372 research outputs found

    Energy-detection based spectrum sensing for cognitive radio on a real-time SDR platform

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    There has been an increase in wireless applications due to the technology boom; consequently raising the level of radio spectrum demand. However, spectrum is a limited resource and cannot be infinitely subdivided to accommodate every application. At the same time, emerging wireless applications require a lot of bandwidth for operation, and have seen exponential growth in their bandwidth usage in recent years. The current spectrum allocation technique, proposed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is a fixed allocation technique. This is inefficient as the spectrum is vacant during times when the primary user is not using the spectrum. This strain on the current available bandwidth has revealed signs of an upcoming spectrum crunch; hence the need to find a solution that satisfies the increasing spectrum demand, without compromising the performance of the applications. This work leverages on cognitive radio technology as a potential solution to the spectrum usage challenge. Cognitive radios have the ability to sense the spectrum and determine the presence or absence of the primary user in a particular subcarrier band. When the spectrum is vacant, a cognitive radio (secondary user) can opportunistically occupy the radio spectrum, optimizing the radio frequency band. The effectiveness of the cognitive radio is determined by the performance of the sensing techniques. Known spectrum-sensing techniques are reviewed, which include energy detection, entropy detection, matched-filter detection, and cyclostationary detection. In this dissertation, the energy sensing technique is examined. A real-time energy detector is developed on the Software-Defined Radio (SDR) testbed that is built with Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) devices, and on the GNU Radio software platform. The noise floor of the system is first analysed to determine the detection threshold, which is obtained using the empirical cumulative distribution method. Simulations are carried out using MATrix LABoratory (MATLAB) to set a benchmark. In both simulations and the SDR development platform, an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) signal with Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) modulation is generated and used as the test signal

    Measuring the Phase Variation of a DOCSIS 3.1 Full Duplex Channel

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    Including a Full Duplex option into DOCSIS introduces several problems. One of the more troublesome issues is the presence of a strong self interference signal that leaks from the transmit side to the receive side of a cable node. This self interference is caused by echoes in the channel that translate the forward travelling transmit signals into a reverse travelling signal, as well as, by leakage from the hybrid coupler used to couple the upstream and downstream signals. To suppress this self interference an echo canceller is implemented to remove the unwanted interference from the received signal. Unfortunately with the high rates of data transmission used in modern day CATV networks the echo canceller needs tremendous precision. A major concern in the implementation of Full Duplex into DOCSIS is if the channels used are even very slightly time varying. The echos in such channels change with time and can be difficult for the echo canceller to track. Changes in the response of the channel cause the echo profile of the network to shift and the echo canceler to re-adapt to the new channel response. The issue with this changing response is that it is possible for the channel to change faster than the echo canceller can adapt, resulting in the interference becoming unacceptably high. Since the channel is a physical network of coaxial cables often exposed to the environment, its propagation properties can be affected by wind swaying pole mounted cables, or by rapid heating from the sun, or sudden shifts in the load of the network. With information on how the physical properties of the cable changes, the engineers designing the echo canceller can know how fast the canceller must adapt to changes and also have a better measure of how reliable its echo cancellation will be. In this thesis the stability of the echo profile of the channel is measured. It is shown that the property of the channel with the greatest potential to rapidly change and cause noise after echo cancellation is the phase response of the channel. Due to this, the approach of this thesis is to measure the fluctuations in the phase of the channel response of a CATV network constructed in the lab. To measure the fluctuations in the phase response of the channel, a PLL (Phase Locked Loop) based circuit is designed and built on an FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) and connected to a model of a simple CATV network. The PLL circuit used to measure the phase fluctuations of the channel is designed to be able to measure changes occurring faster than 0.1 Hz and with a power higher than 10−7 V210^{-7} \: V^2. The circuit is able to capture data from the channel over a period of 90 seconds. Using this phase variation measurement circuit a series of experiments were performed on a model CATV DOCSIS network. It was found that many physical disturbances to the network had the effect of rapidly shifting the phase response of the network. Heating the cables in the network was found to shift the phase response upwards of 20000 μ20000\:\muradians. Flexing the cables in the network was found to have a peak phase variation of 8000 μ8000\: \muradians with similar effects found from walking over cables. Overall, it was clear that physical effects on the network had the propensity to rapidly shift the network response. Any echo canceller that is designed in the future will have to consider these effects when reporting the cancellation that it is able to achieve

    Contributions to channel modelling and performance estimation of HAPS-based communication systems regarding IEEE Std 802.16TM

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    New and future telecommunication networks are and will be broadband type. The existing terrestrial and space radio communication infrastructures might be supplemented by new wireless networks that make and will make use of aeronautics-technology. Our study/contribution is referring to radio communications based on radio stations aboard a stratospheric platform named, by ITU-R, HAPS (High Altitude Platform Station). These new networks have been proposed as an alternative technology within the ITU framework to provide various narrow/broadband communication services. With the possibility of having a payload for Telecommunications in an aircraft or a balloon (HAPS), it can be carried out radio communications to provide backbone connections on ground and to access to broadband points for ground terminals. The latest implies a complex radio network planning. Therefore, the radio coverage analysis at outdoors and indoors becomes an important issue on the design of new radio systems. In this doctoral thesis, the contribution is related to the HAPS application for terrestrial fixed broadband communications. HAPS was hypothesised as a quasi-static platform with height above ground at the so-called stratospheric layer. Latter contribution was fulfilled by approaching via simulations the outdoor-indoor coverage with a simple efficient computational model at downlink mode. This work was assessing the ITU-R recommendations at bands recognised for the HAPS-based networks. It was contemplated the possibility of operating around 2 GHz (1820 MHz, specifically) because this band is recognised as an alternative for HAPS networks that can provide IMT-2000 and IMT-Advanced services. The global broadband radio communication model was composed of three parts: transmitter, channel, and receiver. The transmitter and receiver parts were based on the specifications of the IEEE Std 802.16TM-2009 (with its respective digital transmission techniques for a robust-reliable link), and the channel was subjected to the analysis of radio modelling at the level of HAPS and terrestrial (outdoors plus indoors) parts. For the channel modelling was used the two-state characterisation (physical situations associated with the transmitted/received signals), the state-oriented channel modelling. One of the channel-state contemplated the environmental transmission situation defined by a direct path between transmitter and receiver, and the remaining one regarded the conditions of shadowing. These states were dependent on the elevation angle related to the ray-tracing analysis: within the propagation environment, it was considered that a representative portion of the total energy of the signal was received by a direct or diffracted wave, and the remaining power signal was coming by a specular wave, to last-mentioned waves (rays) were added the scattered and random rays that constituted the diffuse wave. At indoors case, the variations of the transmitted signal were also considering the following matters additionally: the building penetration, construction material, angle of incidence, floor height, position of terminal in the room, and indoor fading; also, these indoors radiocommunications presented different type of paths to reach the receiver: obscured LOS, no LOS (NLOS), and hard NLOS. The evaluation of the feasible performance for the HAPS-to-ground terminal was accomplished by means of thorough simulations. The outcomes of the experiment were presented in terms of BER vs. Eb/N0 plotting, getting significant positive conclusions for these kind of system as access network technology based on HAPS

    In-Service BER Based Estimation of OFDM PAPR and CFO-induced Peak Phase Deviation

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    High Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) of the transmitted OFDM signal is a well-known major drawback of the Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (OFDM), so the High-Power Amplifier (HPA) is therefore necessary to operate in its linear region, i.e. with large back-off between the operating input power and its saturation region, so introducing not only in-band distortion, but also the adjacent channel interference. Specifically with the Long-Term Evolution (LTE) systems downlink, some sort of PAPR reduction, such as e.g. clipping, must be utilized. Considering that in many practical situations, determining PAPR demands complex test equipment, such as e.g. Vector Signal Analyzer (VSA), which might not be available, in this paper, we develop a simple Bit-Error-Rate (BER) based model for the (residual) PAPR estimation, by applying link abstraction, i.e. considering the easy measurable BER degradation due to HPA non-linearity, as if it were the consequence of the according level of additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) abstracting the HPA distortion, while considering high Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) and long enough cyclic prefix (CP), thus neglecting (real) additive noise and time dispersion (i.e. multipath fading). Moreover, the out-of-service BER testing, which requires network operator to interrupt its revenue-generating traffic, can be substituted by in-service BER estimation from in-phase and quadrature-phase eye diagram closures, measured on live traffic, by means of a simple oscilloscope. The analytical model is verified by the appropriate Monte-Carlo simulations
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