PCS Extension to Hata Model, Walfisch Bertoni Model, Indoor Propagation and Partition Losses

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mobile Communications
Advertisements

Data Communication lecture10
S Digital Communication Systems Multipath Radio Channel Addendum (extracts from J-P Linnartz: Wireless Communication CDROM)
1 Small-scale Mobile radio propagation Small-scale Mobile radio propagation l Small scale propagation implies signal quality in a short distance or time.
CELLULAR COMMUNICATIONS 2. Radio Wave Propagation.
EE 6332, Spring, 2014 Wireless Telecommunication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 2 Jan. 15 th, 2014.
Propagation Characteristics
1. Outdoor Propagation Models
Ray Tracing A radio signal will typically encounter multiple objects and will be reflected, diffracted, or scattered These are called multipath signal.
Lecture 3: Propagation Modelling Anders Västberg
EELE 5490, Fall, 2009 Wireless Communications Ali S. Afana Department of Electrical Engineering Class 6 Dec. 4 th, 2009.
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS Assist.Prof.Dr. Nuray At.
1 Mobile Communication Systems 1 Prof. Carlo Regazzoni Prof. Fabio Lavagetto.
Advanced Topics in Next- Generation Wireless Networks Qian Zhang Department of Computer Science HKUST Wireless Radio.
Mobile Radio Propagation - Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
EELE 5490, Fall, 2009 Wireless Communications
Wireless and Mobile Communication Systems
EL 675 UHF Propagation for Modern Wireless Systems Henry L. Bertoni Polytechnic University.
ECE 4730: Lecture #10 1 MRC Parameters  How do we characterize a time-varying MRC?  Statistical analyses must be used  Four Key Characteristics of a.
Wireless Communication Channels: Large-Scale Pathloss
Wireless Communication Channels: Small-Scale Fading
Propagation Measurements and Models for Wireless Communications Channels Brian Alexander.
Voice capacity in CDMA xRTT systems Term project (COE-543) By S.M.Rehman #
EEE440 Modern Communication Systems Wireless and Mobile Communications.
Propagation characteristics of wireless channels
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS Assist.Prof.Dr. Nuray At.
Chapter 4 Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
1 Lecture 9: Diversity Chapter 7 – Equalization, Diversity, and Coding.
Modelling and analysis of wireless fading channels Geir E. Øien
Chapter 5 – Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath
August 21, Mobile Computing COE 446 Network Planning Tarek Sheltami KFUPM CCSE COE Principles of.
Cellular Mobile Communication Systems Lecture 2
EE 6332, Spring, 2014 Wireless Communication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 3 Jan. 22 nd, 2014.
EELE 5490, Fall, 2009 Wireless Communications Ali S. Afana Department of Electrical Engineering Class 5 Dec. 4 th, 2009.
The Wireless Channel Lecture 3.
Propagation Measurements and Models for Wireless Communication Channels 指導教授:黃文傑 老師 學  生:曾凱霖 學  號:M 無線通訊實驗室.
EE 6331, Spring, 2009 Advanced Telecommunication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 7 Feb. 10 th, 2009.
© 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Commercial use, distribution, or sale prohibited. Wireless Communications Principles and Practice 2 nd Edition T.S. Rappaport.
Wireless Communications Principles and Practice 2 nd Edition T.S. Rappaport Chapter 5: Mobile Radio Propagation: Small-Scale Fading and Multipath as it.
Applications of Wireless Communication Student Presentations and Research Papers Wireless Communication Technologies Wireless Networking and Mobile IP.
1 What is small scale fading? Small scale fading is used to describe the rapid fluctuation of the amplitude, phases, or multipath delays of a radio signal.
Path loss & shadowing By eng : mahmoud abdel aziz.
Wireless Channels: Large Scale Fading (Path Loss) These slides contains copyrighted materials from Prentice Hall Inc.. These figures are provided as instructor.
Propagation Models Large scale models predict behavior averaged over distances >>  Function of distance & significant environmental features, roughly.
EE 6331, Spring, 2009 Advanced Telecommunication Zhu Han Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Class 6 Feb. 5 th, 2009.
Adaphed from Rappaport’s Chapter 5
Statistical multipath channel models Hassan fayed DR.ENG MOHAB MANGOUD.
Statistical Description of Multipath Fading
TI Cellular Mobile Communication Systems Lecture 3 Engr. Shahryar Saleem Assistant Professor Department of Telecom Engineering University of Engineering.
1 Orthogonal Frequency- Division Multiplexing (OFDM) Used in DSL, WLAN, DAB, WIMAX, 4G.
ECEN 621, Prof. Xi Zhang ECEN “ Mobile Wireless Networking ” Course Materials: Papers, Reference Texts: Bertsekas/Gallager, Stuber, Stallings,
Fading in Wireless Communications Yan Fei. Contents  Concepts  Cause of Fading  Fading Types  Fading Models.
Chapter 4: Mobile Radio Propagation: Large-Scale Path Loss
EENG473 Mobile Communications Module 3 : Week # (10) Mobile Radio Propagation: Large-Scale Path Loss.
Wireless communication lectureset: 8
Diana B. Llacza Sosaya Digital Communications Chosun University
1 EMLAB EM wave propagation. 2 EMLAB Impulse response Time Radio Propagation : physical model 안테나에서 나온 신호는 지형지물과 반사, 투과, 산란을 거치면서 다양한 진폭과, 시간 지연을 갖는 신호들로.
Signal Propagation Basics
The University of Iowa. Copyright© 2005 A. Kruger 1 Introduction to Wireless Sensor Networks Wireless Terms, FAQ & Glossary 27 January 2005.
Doc.: IEEE /313r0 Submission May 2003 Val Rhodes, Cliff Prettie, Intel Corp.Slide 1 Intel SISO/MIMO WLAN Channel Propagation Results Val Rhodes.
Small-Scale Fading Prof. Michael Tsai 2016/04/15.
Shadowing.
Radio Coverage Prediction in Picocell Indoor Networks
UNIT I – Wireless channels
Modeling wireless propagation
9/16/ :14 PM ALLAH © 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered.
Characterizations and Modeling of the Wireless Channel
Practical Radio Propagation Models
Mobile Radio Environment – Propagation Phenomena
Wireless Communications Principles and Practice 2nd Edition T. S
Presentation transcript:

PCS Extension to Hata Model, Walfisch Bertoni Model, Indoor Propagation and Partition Losses Instructor: Dr. Mustafa Shakir

PCS Extension to Hata Model PCS Extension to Hata Model Euorpean Cooperative for Scientific and Technical Research (EURO-COST)

Walfisch and Bertoni Model Walfisch and Bertoni considers the impact of rooftops and building height by using diffraction to predict average signal strength at street level P0 represents the free space loss P1 is based upon diffraction and determines the signal loss from the rooftop to the street Q2 gives the reduction in the rooftop signal due to the row of the buildings which immediately shadow thereceiver at street level The pathloss S as product of three fators 𝑆= 𝑃 0 𝑄 2 𝑃 1

Indoor PropagationIndoor channels are different from traditional mobile radio channels in two different ways: The distances covered are much smaller The variablity of the environment is much greater for a much smaller range of T-R separation distances. The propagation inside a building is influenced by: Layout of the building Construction materials Building type: sports arena, residential home, factory,...

Microcells Models Smaller cells for increased capacity Base station height is typically about that as lamp posts in a street(3-6 m above ground level) Coverage is typically few hundred meters and is determined mostly by specific locations and electrical characteristics of surrounding buildings Dominant propagation mechanisms are: Free space propagation + multiple reflection+ scattering+ diffraction around vertical edges of buildings and rooftops In urban areas lowering the antenna height and the output power will reduce the cell coverage area thus reducing the number of usersin the cell and most important frequencies in the cell can be reused within small distance. This leads to increased over all capacity

Indoor Propagation Indoor propagation is domited by the same mechanisms as outdoor: reflection, scattering, diffraction. --However, conditions are much more variable Doors/windows open or not The mounting place of antenna: desk, ceiling, etc. The level of floors Indoor channels are classified as Line-of-sight (LOS) Obstructed (OBS) with varying degrees of clutter.

Indoor Propagation Buiding types Residential homes in suburban areas Residential homes in urban areas Traditional office buildings with fixed walls (hard partitions) Open plan buildings with movable wall panels (soft partitions) Factory buildings Grocery stores Retail stores Sport arenas

Indoor propagation events and parameters Temporal fading for fixed and moving terminals Motion of people inside building causes Ricean Fading for the stationary receivers Portable receivers experience in general: Rayleigh fading for OBS propagation paths Ricean fading for LOS paths. Multipath Delay Spread Buildings with fewer metals and hard-partitions typically have small rms delay spreads: 30-60ns. ---Can support data rates excess of several Mbps without equalization Larger buildings with great amount of metal and open aisles may have rms delay spreads as large as 300ns. ---Can not support data rates more than a few hundred Kbps without equalization. Path Loss The following formula that we have seen earlier also describes the indoor path loss: -- PL(d)[dBm] = PL(d0) + 10nlog(d/d0) + Xs >>n and s depend on the type of the building >>Smaller value for s indicates the accuracy of the path loss model.

Partition Losses In building path loss:Partition losses (same floor) Partition losses between floors Signal Penetration into Buildings There are two kind of partition at the same floor: Hard partions: the walls of the rooms Soft partitions: moveable partitions that does not span to the ceiling The path loss depends on the type of the partitions Partitions vary widely in physical and electrical characteristics making it difficult to apply general models to indoor installations specifically.

Introduction-Fading One of the most interesting applications of radio communications, that is communication between mobile people, has many impairments. Due to multiple users, mobility and environment dynamics, the mobile radio channel is impaired by noise, interference as well as time-varying fluctuations System design requires statistical characterization of both disturbances and random channel space/time variations Envelope variations are due to phenomena on different spatial/temporal

Wireless Propagation Environment

Multipath Effects Rapid changes in signal strength over a small travel distance or time interval Random frequency/phase modulation due to Doppler shifts on different multipath signals Time dispersion caused by multipath propagation delays

Impulse Response Model of a Multipath Channel A mobile radio channel may be modeled as a linear filter with a time varying impulse response, where the time variation is due to receiver motion in space. The filtering nature of the channel is caused by the summation of amplitudes and delays of the multiple arriving waves at any instant of time.

Channel Impulse Response Due to the different multipath waves which have propagation delays which vary over different spatial locations of the receiver, the impulse response of the linear time invariant channel should be a function of the position of the receiver.

Multipath Radio Channel