EE 615: Lecture 1 Multicarrier Communications: Professor Uf Tureli
EE 615: Lecture 1 Multicarrier Communications: Professor Uf Tureli
EE 615: Lecture 1 Multicarrier Communications: Professor Uf Tureli
Multicarrier Communications
Professor Uf Tureli
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Contents
Syllabus: http://koala.ece.stevens-
tech.edu/~utureli/EE615/home.html
Todays lecture, motivation for
Multicarrier Communications
Next lecture: review of random
variables, discrete time signal
processing, digital communications,
multipath fading channels
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Books
(Required) OFDM Wireless LANS: A
Theoretical and Practical Guide, John Terry,
Juha Heiskala, Dec. 2001, ISBN:
06723221572
(Recommended) OFDM for Wireless
Multimedia Communications, Richard van Nee
and Ramjee Prasad, 2000, ISBN:0890065306
(Recommended) Multicarrier Techniques for
4G Mobile Communications, Shinsuke Hara
and Ramjee Prasad, 2003, ISBN:1580534821
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Homework & Quizzes
MATLAB based code along w/ book.
SystemView with Wireless LAN
http://www.elanix.com/html/program.html
Projects: About three. Emphasis is on
recent results. Need to have computer
based component.
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Course Outline
Propagation, Multipath and TV Channels
Multicarrier System Model
Implementation aspects
Channel Estimation
Synchronization
Coding
Multiuser detection/ separation
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Motivation
Wireless and Internet trends
WAN, WLAN, WPAN networks
Bandwidth and Mobility Requirements
OFDM, OFDMA, MC-CDMA technologies
Efficient modulation, coding and
diversity techniques
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Wireless Vision
Applications:
Wireless Phones
Wireless Internet Access
Wireless LANs
Smart Homes/Appliances
Automated Highways
Video Teleconferencing
Distance Learning
Sensor Networks
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Seamless Connection
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Technical Challenges
Hardware
Small, lightweight, low power, multimode operation
Communication Link Design
Channel characterization
Fast, robust, spectrally efficient communication
techniques
Mitigation of wireless channel impairments
Multiple Access and Resource Allocation
Efficient modulation, coding and smart antenna schemes
that maximize system capacity
Protocols and cross layer optimization
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Networking.
Routing and mobility management for mobile users
Network reliability
Network flexibility and scalability.
Meeting application-specific requirements.
Performance gap with wireline systems.
Application Issues
Adaptable to changing QOS
Predictive caching
Resource environment awareness
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Wireless Internet Technologies
UWB
802.11a
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Performance Gap
WIDE AREA CIRCUIT SWITCHING
User
Bit-Rate
(kbps)
14.4
digital
cellular
28.8 modem
ISDN
ATM
9.6 modem
2.4 modem
2.4 cellular
32 kbps
PCS
9.6 cellular
wired- wireless
bit-rate "gap"
1970 2000 1990 1980
YEAR
LOCAL AREA PACKET SWITCHING
User
Bit-Rate
(kbps)
Ethernet
FDDI
ATM
100 M
Ethernet
Polling
Packet
Radio
1st gen
WLAN
2nd gen
WLAN
wired- wireless
bit-rate "gap"
1970 2000 1990 1980
.01
.1
1
10
100
1000
10,000
100,000
YEAR
.01
.1
1
10
100
1000
10,000
100,000
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Spectrum Regulation
Spectral Allocation in US controlled by FCC
(commercial) or OSM (defense)
FCC allocates spectral blocks for particular
applications.
FCC previously gave away spectrum
Currently holds spectral auctions
Some spectrum set aside for universal use
Worldwide spectrum controlled by ITU-R
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
History of Mobile Comm
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Standards
Interacting communication systems require
standardization
Standards determined by TIA/CTIA in US
IEEE standards often adopted
Worldwide standards determined by ITU-T
In Europe, ETSI is equivalent of IEEE for
standards development.
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Example Standards
M
o
b
i
l
i
t
y
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Systems beyond 3G/ IMT
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Digital Audio Broadcast (DAB)
DAB supersedes AM/FM
Main advantage, more channels per BW
6 stereo (12 mono) channels per single
freq, allows tranmission of data (as well
as programming information)
DAB uses single frequency network,
differential quadrature phase shift
keying (DQPSK), of BW 1.54 MHz
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Digital Video Broadcast (DVB)
MPEG-2 compressed 3 Mbps TV, 20
Mbps HDTV.
8 MHz channel, 64 QAM modulation
Similar to DAB but intended mainly for
digital television broadcasting.
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Wireless Broadband LANs
Mobile Multimedia Access Communication
(MMAC)
Japanese Association of Radio Industies and
Business (ARIB)
OFDM, 155 Mbps, indoor&outdoor
CBR, VBR and ABR services
USA-IEEE 802.11a, ETSI- Hiperlan II
OFDM, 5.7 GHz, 6-54 Mbit/sec
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
WPAN(Personal Area Network)
UWB: 802.15.3a proposes Multiband OFDM
spread to 500MHz, many bands envisioned.
http://www.multibandofdm.org/
(Ultra-wideband communications
Fractional bandwidth (BW/fc) > 25%
BW > 1.5 GHx)
128 Carriers, 500/128=4MHz tone spacing
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
Throughput Comparison
802.11b
802.11 a
802.15.3
Frequency band
2.4 GHz
5 GHz
2.4 GHz
Maximum bit rate per channel
11 Mb/s
54 Mb/s[1]
55 Mb/s
Number of non-interfering
channels
3
12
4
Support for QoS
802.11e QoS patch under development
Guaranteed time
slots
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
802.15.3 UWB
UWB: Robustness to multipath and
fading
Aug 31, 2006 E E615
802.15.3 UWB-OFDM
High bit rate capability proportional to
power (from Information Theory)
Fine time resolution (Time Bandwidth
product is constant), e.g. localization
Merge UWB with Multicarrier
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
-1
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
time
a
m
p
l i t u
d
e
2 ( )
1
0
( ) ( ) ,
c
c n t
N
j
T
n
p t s t nT e
t
=
=
>
=
else 0
1
0
1
) (
0
M
M
E
E