their places in the recent 3GPP specification of cellular low- power wide-area (LPWA) access technology called narrowband internet-of-things (NB-IoT). NB-IoT aims at introducing the IoT to LTE and GSM frequency bands in coexistence with those technologies. NB-IoT uses CP-OFDM based waveforms with parameters compatible with the LTE. However, additional means are needed also for NB-IoT transmitters to improve the spec- trum localization. For NB-IoT user devices, it is important to consider ultra-low complexity solutions, and a look-up table (LUT) based approach is proposed to implement NB-IoT uplink transmitters with filtered waveforms. This approach provides completely multiplication-free digital baseband implementations and the addition rates are similar or smaller than in the basic NB-IoT waveform generation without the needed elements for spectrum enhancement. The basic idea includes storing full or partial waveforms for all possible data symbol combinations. Then the transmitted waveform is composed through summation of needed stored partial waveforms and trivial phase rotations. The LUT based scheme is developed with different vari- ants tackling practical implementations issues of NB-IoT device transmitters, considering also the effects of nonlinear power amplifier. Moreover, a completely multiplication and addition- free LUT variant is proposed and found to be feasible for very narrowband transmission, with up to 3 subcarriers. The finite-wordlength performance of LUT variants is evaluated through simulations

    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
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