next generation wireless systems and smart antennas

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1 Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas Jack H. Winters April 25, 2003 [email protected]

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Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas. Jack H. Winters. April 25, 2003 [email protected]. Goal. Wireless communications, anywhere, in any form In any form: high-speed data (Internet) voice audio (music) video Anywhere: home buildings (office) pedestrian vehicles. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

1

Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

Jack H. Winters

April 25, 2003

[email protected]

Page 2: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

2

Goal

• Wireless communications, anywhere, in any form

• In any form:

– high-speed data (Internet)

– voice

– audio (music)

– video

• Anywhere:

– home

– buildings (office)

– pedestrian

– vehicles

Page 3: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

3

OUTLINE

• Current Systems

• Current Trends

• Technical Issues

– Smart Antennas

– Radio Resource Management

• ITRI Study on China

• Conclusions

Page 4: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

4

Current Systems

10 feet 100 feet 1 mile 10 miles

100 kbps

1 Mbps

10 Mbps

100 Mbps

3G Wireless~ 2GHz

BlueTooth2.4GHz

802.11a5.5GHz Unlicensed

802.11b2.4GHz Unlicensed

Peak Data Rate

Range

2 mph 10 mph 30 mph 60 mph

$ 500,000

$ 1000

$ 100

$ 500

$ 100

$ 10

$/Cell $/SubHigh performance/price

High ubiquity and mobility

Mobile Speed

UWB3.1-10.6 GHz

Page 5: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

5

Cellular Data

• CDPD (US) < 10 kbps

• GPRS = 30-40 kbps

• EDGE/1xRTT = 80 kbps

• WCDMA = 100 kbps (starting in Japan, but not for several years in US)

Page 6: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

6

Data rate: • 1, 2, 5.5, 11 MbpsModulation/Spreading: • Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)

• DBPSK, DQPSK with 11-chip Barker code (1, 2 Mbps) (this mode stems from the original 802.11 standard)• 8-chip complementary code keying (CCK) (5.5, 11 Mbps)• optional: packet binary convolutional coding (PBCC), 64 state, rate 1/2 CC (BPSK 5.5 Mbps, QPSK 11 Mbps)

Barker

Key 802.11b Physical Layer Parameters:

Chip rate: 11 MHzFrequency band: Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM, unlicensed) 2.4 - 2.4835 GHz

Bandwidth: 22 MHz - TDDChannel spacing: 5 MHz

Total of 14 (but only the first 11 are used in the US), with only 3 nonoverlapping channels

Number of channels:

Transmission modes:(dynamic rate shifting)

CCK

1 s11 chips

Barker

727 ns8 chips

CCK

WLANs: 802.11b

Page 7: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

7

Unlicensed national infrastructure (U-NII), 5.5 GHz

Total of 12 in three blocks between 5 and 6 GHz

Data rate: 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 54 MbpsModulation: BPSK, QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM

Coding rate: 1/2, 2/3, 3/4Subcarriers: 52

Pilot subcarriers: 4

G

3.2 s

4 s

FFT

52=48+4 tones64 point FFT

Key 802.11a Physical Layer Parameters:

Symbol duration: 4 sGuard interval: 800 ns

Subcarrier spacing: 312.5 kHzBandwidth: 16.56 MHz - TDD

Channel spacing: 20 MHz

FFT size: 64

:

BPSK QPSK QAM16 QAM64

6 12 24R=1/2

48R=2/3

9 18 36 54R=3/4

User data rates (Mbps):

Frequency band:

Number of channels:

WLANs: 802.11a (g in 2.4 GHz band)

Page 8: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

8

WLAN Evolution

• Start with wireless data access (802.11b) (hotspots)

– Extend range and migrate to:

• Voice

• Audio (music)

• Video

• Mobility

• Higher data rates (54 Mbps - 802.11a and higher)

Page 9: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

9

Technical Issues

• Voice/Music streaming/Video streaming (802.11e)

• Universal coverage (Internet roaming)

• Range

• Higher data rates

• Capacity/Interference

• Key constraint: Stay within existing standards/standard evolution (enhance performance within standards and drive standards evolution)

Page 10: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

10

Internet Roaming

• Seamless handoffs between WLAN and WAN

– high-performance when possible

– ubiquity with reduced throughput

• Management/brokering of consolidated WLAN and WAN access

• Adaptive or performance-aware applications

• Nokia GPRS/802.11b PCMCIA card

• NTT DoCoMo WLAN/WCDMA trial

Cellular Wireless

EnterpriseHome

Public

Internet

Wireless LAN’s

Page 11: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

11

Technical Issues

• Voice/Music streaming/Video streaming (802.11e)

• Universal coverage (Internet roaming)

• Range

• Higher data rates

• Capacity/Interference

• Key constraint: Stay within existing standards/standard evolution (enhance performance within standards and drive standards evolution)

Page 12: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

12

Wireless System Enhancements

10 feet 100 feet 1 mile 10 miles

100 kbps

1 Mbps

10 Mbps

100 Mbps

3G Wireless~ 2GHz

BlueTooth2.4GHz

802.11a5.5GHz Unlicensed

802.11b2.4GHz Unlicensed

Peak Data Rate

Range

2 mph 10 mph 30 mph 60 mph

$ 500,000

$ 1000

$ 100

$ 500

$ 100

$ 10

$/Cell $/SubHigh performance/price

High ubiquity and mobility

Mobile Speed

Enhanced

UWB3.1-10.6 GHz

Page 13: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

13

Enhancements

• Smart Antennas (keeping within standards):

– Range increase

– Interference suppression

– Capacity increase

– Data rate increase using multiple transmit/receive antennas (MIMO)

• Radio resource management techniques (using cellular techniques in WLANs):

– Dynamic packet assignment

– Power control

– Adaptive coding/modulation/smart antennas

Page 14: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

14

Smart AntennasSmart Antennas

Smart Antennas significantly improve performance:

• Higher antenna gain with multipath mitigation (gain of M with M-fold diversity) Range extension

• Interference suppression (suppress M-1 interferers) Quality and capacity improvement

• With smart antennas at Tx/Rx MIMO capacity increase(M-fold)

SIGNAL

INTERFERENCE

INTERFERENCEBEAMFORMER

WEIGHTS

SIGNAL OUTPUT

Page 15: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

In 1999, combining at base stations changed from MRC to MMSE for capacity increase

Downlink Switched Beam Antenna

INTERFERENCE

SIGNAL

SIGNALOUTPUT

BEAMFORMERWEIGHTS

Uplink Adaptive Antenna

SIGNALOUTPUT

SIGNAL

INTERFERENCE

BE

AM

FO

RM

ER

BEAMSELECT

Smart Antennas for Cellular

• Key enhancement technique to increase system capacity, extend coverage, and improve user experience in cellular (IS-136)

Page 16: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

16

Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) Radio

• With M transmit and M receive antennas, can provide M independent channels, to increase data rate M-fold with no increase in total transmit power (with sufficient multipath) – only an increase in DSP

– Indoors – up to 150-fold increase in theory

– Outdoors – 8-12-fold increase typical

• AT&T measurements show 4x data rate & capacity increase in all mobile & indoor/outdoor environments (4 Tx and 4 Rx antennas)

– 216 Mbps 802.11a (4X 54 Mbps)

– 1.5 Mbps EDGE

– 19 Mbps WCDMA

Page 17: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

17

Rx

Rx

Rx

MIMO Channel Testing

W1

W2

W3

W4

LO

Synchronoustest

sequences

Rx

• Perform timing recovery and symbol synchronization

• Record 4x4 complex channel matrix

• Evaluate capacity and channel correlation

LO

Mobile Transmitters Test Bed Receivers with RooftopAntennas

Terminal Antennas on a Laptop

Tx

Tx

Tx

Tx

Rooftop Base Station Antennas

11.3 ft

Prototype Dual Antenna Handset

Mobile Transmitters

Page 18: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

18

DIVERSITY TYPES

Spatial: Separation – only ¼ wavelength needed at terminal

Polarization: Dual polarization (doubles number of antennas in one location

Pattern: Allows even closer than ¼ wavelength

4 or more antennas on a PCMCIA card

16 on a handset

Even more on a laptop

Page 19: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

19

MIMO Antennas

Base Station Antennas

Laptop Prototype • Antennas mounted on 60 foot tower on 5 story office building

• Dual-polarized slant 45 1900 MHz sector antennas and fixed multibeam antenna with 4 - 30 beams

• 4 patch antennas at 1900 MHz separated by 3 inches (/2 wavelengths)

• Laptop prototype made of brass with adjustable PCB lid

Page 20: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

20

• Measured capacity distribution is close to the ideal for 4 transmit and 4 receive antennas

MIMO Field Test Results

Page 21: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

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Smart Antennas for WLANs

• TDD operation (only need smart antenna at access point or terminal for performance improvement in both directions)

• Interference suppression Improve system capacity and throughput– Supports aggressive frequency re-use for higher spectrum efficiency, robustness in the ISM band (microwave

ovens, outdoor lights)

• Higher antenna gain Extend range (outdoor coverage)• Multipath diversity gain Improve reliability• MIMO (multiple antennas at AP and laptop) Increase data rates

APSmart

Antenna

Interference

Smart Antennas can significantly improve the performance of WLANs

APSmart

Antenna

Page 22: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

22

Smart Antennas

• Adaptive MIMO

– Adapt among:

• antenna gain for range extension

• interference suppression for capacity (with frequency reuse)

• MIMO for data rate increase

• With 4 antennas at access point and terminal, in 802.11a have the potential to provide up to 216 Mbps in 20 MHz bandwidth within the standard

• In EDGE/GPRS, 4 antennas provide 4-fold data rate increase (to 1.5 Mbps in EDGE)

• In WCDMA, BLAST techniques proposed by Lucent, with 19 Mbps demonstrated

• In UWB, smart antennas at receiver provide range increase at data rates of 100’s Mbps

Page 23: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

23

Radio Resource Management

• Use cellular radio resource management techniques in WLANs: Adaptive coding/modulation, dynamic packet assignment, power control

• Use software on controller PC for multiple access points to analyze data and control system

• Power control to permit cell ‘breathing’ (for traffic spikes)

• Dynamic AP channel assignment

– Combination of radio resource management and smart antennas yields greater gains than sum of gains

Page 24: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

04/21/23

v00509m.ppt

International Technology Research Institute

Study on Wireless Communication Technology and Systems

• ITRI Wireless Comm. Technology (EU, Japan, 2000)• ITRI Asian Telecomm. Update (HK, Taiwan, 2001)• ITRI Asian Telecomm. Update (PRC, March-April, 2003)

http://itri2.org

Page 25: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

25

Asia Telecommunications Study

• Growing activities to support development of Asia’s expertise in 3G systems are questionable

Comparing the observed R&D trends in Asia with those from the previous wireless study in Europe and Japan we may conclude:

• Magnitude of R&D activities in Europe and Japan is much larger

• System-based R&D is limited in Asia

Page 26: Next Generation Wireless Systems and Smart Antennas

26

Conclusions

• We are evolving toward our goal of universal high-speed wireless access, but technical challenges remain

• These challenges can be overcome by the use of:

– Smart antennas to reduce interference, extend range, increase data rate, and improve quality, without standards changes

– Radio resource management techniques, in combination with smart antennas, and multiband/multimode devices