Wireless and Mobile Communications
Dr. Surbhi Sharma
Outline
 Course
Basics
 Course
Syllabus
 The
Wireless Vision
 Technical
 Current
Challenges
Wireless Systems
 Emerging
Wireless Systems
 Spectrum
Regulation
 Standards
Wireless History
 Ancient
Systems: Smoke Signals,
 Radio invented in the 1880s by Marconi
Carrier Pigeons, 
 Many
sophisticated military radio
systems were developed during and
after WW2
 Cellular has enjoyed exponential
growth since 1988, with almost 3
billion users worldwide today
 Ignited
the wireless revolution
 Voice, data, and multimedia becoming
ubiquitous
 Wifi
also enjoying tremendous success
 Use in third world countries growing
and
growth
rapidly
 Wide area networks (e.g. Wimax) and
Future Wireless
Networks
Ubiquitous Communication Among People an
Next-generation
Cellular
Wireless Internet
Access
Wireless Multimedia
Sensor Networks
Smart
Homes/Spaces
Challenges
 Network
Challenges
 Scarce
spectrum
 Demanding/diverse applications
 Reliability
 Ubiquitous coverage
 Seamless indoor/outdoor operation
 Device
 Size,
Challenges
Power, Cost
 Multiple Antennas in Silicon
 Multiradio Integration
 Coexistance
BT
Cellular
FM/XM
GPS
DVB-H
Apps
WLAN
Processor
Media
Wimax
Processor
Evolution of Current
Systems
 Wireless
systems today
 3G Cellular: ~200-300 Kbps.
 WLANs: ~450 Mbps (and growing).
 Next
 4G
 4G
Generation is in the works
Cellular: Likely OFDM/MIMO
WLANs: Wide open, 3G just being finalized
Technology Enhancements
 Hardware: Better batteries. Better circuits/processors.
 Link: Antennas, modulation, coding, adaptivity, DSP,
BW.
 Network: Not much: more efficient resource allocation
 Application: Soft and adaptive QoS.
Future Generations
Rate
802.11n
802.11b WLAN
2G
Other Tradeoffs:
Rate vs. Coverage
Rate vs. Delay
Rate vs. Cost
Rate vs. Energy
4G
3G
Wimax/3G
2G Cellular
Mobility
Fundamental Design Breakthroughs Needed
Multimedia
Requirements
Voice
Data
Video
Delay
<100ms
<100ms
Packet Loss
BER
<1%
10-3
0
10-6
<1%
10-6
Data Rate
Traffic
8-32 Kbps 10-1000 Mbps 10-1000 Mbps
Continuous
Bursty
Continuous
One-size-fits-all protocols and design do not work well
Wired networks use this approach, with poor results
Quality-of-Service
(QoS)
 QoS
refers to the requirements associated with a
given application, typically rate and delay
requirements.
 It
is hard to make a one-size-fits all network that
supports requirements of different applications.
 Wired
networks often use this approach with poor
results, and they have much higher data rates and
better reliability than wireless.
 QoS
for all applications requires a cross-layer
design approach.
Crosslayer Design
 Application
 Network
Delay Constraints
Rate Constraints
Energy Constraints
 Access
 Link
 Hardware
Adapt across design layers
Reduce uncertainty through scheduling
Provide robustness via diversity
Current Wireless
Systems
 Cellular
 Wireless
Systems
LANs
 WIMAX
 Satellite
 Paging
Systems
Systems
 Bluetooth
 Ultrawideband
 Zigbee
radios
radios
Cellular Phones
Everything Wireless in One
Device
Cellular Systems:
Reuse channels to maximize
capacity
Geographic region divided into cells
Frequency/timeslots/codes/ reused at spatially-separated locations.
Co-channel interference between same color cells.
Base stations/MTSOs coordinate handoff and control functions
Shrinking cell size increases capacity, as well as networking burden
BASE
STATION
MTSO
Cellular Networks
Future networks want better performance a
- Gbps rates, low latency, 99% coverage indo
3G Cellular Design:
Voice and Data
 Data
is bursty, whereas voice is continuous
 Typically
 3G
require different access and routing strategies
widens the data pipe:
 384 Kbps (802.11n has 100s of Mbps).
 Standard based on wideband CDMA
 Packet-based switching for both voice and
 3G cellular popular in Asia and Europe
 Evolution
data
of existing systems in US (2.5G++)
GSM+EDGE, IS-95(CDMA)+HDR
 100 Kbps may be enough
 Dual phone (2/3G+Wifi) use growing (iPhone, Google)
 What
is beyond 3G?
The trillion dollar question
4G and LTE
(long term evolution)
 OFDM/MIMO
 Much
higher data rates (50-100 Mbps)
 Greater
spectral efficiency (bits/s/Hz)
 Flexible
use of up to 100 MHz of spectrum
 Low
packet latency (<5ms).
 Increased
 Reduced
 Support
system capacity
cost-per-bit
for multimedia
Wifi Networks
Multimedia Everywhere,
Without Wires
802.11n++
 Streaming video
 Gbps data rates
 High reliability
Wireless HDTV
and Gaming
 Coverage in every room
Wireless Local Area
Networks (WLANs)
01011011
0101
1011
Internet
Access
Point
 WLANs
connect local computers
(100m range)
 Breaks data into packets
 Channel access is shared (random
access)
Wireless LAN
Standards
 802.11b
(Old  1990s)
 Standard for 2.4GHz ISM band (80 MHz)
 Direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)
 Speeds of 11 Mbps, approx. 500 ft range
 802.11a/g
(Middle Age mid-late 1990s)
 Standard for 5GHz NII band (300 MHz)
 OFDM in 20 MHz with adaptive rate/codes
 Speeds of 54 Mbps, approx. 100-200 ft range
 802.11n
Many WLAN
cards have
all 3 (a/b/g)
(Hot stuff, standard done, published in Oct)
 Standard in 2.4 GHz and 5 GHzband
 Adaptive OFDM /MIMO in 20/40 MHz (2-4 antennas)
 Speeds up to 600Mbps, approx. 200 ft range
 Other advances in packetization, antenna use, etc.
Wimax
WiMAX(Worldwide
Interoperability
for
Microwave Access) is awirelesscommunications
standard designed to provide 30 to 40 megabitper-second data rates,with the 2011 update
providing up to 1 Gbit/sfor fixed stations. The
name "WiMAX" was created by theWiMAX
Forum, which was formed in June 2001 to
promote conformity and interoperability of the
standard. The forum describes WiMAX as "a
standards-based technology enabling the delivery
of last milewireless broadbandaccess as an
alternative tocableandDSL"
Uses of Wi-max
Providing portable mobile broadband connectivity
across cities and countries through a variety of devices.
Providing a wireless alternative to cable anddigital
subscriber line(DSL) for "last mile" broadband access.
Providing data, telecommunications (VoIP)
andIPTVservices .
Providing a source of Internet connectivity as part of a
business continuity plan.
Smart grids and metering
Wimax
Worldwide Interoperability for
Microwave Access (802.16)
 Wide
area wireless network standard
System
architecture similar to cellular
Hopes to compete with cellular
 OFDM/MIMO
 Operates
is core link technology
in 2.5 and 3.5 MHz bands
Different
for different countries, 5.8 also used.
Bandwidth is 3.5-10 MHz
 Fixed
(802.16d) vs. Mobile (802.16e) Wimax
Fixed:
75 Mbps max, up to 50 mile cell radius
Mobile: 15 Mbps max, up to 1-2 mile cell radius
Satellite Systems
Cover very large areas
Different orbit heights
 GEOs
(39000 Km) versus LEOs (2000 Km)
Optimized for one-way transmission
 Radio
 Most
(XM, Sirius) and movie (SatTV, DVB/S) broadcasts
two-way systems struggling or bankrupt
Global Positioning System (GPS) use growing
 Satellite
signals used to pinpoint location
 Popular
in cell phones, PDAs, and navigation devices
Paging Systems
 Broad
coverage for short messaging
 Message
broadcast from all base
stations
 Simple
terminals
 Optimized
for 1-way transmission
 Answer-back
 Overtaken
hard
by cellular
Bluetooth
 Cable
replacement RF technology (low cost)
 Short
range (10m, extendable to 100m)
 2.4
GHz band (crowded)
Data (700 Kbps) and 3 voice channels, up
to 3 Mbps
 Widely
supported by telecommunications,
PC, and consumer electronics companies
 Few
8C32810.61-Cimini-7/98
applications beyond cable replacement
Ultrawideband Radio
(UWB)
 UWB
is an impulse radio: sends pulses of
tens of picoseconds(10-12) to nanoseconds
(10-9)
 Duty
cycle of only a fraction of a percent
carrier is not necessarily needed
 Uses
a lot of bandwidth (GHz)
 High
data rates, up to 500 Mbps
 7.5
Ghz of free spectrum in the U.S.
(underlay)
 Multipath
highly resolvable: good and bad
ZigBee Radios
ZigBeeis aspecificationfor a suite of high level
communication protocols used to createpersonal area
networksbuilt from small, low-powerdigital radios.
ZigBee is based on anIEEE 802.15 standard. Though lowpowered, ZigBee devices can transmit data over long
distances by passing data through intermediate devices to
reach more distant ones, creating amesh network; i.e., a
network with no centralized control or high-power
transmitter/receiver able to reach all of the networked
devices. The decentralized nature of suchwireless ad hoc
networksmake them suitable for applications where a
central node can't be relied upon.
ZigBee Radios
ZigBee is used in applications that require only a low data
rate, long battery life, and secure networking. ZigBee has a
defined rate of 250 kbit/s, best suited for periodic or
intermittent data or a single signal transmission from a
sensor or input device. Applications include wireless light
switches, electrical meters with in-home-displays, traffic
management systems, and other consumer and industrial
equipment that requires short-range wireless transfer of data
at relatively low rates. The technology defined by the ZigBee
specification is intended to be simpler and less expensive
than other wireless personal area networks(WPANs), such
asBluetoothorWi-Fi.
Home Entertainment and Control
Industrial control
Embedded sensing
Medical data collection
Smoke and intruder warning
Building automation
Scarce Wireless
Spectrum
$$$
and Expensive
Spectrum Regulation
 Spectral
Allocation in US controlled by
FCC (commercial) or OSM (defense)
 FCC
auctions spectral blocks for set
applications.
 Some
spectrum set aside for universal use
 Worldwide
 Regulation
spectrum controlled by ITU-R
is a necessary evil.
Innovations in regulation being considered worldwide,
including underlays, overlays, and cognitive radios
Spectral Reuse
Due to its scarcity, spectrum is reused
In licensed
bands
and unlicensed
bands
BS
Cellular, Wimax
Wifi, BT, UWB,
Reuse introduces
Coexistence
Many devices use the same radio
band
 Technical
Solutions:
Interference
Cancellation
Smart/Cognitive Radios
Emerging Systems*
 4th
generation cellular (4G)
OFDMA
will be PHY layer (like Wimax)
Other new features and bandwidth still in
flux
 Ad
hoc/mesh wireless networks
 Cognitive radios
 Sensor networks
 Distributed control networks
 Biomedical networks
Ad-Hoc/Mesh Networks
Outdoor Mesh
ce
Indoor Mesh
Design Issues
 Ad-hoc
networks provide a flexible network
infrastructure for many emerging applications.
 The
capacity of such networks is generally
unknown.
 Transmission,
access, and routing strategies for
ad-hoc networks are generally ad-hoc.
 Crosslayer
 Energy
design critical and very challenging.
constraints impose interesting design
tradeoffs for communication and networking.
Cognitive Radio
Paradigms
 Underlay
Cognitive
radios constrained to cause minimal
interference to noncognitive radios
 Interweave
Cognitive
radios find and exploit spectral holes
to avoid interfering with noncognitive radios
 Overlay
Cognitive
radios overhear and enhance
noncognitive radio transmissions
Knowled
ge
and
Wireless Sensor Networks
Data Collection and Distributed Control
Smart homes/buildin
Smart structures
Search and rescue
Homeland security
Event detection
Battlefield surveillan
 Energy (transmit and processing) is the driving
constraint
 Data flows to centralized location (joint compression)
 Low per-node rates but tens to thousands of nodes
Energy-Constrained
Nodes
 Each
node can only send a finite number of bits.
 Transmit
energy minimized by maximizing bit time
 Circuit energy consumption increases with bit time
 Introduces a delay versus energy tradeoff for each bit
 Short-range
networks must consider transmit,
circuit, and processing energy.
 Sophisticated
techniques not necessarily energy-efficient.
 Sleep modes save energy but complicate networking.
 Changes
 Bit
everything about the network design:
allocation must be optimized across all protocols.
 Delay vs. throughput vs. node/network lifetime tradeoffs.
 Optimization of node cooperation.
Distributed Control over
Wireless
Automated Vehic
- Cars
- Airplanes/UAV
- Insect flyers
Interdisciplinary design
approach
 Control requires fast, accurate, and
reliable feedback.
 Wireless networks
introduce
and
: Many
designdelay
challenges
Wireless Biomedical
Systems
Wireless
Telemedicine
Wireless
Network
In- Body Wireless
Devices
-Sensors/monitoring
devices
-Drug delivery systems
Recovery from
Nerve Damage
Main Points
The wireless vision encompasses many exciting systems
and applications
Technical challenges transcend across all layers of the
system design.
Cross-layer design emerging as a key theme in wireless.
Existing and emerging systems provide excellent quality
for certain applications but poor interoperability.
Standards and spectral allocation heavily impact the
evolution of wireless technology