2,007 research outputs found

    Optimizing time and space MIMO antenna system for frequency selective fading channels

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    Smart or adaptive antennas promise to provide significant increases in system capacity and performance in wireless communication systems. In this paper, we investigate the use of adaptive antennas at the base and mobile stations, operating jointly, to maximize the average signal-to-interference and noise ratio (SINR) of each packet in the system for frequency selective channels with prior knowledge of the channel at the transmitter. Our approach is based on deriving an analytic formula for the average packet SINR and using the Lagrange multiplier method to determine an optimum. We derive necessary conditions for an optimum solution and propose an analytical expression for the optimum. Our analytical expression is not guaranteed to be the global optimum but it does satisfy the derived necessary conditions and, in addition for frequency flat channels, our results reduce to expressions for optimal weights previously published. To demonstrate the potential of the proposed system, we provide Monte Carlo simulation results of the system bit-error rates and make comparisons with other adaptive antenna systems. These show that significant improvements in performance are possible in a wireless communications context

    Foldable all-textile cavity-backed slot antennas for personal UWB localization

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    An all-textile multimoded cavity-backed slot antenna has been designed and fabricated for body-worn impulse radio ultra-wideband (IR-UWB) operation in the 3,744-4,742.4 MHz frequency band, thereby covering Channels 2 and 3 of the IEEE 802.15.4a standard. Its light weight, mechanical flexibility, and small footprint of 35 mm x 56 mm facilitate integration into textile for radio communication equipment for first aid responders, personal locator beacons, and equipment for localization and medical monitoring of children or the elderly. The antenna features a stable radiation pattern and reflection coefficient in diverse operating conditions such as in free space, when subject to diverse bending radii and when deployed on the torso or upper right arm of a test person. The high isolation toward the wearer's body originates from the antenna's hemispherical radiation pattern with a -3 dB beamwidth of 120 degrees and a front-to-back ratio higher than 11 dB over the entire band. Moreover, the antenna exhibits a measured maximum gain higher than 6.3 dBi and a radiation efficiency over 75%. In addition, orientation-specific pulse distortion introduced by the antenna element is analyzed by means of the System Fidelity Factor (SFF). The SFF of the communication link between two instances of this antenna is higher than 94% for all directions within the antenna's -3 dB beamwidth. This easily wearable and deployable antenna is suitable to support IR-UWB localization with an accuracy in the order of 5 cm

    Current and Future Trends of RFID Systems: Guest Editorial of the Special Issue on SpliTech 2021 and IEEE RFID-TA 2021 Conferences

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    This year, the IEEE Journal of Radio Frequency Identification (JRFID), decided to host a joint Special Issue collecting extended versions of papers coming from two international events. The former is the IEEE International Conference on RFID Technology and Applications (RFID-TA) 2021, virtually held in Delhi, India, on October 6-8, 2021. The latter is the International Symposium on Advances in RFID Technology organized within the International Conference on Smart and Sustainable Technologies (SpliTech), hosted in Split and Bol, Croatia, on September 8-11, 2021. SpliTech was technically co-sponsored by the IEEE and technically media sponsored by the IEEE Council on RFID (CRFID)

    Artificial-Noise-Aided Secure Multi-Antenna Transmission with Limited Feedback

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    We present an optimized secure multi-antenna transmission approach based on artificial-noise-aided beamforming, with limited feedback from a desired single-antenna receiver. To deal with beamformer quantization errors as well as unknown eavesdropper channel characteristics, our approach is aimed at maximizing throughput under dual performance constraints - a connection outage constraint on the desired communication channel and a secrecy outage constraint to guard against eavesdropping. We propose an adaptive transmission strategy that judiciously selects the wiretap coding parameters, as well as the power allocation between the artificial noise and the information signal. This optimized solution reveals several important differences with respect to solutions designed previously under the assumption of perfect feedback. We also investigate the problem of how to most efficiently utilize the feedback bits. The simulation results indicate that a good design strategy is to use approximately 20% of these bits to quantize the channel gain information, with the remainder to quantize the channel direction, and this allocation is largely insensitive to the secrecy outage constraint imposed. In addition, we find that 8 feedback bits per transmit antenna is sufficient to achieve approximately 90% of the throughput attainable with perfect feedback.Comment: to appear in IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication
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