Wireless and Mobile Communications: Course Instructor: Dr. Rabia Noor Enam
Wireless and Mobile Communications: Course Instructor: Dr. Rabia Noor Enam
Wireless and Mobile Communications: Course Instructor: Dr. Rabia Noor Enam
Mobile
Communications
Course Instructor:
Dr. Rabia Noor Enam
Course Outline
Week No.
Topic
2
3
4
5
6
10
13
14
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
15
9
Mobile IP
12
Chapter No.
Contents
4
5
6
Revision
Pre-Mid Viva
MID TERM
10
11
12
13
14
15
2
3
Page No in
manual
01-08
09-15
16-19
20-22
23-27
28-35
36-41
42-46
47-52
53-61
62-66
67-69
Wireless network
The
Wireless History
Ancient
and growth
Wide
Communication
History
Future !!
Next-generation Cellular
Wireless Internet Access
Wireless Multimedia
Sensor Networks
Smart Homes/Spaces
Automated Highways
In-Body Networks
All this and more
Standards
Interacting
systems require
standardization
Companies
Standards
in US
IEEE standards often adopted
Spectrum Regulation
Spectrum
Spectral
allocation in US controlled by
FCC (commercial) or OSM (defense)
Some
use
Worldwide
The Electromagnetic
Spectrum
Types of Wireless
Networks
Usually types of wireless networksare
defined on the bases of
Their size/range
Their number of machines
The speed of data transfer.
terms of coverage
area
Wireless MAN
Metropolitan Area
Networks
Wireless PAN
Wireless Personal Area Networks
Such networks interconnect devices in small
premises usually within the reach of a person
for example
Wireless LAN
Wireless MAN
Wireless WAN
The point of the classification is not to partition each technology into a separate bin, but to
highlight the high-level differences within each use case. For Example
Some devices have access to a continuous power source; others must optimize their battery
life at all costs.
Some require Gbit/s+ data rates; others are built to transfer tens or hundreds of bytes of
data.
Some applications require always-on connectivity, while others are delay and latency
tolerant.
These and a large number of other criteria are what determine the original characteristics of each
type of network.
Architecture of
Wireless Networks
The architecture of a network defines the protocols and
components necessary to satisfy application
requirements. Seven-layer Open System Interconnect
(OSI) Reference Model, developed by the International
Standards Organization (ISO) specifies a complete set
of network functions. These functions reside within
each network component.
Architecture of
Wireless Networks
The architecture of a network defines the protocols and
components necessary to satisfy application
requirements. Seven-layer Open System Interconnect
(OSI) Reference Model, developed by the International
Standards Organization (ISO) specifies a complete set
of network functions. These functions reside within
each network component.
Architecture of
Wireless Networks
Each layer of the OSI model supports the layers above it. Usually
Wireless networks are directly implement only on the lower layers
of the model.
Fundamentals of
Wireless Networks
Each and every typeof wireless technology has
its own set of constraints and limitations.
However, all communication methods have a
maximum channel capacity.
Claude E. Shannons mathematical model
determines channel capacity, regardless of the
technology in use.
C=BWlog2(1+S/N)
Fundamentals of
Wireless Networks
In General following 3 parameters affect the performance
of a wireless network
Bandwidth
Signal Power
Modulation Technique
Few factors that may affect the performance of a wireless
network:
Amount of distance between receiver and sender
Amount of background noise in current location
Amount of interference from users in the same network
(intra-cell)
Amount of interference from users in other, nearby
networks (inter-cell)
Bandwidth
Ex: going from 20 to 40 MHz of bandwidth can double the channel data
rate, which is exactly how 802.11n is improving its performance over
earlier WiFi standards!
Finally, it is alsoworth noting that not all frequency ranges offer the
same performance.
Signal Power
Also
Modulation
Modulation
The aim of Analog modulation is to transfer an analog baseband (or low pass) signal,
for example an audio signal or TV signal, over an analog band pass channel at a
different frequency, for example over a limited radio frequency band or a cable TV
network channel.
The aim of Digital modulation is to transfer a digital bit stream over an analog band
pass channel, for example over the public switched telephone network (where a band
pass filter limits the frequency range to 3003400 Hz) or over a limited radio frequency
band.
The choice of the modulation algorithm depends on the available technology, computing
power of both the receiver and sender, as well as the SNR ratio
Wireless devices
Wireless technology defines the electronic devices that communicate in air
without cables using radio frequency signals. On general the wireless
devices are:
Wireless Router
Wireless routers accepts an incoming Internet connection and sends
the data as RF signals to other wireless devices that are near to the
router. A network set up with a wireless router is called as a Wireless
Local Area Network (WLAN).Many routers have built-in security
features such as firewalls that help protect devices connected to the
router against malicious data such as computer viruses.
A wireless router is used in many houses to connect their computers
to the Internet.
Wireless Adapters
Wireless adapters are hardware devices that are installed inside
computers which enables wireless connectivity. If a computer does
not have a wireless adapter, it will not be able to connect to a router
in order to access the Internet.
Wifi Devices
WiFi PC cards
Examples of Wireless
Networks
Broadcast radio
Broadcast radio
Microwave
Communication
Satellite
Communication
Satellite Communication Cover very large areas (ex:
GPS)
Data can be transmitted though a satellite, that orbit
22,300 miles above the earth..
There are about 750 satellite in the space,
Transmission delay is about 0.3 sec.
Stations on the earth send and receive data signals from
the satellite with different frequency ranging and with a
transmission speed of 1Mbps to 10Mbps
Satellite up links (4, 11 and 20 Ghz) and down links (6,
14 and 30Ghz)
Orbits:
LEO: Low Earth Orbit.
MEO: Medium Earth Orbit
GEO: Geostationary Earth Orbit
Infrared wireless
Communication
Wifi
Wi-Fi is a low power wireless LAN communication, that is used by various
electronic devices like smart phones, laptops, etc.
In this setup, a router or AP works as a communication hub wirelessly. These
networks allow users to connect only within close proximity to a router.
WiFi is very common in networking applications which affords portability
wirelessly.
These networks need to be protected with passwords for the purpose of
security, otherwise it will access by others
WPAN
Support
Support
CSMA-CA
Very
channel access
Frequency
ZigBee
is used in Commercial
Applications like sensing and
Communication
System
Acellular networkormobile networkis a
wirelessnetworkdistributed over land areas called cells, each
served by at least one fixed-location transceiver, known as
acellsite or base station.
In a cellular network, each cell uses a different set of
frequencies from neighboring cells, to avoid interference and
provide guaranteed bandwidth within each cell.
When joined together these cells provide
radio
.
Bluetooth Technology
Bluetooth is a wireless PAN technology standard for exchanging data over
short distances (using short-wavelength UHF radio waves in the ISM band from
2.4 to 2.485 GHz) from fixed and mobile devices
Invented by telecom vendor Ericsson in 1994
Bluetooth operates at frequencies between 2400 and 2483.5 MHz
Bluetooth uses a radio technology called frequency-hopping spread spectrum.
(FHSS)
Bluetooth divides transmitted data into packets, and transmits each packet on
one of 79 designated Bluetooth channels. Each channel has a bandwidth of
1 MHz.
Ad-Hoc Networks
Peer-to-peer communications
No backbone infrastructure or
centralized control.
Does not rely on a pre existing
infrastructure, such as routers in
wirednetworksor access points
in managed (infrastructure) wirelessnetworks.
Open Challenges