1,787 research outputs found

    Time- and frequency-asynchronous aloha for ultra narrowband communications

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    A low-power wide-area network (LPWAN) is a family of wireless access technologies which consume low power and cover wide areas. They are designed to operate in both licensed and unlicensed frequency bands. Among different low-power wide-area network (LPWAN) technolo-gies, long range (LoRa), Sigfox, and Narrowband Internet of Things (NB-IoT) are leading in IoT deployment in large-scale. However, Sigfox and LoRa both have advantages in terms of battery lifetime, production cost and capacity whereas lower latency and better quality of service are of-fered by Narrowband Internet of Things (NB-IoT) operating licensed cellular frequency bands. The two main approaches for reaching wide coverage with low transmission power are (i) spread spectrum, used by LoRa, and (ii) ultra-narrow band (UNB) which is used by Sigfox. This thesis work focuses on the random-access schemes for UNB based IoT networks mainly. Due to issues related to receiver synchronization, two-dimensional time-frequency ran-dom access protocol is a particularly interesting choice for UNB transmission schemes. Howev-er, UNB possess also some major constraints regarding connectivity, throughput, noise cancel-lation and so. This thesis work investigates UNB-based LPWAN uplink scenarios. The throughput perfor-mance of Time Frequency Asynchronous ALOHA (TFAA) is evaluated using MATLAB simula-tions. The main parameters include the interference threshold which depends on the robust-ness of the modulation and coding scheme, propagation exponent, distance range of the IoT devices and system load. Normalized throughput and collision probability are evaluated through simulations for different combinations of these parameters. We demonstrate that, using repeti-tions of the data packets results in a higher normalized throughput. The repetition scheme is designed in such a way that another user's packets may collide only with one of the target packets repetitions. The power levels as well as distances of a user’s all repetitions are consid-ered same. By using repetitions, reducing the distance range, and increasing the interference threshold, the normalized throughput can be maximized

    Radio Resource Management for Uplink Grant-Free Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency Communications

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    Experimental verification of multi-antenna techniques for aerial and ground vehicles’ communication

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