epl 657 wireless networks - ucy

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EPL 657 Wireless Networks Some fundamentals: Multiplexing / Multiple Access / Duplex Infrastructure vs Infrastructureless Panayiotis Kolios

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Page 1: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

EPL 657 Wireless

Networks

Some fundamentals:

Multiplexing / Multiple Access /

Duplex

Infrastructure vs Infrastructureless

Panayiotis Kolios

Page 2: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Recall: The ‘big’ picture ...

2

Modulations: some basics

Page 3: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Multiplexing / multiple access / duplexing (1)

Multiplexing / multiple access

Signals to/from different users share a common channel using

• time division methods (TDM/TDMA, CSMA),

• frequency division methods (FDM/FDMA),

• code division methods (CDMA), or

• space division (SDMA).

A combination of above is also often used

Page 4: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Multiplexing / multiple access / duplexing (2)

• Duplexing:

– The signals moving between two elements in opposite

directions can be separated using

• time division duplexing (TDD)

• frequency division duplexing (FDD)

• Code Division Duplexing (CDD)

Page 5: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Multiplexing

• Goal: multiple use of a shared medium

• Multiplexing in 4 dimensions: space (si)

time (t)

frequency (f)

code (c)

or even a combination

• Important: guard spaces needed!

• Selective receivers/filters required to obtain/extract signal intended for user

Page 6: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Time multiplex

A channel gets the whole spectrum for a certain amount of time

Advantages:

only one carrier in the medium at any time

throughput high even for many users

Disadvantages:

Precise Synchronization necessary

Can be complex

Can be inefficient

TDM (Time Division Multiplexing): channel

divided into N time slots, one per user;

inefficient with low duty cycle users and at

light load.

Page 7: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Channel Partitioning MAC protocols:

TDMA

TDMA: time division multiple access

• access to channel in "rounds"

• each station gets fixed length slot (length = packet

transmision time) in each round

• unused slots go idle

• example: 6-station LAN, 1,3,4 have packet, slots

2,5,6 idle

Page 8: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Frequency multiplex

Separation of the whole spectrum into smaller frequency bands

A channel gets a certain band of the spectrum for the whole time

Advantages:

no dynamic coordination necessary

works also for analog signals

Disadvantages:

waste of bandwidth if the traffic is distributed unevenly

inflexible

guard spaces

Selective filters required

Can be complex

FDM (Frequency Division Multiplexing):

frequency subdivided among N users,

each user takes one; inefficient with low

duty cycle users and at light load.

Page 9: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Channel Partitioning MAC protocols:

FDMA

FDMA: frequency division multiple access

• channel spectrum divided into frequency bands

• each station assigned fixed frequency band

• unused transmission time in frequency bands go idle

• example: 6-station LAN, 1,3,4 have pkt, frequency bands 2,5,6 idle

f1-f2

f11-f12

freq

uenc

y ban

ds e.g. Assigned

channel frequency

800 – 812 Mhz

Needs of each

user: 1Mhz

f1= 800 Mhz,

f2=801, Mhz ...

Page 10: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Time and frequency multiplex

• Combination of both methods

• A channel gets a certain frequency band for a certain amount of time

• Example: GSM

• Advantages:

better protection against tapping

protection against frequency selective interference

higher data rates compared to code multiplex

but:

precise coordination required

increased complexity, and inefficiency

Page 11: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Code multiplex

Each channel has a unique code

All channels use the same spectrum at the same time (spread the spectrum- each ‘bit’ is ‘expanded’ to many bits-a code, e.g logical bit ‘1' is expanded to 010011)

Advantages:

bandwidth efficient

no coordination and synchronization necessary

good protection against interference and tapping

Disadvantages:

lower user data rates

more complex signal regeneration

Implemented using spread spectrum technology

Page 12: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: Channel Partitioning (CDMA)

CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) • unique “code” assigned to each user; i.e., code set partitioning

• used mostly in wireless broadcast channels (cellular, satellite, etc)

• all users share same frequency, but each user has own “chipping” sequence (i.e., code, ‘language’) to encode data

– encoded signal = (original data) X (chipping sequence)

– decoding: inner-product of encoded signal and chipping sequence

• allows multiple users to “coexist” and transmit simultaneously with minimal interference (if codes are “orthogonal”)

• Note each user appears as interference to others!!!

Page 13: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: CDMA Encode/Decode

Page 14: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: CDMA two-sender interference

Page 15: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

space division multiplex • Cell structure

– Implements space division multiplex: base station covers a certain transmission area (cell)

– Mobile stations communicate only via the base station

– Advantages of cell structures: higher capacity, higher number of users

less transmission power needed

more robust, decentralized

base station deals with interference, transmission area etc. locally

– Problems: fixed network needed for the base stations

handover (changing from one cell to another) necessary

interference with other cells

– Cell sizes from some 100 m in cities to, e.g., 35 km on the country side (GSM) - less for higher frequencies (e.g. UMTS)

Page 16: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: cell

• What is a Cell?

– Cell is the Basic Union in The Mobile Telecommunications System • defined as the area where radio coverage is given by one base station.

– A cell has one or several frequencies, depending on traffic load. • Fundamental idea: Frequencies are reused, but not in

neighboring cells due to interference.

Page 17: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: cell planning (capacity, power, etc...)

• Cell splitting – Decrease transmission

power in base and mobile

– Results in more and smaller cells

– Reuse frequencies in non-contiguous cell groups

– Example: ½ cell radius leads 4 fold capacity increase (BUT higher infrastructure costs)

• Cell sectoring – Directional antennas

subdivide cell into 3 or 6 sectors

– Might also increase cell capacity by factor of 3 or 6

Page 18: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example: Different Types of Cells

Page 19: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Duplex

• Frequency Division Duplex (FDD): Uplink and downlink

transmissions use two separated radio frequencies in

different frequency bands. A pair of frequency bands with

specified separation is assigned for the system.

• Time Division Duplex (TDD): Uplink and downlink

transmissions are carried over same radio frequency by

using synchronized time slots that divide the physical

channel into transmission and reception part. Information

on uplink and downlink are transmitted reciprocally.

• Code Division Duplex (CDD): Uplink and downlink

transmissions are carried over the same radio frequency

and time using orthogonal signal sequences (different

codes).

Page 20: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

FDMA/FDD (as in 1st Generation Wireless)

• Access is FDMA: Frequency Division Multiple Access

• The 1st generation mobile system uses FDMA only. Example: AMP in USA

• Duplex is FDD: Frequency Division Duplex

• The FM channels are paired with an uplink and a downlink channel for each user.

Frequency

Uplink Downlink

Page 21: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

TDMA (as in 2nd Generation wireless)

• GSM, a 2nd generation mobile system, uses 8

time slots in TDMA mode for each 200 kHz carrier.

Carriers are derived from frequency division over

the licensed frequency band (FDMA)

Time

Frequency

Note: Capacity in GSM is doubled by using alternate time slots to

support 16 channels

Page 22: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

TDMA (as in 2nd Generation wireless)

• IS-136 TDMA or DAMP (Digital AMP) is the

American TDMA system with 3 time slots over a

30kHz carrier

• TDMA6 provides 6 channels by alternating the 3

time slots

Page 23: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

TDMA/FDD (as in 2nd Generation wireless)

• GSM and IS-136 TDMA are TDMA/FDD

Time

Frequency

Page 24: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

CDMA (as in 2nd Generation wireless)

• IS-95, a 2nd generation mobile system, uses

CDMA

Time

Frequency

Code

Sequences

User A

User B

User E

User C

User D

Page 25: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

CDMA/FDD (as in 2nd Generation wireless)

• IS-95 is CDMA/FDD

Time

Frequency

Code

Sequences

Page 26: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

2nd Generation

• Going from analog to digital and to CDMA makes

more efficient use of the scarce radio

resources (and expensive frequency spectrum

license), and hence helps to lower the price.

Page 27: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

Wideband CDMA (3G)

• WCDMA allocates 10 ms (38,400 chips) frames to

users. The data rate for a user may change from

frame to frame (using variable length CDMA

codes).

Time

Frequency

10ms, 38,400

chips per frame User A User B

User E

User C

User D

Variable data rate

Page 28: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Example Radio Access

Wideband CDMA UTRA/FDD

• Separate carriers for

– Uplink

– downlink

Time

Frequency

Page 29: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Network

IEEE 802.15.1 WPAN (Bluetooth)

IEEE 802.15.4 LR-WPAN (ZigBee)

IEEE 802.11 WLAN (WiFi)

IEEE 802.16 WMAN (WiMAX)

Multiplexing / MA / duplexing

TDMA / TDD

CSMA/CA

CSMA/CA

TDM/TDMA (down/uplink) / TDD or (semi-duplex) FDD

Examples Multiplexing / multiple access / duplexing

Page 30: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Multiple Access protocols (MAC)

• Share access (time) on the common channel

– single shared broadcast channel

– two or more simultaneous transmissions by nodes

cause interference

• only one node can send successfully at a time, therefore need

multiple access protocols

• distributed algorithm that determines how nodes share

channel, i.e., determine when node can transmit

• communication about channel sharing must use channel itself!

Page 31: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Ideal Multiple Access Protocol

Broadcast channel of rate R bps

1. When one node wants to transmit, it can send at rate R.

2. When M nodes want to transmit, each can send at

average rate R/M

3. When more than one send at the same time, then

‘collision’

4. Fully decentralized:

– no special node to coordinate transmissions

– no synchronization of clocks, slots

5. Simple

Page 32: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

MAC Protocols: a taxonomy

Three broad classes:

• Channel Partitioning

– divide channel into smaller “pieces” (time slots, frequency, code, space)

– allocate piece to node for exclusive use

• Random Access (e.g. Ethernet)

– access when data available to send (random)

– channel not divided, allow collisions

– “recover” from collisions

• “Taking turns” (e.g. Token ring)

– tightly coordinate shared access to avoid collisions

Page 33: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

A popular wireless MAC:

CSMA/CA (Collision Avoidance)

Recall in wired Ethernet:

CSMA/CD: carrier sensing, deferral if busy

– collisions detected within short time

– colliding transmissions aborted, reducing channel

wastage

• collision detection:

– easy in wired LANs: measure signal strengths,

compare transmitted, received signals

– difficult in wireless LANs: receiver shut off while

transmitting

• in wireless CSMA/CA (Collision Avoidance) – more

later

Page 34: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructure /

Infrastructureless

networks

Page 35: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY
Page 36: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Sensor networks and VANETs are another form of

infrastructureless network, with many similarities to ad-hock

Page 37: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

infrastructure vs. ad-hoc networks (WLAN)

infrastructure

network

ad-hoc network

AP AP

AP

wired network

AP: Access Point

Page 38: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructure-based networks (WLAN)

• Infrastructure networks provide access to other networks.

• Communication typically takes place only between the wireless nodes and the access point, but not directly between the wireless nodes.

• The access point does not just control medium access, but also acts as a bridge to other wireless or wired networks.

• Several wireless networks may form one logical wireless network:

– The access points together with the fixed network in between can connect several wireless networks to form a larger network beyond actual radio coverage.

Page 39: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructure-based networks (WLAN)

• Network functionality lies within the access point (controls network flow), whereas the wireless clients can remain quite simple.

• Use different access schemes with or without collision.

– Collisions may occur if medium access of the wireless nodes and the access point is not coordinated (e.g. DCF: CSMA/CA).

– If only the access point controls medium access, no collisions are possible (e.g. PCF).

• Useful for quality of service guarantees (e.g., minimum bandwidth for certain nodes)

• The access point may poll the single wireless nodes to ensure the data rate.

• Infrastructure-based wireless networks lose some of the flexibility wireless networks can offer in general:

– E.g. they cannot be used for disaster relief in cases where no infrastructure is left.

Page 40: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructureless

• No need of any infrastructure to work

– greatest possible flexibility

• Each node communicate with other nodes, so no access point controlling medium access is necessary (autonomous operation).

– The complexity of each node is higher • implement medium access mechanisms, forwarding data

• Nodes within an ad-hoc network can only communicate if they can reach each other physically

– if they are within each other’s radio range

– if other nodes can forward the message

Page 41: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructureless (Ad Hoc Networks)

• Some Features (typically)

– Lack of a centralized entity

– Network self-organization

– All the communication is carried over the wireless

medium

– Rapid mobile host movements possible

– Multi-hop routing

– Power and computing power may be constrained

Page 42: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

Infrastructureless (Sensor Networks)

• Some Features – Many similarities to ad-hock networks – power and

computing power constrained

– Large number of sensors (application dependant)

– Limited wireless bandwidth

– Limited battery power

– Low energy use

– Efficient use of the small memory

– Data aggregation

– Network self-organization

– Collaborative signal processing

– Querying ability

Page 43: EPL 657 Wireless Networks - UCY

VANET Networks:

• VANETS: Vehicle Ad-hock Networks

• Some Features

– Many similarities to ad-hock networks – power and

computing power not necessarily as constrained as in

sensor or ad-hoc networks

– Large number of mobile nodes (cars)

– Network self-organization

– Topology dictated by road system