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The technical challenges and solutions in wireless communication systems. It covers topics such as multipath propagation, spectrum limitations, energy limitations, and user mobility. The document also explains cellular radio systems, frequency reuse, and techniques for improving coverage and capacity in cellular networks. It delves into tdma, fdma, and cdma multiple access schemes, as well as handoff strategies and propagation models. A comprehensive overview of the key concepts and principles underlying wireless communication technologies, making it a valuable resource for students and professionals in the field.
Typology: Schemes and Mind Maps
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Wired communications Wireless communications The communication takes place over a more or less stable medium like copper wires or optical fibers. The properties of the medium are well defined and time-invariant.
Due to user mobility as well as multipath propagation, the transmission medium varies strongly with time.
Increasing the transmission capacity can be achieved by using a different frequency on an existing cable,and/or by stringing new cables.
Increasing the transmit capacity must be achieved bymore sophisticated transceiver concepts and smaller cell sizes (in cellular systems), as the amount of available spectrum is limited. The range over which communications can be performed without repeater stations is mostly
The range that can be covered is limited both by the transmission medium
limited by attenuation by the medium (and thus noise); for optical fibers, the distortion of transmitted pulses can also limit the speed of data transmission.
(attenuation, fading, and signal distortion) and by the requirements of spectral efficiency (cell size).
The delay in the transmission process is also constant, determined by the length of the cable and the group delay of possible repeater amplifiers.
The delay of the transmission depends partly on the distance between base station and Mobile Station (MS), and is thus time- variant. Interference and crosstalk from other users either do not happen or the properties of the interference are stationary.
Interference and crosstalk from other users are inherent in the principle of cellular communications. Due to the mobility of the users, they also are time-variant The Bit Error Rate (BER) decreases strongly (approximately exponentially) with increasing Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR). This means that a relatively small increase in transmit power can greatly decrease the error rate.
For simple systems, the average BER decreases only slowly (linearly) with increasing average SNR. Increasing the transmit power usually does not lead to a significant reduction in BER. However, more sophisticated signal processing helps. Due to the well-behaved transmission medium, the quality of wired transmission is generally high.
Due to the difficult medium, transmission quality is generally low unless special measures are used. Jamming and interception of dedicated links with wired transmission is almost impossible without consent by the network operator.
Jamming a wireless link is straightforward, unless special measures are taken. Interception of the on-air signal is possible. Encryption is therefore necessary to prevent unauthorized use of the information. Establishing a link is location based. In other words, a link is established from one outlet to another, independent of which person is connected to the outlet.
Establishing a connection is based on the (mobile) equipment, usually associated with a specific person. The connection is not associated with a fixed location. Power is either provided through the communications network itself (e.g., for traditional landline telephones), or from traditional power mains (e.g., fax). In neither case is energy consumption a major concern for the designer of the device.
MSs use rechargeable or one-way batteries. Energy efficiency is thus a major concern.
Ans-
o For interference-limited systems
Ans a. Noise limited system When MS moves further away from the BS, the received signal power decreases, and at a certain distance, the SNR does not achieve the required threshold for reliable communications. Therefore, the range of the system is noise limited; equivalently, we can call it signal power limited. Depending on the interpretation, it is too much noise or too little signal power that leads to bad link quality. Explain the following types of noise Thermal noise Man made noise Receiver noise And link budget b. Interference-Limited Systems The interference is so strong that it completely dominates the performance, so that the noise can be neglected.
Ans- Fixed channel assignment Dynamic channel assignment
UNIT-II
For derivation refer ( Rappaport Book)
Scattering
For a narrowband channel, the impulse response is a delta function with a time-varying attenuation, so that for slowly time-varying channels: h(t, τ ) = α(t)δ(τ )
UNIT-III
Principle of MSK MSK transmitter block diagram &explanation MSK receiver block diagram &explanation
Quadrature-Phase Shift Keying A Quadrature-Phase Shift Keying (QPSK)-modulated signal is a PAM where the signal carries bit per symbol interval on both the in-phase and quadrature-phase component. When interpreting QPSK as a PAM , the band pass signal reads S BP (t ) = E B /T B[ p 1D (t ) cos ( 2 πf c t) − p 2D (t ) sin ( 2 πf c t) ] Explain the following for different types of QPSK and its comparison Circuit diagram Waveform Constellation diagram
Principle of GMSK GMSK transmitter block diagram &explanation GMSK receiver block diagram &explanation
Explanation & comparison of digital modulation Performance results for ASK, FSK,QPSK,MSK
The modulation formats can be any of the form and explain error probability for the following signal formats
6. Explain Error Probability in Flat-Fading Channels
UNIT-IV
Micro diversity can be used to combat small-scale fading, which are therefore called “microdiversity.” The five most common methods are as follows:
Explain each types of diversity using diagrams (refer book Molisch)
2 .Explain several signal combining techniques in detail ((16 Marks)
Combining Signals - How to use diversity signals in a way that improves the total quality of the signal that is to be detected. In general, we can distinguish two ways of exploiting signals from the multiple diversity branches:
signal. This drawback is avoided by combining diversity, which exploits all available signal
copies. Each signal copy is multiplied by a (complex) weight and then added up.
Maximum Ratio Combining Equal Gain Combining Optimum Combining Hybrid Selection – Maximum Ratio Combining
multiplied by the information symbols. Thus, many users can transmit simultaneously in a
wide band
It also implies that any increase in SINR at the receiver, or reduction in the required SINR, can be immediately translated into higher capacity.
Power control Distinguish between power control for the uplink and that for the downlink:
CDMA. Power control is done by a closed control loop: the MS first sends with a certain power, the BS then tells the MS whether the power was too high or too low, and the MS adjusts its power accordingly. An open control loop (where the MS adjusts its transmit power based on its own channel estimate) cannot be used to compensate for small-scale fading in a Frequency Domain However, an open loop can be used in conjunction with a closed loop. The open loop compensates for large-scale variations in the channel (path loss and shadowing), which are approximately the same at uplink and downlink frequencies. The closed loop is then used to compensate for small-scale variations.
to function: all signals from the BS arrive at one MS with the same power (the channel is the same for all signals). However, it can be advantageous to still use power control in order to keep the total transmit power low. Decreasing the transmit power for all users within a cell by the same amount leaves unchanged the ratio of desired signal power to intra-cell interference – i.e., interference from signals destined for other users in the cell.
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) is a modulation scheme that is especially suited for high-data-rate transmission in delay-dispersive environments. It converts a high-rate data stream into a number of low-rate streams that are transmitted over parallel, narrowband channels that can be easily equalized. Principle of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing OFDM splits a high-rate data stream into N parallel streams, which are then transmitted by modulating N distinct carriers (henceforth called subcarriers or tones ). Symbol duration on each subcarrier thus becomes larger by a factor of N. In order for the receiver to be able to separate signals carried by different subcarriers, they have to be orthogonal. Implementation of Transceivers OFDM can be interpreted in two ways: one is an “analog” –Explain using diagram Splitting original data stream into N parallel data streams, each of which has a lower data rate. We furthermore have a number of local oscillators (LOs) available, each of which oscillates at a frequency fn = nW/N , where n = 0 , 1 ,.. .,N − 1. Each of the parallel data streams then modulates one of the carriers.
IS-95 specifies two possible speech coder rates: 13.3 or 8.6 kbit/s. In both cases, coding increases the data rate to 28.8 kbit/s. The signal is then spread by a factor of 64, resulting in a chip rate of 1.2288 Mchip/s. theoretically; each cell can sustain 64 speech users. In practice, this numberis reduced to 12–18, due to imperfect power control, non orthogonality of spreading codes, etc. The downlink signals generated by one Base Station (BS) for different users are spread by different Walsh–Hadamard sequences (see Section 18.2.6), and thus orthogonal to each other. This puts an upper limit of 64 channels on each carrier. In the uplink, different users are separated by spreading codes that are not strictly orthogonal. Furthermore, interference from other cells reduces signal quality at the BS and Mobile Station (MS). Explain Spreading and Modulatio in the uplink and downlink
Explain the following
Physical-Layer Overview Network Structure Data Rates and Service Classes Air Interface