16 research outputs found
Optimization of Spectrum Management in Massive Array Antenna Systems with MIMO
Fifth generation (5G), is being considered as a revolutionary technology in the telecommunication
domain whose the challenges are mainly to achieve signal quality and great ability to
work with free spectrum in the millimetre waves. Besides, other important innovations are the
introduction of a more current architecture and the use of multiple antennas in transmission
and reception. Digital communication using multiple input and multiple output (MIMO) wireless
links has recently emerged as one of the most significant technical advances in modern communications.
MIMO technology is able to offer a large increase in the capacity of these systems,
without requiring a considerable increase in bandwidth or power required for transmission.
This dissertation presents an overview of theoretical concepts of MIMO systems. With such a
system a spatial diversity gain can be obtained by using space-time codes, which simultaneously
exploit the spatial domain and the time domain. SISO, SIMO and MISO systems are differentiated
by their channel capacity and their configuration in relation to the number of antennas in the
transmitter/receiver. To verify the effectiveness of the MIMO systems a comparison between the
capacity of SISO and MIMO systems has been performed using the Shannon’s principles. In the
MIMO system some variations in the number of antennas arrays have been considered, and the
superiority of transmission gains of the MIMO systems have been demonstrated. Combined with
millimetre waves (mmWaves) technology, massive MIMO systems, where the number of antennas
in the base station and the number of users are large, is a promising solution.
SDR implementations have been performed considering a platform with Matlab code applied to
MIMO 2x2 Radio and Universal Software Peripheral Radio (USRP). A detailed study was initially
conducted to analyze the architecture of the USRP. Complex structures of MIMO systems can
be simplified by using mathematical methods implemented in Matlab for the synchronization of
the USRP in the receiver side. SISO transmission and reception techniques have been considered
to refine the synchronization (with 16-QAM), thus facilitating the future implementation of the
MIMO system. OpenAirInterface has been considered for 4G and 5G implementations of actual
mobile radio communication systems. Together with the practical MIMO, this type of solution is
the starting point for future hardware building blocks involving massive MIMO systems.A quinta geração (5G) está sendo considerada uma tecnologia revolucionária no setor de telecomunicações,
cujos desafios são principalmente a obtenção de qualidade de sinal e grande capacidade
de trabalhar com espectro livre nas ondas milimétricas. Além disso, outras inovações
importantes são a introdução de uma arquitetura mais atual e o uso de múltiplas antenas em
transmissão e recepção. A comunicação digital usando ligaçõe sem fio de múltiplas entradas e
múltiplas saídas (MIMO) emergiu recentemente como um dos avanços técnicos mais significativos
nas comunicações modernas. A tecnologia MIMO é capaz de oferecer um elevado aumento na
capacidade, sem exigir um aumento considerável na largura de banda ou potência transmitida.
Esta dissertação apresenta uma visão geral dos conceitos teóricos dos sistemas MIMO. Com esses
sistemas, um ganho de diversidade espacial pode ser obtido utilizando códigos espaço-tempo
reais. Os sistemas SISO, SIMO e MISO são diferenciados pela capacidade de seus canais e a sua
configuração em relação ao número de antenas no emissor/receptor. Para verificar a eficiência
dos sistemas MIMO, realizou-se uma comparação entre a capacidade dos sistemas SISO e MIMO
utilizado os princípios de Shannon. Nos sistemas MIMO condecideraram-se algumas variações no
número de agregados de antenas, e a superioridade dos ganhos de transmissão dos sistemas MIMO
foi demonstrada. Combinado com a tecnologia de ondas milimétricas (mmWaves), os sistemas
massivos MIMO, onde o número de antenas na estação base e o número de usuários são grandes,
são uma solução promissora.
As implementações do SDR foram realizadas considerando uma plataforma com código Matlab
aplicado aos rádios MIMO 2x2 e Universal Software Peripheral Radio (USRP). Um estudo detalhado
foi inicialmente conduzido para analisar a arquitetura da USRP. Estruturas complexas de sistemas
MIMO podem ser simplificadas usando métodos matemáticos implementados no Matlab para a
sincronização do USRP no lado do receptor. Consideraram-se técnicas de transmissão e recepção
SISO para refinar a sincronização (com 16-QAM), facilitando assim a implementação futura do
sistema MIMO . Considerou-se o OpenAirInterface para implementações 4G e 5G de sistemas
reais de comunicações móveis. Juntamente com o MIMO na pratica, este tipo de solução é
o ponto de partida para futuros blocos de construção de hardware envolvendo sistemas MIMO
massivos
1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface
A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance
Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure
A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium
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Array Architectures and Physical Layer Design for Millimeter-Wave Communications Beyond 5G
Ever increasing demands in mobile data rates have resulted in exploration of millimeter-wave (mmW) frequencies for the next generation (5G) wireless networks. Communications at mmW frequencies is presented with two keys challenges. Firstly, high propagation loss requires base stations (BSs) and user equipment (UEs) to use a large number of antennas and narrow beams to close the link with sufficient received signal power. Consequently, communications using narrow beams create a new challenge in channel estimation and link establishment based on fine angular probing. Current mmW system use analog phased arrays that can probe only one angle at the time which results in high latency during link establishment and channel tracking. It is desirable to design low latency beam training by exploring both physical layer designs and array architectures that could replace current 5G approaches and pave the way to the communications for frequency bands in higher mmW band and sub-THz region where larger antenna arrays and communications bandwidth can be exploited. To this end, we propose a novel signal processing techniques exploiting unique properties of mmW channel, and show both theoretically, in simulation and experiments its advantages over conventional approaches. Secondly, we explore different array architecture design and analyze their trade-offs between spectral efficiency and power consumption and area. For comprehensive comparison, we have developed a methodology for optimal design of system parameters for different array architecture candidates based on the spectral efficiency target, and use these parameters to estimate the array area and power consumption based on the circuits reported in the literature. We show that the hybrid analog and digital architectures have severe scalability concerns in radio frequency signal distribution with increased array size and spatial multiplexing levels, while the fully-digital array architectures have the best performance and power/area trade-offs.The developed approaches are based on a cross-disciplinary research that combines innovation in model based signal processing, machine learning, and radio hardware. This work is the first to apply compressive sensing (CS), a signal processing tool that exploits sparsity of mmW channel model, to accelerate beam training of mmW cellular system. The algorithm is designed to address practical issues including the requirement of cell discovery and synchronization that involves estimation of angular channel together with carrier frequency offset and timing offsets. We have analyzed the algorithm performance in the 5G compliant simulation and showed that an order of magnitude saving is achieved in initial access latency for the desired channel estimation accuracy. Moreover, we are the first to develop and implement a neural network assisted compressive beam alignment to deal with hardware impairments in mmW radios. We have used 60GHz mmW testbed to perform experiments and show that neural networks approach enhances alignment rate compared to CS. To further accelerate beam training, we proposed a novel frequency selective probing beams using the true-time-delay (TTD) analog array architecture. Our approach utilizes different subcarriers to scan different directions, and achieves a single-shot beam alignment, the fastest approach reported to date. Our comprehensive analysis of different array architectures and exploration of emerging architectures enabled us to develop an order of magnitude faster and energy efficient approaches for initial access and channel estimation in mmW systems
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IC-Antenna Co-Integration for Efficient and Scalable Millimeter-Wave Antenna Interfaces
Millimeter-wave (mm-wave) technology promises high speed, high system capacity and low latency interconnects with reduced cost. Applications like high data-rate wireless links, next generation automotive sensors and security body scanners highly depend on mm-wave technology innovations. As operating frequency moves to higher mm-wave bands, shrinking antenna dimensions enable co-integration of IC and antenna. Limited transistor output power at mm-wave requires multi-element arrays to satisfy communication and radar link budgets. This dissertation presents a wafer-scale compatible IC-antenna co-integration for efficient and scalable mm-wave antenna interfaces. The proposed IC-antenna co-integration approach is demonstrated through single antenna transmitters, a concurrent dual-polarization receiver front-end and polarization-duplex transmitter/receiver front-end. Chapter 2 discusses the challenge of mm-wave IC-antenna interfaces with prior art including antenna-in-package (AiP) and on-chip antennas. The 60 GHz efficient, scalable and wafer-scale compatible IC-antenna co-integration approach is presented demonstrating wide bandwidth and large efficiency which are comparable to system-level AiP techniques at a lower cost and fabrication complexity. Chapter 3 extends the proposed approach to a concurrent 60 GHz dual-polarization receiver front-end for short-range imaging/communication applications and polarization diversity based MIMO links. Active cancellation between orthogonal polarizations is adopted to achieve ∼ 30 dB cross-polarization leakage cancellation and concurrent dual-pol reception. Chapter 4 presents a 60 GHz simultaneous transmit and receive front-end to achieve efficient polarization-duplex operation based on dual-polarization IC-antenna co-integration. Transmitter leakage is suppressed at receiver input and output by intrinsic antenna isolation and a feed-forward passive canceller. Total average self-interference cancellation >40 dB is achieved for 1.07 GHz RF bandwidth at 60 GHz in the presence of a reflector
A COMPREHENSIVE OVERVIEW OF RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN RF-MEMS TECHNOLOGY-BASED HIGH-PERFORMANCE PASSIVE COMPONENTS FOR APPLICATIONS IN THE 5G AND FUTURE TELECOMMUNICATIONS SCENARIOS
The goal of this work is to provide an overview about the current development of radio-frequency microelectromechanical systems technology, with special attention towards those passive components bearing significant application potential in the currently developing 5G paradigm. Due to the required capabilities of such communication standard in terms of high data rates, extended allocated spectrum, use of massive MIMO (Multiple-Input-Multiple-Output) systems, beam steering and beam forming, the focus will be on devices like switches, phase shifters, attenuators, filters, and their packaging/integration. For each of the previous topics, several valuable contributions appeared in the last decade, underlining the improvements produced in the state of the art and the chance for RF-MEMS technology to play a prominent role in the actual implementation of the 5G infrastructure
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High Performance Local Oscillator Design for Next Generation Wireless Communication
Local Oscillator (LO) is an essential building block in modern wireless radios. In modern wireless radios, LO often serves as a reference of the carrier signal to modulate or demod- ulate the outgoing or incoming data. The LO signal should be a clean and stable source, such that the frequency or timing information of the carrier reference can be well-defined. However, as radio architecture evolves, the importance of LO path design has become much more important than before. Of late, many radio architecture innovations have exploited sophisticated LO generation schemes to meet the ever-increasing demands of wireless radio performances.
The focus of this thesis is to address challenges in the LO path design for next-generation high performance wireless radios. These challenges include (1) Congested spectrum at low radio frequency (RF) below 5GHz (2) Continuing miniaturization of integrated wireless radio, and (3) Fiber-fast (>10Gb/s) mm-wave wireless communication.
The thesis begins with a brief introduction of the aforementioned challenges followed by a discussion of the opportunities projected to overcome these challenges.
To address the challenge of congested spectrum at frequency below 5GHz, novel ra- dio architectures such as cognitive radio, software-defined radio, and full-duplex radio have drawn significant research interest. Cognitive radio is a radio architecture that opportunisti- cally utilize the unused spectrum in an environment to maximize spectrum usage efficiency. Energy-efficient spectrum sensing is the key to implementing cognitive radio. To enable energy-efficient spectrum sensing, a fast-hopping frequency synthesizer is an essential build- ing block to swiftly sweep the carrier frequency of the radio across the available spectrum. Chapter 2 of this thesis further highlights the challenges and trade-offs of the current LO gen-
eration scheme for possible use in sweeping LO-based spectrum analysis. It follows by intro- duction of the proposed fast-hopping LO architecture, its implementation and measurement results of the validated prototype. Chapter 3 proposes an embedded phase-shifting LO-path design for wideband RF self-interference cancellation for full-duplex radio. It demonstrates a synergistic design between the LO path and signal to perform self-interference cancellation.
To address the challenge of continuing miniaturization of integrated wireless radio, ring oscillator-based frequency synthesizer is an attractive candidate due to its compactness. Chapter 4 discussed the difficulty associated with implementing a Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) with ultra-small form-factor. It further proposes the concept sub-sampling PLL with time- based loop filter to address these challenges. A 65nm CMOS prototype and its measurement result are presented for validation of the concept.
In shifting from RF to mm-wave frequencies, the performance of wireless communication links is boosted by significant bandwidth and data-rate expansion. However, the demand for data-rate improvement is out-pacing the innovation of radio architectures. A >10Gb/s mm-wave wireless communication at 60GHz is required by emerging applications such as virtual-reality (VR) headsets, inter-rack data transmission at data center, and Ultra-High- Definition (UHD) TV home entertainment systems. Channel-bonding is considered to be a promising technique for achieving >10Gb/s wireless communication at 60GHz. Chapter 5 discusses the fundamental radio implementation challenges associated with channel-bonding for 60GHz wireless communication and the pros and cons of prior arts that attempted to address these challenges. It is followed by a discussion of the proposed 60GHz channel- bonding receiver, which utilizes only a single PLL and enables both contiguous and non- contiguous channel-bonding schemes.
Finally, Chapter 6 presents the conclusion of this thesis