715 research outputs found

    Codificação de bloco espaço-tempo na habilitação de sistemas MIMO-OFDM

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    The available bandwidth in the radio frequency spectrum is decreasing due to the growing number of applications and users. Therefore, in order to ensure a sustainable evolution in this area it is crucial to develop strategies to optimize the spectrum usage. Joining RADAR and communication functionalities in a single terminal represents exactly this same strategy. As such, the two functionalities, which usually compete for the same radio resources, can coexist through a cooperative relation in which they can thrive and cease to introduce interferences in between them. In this dissertation, the integration of both systems is achieved through the use of OFDM as the common waveform. Through the space time/frequency block codes, namely the Tarokh coding it is possible to introduce spatial diversity and orthogonality to the system, therefore increasing the system’s robustness and allowing to use the virtual antenna concept, which enables improved RADAR resolution and detection. In order to evaluate the system’s performance, a simulation platform was developed. In these simulations we start by firstly considering RADAR detection for single and multiple antenna systems and then integrate the radar and communication functionalities. We have verified the good performance levels of the proposed system, which thanks to its low complexity can be an interesting RadCom approach for future wireless systems.A largura de banda disponível no espectro de radio frequência enfrenta uma diminuição face ao crescente número de aplicações e utilizadores. Assim, por forma a assegurar uma evolução sustentável neste campo é fulcral desenvolver estratégias que otimizem o uso do espectro. A junção das funcionalidades RADAR e comunicação num só terminal faz parte dessa estratégia. Desta forma, duas funcionalidades usualmente concorrentes pelos mesmos recursos radio, podem coexistir em cooperação, sem interferência entre ambos. Nesta dissertação a integração dos dois sistemas é conseguida através do uso do OFDM como forma de onda comum. Através de códigos desenhados no espaço-tempo/frequência, nomeadamente a codificação de Tarokh, foi possível introduzir diversidade espacial e ortogonalidade no sistema, aumentando assim a sua robustez e permitindo o uso do conceito de antenas virtuais, que por sua vez possibilitam uma melhoria na resolução e deteção do RADAR. De forma a avaliar o desempenho do sistema desenvolveu-se uma plataforma de simulação. Nesta plataforma começou-se por considerar a deteção RADAR para sistemas com uma e múltiplas antenas, onde posteriormente se integraram as funcionalidades de comunicação. Os resultados obtidos mostraram um excelente desempenho do sistema, que devido à sua baixa complexidade, pode ser um sistema RadCom interessante para os futuros sistemas sem fios.Mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e Telecomunicaçõe

    Frequency diversity wideband digital receiver and signal processor for solid-state dual-polarimetric weather radars

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    2012 Summer.Includes bibliographical references.The recent spate in the use of solid-state transmitters for weather radar systems has unexceptionably revolutionized the research in meteorology. The solid-state transmitters allow transmission of low peak powers without losing the radar range resolution by allowing the use of pulse compression waveforms. In this research, a novel frequency-diversity wideband waveform is proposed and realized to extenuate the low sensitivity of solid-state radars and mitigate the blind range problem tied with the longer pulse compression waveforms. The latest developments in the computing landscape have permitted the design of wideband digital receivers which can process this novel waveform on Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) chips. In terms of signal processing, wideband systems are generally characterized by the fact that the bandwidth of the signal of interest is comparable to the sampled bandwidth; that is, a band of frequencies must be selected and filtered out from a comparable spectral window in which the signal might occur. The development of such a wideband digital receiver opens a window for exciting research opportunities for improved estimation of precipitation measurements for higher frequency systems such as X, Ku and Ka bands, satellite-borne radars and other solid-state ground-based radars. This research describes various unique challenges associated with the design of a multi-channel wideband receiver. The receiver consists of twelve channels which simultaneously downconvert and filter the digitized intermediate-frequency (IF) signal for radar data processing. The product processing for the multi-channel digital receiver mandates a software and network architecture which provides for generating and archiving a single meteorological product profile culled from multi-pulse profiles at an increased data date. The multi-channel digital receiver also continuously samples the transmit pulse for calibration of radar receiver gain and transmit power. The multi-channel digital receiver has been successfully deployed as a key component in the recently developed National Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA) Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Dual-Frequency Dual-Polarization Doppler Radar (D3R). The D3R is the principal ground validation instrument for the precipitation measurements of the Dual Precipitation Radar (DPR) onboard the GPM Core Observatory satellite scheduled for launch in 2014. The D3R system employs two broadly separated frequencies at Ku- and Ka-bands that together make measurements for precipitation types which need higher sensitivity such as light rain, drizzle and snow. This research describes unique design space to configure the digital receiver for D3R at several processing levels. At length, this research presents analysis and results obtained by employing the multi-carrier waveforms for D3R during the 2012 GPM Cold-Season Precipitation Experiment (GCPEx) campaign in Canada

    Integrated Sensing and Communications: Towards Dual-functional Wireless Networks for 6G and Beyond

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    As the standardization of 5G solidifies, researchers are speculating what 6G will be. The integration of sensing functionality is emerging as a key feature of the 6G Radio Access Network (RAN), allowing for the exploitation of dense cell infrastructures to construct a perceptive network. In this IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Commmunications (JSAC) Special Issue overview, we provide a comprehensive review on the background, range of key applications and state-of-the-art approaches of Integrated Sensing and Communications (ISAC). We commence by discussing the interplay between sensing and communications (S&C) from a historical point of view, and then consider the multiple facets of ISAC and the resulting performance gains. By introducing both ongoing and potential use cases, we shed light on the industrial progress and standardization activities related to ISAC. We analyze a number of performance tradeoffs between S&C, spanning from information theoretical limits to physical layer performance tradeoffs, and the cross-layer design tradeoffs. Next, we discuss the signal processing aspects of ISAC, namely ISAC waveform design and receive signal processing. As a step further, we provide our vision on the deeper integration between S&C within the framework of perceptive networks, where the two functionalities are expected to mutually assist each other, i.e., via communication-assisted sensing and sensing-assisted communications. Finally, we identify the potential integration of ISAC with other emerging communication technologies, and their positive impacts on the future of wireless networks

    Remote Human Vital Sign Monitoring Using Multiple-Input Multiple-Output Radar at Millimeter-Wave Frequencies

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    Non-contact respiration rate (RR) and heart rate (HR) monitoring using millimeter-wave (mmWave) radars has gained lots of attention for medical, civilian, and military applications. These mmWave radars are small, light, and portable which can be deployed to various places. To increase the accuracy of RR and HR detection, distributed multi-input multi-output (MIMO) radar can be used to acquire non-redundant information of vital sign signals from different perspectives because each MIMO channel has different fields of view with respect to the subject under test (SUT). This dissertation investigates the use of a Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) radar operating at 77-81 GHz for this application. Vital sign signal is first reconstructed with Arctangent Demodulation (AD) method using phase change’s information collected by the radar due to chest wall displacement from respiration and heartbeat activities. Since the heartbeat signals can be corrupted and concealed by the third/fourth harmonics of the respiratory signals as well as random body motion (RBM) from the SUT, we have developed an automatic Heartbeat Template (HBT) extraction method based on Constellation Diagrams of the received signals. The extraction method will automatically spot and extract signals’ portions that carry good amount of heartbeat signals which are not corrupted by the RBM. The extracted HBT is then used as an adapted wavelet for Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) to reduce interferences from respiratory harmonics and RBM, as well as magnify the heartbeat signals. As the nature of RBM is unpredictable, the extracted HBT may not completely cancel the interferences from RBM. Therefore, to provide better HR detection’s accuracy, we have also developed a spectral-based HR selection method to gather frequency spectra of heartbeat signals from different MIMO channels. Based on this gathered spectral information, we can determine an accurate HR even if the heartbeat signals are significantly concealed by the RBM. To further improve the detection’s accuracy of RR and HR, two deep learning (DL) frameworks are also investigated. First, a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) has been proposed to optimally select clean MIMO channels and eliminate MIMO channels with low SNR of heartbeat signals. After that, a Multi-layer Perceptron (MLP) neural network (NN) is utilized to reconstruct the heartbeat signals that will be used to assess and select the final HR with high confidence

    RAPID: Retrofitting IEEE 802.11ay Access Points for Indoor Human Detection and Sensing

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    In this work we present RAPID, a joint communication and radar (JCR) system based on next-generation IEEE 802.11ay WiFi networks operating in the 60 GHz band. In contrast to most existing approaches for human sensing at millimeter-waves, which employ special-purpose radars to retrieve the small-scale Doppler effect (micro-Doppler) caused by human motion, RAPID achieves radar-level sensing accuracy by retrofitting IEEE 802.11ay access points. For this, it leverages the IEEE 802.11ay beam training mechanism to accurately localize and track multiple individuals, while the in-packet beam tracking fields are exploited to extract the desired micro-Doppler signatures from the time-varying phase of the channel impulse response (CIR). The proposed approach enables activity recognition and person identification with IEEE 802.11ay wireless networks without requiring modifications to the packet structure specified by the standard. RAPID is implemented on an IEEE 802.11ay-compatible FPGA platform with phased antenna arrays, which estimates the CIR from the reflections of transmitted packets. The proposed system is evaluated on a large dataset of CIR measurements, proving robustness across different environments and subjects, and outperforming state-of-the-art sub-6 GHz WiFi sensing techniques. Using two access points, RAPID reliably tracks multiple subjects, reaching activity recognition and person identification accuracies of 94% and 90%, respectively.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures, 4 table

    Applicability and Advantages of Implementation of MIMO Techniques in Radar Systems

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    High-accuracy object detection using radio frequency signal has become popular field for research since last couple of years. Huge amount of research work are being done in this field now a days. Although radar systems were invented for the purpose of military, they are also used for civil service at present. MIMO communication systems becomes popular in recent years because of higher capacity, increased coverage and better voice and data quality in telecommunication systems. The overwhelming popularity of MIMO systems draws radar researchers’ attention to study the probability of implementing MIMO techniques in radar systems. This trend has been followed in this thesis. The applicability of MIMO in radar systems has been examined along with small simulations outcomes, which ends with analysis of the result and further research probability in this field. Any type of diversity is required for MIMO radar. Some of the probable diversity techniques are discussed with a signal model along with their advantages and disadvantages. This thesis starts with a brief discussion about radar principle and different types of radar systems, followed by detailed discussion on MIMO technology and their implementation on radar systems. Angular diversity i.e. beamforming is considered, in the simulation part of the thesis, to implement MIMO. Ideal propagation environment is assumed in the simulations in order to keep the focus on the beamforming mechanism itself. Approximately 10 dB signal-to-noise ratio gain is obtained in the simulations using reasonably low number of antennas. The thesis ends up with short discussion on the advantages of MIMO application in radar along with future research possibilities in this arena

    Algorithm-Architecture Co-Design for Digital Front-Ends in Mobile Receivers

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    The methodology behind this work has been to use the concept of algorithm-hardware co-design to achieve efficient solutions related to the digital front-end in mobile receivers. It has been shown that, by looking at algorithms and hardware architectures together, more efficient solutions can be found; i.e., efficient with respect to some design measure. In this thesis the main focus have been placed on two such parameters; first reduced complexity algorithms to lower energy consumptions at limited performance degradation, secondly to handle the increasing number of wireless standards that preferably should run on the same hardware platform. To be able to perform this task it is crucial to understand both sides of the table, i.e., both algorithms and concepts for wireless communication as well as the implications arising on the hardware architecture. It is easier to handle the high complexity by separating those disciplines in a way of layered abstraction. However, this representation is imperfect, since many interconnected "details" belonging to different layers are lost in the attempt of handling the complexity. This results in poor implementations and the design of mobile terminals is no exception. Wireless communication standards are often designed based on mathematical algorithms with theoretical boundaries, with few considerations to actual implementation constraints such as, energy consumption, silicon area, etc. This thesis does not try to remove the layer abstraction model, given its undeniable advantages, but rather uses those cross-layer "details" that went missing during the abstraction. This is done in three manners: In the first part, the cross-layer optimization is carried out from the algorithm perspective. Important circuit design parameters, such as quantization are taken into consideration when designing the algorithm for OFDM symbol timing, CFO, and SNR estimation with a single bit, namely, the Sign-Bit. Proof-of-concept circuits were fabricated and showed high potential for low-end receivers. In the second part, the cross-layer optimization is accomplished from the opposite side, i.e., the hardware-architectural side. A SDR architecture is known for its flexibility and scalability over many applications. In this work a filtering application is mapped into software instructions in the SDR architecture in order to make filtering-specific modules redundant, and thus, save silicon area. In the third and last part, the optimization is done from an intermediate point within the algorithm-architecture spectrum. Here, a heterogeneous architecture with a combination of highly efficient and highly flexible modules is used to accomplish initial synchronization in at least two concurrent OFDM standards. A demonstrator was build capable of performing synchronization in any two standards, including LTE, WiFi, and DVB-H

    Cloud-aided wireless systems: communications and radar applications

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    This dissertation focuses on cloud-assisted radio technologies for communication, including mobile cloud computing and Cloud Radio Access Network (C-RAN), and for radar systems. This dissertation first concentrates on cloud-aided communications. Mobile cloud computing, which allows mobile users to run computationally heavy applications on battery limited devices, such as cell phones, is considered initially. Mobile cloud computing enables the offloading of computation-intensive applications from a mobile device to a cloud processor via a wireless interface. The interplay between offloading decisions at the application layer and physical-layer parameters, which determine the energy and latency associated with the mobile-cloud communication, motivates the inter-layer optimization of fine-grained task offloading across both layers. This problem is modeled by using application call graphs, and the joint optimization of application-layer and physical-layer parameters is carried out via a message passing algorithm by minimizing the total energy expenditure of the mobile user. The concept of cloud radio is also being considered for the development of two cellular architectures known as Distributed RAN (D-RAN) and C-RAN, whereby the baseband processing of base stations is carried out in a remote Baseband Processing Unit (BBU). These architectures can reduce the capital and operating expenses of dense deployments at the cost of increasing the communication latency. The effect of this latency, which is due to the fronthaul transmission between the Remote Radio Head (RRH) and the BBU, is then studied for implementation of Hybrid Automatic Repeat Request (HARQ) protocols. Specifically, two novel solutions are proposed, which are based on the control-data separation architecture. The trade-offs involving resources such as the number of transmitting and receiving antennas, transmission power and the blocklength of the transmitted codeword, and the performance of the proposed solutions is investigated in analysis and numerical results. The detection of a target in radar systems requires processing of the signal that is received by the sensors. Similar to cloud radio access networks in communications, this processing of the signals can be carried out in a remote Fusion Center (FC) that is connected to all sensors via limited-capacity fronthaul links. The last part of this dissertation is dedicated to exploring the application of cloud radio to radar systems. In particular, the problem of maximizing the detection performance at the FC jointly over the code vector used by the transmitting antenna and over the statistics of the noise introduced by quantization at the sensors for fronthaul transmission is investigated by adopting the information-theoretic criterion of the Bhattacharyya distance and information-theoretic bounds on the quantization rate

    REAL-TIME ADAPTIVE PULSE COMPRESSION ON RECONFIGURABLE, SYSTEM-ON-CHIP (SOC) PLATFORMS

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    New radar applications need to perform complex algorithms and process a large quantity of data to generate useful information for the users. This situation has motivated the search for better processing solutions that include low-power high-performance processors, efficient algorithms, and high-speed interfaces. In this work, hardware implementation of adaptive pulse compression algorithms for real-time transceiver optimization is presented, and is based on a System-on-Chip architecture for reconfigurable hardware devices. This study also evaluates the performance of dedicated coprocessors as hardware accelerator units to speed up and improve the computation of computing-intensive tasks such matrix multiplication and matrix inversion, which are essential units to solve the covariance matrix. The tradeoffs between latency and hardware utilization are also presented. Moreover, the system architecture takes advantage of the embedded processor, which is interconnected with the logic resources through high-performance buses, to perform floating-point operations, control the processing blocks, and communicate with an external PC through a customized software interface. The overall system functionality is demonstrated and tested for real-time operations using a Ku-band testbed together with a low-cost channel emulator for different types of waveforms

    Aerospace medicine and biology: A continuing bibliography with indexes (supplement 359)

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    This bibliography lists 164 reports, articles and other documents introduced into the NASA Scientific and Technical Information System during Jan. 1992. Subject coverage includes: aerospace medicine and physiology, life support systems and man/system technology, protective clothing, exobiology and extraterrestrial life, planetary biology, and flight crew behavior and performance
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