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Wireless Communication Channels: Large-Scale Pathloss
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Diffraction
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 3 Diffraction Diffraction allows radio signals to propagate behind obstacles between a transmitter and a receiver htht hrhr
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 4 Huygen’s Principle & Diffraction All points on a wavefront can be considered as point sources for the production of secondary wavelets. These wavelets combine to produce a new wavefront in the direction of propagation.
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 5 Knife-Edge Diffraction Geometry htht hrhr d1d1 d2d2 h obs h Tx Rx α β γ Δ: Excess Path Length (Difference between Diffracted Path and Direct Path) <<
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 6 Ф: Phase Difference between Diffracted Path and Direct Path) Fresnel Zone Diffraction Parameter ( ν ) ν 2 =2, 6, 10 … corresponds to destructive interference between direct and diffracted paths ν 2 =4, 8, 12 … corresponds to constructive interference between direct and diffracted paths
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 7 Fresnel Zones From “Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice” T.S. Rappaport Fresnel Zones: Successive regions where secondary waves have a path length from the transmitter to receiver which is nλ/2 greater than the total path length of a line-of-sight path r n : Radius of the n th Fresnel Zone
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 8 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d First Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d =(λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 9 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d First Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d =(λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 10 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d First Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d =(λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 11 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d First Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d =(λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 12 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d First Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d =(λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 13 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d Second Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d = λ
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 14 Diffraction Loss Diffraction Loss occurs from the blockage of secondary waves such that only a portion of the energy is diffracted around the obstacle htht hrhr Tx Rx l1l1 l2l2 d Third Fresnel Zone Points l 1 +l 2 -d = (3λ/2)
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 15 Knife-Edge Diffraction Scenarios htht hrhr Tx Rx d1d1 d2d2 h (-ve) h & ν are –ve Relative Low Diffraction Loss
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 16 htht hrhr Tx Rx d1d1 d2d2 h =0 Knife-Edge Diffraction Scenarios h =0 Diffraction Loss = 0.5
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 17 Knife-Edge Diffraction Scenarios htht hrhr Tx Rx d1d1 d2d2 h (+ve) h & ν are +ve Relatively High Diffraction Loss
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 18 Knife-Edge Diffraction Model The field strength at point Rx located in the shadowed region is a vector sum of the fields due to all of the secondary Huygen’s sources in the plane above the knife-edge Electric Field Strength, E d, of a Knife-Edge Diffracted Wave is given By: E 0 : Free-Space Field Strength in absence of Ground Reflection and Knife-Edge Diffraction F(ν) is called the complex Fresnel Integral
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 19 Diffraction Gain
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 20 Diffraction Gain Approximation
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 21 Multiple Knife-Edge Diffraction htht hrhr Tx Rx d In the practical situations, especially in hilly terrain, the propagation path may consist of more than one obstruction. Optimistic solution (by Bullington): The series of obstacles are replaced by a single equivalent obstacle so that the path loss can be obtained using single knife-edge diffraction models.
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Scattering
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 23 Scattering The actual received signal in a mobile radio environment is often stronger than what is predicted by reflection and diffraction Reason: When a radio wave impinges on a rough surface, the reflected energy is spread in all directions due to scattering
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 24 Reflection Vs Scattering Reflection: Flat surfaces that have much larger dimension than wavelength Scattering: When the medium consists of objects with dimensions that are small compared to the wavelength Testing Surface Roughness using Rayleigh Criterion h c : Critical Height of Surface Protuberance Θ i : Angle of Incidence λ : Wavelength Smooth Surface Minimum to maximum protuberance h is less than h c Rough Surface Minimum to maximum protuberance h is greater than h c
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© Tallal Elshabrawy 25 Γ rough : Reflection Coefficient for Rough Surfaces Γ : Reflection Coefficient for Smooth Surfaces ρ S : Scattering Loss Factor σ h : Standard deviation of the surface height h about the mean surface height I 0 (.) : Bessel Function of the first kind and zero order Reflection Coefficient for Rough Surfaces
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