doc.: ieee 802.19 02/002r0 submission september 2002 jim lansford, mobilian corporationslide 1...

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September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian Corporation Slide 1 doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submiss ion Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title: [Coexistence Metrics for Wireless Systems] Date Submitted: [11 Sep 2002] Source: [Jim Lansford] Company: [Mobilian Corporation] Address: [7431 NE Evergreen Rd, Suite 220, Hillsboro, OR 97124] Voice:[(405) 377-6170], FAX: [ (405) 377-6173], E-Mail: [[email protected]] Re: [ ] Abstract: [This presentation is based on work in progress by the authors for PHY-based metrics for determining coexistence. Metrics based on physical layer characteristics provide a relative measure of the interference between systems that establishes a bound on degradation. More detailed models that take MAC characteristics into account can provide more fidelity, but are much more difficult to develop and verify.] Purpose: [Propose possible metrics to quantify the level of coexistence between two wireless systems.] Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.19. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw

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Page 1: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG

Submission Title: [Coexistence Metrics for Wireless Systems]Date Submitted: [11 Sep 2002]Source: [Jim Lansford] Company: [Mobilian Corporation]Address: [7431 NE Evergreen Rd, Suite 220, Hillsboro, OR 97124]Voice:[(405) 377-6170], FAX: [ (405) 377-6173], E-Mail:[[email protected]]

Re: [ ]

Abstract: [This presentation is based on work in progress by the authors for PHY-based metrics for determining coexistence. Metrics based on physical layer characteristics provide a relative measure of the interference between systems that establishes a bound on degradation. More detailed models that take MAC characteristics into account can provide more fidelity, but are much more difficult to develop and verify.]

Purpose: [Propose possible metrics to quantify the level of coexistence between two wireless systems.]

Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.19. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein.

Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P802.19.

Page 2: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 2

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Coexistence Metric (CM)for Wireless Systems

Jim [email protected]

Rob [email protected]

• PHY models are good first order approximations to quantify interference• Parameters are well defined and lead to models that are relatively easy to compute• Can give reasonably good estimates of BER/PFR• Do not have the fidelity of PHY+MAC models• Cannot be used to evaluate latency and jitter

Page 3: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 3

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Terms• Coexistence?

– the effects of interference among wireless devices that are physically near one another

– Two wireless devices are said to coexist if they can be brought near one another without significant degradation in their performance

– The term “significant” is open to interpretation

• What is a “coexistence metric?”– A number, typically derived from a model, that quantifies the

extent to which device A is expected to interfere with and be interfered by device B.

– The level of detail required in the model is debatable, but simple is desirable.

Page 4: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 4

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Goals of a Coex Metric• Quantitative, rather than qualitative• Simple framework

– Allows others to use the model easily

• Produces intuitive results• Builds upon previous work

– Particularly TG2

• Establishes a bound– A relatively simple model should be somewhat pessimistic– More detailed models (e.g., including MAC) should improve results

• Use a portable, widely supported framework– Java or Matlab

• Open process– Consensus-based– Frequent feedback and revision

Page 5: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 5

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

A Physical Model

• Similar to TG2• Provides BER/FER• No MAC behavior

– Doesn’t give latency/jitter performance– Doesn’t give detailed throughput, but a bound

BE

R c

alc

ula

tion

Transmitter

Interferer Path Loss(d) Spectral Coupling

SIR

PT

PI

(PT = Receiver sensitivity+10dB) Signal power at receiver

Interference power at receiver

BER

FE

R c

alc

ula

tion

FER

Page 6: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 6

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Model parameters

• Interference is assumed to appear as AWGN at the detector– Can refine this over time

• Signal power• Interference power• Path loss• Spectral coupling (called spectrum factor in TG2)• Signal-to-interference ratio – derived from parameters• Bit error rate – derived from SIR and modulation type• Frame error rate – derived from BER and frame

structure of victim

Page 7: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 7

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Path loss

• At 2.4GHz, can use TG2 model– L= 20 log(4d/) = 40.23 + 20 log(d) d ≤ 8m

= 58.3 + 33 log(d/8)d > 8m

40

50

60

70

80

90

1001 10 100

Separation (M)

Att

en

uati

on

(d

B)

Page 8: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 8

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Spectral coupling

• Combined effect of Tx mask of interferer and Rx passband of victim– Quantifies power from interferer that couples to victim’s detector– For FH systems, there would be multiple offsets

Area AIArea AF

Interferer ReceiverPassband

Coupledpower

Spectral Coupling = Area AF / Area AI

Page 9: Doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0 Submission September 2002 Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P802.19 Coexistence TAG Submission Title:

September 2002

Jim Lansford, Mobilian CorporationSlide 9

doc.: IEEE 802.19 02/002r0

Submission

Status

• Java applet has been coded

• Future work to incorporate:– Compare model to measured results and

refine– Add other radios such as UWB– Incorporate effects of duty cycle