Smart Antenna
Smart Antenna
Smart Antenna
This is to certify that the seminar on “SMART ANTENNA SYSTEM FOR MOBILE
COMMUNICATION” is a work carried out by INDIGENE in the department of
Electrical Electronics Engineering ( Instrumentationoption), School Of
Engineering, Federal Polytechnic Nekede, Owerri Imo State.
_______________________ ____________________
ENGR A.I AKWU. Date
(supervisor).
_______________________ ____________________
ENGR. OSONDU Date
(HOD).
_______________________. __________________
ENGR. R.U. ONUOHA. Date
Seminar co-ordinator
_______________________. _____________________
In truth, antennas are not smart antenna systems are smart. Generally
co-located with a base station, a smart antenna system combines an
antenna array with a digital signal-processing capability to transmit and
receive in an adaptive, spatially sensitive manner. Such a configuration
dramatically enhances the capacity of a wireless link through a
combination of diversity gain, array gain and interference suppression.
Increased capacity translates to higher data rates for a given number of
users or more users for a given data rate per user. In other words, such
a system can automatically change the directionality of its radiation
patterns in response to its signal environment. This can dramatically
increase the performance characteristics (such as capacity) of a wireless
system. Multipath of propagation are created by reflections and
scattering. Also, interference signals such as that produced by the
microwave oven are superimposed on the desired signals. Measurements
suggest that each path is really a bundle or cluster of paths, resulting
from surface roughness or irregularities. The random gain of the bundle
is called multipath fading.
LITERATURE REVIEW
CHAPTER 3
METHODOLOGY
The smart antenna works as follows. Each antenna element “sees” each
propagation path differently, enabling the collection of elements to
distinguish individual paths to within a certain resolution. As a
consequence, smart antenna transmitters can encode independent
streams of data onto different paths or linear combinations of paths,
thereby increasing the data rate, or they can encode data redundantly
onto paths that fade independently to protect the receiver from
catastrophic signal fades, thereby providing diversity gain. A smart
antenna receiver can decode the data from a smart antenna transmitter
this is the highest-performing configuration or it can simply provide array
gain or diversity gain to the desired signals transmitted from conventional
transmitters and suppress the interference. No manual placement of
antennas is required. The smart antenna electronically adapts to the
environment. In truth, antennas are not smart antenna systems are
smart. Generally co-located with a base station, a smart antenna system
combines an antenna array with a digital signal-processing capability to
transmit and receive in an adaptive, spatially sensitive manner. Such a
configuration dramatically enhances the capacity of a wireless link through
a combination of diversity gain, array gain and interference suppression.
Increased capacity translates to higher data rates for a given number of
users or more users for a given data rate per user. In other words, such
a system can automatically change the directionality of its radiation
patterns in response to its signal environment. This can dramatically
increase the performance characteristics (such as capacity) of a wireless
system. Multipath of propagation are created by reflections and
scattering. Also, interference signals such as that produced by the
microwave oven are superimposed on the desired signals. Measurements
suggest that each path is really a bundle or cluster of paths, resulting
from surface roughness or irregularities. The random gain of the bundle
is called multipath fading.
CONCLUSION
“Smart Antenna” systems are the antennas with intelligence and the
radiation pattern can be varied without being mechanically changed. With
appropriate adaptive algorithms such as Recursive Least Square Algorithm
(RLS) the beam forming can be obtained. As the system uses a DSP
processor the signals can be processed digitally and the performance
with a high data rate transmission and good reduction of mutual signal
interference. The narrow beams get rid of interference, allowing many
users to be connected with in the same cell at the same time using the
same frequencies and can adapt the frequency allocation to where the
most users are located. With adaptive beam forming, spectral efficiency
of the cell could be multiplied at least ten times. Smart antennas
effectively reduce the power consumption which in turn avoids RF
pollution, minimize health hazard and save scarce resource (diesel &
foreign exchange). Indeed it has been argued that performance
requirement of a future cellular communication system cannot be made
without the use of smart antennas.
REFERENCE
Defeng (David) Huang, and Khaled Ben Letaie f, (2004) “Pre-DFT Processing
Using Eigenanalysis for Coded OFDM With Multiple Receive Antennas”,
IEEE Transactions on Communications, Vol. 52, No. 11, pp. 2019-2027,
November 2004.
Haris Majeed, Rahim Umar, Arslan Ali Basit, (2011) “SMART ANTENNAS–
MIMO, OFDM & Single Carrier FDMA for LTE”, Master's thesis, Linnaeus
University, 2011-06-10
Hongwei Yang, Alcatel Shanghai Bell Co., Ltd., (2005) “A Road to Future
Broadband Wireless Access: MIMO-OFDM-Based Air Interface”, IEEE
Communications Magazine, Vol.43, issue 1, pp. 53-60, January 2005.
Javier V´ıa, Ignacio Santamar´ıa and Victor Elvira, Ralf Eickhoff, (2010) “A
General Pre- FFT Criterion for MIMO-OFDM Beam forming ”, IEEE
International Conference on Communications (ICC), pp. 1-5, May 23-
27,2010.
Tom Van Leeuwen, Ingrid Moerman, Hendrik Rogier, Bart Dhoedt, Daniël De
Zutter and Piet Demeester, (2003) “Broadbandd Wireless
Communication in Vehicles,” Journal of the Communications Network,
pp.76-82, 2003.
X Gu, X-H Peng and G C Zhang, (2006) “MIMO systems for broadband wireless
communications”, BT Technology Journal, Volume 24 No 2, pp. 90-96,
April 2006.