273 research outputs found
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Millimeter wave wearable communication networks : analytic modeling and MIMO support
Future high-end wearable electronic devices including virtual reality goggles and augmented reality glasses require rates of the order of gigabits-per-second and potentially very low latency. Supporting high data rate wireless connectivity for applications such as uncompressed video streaming among wearable devices in a densely crowded environment is challenging. This is primarily due to bandwidth scarcity when many users operate multiple devices simultaneously. The millimeter wave (mmWave) band has the potential to address this bottleneck, thanks to more spectrum and less interference because of signal blockage at these frequencies. This dissertation addresses key questions that need to be answered before realizing mmWave-based wearables in practice: (i) what are the expected achievable rates in a crowded user environment, with mmWave devices using a given hardware configuration? (ii) how is the wireless connectivity affected in an indoor operation, which is prone to surface reflections? (iii) can multi-stream data transmission, involving large bandwidth communication under hardware constraints be realized? To answer these, tools from stochastic geometry and compressive sensing, and architectures involving hybrid analog/digital multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) are leveraged. The main contributions of this dissertation are 1) analytical modeling to compute average achievable rates in mmWave wearable networks consisting of finite number of user devices and human blockages, 2) characterizing the impact of reflections and non-isotropic performance of mmWave wearable networks in crowded indoor environments, 3) channel estimation to support MIMO for wideband mmWave wearable devices using hybrid architecture, and 4) designing optimal, but easy-to-implement, precoding/combining strategies in frequency-selective mmWave systems. Both analysis and numerical simulations show how the proposed evaluation methodology and solutions serve to enable mmWave based communication among next generation wearable electronic devices.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Transmit Beamforming in Dense Networks-A Review
Communication technology has prospered in manifolds over the last decade. The scarcity of spectrum as well as the demand for higher data rates and increase in capacity has become a matter of concern. Newer technologies have evolved time and again, the latest of which is Long Term Evolution (LTE) and Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) systems more commonly known as 4G technology. The striking feature of LTE/LTE-A is the deployment of smaller cells (femto cells) in the vicinity of a large macro cells resulting in a dense network. As a result the data rate as well as capacity has increased in manifolds but the detrimental factor is the issue of interference between the various cells. Beamforming provides a solution in removing the issues of interference in dense networks. This paper focuses on the interference scenario in LTE dense networks and gives an overview of different beamforming methods that can provide a solution to the interference problem. Further, a review of several such methods so far proposed in available literature has been presented in this paper.Keywords:LTE/LTE-A, Dense Network, Interference,Beamformin
Clearing the Rf Smog: Making 802.11 Robust to Cross-Technology Interference
Recent studies show that high-power cross-technology interference
is becoming a major problem in today’s 802.11 networks. Devices
like baby monitors and cordless phones can cause a wireless
LAN to lose connectivity. The existing approach for dealing
with such high-power interferers makes the 802.11 network switch
to a different channel; yet the ISM band is becoming increasingly
crowded with diverse technologies, and hence many 802.11 access
points may not find an interference-free channel.
This paper presents TIMO, a MIMO design that enables 802.11n
to communicate in the presence of high-power cross-technology
interference. Unlike existing MIMO designs, however, which require
all concurrent transmissions to belong to the same technology,
TIMO can exploit MIMO capabilities to decode in the presence
of a signal from a different technology, hence enabling diverse
technologies to share the same frequency band. We implement a
prototype of TIMO in GNURadio-USRP2 and show that it enables
802.11n to communicate in the presence of interference from baby
monitors, cordless phones, and microwave ovens, transforming scenarios
with a complete loss of connectivity to operational networks.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF grant CNS-0831660)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF grant CNS- 0721857)United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA ITMANET
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