86 research outputs found
Characterisation of MIMO radio propagation channels
Due to the incessant requirement for higher performance radio systems, wireless designers have been constantly seeking ways to improve spectrum efficiency, link reliability, service quality, and radio network coverage. During the past few years, space-time technology which employs multiple antennas along with suitable signalling schemes and receiver architectures has been seen as a powerful tool for the implementation of the aforementioned requirements. In particular, the concept of communications via Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) links has emerged as one of the major contending ideas for next generation ad-hoc and cellular systems. This is inherently due to the capacities expected when multiple antennas are employed at both ends of the radio link. Such a mobile radio propagation channel constitutes a MIMO system. Multiple antenna technologies and in particular MIMO signalling are envisaged for a number of standards such as the next generation of Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) technology known as 802.1 ln and the development of the Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX) project, such as the 802.16e. For the efficient design, performance evaluation and deployment of such multiple antenna (space-time) systems, it becomes increasingly important to understand the characteristics of the spatial radio channel. This criterion has led to the development of new sounding systems, which can measure both spatial and temporal channel information. In this thesis, a novel semi-sequential wideband MIMO sounder is presented, which is suitable for high-resolution radio channel measurements. The sounder produces a frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) or chirp signal with variable bandwidth, centre frequency and waveform repetition rate. It has programmable bandwidth up to 300 MHz and waveform repetition rates up to 300 Hz, and could be used to measure conventional high- resolution delay/Doppler information as well as spatial channel information such as Direction of Arrival (DOA) and Direction of Departure (DOD). Notably the knowledge of the angular information at the link ends could be used to properly design and develop systems such as smart antennas. This thesis examines the theory of multiple antenna propagation channels, the sounding architecture required for the measurement of such spatial channel information and the signal processing which is used to quantify and analyse such measurement data. Over 700 measurement files were collected corresponding to over 175,000 impulse responses with different sounder and antenna array configurations. These included measurements in the Universal Mobile Telecommunication Systems Frequency Division Duplex (UMTS-FDD) uplink band, the 2.25 GHz and 5.8 GHz bands allocated for studio broadcast MIMO video links, and the 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz ISM bands allocated for Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) activity as well as for a wide range of future systems defined in the WiMAX project. The measurements were collected predominantly for indoor and some outdoor multiple antenna channels using sounding signals with 60 MHz, 96 MHz and 240 MHz bandwidth. A wide range of different MIMO antenna array configurations are examined in this thesis with varying space, time and frequency resolutions. Measurements can be generally subdivided into three main categories, namely measurements at different locations in the environment (static), measurements while moving at regular intervals step by step (spatial), and measurements while the receiver (or transmitter) is on the move (dynamic). High-scattering as well as time-varying MIMO channels are examined for different antenna array structures
Interference charecterisation, location and bandwidth estimation in emerging WiFi networks
Wireless LAN technology based on the IEEE 802.11 standard, commonly referred
to as WiFi, has been hugely successful not only for the last hop access to the Internet
in home, office and hotspot scenarios but also for realising wireless backhaul in mesh
networks and for point -to -point long- distance wireless communication. This success
can be mainly attributed to two reasons: low cost of 802.11 hardware from reaching
economies of scale, and operation in the unlicensed bands of wireless spectrum.The popularity of WiFi, in particular for indoor wireless access at homes and offices,
has led to significant amount of research effort looking at the performance issues
arising from various factors, including interference, CSMA/CA based MAC protocol
used by 802.11 devices, the impact of link and physical layer overheads on application
performance, and spatio-temporal channel variations. These factors affect the performance
of applications and services that run over WiFi networks. In this thesis, we
experimentally investigate the effects of some of the above mentioned factors in the
context of emerging WiFi network scenarios such as multi- interface indoor mesh networks,
802.11n -based WiFi networks and WiFi networks with virtual access points
(VAPs). More specifically, this thesis comprises of four experimental characterisation
studies: (i) measure prevalence and severity of co- channel interference in urban WiFi
deployments; (ii) characterise interference in multi- interface indoor mesh networks;
(iii) study the effect of spatio-temporal channel variations, VAPs and multi -band operation
on WiFi fingerprinting based location estimation; and (iv) study the effects of
newly introduced features in 802.11n like frame aggregation (FA) on available bandwidth
estimation.With growing density of WiFi deployments especially in urban areas, co- channel
interference becomes a major factor that adversely affects network performance. To
characterise the nature of this phenomena at a city scale, we propose using a new measurement
methodology called mobile crowdsensing. The idea is to leverage commodity
smartphones and the natural mobility of people to characterise urban WiFi co- channel
interference. Specifically, we report measurement results obtained for Edinburgh, a
representative European city, on detecting the presence of deployed WiFi APs via the
mobile crowdsensing approach. These show that few channels in 2.4GHz are heavily
used and there is hardly any activity in the 5GHz band even though relatively it
has a greater number of available channels. Spatial analysis of spectrum usage reveals
that co- channel interference among nearby APs operating in the same channel
can be a serious problem with around 10 APs contending with each other in many locations. We find that the characteristics of WiFi deployments at city -scale are similar
to those of WiFi deployments in public spaces of different indoor environments. We
validate our approach in comparison with wardriving, and also show that our findings
generally match with previous studies based on other measurement approaches. As
an application of the mobile crowdsensing based urban WiFi monitoring, we outline a
cloud based WiFi router configuration service for better interference management with
global awareness in urban areas.For mesh networks, the use of multiple radio interfaces is widely seen as a practical
way to achieve high end -to -end network performance and better utilisation of
available spectrum. However this gives rise to another type of interference (referred to
as coexistence interference) due to co- location of multiple radio interfaces. We show
that such interference can be so severe that it prevents concurrent successful operation
of collocated interfaces even when they use channels from widely different frequency
bands. We propose the use of antenna polarisation to mitigate such interference and
experimentally study its benefits in both multi -band and single -band configurations. In
particular, we show that using differently polarised antennas on a multi -radio platform
can be a helpful counteracting mechanism for alleviating receiver blocking and adjacent
channel interference phenomena that underlie multi -radio coexistence interference.
We also validate observations about adjacent channel interference from previous
studies via direct and microscopic observation of MAC behaviour.Location is an indispensable information for navigation and sensing applications.
The rapidly growing adoption of smartphones has resulted in a plethora of mobile
applications that rely on position information (e.g., shopping apps that use user position
information to recommend products to users and help them to find what they want
in the store). WiFi fingerprinting is a popular and well studied approach for indoor
location estimation that leverages the existing WiFi infrastructure and works based on
the difference in strengths of the received AP signals at different locations. However,
understanding the impact of WiFi network deployment aspects such as multi -band
APs and VAPs has not received much attention in the literature. We first examine the
impact of various aspects underlying a WiFi fingerprinting system. Specifically, we
investigate different definitions for fingerprinting and location estimation algorithms
across different indoor environments ranging from a multi- storey office building to
shopping centres of different sizes. Our results show that the fingerprint definition
is as important as the choice of location estimation algorithm and there is no single
combination of these two that works across all environments or even all floors of a given environment. We then consider the effect of WiFi frequency bands (e.g., 2.4GHz
and 5GHz) and the presence of virtual access points (VAPs) on location accuracy with
WiFi fingerprinting. Our results demonstrate that lower co- channel interference in the
5GHz band yields more accurate location estimation. We show that the inclusion of
VAPs has a significant impact on the location accuracy of WiFi fingerprinting systems;
we analyse the potential reasons to explain the findings.End -to -end available bandwidth estimation (ABE) has a wide range of uses, from
adaptive application content delivery, transport-level transmission rate adaptation and
admission control to traffic engineering and peer node selection in peer -to- peer /overlay
networks [ 1, 2]. Given its importance, it has been received much research attention in
both wired data networks and legacy WiFi networks (based on 802.11 a/b /g standards),
resulting in different ABE techniques and tools proposed to optimise different criteria
and suit different scenarios. However, effects of new MAC/PHY layer enhancements
in new and next generation WiFi networks (based on 802.11n and 802.11ac
standards) have not been studied yet. We experimentally find that among different
new features like frame aggregation, channel bonding and MIMO modes (spacial division
multiplexing), frame aggregation has the most harmful effect as it has direct
effect on ABE by distorting the measurement probing traffic pattern commonly used
to estimate available bandwidth. Frame aggregation is also specified in both 802.11n
and 802.1 lac standards as a mandatory feature to be supported. We study the effect of
enabling frame aggregation, for the first time, on the performance of the ABE using an
indoor 802.11n wireless testbed. The analysis of results obtained using three tools -
representing two main Probe Rate Model (PRM) and Probe Gap Model (PGM) based
approaches for ABE - led us to come up with the two key principles of jumbo probes
and having longer measurement probe train sizes to counter the effects of aggregating
frames on the performance of ABE tools. Then, we develop a new tool, WBest+ that
is aware of the underlying frame aggregation by incorporating these principles. The
experimental evaluation of WBest+ shows more accurate ABE in the presence of frame
aggregation.Overall, the contributions of this thesis fall in three categories - experimental
characterisation, measurement techniques and mitigation/solution approaches for performance
problems in emerging WiFi network scenarios. The influence of various factors
mentioned above are all studied via experimental evaluation in a testbed or real - world setting. Specifically, co- existence interference characterisation and evaluation
of available bandwidth techniques are done using indoor testbeds, whereas characterisation of urban WiFi networks and WiFi fingerprinting based location estimation are
carried out in real environments. New measurement approaches are also introduced
to aid better experimental evaluation or proposed as new measurement tools. These
include mobile crowdsensing based WiFi monitoring; MAC/PHY layer monitoring of
co- existence interference; and WBest+ tool for available bandwidth estimation. Finally,
new mitigation approaches are proposed to address challenges and problems
identified throughout the characterisation studies. These include: a proposal for crowd - based interference management in large scale uncoordinated WiFi networks; exploiting
antenna polarisation diversity to remedy the effects of co- existence interference
in multi -interface platforms; taking advantage of VAPs and multi -band operation for
better location estimation; and introducing the jumbo frame concept and longer probe
train sizes to improve performance of ABE tools in next generation WiFi networks
Performance evaluation of detection algorithms for MOMI OFDM systems
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-86).Introduction of Multi Input Multi Output (MIMO) Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) as the base air interface method for Next Generation Network (NGN) will face a number of challenges from hostile channel conditions to interference from other users. This would result in an increase of detection complexity required for mobile systems. Complex detection will reduce the battery life of mobile devices because of the many calculations that have to be done to decode the signal. Very powerful detection algorithms exist but they introduce high detection complexity. NGN will employ different MIMO systems, but this research will consider spatially multiplexed MIMO which is used to improve the data rate and network capacity. In NGN different multi access modulation schemes will be used for uplink and downlink but they both have OFDM as the basic building block. In this work performance of MIMO OFDM is investigated in different channels models and detection algorithms. A low complexity detection scheme is proposed in this research to improve performance of MIMO OFDM. The proposed detection scheme is investigated for different channel characteristics. Realistic channels conditions are introduced to evaluate the performance of the proposed detection scheme. We analyze weaknesses of existing linear detectors and the enhancements that can be done to improve their performance in different channel conditions. Performance of the detectors is evaluated by comparison of Bit Error Rate (BER) and Symbol Error Rate (SER) against signal to noise ratio (SNR). This thesis proposes a detector which shows a higher complexity than linear detectors but less than Maximum Likelihood Detector (MLD). The proposed detector shows significant BER improvement in all channel conditions. For better performance evaluation this work also investigates performance of MIMO OFDM detectors in realistic channels like Kronecker and Weichselberger channel models
Pattern Diversity Characterization of Reconfigurable Antenna Arrays for Next Generation Wireless Systems
The use of multi-antenna technology in wireless radio communications has attracted tremendous attention due to its potential to increase data rates without requiring additional bandwidth and transmission power. This has been driven by the burgeoning demand for high data rates and the need for instantaneous and ubiquitous access to information. It is therefore no surprise that current and future generation wireless standards such as LTE and WiMAX have adopted the use of adaptive multi-antenna systems also known as adaptive Multiple Input and Multiple Output (MIMO) as their de facto transmission technology. In this thesis work, we focus on the design of a smart wireless antenna system, and the study of relevant techniques that enable us to reap the benefits of their deployment in small wireless devices with MIMO capability. Specifically, we employ a new class of adaptive antenna systems known as Reconfigurable Antenna Systems (RAS) for portable devices. These antennas are capable of dynamically changing their electrical and radiation characteristics to suit the conditions of the wireless channel. The changing radiation patterns lead to pattern diversity gains that improve system performance. This is in contrast to conventional non-reconfigurable arrays which depend on signal processing techniques such as antenna grouping and beamforming to achieve performance gains. However, despite the demonstrable system-level performance benefits of RAS in adaptive MIMO, few of these antennas have been adopted and integrated in state-of-the-art wireless standards. Their usage has been partly inhibited by the prohibitive costs of implementation and operation in a real wireless infrastructure. As part of this thesis research effort we attempt to integrate these new antennas into a cost-effective real wireless MIMO testbed for use in current generation technologies. The solution integration is carried-out through the use of readily available software-defined radio frameworks. We first design, analyze and characterize the pattern diversity in RAS antenna arrays that resonate at frequencies suitable for 4G applications. We then study the benefits of pattern diversity obtained from RAS arrays over conventional space diversity approaches such as antenna grouping and beamforming. This dissertation also presents low-complexity adaptive physical layer models and algorithms to exploit the benefits of RAS array integration in MIMO wireless systems. We implement these algorithms in software-defined radio frameworks, experimentally test, and benchmark them against other established approaches in literature. And finally, integrate and test these RAS array design prototypes as part of the MIMO wireless system that leverages a state-of-the-art wireless base station and mobile terminals.Ph.D., Electrical Engineering -- Drexel University, 201
SPECTRUM SENSING AND COOPERATION IN COGNITIVE-OFDM BASED WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS
The world has witnessed the development of many wireless systems and
applications. In addition to the large number of existing devices, such development of
new and advanced wireless systems increases rapidly the demand for more radio
spectrum. The radio spectrum is a limited natural resource; however, it has been
observed that it is not efficiently utilized. Consequently, different dynamic spectrum
access techniques have been proposed as solutions for such an inefficient use of the
spectrum. Cognitive Radio (CR) is a promising intelligent technology that can identify
the unoccupied portions of spectrum and opportunistically uses those portions with
satisfyingly high capacity and low interference to the primary users (i.e., licensed users).
The CR can be distinguished from the classical radio systems mainly by its awareness
about its surrounding radio frequency environment. The spectrum sensing task is the
main key for such awareness. Due to many advantages, Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing system (OFDM) has been proposed as a potential candidate for the CR‟s
physical layer. Additionally, the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) in an OFDM receiver
supports the performance of a wide band spectrum analysis. Multitaper spectrum
estimation method (MTM) is a non-coherent promising spectrum sensing technique. It
tolerates problems related to bad biasing and large variance of power estimates.
This thesis focuses, generally, on the local, multi antenna based, and global
cooperative spectrum sensing techniques at physical layer in OFDM-based CR systems.
It starts with an investigation on the performance of using MTM and MTM with
singular value decomposition in CR networks using simulation. The Optimal MTM
parameters are then found. The optimal MTM based detector theoretical formulae are
derived. Different optimal and suboptimal multi antenna based spectrum sensing
techniques are proposed to improve the local spectrum sensing performance. Finally, a
new concept of cooperative spectrum sensing is introduced, and new strategies are
proposed to optimize the hard cooperative spectrum sensing in CR networks.
The MTM performance is controlled by the half time bandwidth product and
number of tapers. In this thesis, such parameters have been optimized using Monte
Carlo simulation. The binary hypothesis test, here, is developed to ensure that the effect
of choosing optimum MTM parameters is based upon performance evaluation. The
results show how these optimal parameters give the highest performance with minimum
complexity when MTM is used locally at CR.
The optimal MTM based detector has been derived using Neyman-Pearson
criterion. That includes probabilities of detection, false alarm and misses detection
approximate derivations in different wireless environments. The threshold and number
of sensed samples controlling is based on this theoretical work.
In order to improve the local spectrum sensing performance at each CR, in the CR
network, multi antenna spectrum sensing techniques are proposed using MTM and
MTM with singular value decomposition in this thesis. The statistical theoretical
formulae of the proposed techniques are derived including the different probabilities.
ii
The proposed techniques include optimal, that requires prior information about the
primary user signal, and two suboptimal multi antenna spectrum sensing techniques
having similar performances with different computation complexity; these do not need
prior information about the primary user signalling. The work here includes derivations
for the periodogram multi antenna case.
Finally, in hard cooperative spectrum sensing, the cooperation optimization is
necessary to improve the overall performance, and/or minimize the number of data to be
sent to the main CR-base station. In this thesis, a new optimization method based on
optimizing the number of locally sensed samples at each CR is proposed with two
different strategies. Furthermore, the different factors that affect the hard cooperative
spectrum sensing optimization are investigated and analysed and a new cooperation
scheme in spectrum sensing, the master node, is proposed.Ministry of Interior-Kingdom of Saudi Arabi
On geometry-base statistical channel models for MIMO wireles communications
El uso de sistemas de comunicación de banda ancha de múltiple entradamúltiple salida (Multiple Input Multiple Output MIMO) es actualmente objeto de un interés considerable. Una razón para esto es el reciente desarrollo de sistemas de comunicación móvil de tercera generación (3G) y superiores, tales como la tecnologÃa de banda ancha Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA, por sus siglas en inglés), la cual proporciona canales de radio de 5 MHz de ancho de banda. Para el diseño y la simulación de estos sistemas de radio móviles que usan propagación inalámbrica MIMO (como Wideband-CDMA por ejemplo), necesitamos modelos de canal que provean la requerida información espacial y temporal necesaria para el estudio de tales sistemas, esto es, los parámetros básicos de modelado en los dominios del espacio y el tiempo. Como ejemplo podemos mencionar, el valor cuadrático medio de la dispersión del retardo (Delay spread DS) el cual está directamente relacionado a la capacidad de un sistema de comunicación especÃfico y nos da una idea aproximada de la complejidad del receptor. En esta tesis, se propone un modelo basado en geometrÃa con enfoque en grupos (clusters) y es utilizado para el análisis en los dominios del espacio y el tiempo para condiciones estacionarias, y para representar los perfiles de potencia-angulo-retardo (Power Delay Angle Profiles PDAPs) de los componentes multi-trayectoria en ambientes urbanos. Además, se han derivado soluciones en formas cerradas para las expresiones en el dominio del ángulo (espacial) y del tiempo. La investigación previa sobre el modelado de canales cubre una amplia variedad de aspectos en varios niveles de detalle, incluyendo análisis para condiciones no estacionarias. Sin embargo el trabajo presentado en la literatura no incluye las relaciones entre los grupos (cluster) fÃsicos y los PDAPs. El modelo propuesto basado en grupos (clusters) puede ser usado para mejorar aún más el desempeño en condiciones estacionarias de los sistemas de comunicaciones móviles actuales y futuros tales como los sistemas de comunicación MIMO de banda ancha. En la tesis también se presenta un análisis en el dominio del ángulo (espacial) y del tiempo respectivamente, a través de las funciones densidad de probabilidad (PDF) de la dirección de llegada (Direction of Arrival DOA) y el tiempo de llegada (Time of Arrival TOA) para el modelo basado en grupos. A fin de evaluar las funciones de probabilidad teóricas derivadas, éstas han sido comparadas con resultados experimentales publicados en la literatura. La comparación con estos resultados experimentales muestran una buena concordancia, no obstante la técnica de modelado presentada en esta tesis se encuentra limitada a condiciones estacionarias del canal. La condición de no estacionariedad se ubica más allá del alcance de esta tesis, es decir, el modelo propuesto no incorpora el efecto Doppler en los análisis
Cooperative Radio Communications for Green Smart Environments
The demand for mobile connectivity is continuously increasing, and by 2020 Mobile and Wireless Communications will serve not only very dense populations of mobile phones and nomadic computers, but also the expected multiplicity of devices and sensors located in machines, vehicles, health systems and city infrastructures. Future Mobile Networks are then faced with many new scenarios and use cases, which will load the networks with different data traffic patterns, in new or shared spectrum bands, creating new specific requirements. This book addresses both the techniques to model, analyse and optimise the radio links and transmission systems in such scenarios, together with the most advanced radio access, resource management and mobile networking technologies. This text summarises the work performed by more than 500 researchers from more than 120 institutions in Europe, America and Asia, from both academia and industries, within the framework of the COST IC1004 Action on "Cooperative Radio Communications for Green and Smart Environments". The book will have appeal to graduates and researchers in the Radio Communications area, and also to engineers working in the Wireless industry. Topics discussed in this book include: • Radio waves propagation phenomena in diverse urban, indoor, vehicular and body environments• Measurements, characterization, and modelling of radio channels beyond 4G networks• Key issues in Vehicle (V2X) communication• Wireless Body Area Networks, including specific Radio Channel Models for WBANs• Energy efficiency and resource management enhancements in Radio Access Networks• Definitions and models for the virtualised and cloud RAN architectures• Advances on feasible indoor localization and tracking techniques• Recent findings and innovations in antenna systems for communications• Physical Layer Network Coding for next generation wireless systems• Methods and techniques for MIMO Over the Air (OTA) testin
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