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Wireless Networks Instructor: Fatima Naseem Computer Engineering Department, University of Engineering and Technology, Taxila.

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Presentation on theme: "Wireless Networks Instructor: Fatima Naseem Computer Engineering Department, University of Engineering and Technology, Taxila."— Presentation transcript:

1 Wireless Networks Instructor: Fatima Naseem Computer Engineering Department, University of Engineering and Technology, Taxila

2 Lecture # 13 Broadband Wireless

3 Broadband Wireless Background Deregulation of telephone system in many countries Competitors are now allowed to offer local voice & Internet service Running Fiber, coax, or cat 5 UTP to millions of homes & businesses is Prohibitively expensive Solution Broadband Wireless

4 Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) Technology for high-speed connection over the air Uses radio waves to transmit and receive data BWA is a point-to-multipoint system Made up of base station and subscriber equipment. Base station uses an outdoor antenna to send and receive high-speed data and voice to subscriber equipment

5 What is WiMAX?

6 Prior Attempts: LMDS & MMDS Local Multipoint Distribution Service (1998) 1.3 GHz around 28 GHz band (Ka Band) 28 GHz ⇒ Rain effects Multi-channel Multipoint Distribution Services (1999-2001) 2.1, 2.5-2.7 GHz Band ⇒ Not affected by rain Issues: Equipment too expensive, Roof top LoS antennas, short range (LMDS) or too small capacity (MMDS)

7 WiMax (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) – IEEE 802.16 Based on Wireless MAN technology WiMAX standard consist of Fixed system (IEEE 802.16d-2004 Air Interface standard) Mobile system (IEEE 802.16e) Define specifications for the PHY & MAC layer PHY layer specs Frame structure, OFDMA, modulation, and coding MAC layer specs Data and control plane, sleep mode for the terminals

8 Key Features of WiMAX Works on many bands: 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz, 3.5 GHz, … Scalable  Can use any available spectrum width: 1.25 MHz to 28 MHz Strong security Open technology like WiFi Reach and mobility like Cellular but much higher data rates High data rate, up to 70Mbps Long distance, up to 50kms Mobility, up to 120 to 150 km/hour Data rate vs Distance trade off using adaptive modulation. 64QAM to BPSK Offers non-line of site (NLOS) operation Strong QoS  Guaranteed services for data, voice, and video

9 WiMAX WiMAX ≠ IEEE 802.16 Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access 420+ members including Semiconductor companies, equipment vendors, integrators, service providers. Like Wi-Fi Alliance Narrows down the list of options in IEEE 802.16 WiMAX forum lists certified base stations and subscriber stations from many vendors

10 Effect of Frequency Higher Frequencies have higher attenuation, e.g., 18 GHz has 20 dB/m more than 1.8 GHz Higher frequencies need smaller antenna Antenna > Wavelength/2, 800 MHz ⇒ 6” Higher frequencies are affected more by weather Higher than 10 GHz affected by rainfall 60 GHz affected by absorption of oxygen molecules Higher frequencies have more bandwidth and higher data rate Higher frequencies allow more frequency reuse They attenuate close to cell boundaries. Low frequencies propagate far. Mobility  Below 10 GHz

11 WiMax- Type of Service Line-of-sight A fixed dish antenna points straight at the WiMAX tower from a rooftop or pole The line-of-sight connection is stronger and more stable, so it's able to send a lot of data with fewer errors Line-of-sight transmissions use higher frequencies, with ranges reaching a possible 66 GHz Non-line-of-sight A small antenna on your computer connects to the WiMAX tower WiMAX uses a lower frequency range -- 2 GHz to 11 GHz

12 Comparison of 802.11 with 802.16 Why devise a new standard? Why not just use 802.11 Reasons: 802.16 provides service to buildings & buildings are not mobile. Do not migrate from cell to cell often 802.16 runs over a part of city, distances involved can be several kilometers In 802.16, each cell has more users than 802.11cell & these users are expected to use more BW than a typical 802.11. so more spectrum needed 802.16 works in a 10-to-66 GHz range but these millimeter waves have different properties then the longer waves in ISM bands Strongly absorbed by water Line of sight communication

13 Data rate vs. Mobility

14 Why not WIFI Scalability Relative Performance Quality of Service Range Coverage Security

15 The 802.16 Protocol Stack Differences with 802.11 Transmission sublayer is used to hide the different technologies from data link layer Security sublayer MAC sublayer is completely connection oriented Services-specific convergence sublayer takes place of LLC Provides support for both connectionless & connectionoriented protocols

16 IEEE 802.16 PHYs

17 The 802.16 Physical Layer Base station has multiple antennas Each antenna pointing at different sector of surrounding terrain due to line of sight requirement for millimeter waves Each sector has his own users & independent of surrounding sectors De-Merits Signal strength in millimeter band falls off sharply with distance from base station SNR drops with distance from base station Solution Employs three different modulation schemes Based on how far subscriber station is far from base station

18 The 802.16 Modulation Close-in subscribers QAM-64 is used with 6 bits/baud Medium-distance subscribers QAM-16 is used with 4 bits/baud Distant subscribers QPSK is used with 2 bits/baud Example: for 25 MHz of spectrum QAM-64 gives 150Mbps QAM-16 gives 100Mbps QPSK gives 50 Mbps Farther the subscriber is from base station, lower the data rate Transmission environment is shown pictorially on next slide

19 The 802.16 Transmission Environment

20 The 802.16 Multiplexing TDD: Time Division Duplexing Base station periodically send out frames, each containing time slots; Refer next slide 1st ones are for downstream traffic Guard frames are used to switch direction Number of time slots devoted to each direction can be changed dynamically to match the BW in each direction to the traffic Downstream traffic is mapped into time slots by base station. Upstream is more complex & depends upon on quality of service Use of Hamming codes to do FEC in physical layer

21 Frames and time slots for TDD

22 802.16 Frame Structure

23 Mobile WiMAX Frame

24 Frame Structure DL Preamble: Time and frequency synchronization Frame Control Header (FCH): MAPs lengths, modulation and coding, usable subcarriers Downlink MAP: Burst profile (time, frequency, modulation, coding) to each user Uplink MAP: Burst profile for transmission from each user. MAPs can be compressed Contention-based region: Ranging, bandwidth request, besteffort data Ranging Channel: Closed loop frequency, time, and power adjustments Channel quality indicator channel (CQICH) Ack Channel: subscriber stations Initially, 5 ms frames only.

25 Subscriber Initialization

26 The 802.16 MAC Sublayer Protocol … Security sublayer Encryption is used to keep secret all the data Only payloads are encrypted; the headers are not MAC sublayer common part MAC frames occupy an integral number of physical layer time slots Each MAC frame is composed of subframes, 1st two of which are downstream & upstream maps These maps tells what is in which time slot & which time slots are free Upstream channel allocation is closely tied to the quality of service issue

27 The 802.16 MAC Sublayer Protocol: Service Classes All services in 802.16 are connection-oriented Each gets one of the above classes of service, determined when the connection is setup Design is very different from that of 802.11 or Ethernet Standard defines two forms of BW allocation per station & per connection Per station case Subscriber station aggregates the needs of all users in the building & makes collective requests for them Per connection case Base station manages each connection directly

28 The 802.16 Frame Structure (a) A generic frame (b) A bandwidth request frame EC bit: tells whether payload is encrypted Type field: identifies frame type CI field: presence or absence of final checksum EK field: which of encryption keys is used (if any) Length field: complete length of the frame including header Connection ID: tells which connection this frame belongs to Header CRC: checksum over header only For more details, please consult the standard

29 WiMAX MAC: Key Features Flexible and Extensible - Same MAC for all current and future PHYs Modular: Several optional features. Negotiable SS/BS features Multiple Topologies: PTP, PMP, mesh Multiple Antenna Technologies: Adaptive Antennas, MIMO Multiple Protocol Payloads: ATM, Packets (IP or Ethernet), W or w/o header suppression Flexible Retransmission Policies: ARQ, HARQ TDD and FDD Support Variety of Subscribers: Several per subscriber or per connection parameters Integrated QoS Security

30 Base Station and Subscriber Stations Base Station (BS): Controls the entire system, frame size, scheduling, admission control, QoS, Ranging, clock synchronization, power control and handoff. All traffic goes through BS Subscriber Station (SS): Find BS, Acquire PHY synchronization, Obtain MAC parameters, Generate bandwidth requests, make local scheduling decisions, follow transmission/reception schedule from BS, perform initial ranging, maintenance ranging, power control Mobile Station (MS): Mobility management, Handoff, Power Conservation

31 Framing and Duplexing Burst = n MPDUs with per burst CRC Burst Profile: Modulation type, FEC, preamble type, guard time Downlink Interval Usage Code (DIUC): Identifies burst profile DL Channel Descriptor (DCD): Describes DL PHY. Broadcast periodically by BS. Frame duration, Defines DIUCs. Uplink Interval Usage Code (UIUC): Identifies UL burst profiles UL Channel Descriptor (UCD): Describes UL PHY.

32 Connections and Service Flows Service Flows = Higher layer flows Each Service flow has a connection Extra connections for management and control 16-bit CID ⇒ 65,535 connections Each station has many connections with BS: Initial Ranging CID Basic CID Primary Management CID Secondary Management CID: Higher layer Multicast Polling CID: Bandwidth requests

33 IEEE 802.16 – QoS Classes Connection oriented: All traffic is assigned a connection Five Service Classes: 1. Unsolicited Grant Service (UGS): CBR traffic, e.g., voice Specified throughput, delay, and delay jitter 2. Enhanced Real-Time Polling Service (ertPS): Silence suppressed voice. On/off UGS. 3. Real-Time Polling Services (rtPS): rtVBR, e.g., streaming video. Specified peak and average throughput, delay and delay jitter. 4. Non-Real-Time Polling Service (nrtPS): nrtVBR, Specified peak and average throughput 5. Best Effort (BE); No throughput or delay guarantees

34 ARQ Allows selective repeat (Stop and Wait, go back n ) ARQ block size negotiated at connection setup Depends upon the Type of Service (ToS), expected delay, etc ARQ block cannot be fragmented A fragment may contain blocks from multiple SDUs

35 IEEE 802.16 Protocol Structure CS: All functions that are specific to a higher layer protocol Classify SDUs based on MAC address, VLANs, priorities Assigns Service Flow ID (SFID) and a connection identifier Optional payload header suppression (PHS) CPS: Fragmentation and reassembly of large MAC SDUs Packing and unpacking of several small MAC SDUs QoS control, Scheduling Bandwidth request Automatic repeat request (ARQ

36 Benefits OF WiMax Speed Faster than broadband service Wireless Not having to lay cables reduces cost Easier to extend to suburban and rural areas Broad Coverage Much wider coverage than WiFi hotspots

37 END OF LECTURE 13


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