ANTENNAS AT CELL SITE For Coverage

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mobile Communications and Antennas
Advertisements

Introduction to Antennas
The Mobile MIMO Channel and Its Measurements
Base Station Antenna Considerations in Wireless Network Deployment By David Shani V.P. Int’ Sales and Marketing With MTI Wireless Edge.
Bab: Antenna.
Antenna Selection for Optimum Wireless LAN Performance Dr. Steven R. Best Cushcraft Corporation 48 Perimeter Road Manchester, NH (603)
APRS ANTENNAS by ED LAWRENCE WA5SWD SIMPLIFIED & TRANSMISSION LINES.
2001 APCO/NENA State Training Conference January 19, 2001.
Antennas.
Design Team Jarret Lavallee Corey Davis. WiFi Basics Wireless adapters transmit frequencies of 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. The higher the frequency, the more data.
Chapter 6 Antennas Antenna Basics
Antennas Lecture 9.
Olga Torstensson Halmstad University
Based on Cisco Wireless Material
Antennas Radiated Power Radiation Pattern Beamwidth
Antenna Primer Wang Ng. References Balanis; Antenna Theory Collin; Antennas and Radiowave Propagation.
Antenna Basics Module 3A
Helical Antennas Supervisor: Dr. Omar Saraereh Written By:
CCRI J. Bernardini Antenna Basics Module 3 Jerry Bernardini Community College of Rhode Island.
Technical University of Gdansk Department of Radio Communications
9. Radiation & Antennas Applied EM by Ulaby, Michielssen and Ravaioli.
F ACULTY OF C OMPUTER S CIENCE & E NGINEERING Chapter 06: Antennas and Accessories.
Antennas and Radiation
1 WiFi Network standards WiFi Network standards BASIC TELECOMMUNICATIONS.
ESTeem Training Class Antenna Fundamentals. Decibels (dB) Used for all mathematical calculations in the radio world. – dB is a logarithmic number dB =10.
Training materials for wireless trainers Antennas and Transmission Lines.
Family Tree of Antennas David Conn VE3KL
Antenna Types Dipole Folded Dipole Monopole
CHAPTER 8 ANTENNAS.
General Licensing Class
15 Feb 2001Property of R. Struzak1 Antenna Fundamentals (2) R. Struzak School on Digital and Multimedia Communications Using.
General Licensing Class G9A – G9D Antennas Your organization and dates here.
ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS A SYSTEMS APPROACH CHAPTER Copyright © 2014 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Electronic Communications: A Systems.
Frequency Management and Channel Assignment
SMART ANTENNA SYSTEMS IN BWA Submitted by M. Venkateswararao.
2M Moxon Antenna.
CSE5807 Wireless and Personal Area Networks Lecture 2 Radio Communications Principles Chapters 2,5 and 11 Stallings.
1 PROPAGATION ASPECTS FOR SMART ANTENNAS IN WIRELESS SYSTEMS JACK H. WINTERS AT&T Labs - Research Red Bank, NJ July 17,
Oct. 16, 2006 Midterm Next Class Assignment #4 is Marked
Lecture 9,10: Beam forming Transmit diversity Aliazam Abbasfar.
Antenna Design and Link Engineering Pattern lobes Pattern lobe is a portion of the radiation pattern with a local maximum Lobes are classified as: major,
10/5/2015Antenna Presentation: Carp,Ontario1 Family Tree of Antennas David Conn VE3KL Acknowledgements Acknowledgements Doug Leach VE3XK Doug Leach VE3XK.
Antenna Concepts © 2001, Cisco Aironet Systems, Inc. Chapter5-1.
Author: Bill Buchanan Wireless LAN Unit 6 Radio and RF Wireless LAN Unit 6 Radio and RF.
G9 - Antennas 1 G9 – Antennas and Feedlines [4 exam questions - 4 groups] G9A - Antenna feed lines: characteristic impedance and attenuation; SWR calculation,
1 Detection of Cellular Activity Within A Defined Space Undergraduate Project – Final Presentation Spring 2008 Doron BrotEyal Cimet Supervisor:Yossi Hipsh.
Antennas: from Theory to Practice 4. Antenna Basics
Oct. 23, 2006 Midterm Marked. –Average: 73%. 6 below, 9 above –Answer Key posted: s/nten216/Tests/NTEN216_Midterm1WithAns.
Test 1: Co-channel interference at the mobile unit
BASIC ANTENNA PARAMETERS
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved
Chapter 3 Antenna Types Part 1.
1 SMART ANTENNAS FOR THIRD GENERATION TDMA (EDGE) Jack H. Winters AT&T Labs - Research Red Bank, NJ July 17, 2000.
RF Propagation No. 1  Seattle Pacific University Basic RF Transmission Concepts.
Doc.: IEEE /0632r0 Submission May 2015 Intel CorporationSlide 1 Experimental Measurements for Short Range LOS SU-MIMO Date: Authors:
INTRODUCTION An antenna is an electrical device which converts electric currents into radio waves, and vice versa. It is usually used with a radio transmitter.
Stallings, Wireless Communications & Networks, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Antennas and Propagation.
Practice Questions 2015 General License Course. How does antenna gain stated in dBi compare to gain stated in dBd for the same antenna? A. dBi gain figures.
Antenna Basics.
DESIGN PARAMETRES AT BASE STATION Prittu Ann Thomas Roll no :14.
CS 414 Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay CS 414 Wireless Propagation Basics.
Radar Range Equation.
Antennas and Propagation
TRANSMISI LEWAT KABEL DAN TRANSMISI LEWAT RADIO
Ibrahem Mohamed Garrah
Antennas and wave propagation ppt presentation Introduction to antennas Antenna is an important tool in communication engineering. An antenna is structure,usually.
Antennas.
Active Beam MobiRake TDMA/OFDM Radio
Helical Antennas Supervisor: Dr. Omar Saraereh Written By:
Mobile Computing Lecture Materials By Bintang Eka Putera.
Presentation transcript:

ANTENNAS AT CELL SITE For Coverage Use Omni-directional Antennas High-Gain Antennas There are standard 6-dB and 9-dB gain omni-directional antennas

High-gain omnidirectional antennas Gain with reference to dipole: (a) 6 dB; (b) 9 dB

Cell-site antennas for omnicells (a) for 3N channels (b) for 6N channels.

Ring combiner A ring combiner is used to combine two groups of channels into a single output. The function of a ring combiner is to combine two 16-channel combiners into one 32-channel output. Therefore, all 32 channels can be used by a single transmitting antenna. The ring combiner has a limitation of handling power up to 600 W with a loss of 3 dB.

Relation between Gain and Beam Width The receiver gain GR can be related to its half-power beam width as θHP and φHP are the half-power beam widths in the θ and φ planes The factor 4π is the solid angle subtended by a sphere in steradians (square radians)

Relation between Gain and Beam Width

A typical pattern for a directional antenna of 120° beamwidth (a) Azimuthal pattern of 8-dB directional  antenna

A typical pattern for a directional antenna of 120° beamwidth (b) Vertical pattern of 8-dB  directional antenna

Directional antenna arrangement (a) 120◦ sector (45 radios); (b) 60◦ sector; (c) 120◦ sector (90 radios).

Cell-site antenna mounting

Other Antennas at cellsite Location antennas Setup channel antennas Spaced diversity antennas

Spatial Diversity

Diversity Antenna Spacing η = h/d; (b) proper arrangement with two antennas.

Umbrella-Pattern Antennas Normal Umbrella-Pattern Antenna. Broadband Umbrella-Pattern Antenna High-Gain Broadband Umbrella-Pattern Antenna

Dipole antenna

Monopole Antenna

Discone Antennas Single antenna. An array of antennas

Photo of discone antenna

Discone Antenna

Radiation pattern

High gain Broadband umbrella-pattern antenna

UNIQUE SITUATIONS OF CELL-SITE ANTENNAS Antenna Pattern in Free Space and in Mobile Environments

Front-to-back ratio of a directional antenna in a mobile radio environment.

Minimum Separation of Cell-Site Receiving Antennas Antenna pattern ripple effect

Regular Check of the Cell-Site Antennas Choosing an Antenna Site

MOBILE ANTENNAS Roof-Mounted Antenna Glass-Mounted Antennas

Mobile antenna patterns (a) Roofmounted 3-dB-gain collinear antenna versus roof-mounted quarter-wave antenna.

Mobile antenna patterns (b) Windowmounted “on-glass” gain antenna versus roof-mounted quarter-wave antenna.

Roof Mounted Antenna

Mobile Antennas Mobile High-Gain Antennas Horizontally Oriented Space-Diversity Antennas Vertically Oriented Space-Diversity Antennas

Horizontally spaced antennas (a) Maximum difference in lcr of a four-branch equal-gain signal between α = 0 and α = 90◦ with antenna spacing of 0.15λ (b) Not recommended. (c) Recommended.

Level Crossing Rate

Vertical separation between two mobile antennas.

The theoretical derivation of correlation

Correlation coefficients in different areas and different street orientations.

Two vertically spaced antennas mounted on a mobile unit.