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80MHz/160MHz Protection Date: Authors: Date: September 2010

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Presentation on theme: "80MHz/160MHz Protection Date: Authors: Date: September 2010"— Presentation transcript:

1 80MHz/160MHz Protection Date: 2010-09-13 Authors: Date: September 2010
Feb, 2008 doc.: IEEE /xxxx Date: September 2010 80MHz/160MHz Protection Date: Authors: L. Chu et al Liwen Chu, STMicroelectronics

2 HT TXOP Protection and Truncation
Date: September 2010 HT TXOP Protection and Truncation 802.11n introduces features that a legacy STAs can not understand: 40MHz transmission, frame aggregation, short GI etc. 40MHz non-HT duplicate mode is used to protect the 11n transmission: Non-HT duplicate frames (e.g. RTS/CTS) are used to establish protection of its TXOP in two 20MHz channels, and Non-HT duplicate CF-End frame are used to truncate the protect TXOP protected by non-HT duplicate frames. To get a 40MHz EDCA based TXOP, a STA does EDCA backoff procedure in the primary channel, and detects the second channel being idle during PIFS interval before the TXOP. FC HT-STA1 RTS ch0 A-MPDU (HT frame) FC HT-AP1 ch0+ch1 RTS ch1 CTS ch0 BLKACK 11a-STA3 ch0+ch1 FC HT-AP1 11a-AP2 FC HT-STA1 11a-AP3 CTS ch1 11a-STA2 ch1 ch0+ch1 ch0 11a –STA2 NAV ch0 “ch0(primary channel)+ch1” is a 40MHz channel. ch0 is a 20MHz channel. 11a –STA3 NAV ch1 ch1 is a 20MHz channel.

3 802.11ac TXOP Protection and Truncation
Date: September 2010 802.11ac TXOP Protection and Truncation 802.11ac uses 80/160 MHz channels. 802.11ac introduces new features that legacy a STAs and n STAs can not understand: DL-MU MIMO, new ac preamble etc. 802.11ac TXOP should be protected by frames which can be understood by a STAs and n STAs in each 20MHz channel. 80MHz/160MHz non-HT duplicate frames are used for such TXOP protection/truncation: 80MHz/160MHz non-HT duplicate frame duplicates 20 MHz non-HT transmission in each 20 MHz channel of a 80MHz/160MHz channel. 80MHz/160MHz Non-HT duplicate frames (e.g. RTS/CTS) are used to establish protection of its TXOP in four 20MHz channels or in eight 20MHz channels, and 80MHz/160MHz Non-HT duplicate CF-End frame is used to truncate the protect TXOP protected by non-HT duplicate frames in four 20MHz channels or in eight 20MHz channels.

4 802.11ac TXOP Protection and Truncation (Cont’d)
Date: September 2010 802.11ac TXOP Protection and Truncation (Cont’d) To get a 80MHz/160MHz EDCA based TXOP, a STA does EDCA backoff procedure in the primary channel, and detects the other 20MHz channels being idle during PIFS interval before the TXOP. RTS A-MPDU (VHT frame) ch3 RTS ch2 ch0+ch1+ch2+ch3 RTS ch1 VHT-AP1 RTS ch0 VHT-STA1 CTS ch0 ch1 ch2 ch3 BLKACK FC HT-STA3 Ch0+ch1+ch2+ch3 VHT-STA1 VHT-AP1 11a-AP2 FC HT-AP3 11a-STA2 ch0+ch1 ch0+ch1+ch2+ch3 ch3 11a–STA2 NAV ch3 “ch0(primary channel)+ch1+ch2+ch3” is a 80MHz channel. “ch0(primary channel)+ch1” is a 40MHz channel. FC HT–STA3 NAV ch0 ch3 is a 20MHz channel.

5 Notification of Used Channel Bandwidth (TBD)
Date: September 2010 Notification of Used Channel Bandwidth (TBD) The TXOP holder and the TXOP responder should notify the peer STA of the usage of channels in the following frame transmission after RTS/CTS handshake. TXOP Initiating frame: A RTS includes the candidate subchannel set in the reserved bits of Service field or PHY padding. A new control frame that initiates the TXOP which includes candidate subchannel set. The TXOP holder selects the candidate subchannel set from the idle channels that it detects. Responding frame: A CTS includes final subchannel set in the reserved bits of Service field or PHY padding. A new control frame that responds the initiating frame of the TXOP which includes final subchannel set. The final subchannel set must be the same or subset of the candidate subchannel set. The final subchannel set must only include the idle channels that the TXOP responder detects. The final subchannel set is used for the following frame transmission in the TXOP.

6 80MHz/160MHz non-HT Duplicate Transmission
Date: September 2010 80MHz/160MHz non-HT Duplicate Transmission 80MHz/160MHz Non-HT duplicate transmission is used to transmit to a, n STAs that nay be present in a 20MHz/40MHz channel covered by 80MHz/160MHz channel. The L-STF, L-LTF and L-SIG shall be transmitted in the same way as in the ac 80MHz/160MHz VHT transmission. The VHT-SIG, VHT-STF, VHT-LTF are not transmitted.

7 Date: September 2010 Straw Poll Do you support adding the following item into the specification framework document, 11-09/0992? R5.X: 80MHz/160MHz duplicate mode shall be included in the specification to protect 80MHz/160MHz transmission.


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