Channels and Channel Models: EIT 140, Tom AT Eit - Lth.se
Channels and Channel Models: EIT 140, Tom AT Eit - Lth.se
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Multiple-access channel Interference channel
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= port-to-port link
Examples: Multi-antenna systems Multi-pair cables
Modulator
D/A Converter
Up-Converter
Channel
Down-Converter
A/D Converter
Demodulator
Digital Channel
digital refers to the quantisation in amplitude (the set of output symbols is nite) digital channel is described by transition probabilities p (yk |xl ), i.e., the conditional probabilities that yk is detected given that xl was transmitted
Depending on the medium, we distinguish guided channels wire (e.g.: copper twisted-pairs in the access network) cable (e.g.: coax cables used in cable networks) bre (e.g.: optical bres in backbone networks) microwave guides (e.g.: feeder pipes for high-power RF transmitters, radar) unguided channels wireless channel underwater acoustic channel
Channel properties
The transmitted waveforms may experience eects like reection absorption attenuation (scaling in amplitude) dispersion (spreading) in time refraction (bending due to variation of the medias refraction index) diraction (scattered re-radiation, caused by an edge or an object whose size is in the order of the wave length)
essentially time-invariant, frequency-selective attenuation, or equivalently, dispersion in time crosstalk: electromagnetic coupling among wire pairs (also called loops) in a cable extrinsic noise/interference (impulse noise, radio frequency interference) background noise (thermal noise, front-end noise)
1 2 . . . K side A
FEXT
NEXT
1 2 . . . K side B
Far-end crosstalk (FEXT) Near-end crosstalk (NEXT) Impulse noise Radio frequency interference (RFI)
Assuming proper termination, the insertion loss can be modelled as LTI system: Hloop (f , d ) = e where f is the frequency in Hz d is the length of the loop in m k1 , k2 , k3 are constants depending on the diameter of the wire; exemplary values for 0.5mm loop: k1 = 3.8 103 , k2 = 0.541 108 , k3 = 4.883 105
d d 0 d ( k1 f + k2 f ) j d k3 f
(47)
HFEXT (f , d ) = kf
f f0
HNEXT (f , d ) = kn
f f0
90
110 130
150 0
5 10 frequency f in MHz
15
Fixed terminals
Path loss Background noise
Mobile terminal(s)
Path loss Background noise Doppler eect Time-varying impulse response
dispersion in frequency receive signal amplitude uctuations (fading)
(50)
4d
(51)
ht d
2 2 ht hr Pr = Pt Gt Gr 4 d
hr
(d 2 ht hr )
(52)
Pr = Pt Gt Gr Pr (d0 )/Pt
K
d0 d
(53)
d0 reference distance K ratio of receive and transmit power for d0 path loss exponent , depends on wavelength and environment, typically in the range 2 8 for 1 GHz
Mobile terminal(s)
Most often, only one of the terminals is moving, which we call the mobile terminal (MT). The other one, the xed terminal (FT), does not move Due to reciprocity, it does not matter whether we observe downlink (FT MT) or uplink (MT FT)
MT1
v1 = v1 cos 1
is called the Doppler shift (example: 83 Hz for 100 km/h and 900 MHz)
Dispersion in frequency
if either the MT or scatterers are moving, each received beam has a dierent relative velocity with respect to the MT frequency-dispersion of the transmitted signal occurs motion is not the exclusive cause of frequency dispersion; more generally, frequency dispersion is caused by a time-varying channel impulse response
amplitude in dB
time ( distance)
u 0.
(54)
(55)
0.2 0.1 0 0 1 2 u 3 4 5
Large-scale fading
Models the channel property changes caused by movement of the MT Characterises the mean value of the small-scale fading model The log-normal distribution has been found to yield a good match with measurements The mean value in dB dB is Gaussian distributed pdB (dB ) = 1 e 2dB
(dB mdB )2 2(dB )2
(56)
where dB , the standard deviation of dB , is typically in the range of 6-12 dB. Then the distribution of = 10dB /20 is given by 20 e p ( ) = 2dB ln 10
(20 log10 mdB )2 2(dB )2
(57)
Deterministic analysis channel is modelled as linear time-variant (LTV) system, described by a time-variant impulse response h (, t ) time-variant frequency response H (f , t ) = F {h (, t )} delay Doppler spreading function s (, ) = Ft {h (, t )} output Doppler spreading function B (f , ) = Ft {H (f , t )}
()1
1 0 1111111111111 0000000000000
F (f )
RH (f ) Frequency correlation
1 0 1 0 1 0
F (f )
1 0 1 0
Cf ,t (f , t )
RHH (f , t )
1 0 =0 t 1 0 1 0
f = 0
RH (t ) Time correlation
1 0Ct (t ) 1 0
h(, t ) Time-variant impulse response
1 0 1 0
1 0 1 0 1 0
F (f )
H (f , t )
Ft ()
1 0 1 0| |2 1 0
Ft ( )
1 0 () F 1 0 1 0t 1 0
B (f , ) Output Doppler spreading function
s (, )
1 0
Rs (, ) Scattering function
1 0 1111111111111 0000000000000 F (f )
Cf (f )
1 0 1 0
1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1t () F 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 11 00
RB (f , ) f = 0
1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1t () F 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 11 00 Doppler power
P ()
()1
F (f )
density spectrum
11 00
delay power density spectrum (power delay prole) P ( ) = Rhh (, t )|t =0 species time-dispersion (or equivalently, frequency-selectivity) characteristic Doppler power density spectrum (Doppler spectrum) P () = RB (f , )|f =0 species frequency dispersion, or equivalently, the correlation of realisations observed over time of a given coecient of the tapped delay line lter
The multi-path spread Tmulti species the approximate support of the power delay prole P ( ), or equivalently, the approximate length of the channel impulse response. Dual measure: coherence bandwidth Bcoh 1/Tmulti . The coherence time Tcoh species the approximate support of the time correlation function RH (t ), or equivalently, the time during which the impulse response remains constant. Dual measure: Doppler bandwidth Bdop 1/Tcoh .
Ergodicity
useful description of a linear channel with additive noise: r = Hs + n s CS : channel input. r CR : channel output. H CR S : channel matrix. n CR : additive noise. Ergodic channel rn = Hn sn + nn . Hn are realizations of a random process. Transmitted symbol/codeword sn , n = 0, 1, . . . , N; N sees all channel states. Valid for fast fading channels. Nonergodic channel: Consider the model rn = Hsn + nn , Here, H is constant over the symbol/codeword sn , n = 0, 1, . . . , N; N . Transmitted symbol/codeword sees only one state (H). Valid for slowly fading channels.
Block fading
Interleavers spreads out codewords in time and/or frequency. Long interleaver can thus turn a nonergodic channel (where each codesymbol of a codeword sees one channel state only) into an ergodic channel (where each codesymbol of a codeword sees a dierent channel state) Block fading characterizes the situation in between those two extremes. If the interleaver is not long enough, blocks of codesymbols see the same channel state.
Summary
1
Classication of channels single-user, multi-user SISO, MIMO, MISO, SIMO digital channels (BSC, DMC) physical medium (copper, coax, ber, air/space)
Wireline channel essentially time-invariant, strongly frequency selective Wireless channel xed terminals
static view on attenuation (link budget) is sucient, limited by background noise
mobile terminal(s)
time-variant (frequency-dispersive), time-dispersive (frequency selective)
ergodicity