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ECEN 621-600 “ Mobile Wireless Networking ”. Course Materials: Papers, Reference Texts: Bertsekas/Gallager, Stuber, Stallings, etc Grading (Tentative) : HW: 20%, Projects: 40%, Exam-1:20%, Exam-II:20% Lecture notes and Paper Reading Lists: available on-line
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ECEN 621-600 “Mobile Wireless Networking” Course Materials: Papers, Reference Texts: Bertsekas/Gallager, Stuber, Stallings, etc Grading (Tentative): HW: 20%, Projects: 40%, Exam-1:20%, Exam-II:20% Lecture notes and Paper Reading Lists: available on-line Class Website: http://ece.tamu.edu/~xizhang/ECEN621/start.php Research Interests and Projects: URL:http://ece.tamu.edu/~xizhang Instructor: Professor Xi Zhang E-mail: xizhang@ece.tamu.edu Office: WERC 331
Characterizations and Modeling of the Wireless Channel Lecture Notes 7.
Wireless channel disturbances • Additive noise, like thermal background noise • Multiplicative noise • Distortion due to time dispersion • Corruptive elements are in the forms of: • Multipath delay spread • Doppler spread due to motion • Signal fading of frequency-selective and non-frequency-selective variety
Multipath propagation environment • Wireless propagation channel contains objects (particles) randomly scattering the energy of transmitted signals • Scattered signals arrive at receiver out of step • These objects (particles) are called scatterers • Scatterers introduce: • Fading • Multipath delay spread • Doppler spread • Attenuation
Multipath delay spread • Scattering by randomly located scatterers gives rise to different paths with different path-lengths/propagation-delays, resulting in multipath delay spread • If the propagation channel doesn’t exhibit multipath delay spread, a point source (a single tone sinusoid) appears at front end of receiver as another point source • A multipath situation arises when a transmitted point source is received as multipoint source, with each of individually received points experiencing a different transmission delay • The effect of multipath propagation on digital transmission can be characterized by time dispersion and fading
Wireless channel time dispersion • The transmitted point source will be received as a smeared wave due to multipath delay spread • Non-overlapping scatterers give rise to distinct multi paths – characterized by their locations in scattering medium. • All scatterers are located on ellipses with transmitter (Tx) and receiver (Rx) as the foci. One ellipse is associated with one path length/delay • Signals reflected by scatterers located on the same ellipse experience the same propagation delay and thus signal components from these multi-paths are indistinguishable at the receiver • Signals that are reflected by scatterers located on different ellipses arrive a the receiver with different delays
Flat fading vs. frequency-selective fading and ISI • If max difference in delay spread is small compared with symbol duration of transmitted signal, channel is said to exhibit flat fading • If difference in delay spread is large compared with the symbol duration of transmitted signal, the channel exhibits frequency-selective fading • In time domain, received signals corresponding to successive transmitted symbols through frequency-selective fading channel will overlap, giving rise to a phenomenon called inter-symbol interference (ISI) • ISI is a signal-dependent distortion • The severity of ISI increase with the width of delay spread. • ISI distortion in time domain can also be examined in frequency domain • ISI degrades transmission performance, which can be overcome by the channel equalization techniques
Background noise and AWGN • Inherent background noise can be approximated as thermal noise and treated as Additive White Gaussian (AWGN) • Digital transmission over practical wireless channels is mainly limited by interference or distortion other than AWGN
Wireless channel fading • The multipath components can affect the received signal strength constructively or destructively, depending on carrier frequency and delay differences among the multi paths • As a mobile station moves, the position of each scatterer w.r.t. transmitter and receiver may change • The overall effect caused by multipath delay spread, Doppler spread, attenuation, thermal noise, etc. is that the received signal level fluctuates with time, which is the phenomenon called fading
Line-of-Sight (LOS) vs. non-line-of-sight (NLOS) • The delay of Line-of-Sight (LOS) or direct path is the shortest path among the multi paths, having smallest propagation delay (often assumed to be zero); the delay of non-line-of-sight (NLOS) or reflected path has longer propagation delay.
An example of two-path channel • Consider transmitting a single-tone sinusoid signal:
Wireless channel fading analysis • When mobile station moves, alpha_1, alpha_2, and tau change with time and thus received signal amplitude and phase also change with time. • Assuming alpha_1 = 2 and alpha_2 = 1 • Assuming alpha_1 = 1.1 and alpha_2 = 1.0, resulting in deeper fading
Effects of channel fading • When signal components from two paths add destructively, transmitted signal experiences deep fading with a small value of the amplitude alpha • During each deep fading, the instantaneously received signal power is very low, resulting in poor transmission quality (high transmission error rate) • Diversity and error-correction coding are effective to combat channel fading for better transmission accuracy • Channel fading is classified long-term fading or short-term fading: • Short-term fading is rapid fluctuations caused by the local multipath (e.g., Rayleigh fading) • Long-term fading is long-term slow variation in the mean level of received signal strength (e.g., Lognormal fading) caused by movement over large enough distance • Multipath propagation in wireless mobile environment yields fading dispersive channel • Signal propagation environment changes as the mobile station moves and /or as any surrounding scatterers move the wireless channel is time-varying and can be modeled as a linear time-variant (LTV) system
Input/output model of Wireless Channel Linear time-invariant (LTI) channel model —Review“Channel impulse response”
Input/output model of Wireless Channel Linear time-variant (LTV) channel