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3 Wireless Channel

This document discusses key concepts related to wireless communications channels, including: 1) Path loss, small-scale fading and large-scale fading affect signal strength over wireless channels. Log-normal shadowing models how surrounding environments impact path loss. 2) Multipath propagation causes fading effects like rapid signal strength changes and time dispersion of echoes. The number of resolvable paths depends on bandwidth and maximum delay spread. 3) Delay spread and coherence bandwidth characterize time dispersion, with delay spread defining impulse response width and coherence bandwidth relating to frequency selectivity of the channel.

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Mario E Villalta
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views54 pages

3 Wireless Channel

This document discusses key concepts related to wireless communications channels, including: 1) Path loss, small-scale fading and large-scale fading affect signal strength over wireless channels. Log-normal shadowing models how surrounding environments impact path loss. 2) Multipath propagation causes fading effects like rapid signal strength changes and time dispersion of echoes. The number of resolvable paths depends on bandwidth and maximum delay spread. 3) Delay spread and coherence bandwidth characterize time dispersion, with delay spread defining impulse response width and coherence bandwidth relating to frequency selectivity of the channel.

Uploaded by

Mario E Villalta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Wireless Communications

course website:
egypteducation.org

1
Path Loss, Small-
Scale and Large-Scale Fading

2
Path Loss
n
 d 
PL(d )  
 do 

3
Log-Normal Shadowing

4
Log-Normal Shadowing
• The surrounding environment clutter may vastly
differ at two different locations having the same
separation from the transmitter
 d 
PL(d )[dB]  PL(do )  10n log    X
 do 
• X  is a zero-mean Gaussian RV in dB with standard
deviation 

5
Small Scale Fading
• Fading is caused by interference between
two or more versions of the transmitted
signal which arrive at the receiver at
slightly different times.
• These waves combine at the receiver
antenna to give a resultant signal which
varies widely in amplitude & phase.

6
The Wireless Fading Channel
 Wave propagation depends on the environment:
buildings, roads, trees and terrain.
 Each path will experience an attenuation, a time
delay and a possible frequency shift
 The superposition of all the signal paths produces
a distorted received signal.

7
Wireless Channel

8
Wireless Channel
• For a mobile communication system, the signal
received by the mobile at any point in space may
consist of a large number of plane waves having
randomly distributed amplitudes, phases, and angles
of arrival.
• These multipath components combine vectorially at
the receiver antenna & can cause the signal received
by the mobile to distort or fade.
• Even when a mobile receiver is stationary, the
received signal may fade due to movement of the
surrounding objects in the radio channel.
9
Wireless Channel

10
Fading Effects
• Rapid changes in signal strength over a
small travel distance or time interval
• Time dispersion (echoes) caused by
multipath propagation
• Random frequency modulation due to
varying Doppler shifts on different
multipath signals

11
Resolvable Paths
• A wideband signal with symbol duration Tc
can "resolve" the time dispersion of the
channel with a maximum delay spread of
Tdelay with an accuracy of about Tc. the
number of resolvable paths is

 Tdelay 
N  round   1
 Tc 

12
Fading Factors
• Multipath propagation
• Speed of mobile
• Speed of surrounding objects
• Transmission BW of the signal

13
Wireless Channel
• If objects in the radio channel are static &
motion is considered to be only due to that
of the mobile, then fading is purely a
spatial phenomenon.
• The spatial variations of the resulting
signal are seen as temporal variations by
the receiver as it moves through the
multipath field.

14
Wireless Channel
• Define h(τ;t) as the impulse response of
the time varying multipath radio channel.
• The impulse response h(τ;t) completely
characterizes the channel & is a function
of both t & τ.
• The variable t represents the time
variations due to motion, whereas τ
represents the multipath delay for a fixed
value of t.
15
Fading
• Fading is used to describe the rapid
fluctuations of the amplitude of a radio
signal over a short period of time or travel
distance, we can write h(τ;t)as
 j 2 fc t
h( , t )  Re{hb ( , t )e }
where hb ( , t ) is the low-pass complex
equivalent impulse response.

16
Time-Varying Impulse Response

17
Example
x(t) imp. resp. at t=0 imp. resp. at t=1
1 0.7 0.4 0.5
0.3

0 1 0 0.5 1 1.5

• Calculate the output of the channel to the


input signal x(t)

18
Example
• The channel is a 2-path time varying channel

imp. resp. at t=0 imp. resp. at t=1

First path

Second path

19
Example
• The channel is a 2-path time varying channel

imp. resp. at t=0 imp. resp. at t=1


0.7
0.3
First path
0 1

0.4 0.6
Second path
0.5 1.5
20
Example
• O/P due to first path

0.7 0.3

0 1

• O/P due to second path

0.4 0.6

0.5 1.5
21
Example
0.9 0.8

0.7 0.5 0.5 0.6

0 0.5 1 1.5

22
Characteristics of Multipath
Fading Channels
Time dispersion parameters
Define

Ph ( )  Et h  ; t 
2

Ph ( )  delay power spectrum or multipath intensity profile
• Define the standard deviation of Ph ( ) as
the delay spread Tm

23
Delay Spread Tm
1/ 2
 

     av  Ph ( )d
2

Tm   0 
 




0
Ph ( )d 

• where

 P ( )d
h

 av  0

 P ( )d
0
h 24
Measured Impulse Responses

25
Delay Power Spectrum

26
Delay Spread
• The delay spread defines the impulse response
width in the time domain. Define the coherence
B.W. 1
Bc 
5Tm
• Coherence BW is a statistical measure of the
range of frequencies over which the channel can
be considered flat.
• A flat channel passes all the spectral
components with approximately equal gain and
linear phase 27
Coherence BW
• In other words, two sinusoids with
frequency separation greater than Bc are
affected quite differently by the channel

• Bc is the BW that we can send the signal


on without suffering from ISI

28
Correlation Coefficient
• Suppose X and Y are 2 complex RVs
• Their correlation Coefficient is

• This is the normalized covariance; it varies


between +1 and -1

29
WSS Uncorrelated Scattering
• Assumes that the path gains at different
delays are uncorrelated
• Assumes correlations between frequency
responses depend only on the frequency
difference Df

30
Correlation in Frequency
• We can view the freq. response of a
channel as a RP as a function of f
• We can ask, “what is the correlation
between responses at different
frequencies?”

31
Correlation Coefficient for a RP
• Consider 2 frequencies f1 and f2. The correlation
coefficient becomes

Because the phase


is uniformly
distributed [0,2],
mh=0 and we get 32
Coherence BW
• The X% coherence bandwidth is that value
of Δf such that
Df=X/100
• If the 90% coherence bandwidth is 30KHz,
then responses for frequencies separated
by 30KHz or less will be nearly equal

33
Relation to Tm
• The 90% coherence bandwidth is
approximately
Bc,90=1/(50Tm)

• The 50% coherence bandwidth is


approximately
Bc,50=1/(5Tm)

34
Example
• Do you think the 90% coherence
bandwidth is > or < 100MHz?

35
Need for equalization
• If a transmitted signal’s bandwidth is
greater than the 50% coherence
bandwidth, then the channel is frequency
selective and an equalizer will be needed
in the receiver
• Flat-fading channels do not require
equalization

36
Bc and Tm
• Delay spread and coherence bandwidth
are inversely related and quantify the
effects of multipath delays
• They can be used to estimate the
maximum data rate that can be supported
without the use of an equalizer

37
Doppler Shift

v
Df  cos( )

38
Doppler Spread
• Tm and Bc don’t offer information about the time varying
nature of the channel caused by the motion of the mobile
• Doppler spread and coherence time are parameters which
describe the time varying nature of the channel
• Define Bd as the width of the Doppler spectrum. When a pure
sinusoid of freq. fc is transmitted, the received signal
spectrum or the Doppler spectrum will have components in
the range ( f c  Bd ) to ( f c  Bd )

• If the baseband signal B.W is much greater than Bd, the


effect of Doppler spread is negligible, this is slow fading

39
Doppler spectrum

40
Coherence Time
• Define the coherence time Tc=1/Bd
• Coherence time is a measure of the time
deviation over which the channel impulse
response is essentially invariant
• If the symbol duration Ts is greater than Tc,
the channel will change during the
transmission of the baseband message

41
Types of Fading
Classification according to Tm
Flat fading
Bc>>Bs and Tm<<Ts
• The channel is flat over the signal BW
• Overtime, the received signal varies in
gain but the spectrum is preserved
X(f) channel(f)

Bs Bs
f f 42
Types of Fading
Classification According to Tm
Frequency Selective Fading
Bc<Bs and Tm>Ts
• The channel delay spread Tm is greater
than Ts
• In this case, the channel introduces ISI,
viewed in the frequency domain as
different frequency components having
different gains
• An equalizer will be needed in this case 43
Frequency Selective Fading

channel(f)

X(f)

Bs Bs
f f

44
Types of Fading
Classification According to Bd
Fast fading
Bd>Bs and Tc<Ts
The channel impulse response changes
rapidly within the symbol duration
Channel gain (t)
x(t)

Ts
Ts t 45
t
Types of Fading
Classification According to Bd
Slow fading
Bd<<Bs and Tc>>Ts
The channel impulse response changes at a
rate much slower than the transmitted
baseband signal
Channel gain(t) x(t)

Ts
t t 46
Measured impulse responses

47
Typical RMS delay spreads

48
Two independent fading issues

49
Flat-fading (non-freq. Selective)

50
Frequency selective fading

51
Two independent fading issues

52
Rayleigh fading

53
Ricean and Rayleigh fading distributions

54

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