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Comparison of IEEE g Proposals: PBCC, OFDM & MBCK

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Presentation on theme: "Comparison of IEEE g Proposals: PBCC, OFDM & MBCK"— Presentation transcript:

1 Comparison of IEEE 802.11g Proposals: PBCC, OFDM & MBCK
Sean Coffey, Ph.D., Anuj Batra, Ph.D., Srikanth Gummadi, Matthew Shoemake, Ph.D., Ron Provencio and Chris Heegard, Ph.D. Home and Wireless Networking Texas Instruments 141 Stony Circle, Suite 130 Santa Rosa California (707) , Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

2 Outline Overview of comparison with CCK-OFDM Comparison with MBCK
Details of PBCC vs. CCK-OFDM Conclusion Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

3 Comparison with CCK-OFDM
Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

4 The fundamental PBCC performance edge
The PBCC solution uses a more sophisticated code Advantage of PBCC solution of 3.75 dB over CCK-OFDM solution in received power (22Mbps versus 26.4Mbps) The CCK-OFDM solution requires approximately 130% more received power in the same environment. 3.35 dB, 22Mbps vs 24Mbps (115% more ) 2.95 dB over CCK-OFDM solution in received pwr per bit 100% more received power for the same performance after normalizing for rate differences. This doubles area coverage, battery-life, cell density or combination. Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

5 PBCC solution in multipath
The PBCC performance advantage carries over to all channel conditions slightly greater in multipath PBCC uses an optimized "cover code" that makes the code effectively time-varying and inherently more resistant to multipath This is the "P" in "PBCC" Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

6 Achievable rates/throughput
Top mandatory rates: 22 Mbps for PBCC 26.4 Mbps for CCK-OFDM Top optional rates: 33 Mbps for PBCC 59.4 Mbps for CCK-OFDM 10% higher than for a Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

7 Achievable throughput (cont)
Substantial extra overhead in CCK-OFDM reduces throughput: for MPEG packets (188 byte) PBCC 22 has higher throughput than CCK-OFDM 26.4 PBCC 33 has higher throughput than CCK-OFDM 52.8 PBCC 33 Mbps has a 2 dB signal-to-noise ratio advantage over CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

8 Time to market / solution feasibility
TI has produced a chip implementing all mandatory parts of its proposal. PBCC proposed mandatory mode will work with existing b radios. The CCK-OFDM proposal requires design of a new radio Long delay in market availability of IEEE g products. Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

9 Overall approach The fundamentals of the respective approaches:
there is no fundamental performance difference between single-tone and multi-tone systems. TI is developing a-compliant hardware. Both single-tone and multi-tone make sense; it does not make sense to do both! as is required for backward compatibility in CCK-OFDM proposal. Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

10 IP issues TI has offered a royalty-free license for all its inventions required to implement the mandatory portions of the standard if its solution is adopted as the standard There are serious third-party IP issues with CCK-OFDM proposal Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

11 Comparison to MBCK Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

12 Performance advantage
Based on MBCK submission In Gaussian noise, Eb/N0: MBCK 22 Mbps: 8.0 dB, vs. PBCC: 5.5 dB PBCC advantage 2.5 dB Variable, 100 ns, MBCK dB, vs. PBCC dB PBCC advantage 4.0 dB Fixed, 25 ns: 7.2 dB vs PBCC 8.1 dB difference –0.9 dB Fixed, 100 ns: 16.2 dB vs PBCC 8.75 dB difference 7.45 dB Fixed, 250 ns: 17.5 dB vs. PBCC 9.75 dB difference 7.75 dB Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

13 Discussion Essential components of MBCK proposal not currently revealed MBCK proposal beats CCK-OFDM in AWGN but is still well short of PBCC’s solution From MBCK submission, PBCC’s solution has advantage in most channel conditions Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

14 Details Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

15 Performance advantage
PBCC-22 uses a novel 256-state, rate 2/3 binary convolutional code matched to 8-PSK CCK-OFDM adopts a standard 64-state, rate 1/2 convolutional code widely known to all coding practitioners since 1972 existing PBCC 11 Mbps option in b standard is a variation of this type of code A major component of overall 2.95 dB advantage comes from differences between the codes Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

16 Performance curve /24 Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

17 Performance curve (cont)
/24 Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

18 Performance curve (cont)
Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

19 Performance curve (cont)
Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

20 Performance gain (cont)
CCK-OFDM solution spends 20% of transmission time on cyclic extension of every OFDM symbol non-information-carrying, performance cost CCK-OFDM solution has 4 pilot tones out of 52 tones overall spends 1/13 of energy on non-information-carrying signal Bottom line: PBCC advantage of 1.6 (coding) (cyclic extension) (pilot tones) = 2.95 dB Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

21 Performance gain (cont)
Required Eb/N0, experimental: Assume 1000 byte packets, PER = 0.01: CCK-OFDM Eb/N0 = 8.4 dB (document 00/392r1) PBCC Eb/N0 = 5.5 dB Documented difference: 2.9 dB Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

22 Performance difference
CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps vs. PBCC 22 Mbps Difference in received power must be 3.75 dB PBCC’s 22 Mbps has 130% more coverage, or battery life, or cell density than CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps (3.35dB, 115% 24 Mbps) CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps vs. PBCC’s 33 Mbps Difference in received power must be 2.0 dB CCK-OFDM requires more! ( Mbps) PBCC’s 33 Mbps mode has 60% more coverage, or battery life, or cell density, than CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps (45% 24 Mbps) Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

23 Multipath performance:
Variable, 100 ns PBCC 22 Mbps Eb/N0 = dB CCK-OFDM 26.4 Mbps Eb/N0 = 15 dB Difference 3.25 dB Fixed, 25 ns 8.1 dB vs. 11 dB, difference 2.9 dB Fixed, 100 ns 8.75 dB vs. 12 dB, difference 3.25 dB Fixed, 250 ns 9.75 dB vs dB, difference 3.55 dB Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

24 Achievable rates/throughputs
CCK-OFDM requires extra OFDM preamble: 10.9 msec extra SIFS time postamble: 6 msec extra end-symbol pad time: up to 3.64 msec Average extra overhead is 18.7 msec per packet in addition to 96 msec 11b short preamble Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

25 Breakeven points Below certain packet lengths, PBCC has higher throughput: PBCC 22 vs. CCK-OFDM 26.4, no acks: bytes PBCC 33 vs. CCK-OFDM 39.6, no acks: bytes PBCC 33 vs. CCK-OFDM 52.8, no acks: bytes PBCC 33 vs CCK-OFDM 59.4, no acks: bytes Compare MPEG packet length of 188 bytes! Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

26 Breakeven points, contd.
PBCC 22 vs. CCK-OFDM 26.4, with acks: 466 bytes PBCC 22 vs. CCK-OFDM 39.6, with acks: 176 bytes PBCC 33 vs. CCK-OFDM 39.6, with acks: bytes PBCC 33 vs. CCK-OFDM 52.8, with acks: bytes PBCC 33 vs CCK-OFDM 59.4, with acks: bytes Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

27 Complexity requirements: Decoder
PBCC decode a 256-state (1024-edge) BCC with an 11/16.5 MHz clock CCK-OFDM decode a 64-state (128-edge) BCC with a 60 MHz clock if top optional mode implemented Similar complexity and cost TI’s PBCC 22 Mbps decoder has been implemented its practicality is proven Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

28 Complexity requirements: Receiver
PBCC a sophisticated single-tone receiver to handle multipath robustly Same receiver as all IEEE b modes CCK-OFDM a large FFT based processor at both the transmitter and receiver Similar complexity with TI’s single tone receiver Plus, a single-tone receiver for backward compatibility Undue extra cost, for what benefit? TI’s 22 Mbps receiver has been implemented its practicality is proven. Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

29 Required radio PBCC uses 8-PSK, with 802.11b’s 11 MHz clock
no problems of dynamic range or peak-to-average ratio. CCK-OFDM proposal involves 16- and 64-QAM much larger peak-to-average ratio Poses problems with linearity and dynamic range... … and is dramatically different as an interferer CCK-OFDM proposal requires a new radio and baseband a long delay in the debut of standardized products recall HomeRF 10 Mbps products expected in 2001 Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

30 Temporal Character: Peak to Average Power
Barker-2 PAR: 2.1 = 3.2 dB CCK-11 Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

31 PAR (cont) PBCC-24: OFDM-26.4: PAR: 2.1 = 3.2 dB 11.5 = 10.6 dB
Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

32 Overall approach Both single-tone and multi-tone systems achieve “capacity” on the channels seen by wireless LANs. “Which is better: many bits on one tone or few on many?” Well studied in information theory, answer is well known: highest achievable performance in each system is exactly the same This is neither obvious nor easy to show, but has been known since at least the 1960's. Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

33 IP issues Wi-LAN and others claim broad patents covering use of OFDM in wireless LANs Are attempting to enforce these patents via litigation Are not participants in IEEE g TI has offered a royalty-free license, without time limit, for all its inventions required to implement the mandatory portions of the standard, if its solution is adopted as the standard Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

34 Wi-LAN's Zaghloul: "Wi-LAN is ready for the worst," he says, "and antcipates the best. We anticipate [Cisco] will pay without much of a fight, but if they don't, we're prepared to go all the way [in a legal fight to secure license payments.]” Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

35 Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments

36 Conclusions PBCC proposed mandatory 22 Mbps mode
Has large performance advantage (3.75 dB over 26.4 Mbps) Works in same environment as IEEE b Put PBCC-22 Mbps next to 11 Mbps CCK: if the CCK mode works, the PBCC-22 mode also works Has been implemented, is ready for market now Spectrally and temporally identical to existing b Works with existing b radios No new interference type Royalty-free license offered PBCC proposed optional 33 Mbps mode requires 2dB less SNR than the mandatory 26.4 Mbps OFDM Sean Coffey, Texas Instruments


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