Multipath fading and reflections The signal takes many paths to the destination. The propagation delay along each path is different. How many meters difference.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1. Introduction.
Advertisements

7. Channel Models.
OFDM Transmission over Wideband Channel
Mobile Communications
Data Communication lecture10
Quiz Determine the minimum number of shift register stages required to create a maximal length PN sequence which has a repetition time greater than 10.
Fading multipath radio channels Narrowband channel modelling Wideband channel modelling Wideband WSSUS channel (functions, variables & distributions)
1 Small-scale Mobile radio propagation Small-scale Mobile radio propagation l Small scale propagation implies signal quality in a short distance or time.
CELLULAR COMMUNICATIONS 2. Radio Wave Propagation.
Copyright © 2003, Dr. Dharma P. Agrawal and Dr. Qing-An Zeng. All rights reserved. 1 Chapter 3 Mobile Radio Propagation.
OFDM based for WIFI Ziqi SONG Zhuo ZHANG Supervisor: Prabin.
Propagation Characteristics
Copyright © 2011, Dr. Dharma P. Agrawal and Dr. Qing-An Zeng. All rights reserved. 1 Chapter 3 Mobile Radio Propagation.
1 Mobile Communication Systems 1 Prof. Carlo Regazzoni Prof. Fabio Lavagetto.
RAKE Receiver Marcel Bautista February 12, Propagation of Tx Signal.
Chapter 15: Data Transmission Business Data Communications, 5e.
Department of Electronic Engineering City University of Hong Kong EE3900 Computer Networks Data Transmission Slide 1 Continuous & Discrete Signals.
Mobile Radio Propagation - Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
Doppler shifts: Effect on Communication systems Kartik Natarajan.
Wireless and Mobile Communication Systems
Module 3.0: Data Transmission
Basics of Small Scale Fading: Towards choice of PHY Narayan Mandayam.
3.1 Chapter 3 Data and Signals Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
ECE 4730: Lecture #10 1 MRC Parameters  How do we characterize a time-varying MRC?  Statistical analyses must be used  Four Key Characteristics of a.
EEE440 Modern Communication Systems Wireless and Mobile Communications.
Wireless communication channel
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS Assist.Prof.Dr. Nuray At.
Chapter 4 Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
Lecture 3. 2 Outline Signal fluctuations – fading Interference model – detection of signals Link model.
Wireless Transmission Fundamentals (Physical Layer) Professor Honggang Wang
NETW 707 Modeling and Simulation Amr El Mougy Maggie Mashaly.
EE 6332, Spring, 2014 Wireless Communication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 3 Jan. 22 nd, 2014.
EELE 5490, Fall, 2009 Wireless Communications Ali S. Afana Department of Electrical Engineering Class 5 Dec. 4 th, 2009.
The Wireless Channel Lecture 3.
Certified Wireless Network Administrator (CWNA) PW0-105 Chapter 2 Radio Frequency Fundamentals.
Data and Computer Communications by William Stallings Eighth Edition Data Transmission Click to edit Master subtitle style Networks and Communication Department.
Abdul-Aziz .M Al-Yami Khurram Masood
EE 6331, Spring, 2009 Advanced Telecommunication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 7 Feb. 10 th, 2009.
Wireless specifics. 2 A Wireless Communication System Antenna.
1 What is small scale fading? Small scale fading is used to describe the rapid fluctuation of the amplitude, phases, or multipath delays of a radio signal.
Adaphed from Rappaport’s Chapter 5
Chapter 3 Mobile Radio Propagation
Mobile Computing and Wireless Networking Lec 02
Statistical Description of Multipath Fading
OFDM Based WLAN System Song Ziqi Zhang Zhuo.
TI Cellular Mobile Communication Systems Lecture 3 Engr. Shahryar Saleem Assistant Professor Department of Telecom Engineering University of Engineering.
1 Orthogonal Frequency- Division Multiplexing (OFDM) Used in DSL, WLAN, DAB, WIMAX, 4G.
ECEN 621, Prof. Xi Zhang ECEN “ Mobile Wireless Networking ” Course Materials: Papers, Reference Texts: Bertsekas/Gallager, Stuber, Stallings,
Fading in Wireless Communications Yan Fei. Contents  Concepts  Cause of Fading  Fading Types  Fading Models.
1 3. Data Transmission. Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 2 Contents  Concept and Terminology  Analog and Digital Data Transmission  Transmission Impairments  Asynchronous.
Signal Propagation Basics
EEE 441 Wireless And Mobile Communications
Small-Scale Fading Prof. Michael Tsai 2016/04/15.
By Saneeju m salu. Radio waves are one form of electromagnetic radiation RADIO WAVES.
fundamentals of wireless communication
Mobile Radio Propagation - Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
الخبو صغير المقياس أو(المدى)
Shadowing.
1. Introduction.
Doppler shifts: Effect on Communication systems
PROPAGATION OF RADIO WAVES
Basics of Small Scale Fading: Towards choice of PHY
CSE 5345 – Fundamentals of Wireless Networks
UNIT I – Wireless channels
Chapter 2. Wireless Channels
Characterizations and Modeling of the Wireless Channel
CSE 5345 – Fundamentals of Wireless Networks
Fading multipath radio channels
Radio Propagation Review
fundamentals of wireless communication
Presentation transcript:

Multipath fading and reflections The signal takes many paths to the destination. The propagation delay along each path is different. How many meters difference gives you seconds of delay difference?

Effects of Multipath Fading/Reflection “Ghost” on TV. GPS – incorrect position calculation. Frequency Selective Fading. Intersymbol interference.

Intersymbol Interference Suppose that there are two paths. The shorter path has length d1, the longer path has length d2. What is the difference in propagation delay between the two paths? Symbols received over the shorter path Symbols received over the longer path  Received signal – a combination of the two signals How big does  have to be to so that the 3 of the longer path arrives exactly when the 0 arrives on the shorter path? How big must the difference in paths be for this to happen?

Intersymbol Interference Suppose we use differential phase shift keying to transmit ?

Intersymbol Interference

Phasor addition of sine waves with the same frequency a  b  x a  = (a cos(  ), a sin(  )) x = a  magnitude phase x = b  + a  b  = (b cos(  ), b sin(  )) x = (b cos(  )+acos(  ), b sin(  )+asin(  )) = M A

zero amplitude!

Intersymbol Interference ISI can be avoided by making the baud rate small. If the baud rate is 11MHz (802.11b), how much delay will cause complete ISI interference? How much path length difference will cause complete ISI interference? In suburban areas, multiple signals arrive with timing differences up to 25microsec. Indoors, timing differences up to 300ns. What is the max baud rate so that complete ISI occurs

Frequency Selective Fading The received signal is made up of many different, slightly delayed, versions of the same signal. What is going on at these frequencies?

Frequency Selective Fading Phase is ok, but zero amplitude! For what values of T/R does this happen?

Frequency Selective Fading Indoor impulse responds

Frequency Selective Fading delay = 1/(2*fc) Suppose fc = 2.4GHz. Delay = 0.2 ns Distance = 0.2ns * 0.3m/ns = 0.06m (6cm)!!!! So very small differences in path length cause very big changes in signal. Frequency selective fading is be mitigated by Using spread spectrum. Thus multiple frequencies are simultaneously used. If a few frequencies suffer attenuation the others might not. (Used in b) Channel estimation and adaptation (used in GSM cell phones) Use many narrow band frequencies. Then the good ones should work (like spread spectrum). Used in a

Frequency Selective Fading Now suppose that there are many paths, each with a different delay. Then the received signal is: Q I received signal The I component is modeled as a normally distributed random variable. The Q component is modeled as a normally distributed random variable. Both have zero mean and the same variance. Then, the amplitude is a Raleigh random variable and the phase is uniform between 0 and 2 . This is called a Raleigh channel. Hence, the result is that the amplitude and phase are random. If they vary slowly, then the channel is called a slowly fading channel (indoors). If the channel varies quickly, it is a fast fading channel (driving with cell phone). If the channel changes too fast, then changes in phase and amplitude cannot be detected.

Effect of Movement If the receiver or transmitter are moving, then the channel will vary. Hence, the I and Q components will vary with time. Here is a plot of the magnitude of fading as a function of time and frequency. In this case, the channel does not change much over time. It is a slowly fading channel.

Effect of Movement If the receiver or transmitter are moving, then the channel will vary. Hence, the I and Q components will vary with time. Here is a plot of the magnitude of fading as a function of time and frequency. In this case, the channel does not vary with frequency, it only varies over time.

Effect of Movement If the receiver or transmitter are moving, then the channel will vary. Hence, the I and Q components will vary with time. Here is a plot of the magnitude of fading as a function of time and frequency. In this case, the channel varies both in time and frequency.

Doppler Effect When the receiver or transmitter are moving, the frequency is shifted by  f = v/ cos(  ), v is velocity and is wave length  c is the speed of light. If the the signal is sent at fc and passed through a fading channel, the spectrum of the received signal is: Thus, not only one frequency is received, but many.

Doppler Effect To mitigate the Doppler effect: –Use low frequencies –Transmit in bursts so the channel is constant during the burst. –Include training sequences on each frame so the channel can be re-estimated for each transmission. –Do move – indoor use only

Rician Channel Model A Raleigh channel assumes that all the paths arrive with random amplitude. A Rician channel assumes that there is a line of sight component that has much larger amplitude.