WCN IA1 Notes
WCN IA1 Notes
WCN IA1 Notes
Mrinal Sarvagya
The ability to communicate with people on the move has evolved remarkably
since Guglielmo Marconi first demonstrated radio's ability to provide
continuous contact with ships sailing the English channel. That was in 1897,
and since then new wireless communications have been enthusiastically adopted
by people throughout the world.
Most cellular radio systems operate in urban areas where there is no direct line-
of-sight path between the transmitter and the receiver, and where the presence
of high rise buildings causes severe diffraction loss. Due to multiple reflections
from various objects, the signal travels along different paths of different
lengths.
Due to the this multipath propogation of the signal , we will get many signal
replicas instead of one. These multipath component of the signal will phase
difference due to the difference in distances travelled by them, and hence the
sum of the component will have weakened strength as out of phase lead to
cancel each other. This phenomena is called MULTIPATH FADING .
Propagation Model : Models which predict the signal strength for arbitrary
transmitter receiver distances for wireless channels are termed as propagation
models.
In figure 1 the rapid fluctuation of received power is small scale fading and
average power is large scale .
Fig : 1 Small Scale and Large scale Fading
In small-scale fading, the received signal power may vary by as much as three
or four orders of magnitude (30 or 40 dB) when the receiver is moved by only a
fraction of a wavelength. As the mobile moves away from the transmitter over
much larger distances, the local average received signal will gradually decrease,
and it is this local average signal level that is predicted by large-scale
propagation models.
.........(1)
where Pt is the transmitted power, Pr(d) is the received power, Gt is the
transmitter
antenna gain, Gr is the receiver antenna gain, d is the Tx-Rx separation and L is
the system loss factor and is generally 1 for wireless communication.. The gain
of the antenna is related to the effective aperture of the antenna which in turn is
dependent upon the physical size of the antenna as given below
G = 4πAe/λ2
The effective aperture Ae is related to the physical size of the antenna, and
λ is related to the carrier frequency by
λ = c/f
where c is speed of light in meters/s and f is carrier frequency of transmitted
signal in Hz
The path loss, representing the attenuation suffered by the signal as it travels
through the wireless channel is given by the difference of the transmitted and
received power in dB and is expressed as:
PL(dB) = 10log Pt / Pr
The Friis free space model is only a valid predictor for for values of d which are
in the far-field of the 'transmitting antenna. The far-field, or Fraunhofer region,
of a transmitting antenna is defined as the region beyond the far field distance
df, which is related to the largest linear dimension of the transmitter antenna
aperture and the carrier wavelength. The Fraunhofer distance is given by
df = 2D2/ λ
The received power Pr(d) at any distance d > d0, may be related to Pr at d0.
Example 1
Solution
Given:
Transmitter power Pt, = 50 W
Carrier frequency fc, = 900 MHz
= 1/3 m
The received power in watts and dBm is calculate for distance 100m assuming
Gt , Gr and L =1 as
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Two Ray Model
In a mobile radio channel, a single direct path between the base station and
a mobile is seldom the only physical means for propagation, and hence the free
space propagation model is in most cases inaccurate.
The 2-ray ground reflection model shown in Figure 2 where two signal
components are considered one direct Line of sight and other is a reflected
component of the signal. At the receiver the two signals reaching with different
path length ( Distance ) and thus having different phases associated with them.
Here the ground is considered as reflecting object.
The total received E-field, ETOT, is then a result of the direct line-of-sight
component, ELOS , and the ground reflected component, Eg. Referring to Figure
2, ht is the height of the transmitter and hr is the height of the receiver.
If E0 is the free space E-field (in units of V/m) at a reference distance d0 from
the transmitter, then for d > d0, the free space propagating E-field is given by
where E (d, t) = E0d0/d represents the envelope of the E-field at d meters from
the transmitter. and cos wct is tranmitted signal . after travelling distance d the
time delay of the signal is d/c, so delay difference will be( t-d/c ) .
Two propagating waves arrive at the receiver: the direct wave that travels a
distance d'; and the reflected wave that travels a distance d''.
The E-field due to the line-of-sight component at the receiver can be expressed
as
and the E-fleld for the ground reflected wave, which has a propagation distance
of d", can be expressed as
The resultant E-field, is the vector sum of ELOS and Eg and the resultant total
E-field envelope is given by
similarly
d''2 = (ht +hr) 2 + d2
However, when T-R separation distance is very large compared to (ht + hr),
then
by taylors approximation
= d[ {1+ 1/2 (ht2+ hr2 +2hthr)/d2}- {1+ 1/2 (ht2+ hr2 - 2hthr)/d2}
=d[ 1+ 1/2 ht2/ d2 +1/2 hr 2/ d2 + 1/2 *2ht hr / d2 - 1 - 1/2 ht2/ d2 -1/2 hr2/ d2 +
1/2 *2ht hr /d 2}
= d/ d2 [ 2hthr]
= 2hthr/d
.....(3)
....(4)
and the time difference
When d is very large, then Δ becomes very small and therefore ELOS and Eg are
virtually identical with only phase difference,i.e.,
Then
Figure 4
we get
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The model mentioned so far does not consider the fact that the surrounding
environmental clutter may be vastly different at two different locations having
the same T-R separation. This leads to measured signals which are vastly
different than the average value predicted by equation (3.68). Measurements
have shown that at any value of d, the path loss PL(d) at a particular location
is random and distributed log-normally (normal in dB) about the mean distance
dependent value
where Xσ, is a zero-mean Gaussian distributed random variable (in dB) with
standard deviation σ
The log-normal distribution describes the random shadowing effects which occur over
a large number of measurement locations which have the same T-R separation, but
have different levels of clutter on the propagation path. This phe nomenon is referred
to as log-normal shadowing. Simply put, log-normal shadowing implies that
measured signal levels at a specific T-R separation have a Gaussian (normal)
distribution about the distance-dependent mean :
The probability that the received signal level will exceed a certain value y
can be calculated from the cumulative density function as
Similarly, the probability that the received signal level will be below y is given
by
Small scale fading
(2) Speed of the mobile – The relative motion between the base station and the
mobile results in random frequency modulation due to different doppler shifts
on each of the multipath components.
Doppler Shift
where Δt is the time required for the mobile to travel from A to B, and θ is
assumed to be the same at points A and B since the source is assumed to be very
far away. The phase change in the received signal due to the difference in path
lengths is therefore
The mean excess delay is the first moment of the power delay profile and is
defined to be
where ak is the amplitude, τk is the excess delay and P(τk) is the power of the
individual multipath signals.
The mean square excess delay spread is defined as
Since the rms delay spread is the square root of the second central moment of
the
power delay profile, it can be written as
The maximum excess delay (X dB) of the power delay profile is defined to be
the time delay during which multipath energy falls to X dB below the
maximum.
Figure 7: Example of an indoor power delay profile; nns delay spread, mean
excess delay, maximum excess delay (10 dB).
Coherence Bandwidth
Example 3 :
Calculate the mean excess delay, rms delay spread, and the maximum excess
delay (10 dE) for the multipath profile given in the figure below. Estimate the
50% coherence bandwidth of the channel
Solution
The second moment for the given power delay profile can be calculated
as
Coherence time: this is a statistical measure of the time duration over which
the channel impulse response is almost invariant. When channel behaves like
this, it is said to be slow faded. Essentially it is the minimum time duration over
which two received signals are affected differently.
For an example, if the coherence time is considered to be the bandwidth over
which the time correlation is above 0.5, then
it can be approximated as
Types of Small-Scale Fading
The type of fading experienced by the signal through a mobile channel depends
on the relation between the signal parameters (bandwidth, symbol period) and
the channel parameters (rms delay spread and Doppler spread). Hence we have
four different types of fading. There are two types of fading due to the time
dispersive nature of the channel.
Flat Fading
Such types of fading occurs when the bandwidth of the transmitted signal is less
than the coherence bandwidth of the channel. Equivalently if the symbol period
of the signal is more than the rms delay spread of the channel, then the fading is
flat fading.
So we can say that flat fading occurs when
BS < BC
where BS is the signal bandwidth and BC is the coherence bandwidth. Also
TS > στ
where TS is the symbol period and στ is the rms delay spread. And in such a
case,
mobile channel has a constant gain and linear phase response over its bandwidth
Fast Fading
In a fast fading channel, the channel impulse response changes rapidly within
the symbol duration of the signal. Due to Doppler spreading, signal undergoes
frequency dispersion leading to distortion. Therefore a signal undergoes fast
fading if
TS > TC
BD is doppler spread
Slow Fading
In such a channel, the rate of the change of the channel impulse response is
much less than the transmitted signal. We can consider a slow faded channel a
channel in which channel is almost constant over atleast one symbol duration.
Hence
TS < TC
and
BS > BD
We observe that the velocity of the user plays an important role in deciding
whether the signal experiences fast or slow fading.
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