Wireless Transmission Media

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Presentation transcript:

Wireless Transmission Media Lecture 5

Overview Wireless Transmission Wireless Transmission Examples terrestrial microwave satellite microwave broadcast radio Infrared Wireless Transmission Systems Comparison Wireless Propagation Modes Multiplexing TDM, FDM WDM

Wireless (Unguided Media) Transmission transmission and reception are achieved by means of an antenna directional transmitting antenna puts out focused beam transmitter and receiver must be aligned omnidirectional signal spreads out in all directions can be received by many antennas

Wireless Examples terrestrial microwave satellite microwave broadcast radio infrared

Terrestrial Microwave used for long-distance telephone service uses radio frequency spectrum, from 2 to 40 Ghz parabolic dish transmitter, mounted high used by common carriers as well as private networks requires unobstructed line of sight between source and receiver curvature of the earth requires stations (repeaters) ~30 miles apart

Satellite Microwave Applications Television distribution Long-distance telephone transmission Private business networks

Microwave Transmission Disadvantages line of sight requirement expensive towers and repeaters subject to interference such as passing airplanes and rain

Satellite Microwave Transmission a microwave relay station in space can relay signals over long distances geostationary satellites remain above the equator at a height of 22,300 miles (geosynchronous orbit) travel around the earth in exactly the time the earth takes to rotate

Satellite Transmission Links earth stations communicate by sending signals to the satellite on an uplink the satellite then repeats those signals on a downlink the broadcast nature of the downlink makes it attractive for services such as the distribution of television programming

Satellite Transmission Process transponder dish dish 22,300 miles uplink station downlink station

Satellite Transmission Applications television distribution a network provides programming from a central location direct broadcast satellite (DBS) long-distance telephone transmission high-usage international trunks private business networks

Principal Satellite Transmission Bands C band: 4(downlink) - 6(uplink) GHz the first to be designated Ku band: 12(downlink) -14(uplink) GHz rain interference is the major problem Ka band: 19(downlink) - 29(uplink) GHz equipment needed to use the band is still very expensive

Microwave Transmission Characteristics Microwave transmission covers a substantial portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Common frequencies used for transmission are in the range 2 to 40 GHz. The higher the frequency used, the higher the potential bandwidth and therefore the higher the potential data rate. Microwave Bandwidth and Data Rates

Microwave Transmission Characteristics As with any transmission system, a main source of loss is attenuation. For microwave (and radio frequencies), the loss can be expressed as where d is the distance and A is the wavelength, in the same units. Thus, loss varies as the square of the distance. In contrast, for twisted pair and coaxial cable, loss varies exponentially with distance (linear in decibels). Thus repeaters or amplifiers may be placed farther apart for microwave systems-10 to 100 km is typical. Attenuation is increased with rainfall. The effects of rainfall become especially noticeable above 10 GHz. Another source of impairment is interference. With the growing popularity of microwave, transmission areas overlap and interference is always a danger. Thus the assignment of frequency bands is strictly regulated

Fiber vs Satellite

Radio radio is omnidirectional and microwave is directional Radio is a general term often used to encompass frequencies in the range 3 kHz to 300 GHz. Mobile telephony occupies several frequency bands just under 1 GHz.

Infrared Uses transmitters/receivers (transceivers) that modulate noncoherent infrared light. Transceivers must be within line of sight of each other (directly or via reflection ). Unlike microwaves, infrared does not penetrate walls.

Satellite Vs. Terrestrial Satellite communications only work when there is a line of sight from the communications satellite. So does terrestrial microwave communications. Both require parabolic antennas. This is because apart from the limited frequency bands used by satellite communications, terrestrial and satellite microwave communications are actually using the same technology, and the only difference is the distance between sender and receiver. Terrestrial is point to point whereas satellite is sent from earth - space - earth

Radio Vs. Microwave The principle difference between radio and microwave is that radio is omnidirectional and microwave is focused. The term "Radio" covers the FM radio and UHF and VHF television. Packet Radio: Uses a ground based antenna to link multiple sites in a data transmission network. Teletext Service: This service inserts character data in the vertical blanking interval in a conventional TV signal. Televisions equipped with a decoder can receive and display the signal (Closed Caption). Cellular Radio: A given frequency may be used by a number of transmitters in the same area.

Infrared Vs. Microwave One important difference between infrared and microwave transmission is that the former does not penetrate walls. Thus the security and interference problems encountered in microwave systems are not present. Furthermore, there is no frequency allocation issue with infrared, because no licensing is required. Also the presence of high amounts of electromagnetic interference (EMI) would also suggest the use of infrared systems rather than microwave Infrared systems are advantageous if the weather is normally rainy but not foggy and there is little smog. However if the area is foggy and has a substantial amount of snow and smog then microwave systems would work better

Frequency Bands A signal radiated from an antenna travels along one of three routes: Ground wave Sky wave Line Of Sight(LOS)

Wireless Propagation Ground Wave Radio waves in the VLF (Very low frequency) band propagate in a ground, or surface wave. The wave is confined between the surface of the earth and to the ionosphere. The ground wave can propagate a considerable distance over the earth's surface and in the low frequency and medium frequency portion of the radio spectrum. Ground wave radio propagation is used to provide relatively local radio communications coverage, especially by radio broadcast stations that require to cover a particular locality. Ground wave propagation follows the contour of the earth and can propagate distances well over the visible horizon This effect is found in frequencies up to 2MHz The best known example of ground wave communication is AM radio

Wireless Propagation Sky Wave Sky wave propagation is used for amateur radio, CB radio, and international broadcasts such as BBC and Voice of America A signal from an earth based antenna is reflected from the ionized layer of the upper atmosphere back down to earth Sky wave signals can travel through a number of hops, bouncing back and for the between the ionosphere and the earth’s surface

Wireless Propagation Sky Wave In radio communication, skywave or skip refers to the propagation of radio waves reflected or refracted back toward Earth from the ionosphere, an electrically charged layer of the upper atmosphere. Since it is not limited by the curvature of the Earth, skywave propagation can be used to communicate beyond the horizon, at intercontinental distances. It is mostly used in the shortwave frequency bands.

Wireless Propagation Line of Sight Line-of-sight propagation refers to electro-magnetic radiation or acoustic wave propagation. Electromagnetic transmission includes light emissions traveling in a straight line. The rays or waves may be diffracted, refracted, reflected, or absorbed by atmosphere and obstructions with material and generally cannot travel over the horizon or behind obstacles.   Ground and sky wave propagation modes do not operate above 30 MHz - - communication must be by line of sight

Refraction Velocity of electromagnetic wave is a function of the density of the medium through which it travels ~3 x 108 m/s in vacuum, less in anything else Speed changes with movement between media Index of refraction (refractive index) is Sine(incidence)/sine(refraction) Varies with wavelength Gradual bending Density of atmosphere decreases with height, resulting in bending of radio waves towards earth

Line of Sight Transmission Free space loss loss of signal with distance Atmospheric Absorption from water vapor and oxygen absorption Multipath multiple interfering signals from reflections Refraction bending signal away from receiver

Multipath Interference In digital radio communications (such as GSM) multipath can cause errors and affect the quality of communications. The errors are due to intersymbol interference (ISI). Equalisers are often used to correct the ISI. Alternatively, techniques such as orthogonal frequency division modulation and rake receivers may be used.

Multiplexing In both local and wide area communications, it is almost always the case that the capacity of the transmission medium exceeds the capacity required for the transmission of a single signal. To make efficient use of the transmission system, it is desirable to carry multiple signals on a single medium. This is referred to as multiplexing

Reasons for Widespread Use of Multiplexing Cost per kbps of transmission facility declines with an increase in the data rate Cost of transmission and receiving equipment declines with increased data rate Most individual data communicating devices require relatively modest data rate support

Multiplexing Techniques Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) Takes advantage of the fact that the useful bandwidth of the medium exceeds the required bandwidth of a given signal Time-division multiplexing (TDM) Takes advantage of the fact that the achievable bit rate of the medium exceeds the required data rate of a digital signal

Frequency-division Multiplexing Each signal requires a certain bandwidth centered on its carrier frequency, referred to as a channel. To prevent interference, the channels are separated by guard bands, which are unused portions of the spectrum. An example is the multiplexing of voice signals. We mentioned that the useful spectrum for voice is 300 to 3400 Hz. Thus, a bandwidth of 4 kHz is adequate to carry the voice signal and provide a guard band Six signal sources are fed into a multiplexer that modulates each signal onto a different frequency (fi, . . . , f6). Each signal requires a certain bandwidth centered on its carrier frequency, referred to as a channel. To prevent interference, the channels are separated by guard bands, which are unused portions of the spectrum (not shown in the figure).

Time-division Multiplexing TDM, referring to the fact that time slots are preassigned and fixed. Hence the timing of transmission from the various sources is synchronized. In contrast, asynchronous TDM allows time on the medium to be allocated dynamically. Unless otherwise noted, the term TDM will be used to mean synchronous TDM TDM takes advantage of the fact that the achievable bit rate (sometimes, unfortunately, called bandwidth) of the medium exceeds the required data rate of a digital signal. Multiple digital signals can be carried on a single transmission path by interleaving portions of each signal in time.

Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik 4/21/2017 Frequency multiplex Separation of the whole spectrum into smaller frequency bands A channel gets a certain band of the spectrum for the whole time Advantages no dynamic coordination necessary works also for analog signals Disadvantages waste of bandwidth if the traffic is distributed unevenly inflexible k2 k3 k4 k5 k6 k1 f t c Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. G. Krüger E. Dorner / Dr. J. Schiller

Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik 4/21/2017 Time multiplex A channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain amount of time Advantages only one carrier in the medium at any time throughput high even for many users Disadvantages precise synchronization necessary f t c k2 k3 k4 k5 k6 k1 Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. G. Krüger E. Dorner / Dr. J. Schiller

Time and frequency multiplex Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik Time and frequency multiplex 4/21/2017 Combination of both methods A channel gets a certain frequency band for a certain amount of time Example: GSM Advantages better protection against tapping protection against frequency selective interference but: precise coordination required f t c k2 k3 k4 k5 k6 k1 Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. G. Krüger E. Dorner / Dr. J. Schiller

Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik 4/21/2017 Code multiplex Each channel has a unique code All channels use the same spectrum at the same time Advantages bandwidth efficient no coordination and synchronization necessary good protection against interference and tapping Disadvantages varying user data rates more complex signal regeneration Implemented using spread spectrum technology k2 k3 k4 k5 k6 k1 f t c Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. G. Krüger E. Dorner / Dr. J. Schiller

Universität Karlsruhe Institut für Telematik 4/21/2017 Multiplexing Multiplexing in 4 dimensions space (si) time (t) frequency (f) code (c) Goal: multiple use of a shared medium Important: guard spaces needed! s2 s3 s1 f t c k2 k3 k4 k5 k6 k1 channels ki f Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. G. Krüger E. Dorner / Dr. J. Schiller

Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) multiple beams of light at different frequencies carried over optical fiber links commercial systems with 160 channels of 10 Gbps lab demo of 256 channels 39.8 Gbps architecture similar to other FDM systems multiplexer consolidates laser sources (1550nm) for transmission over single fiber optical amplifiers amplify all wavelengths demultiplexer separates channels at destination Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) use of more channels more closely spaced

Summary Guided and Unguided Media Advantages and disadvantages some of the media (TP, STP, UTP, Coaxial, Fiber) Design factor of the underlying media Antennas Modes of transmission