1 / 31

A Survey of Various Propagation Models for Mobile Communication

This article provides an overview of various propagation models used in mobile communication, including empirical and site-specific models for path loss, as well as models for small-scale fading. The different models are discussed, along with their advantages and disadvantages.

Télécharger la présentation

A Survey of Various Propagation Models for Mobile Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Survey of Various Propagation Models for Mobile Communication Tapan K Sarkar, Zhong Ji, Kyungjung Kim, Abdellatif Medouri, and Magdalena Salazar-Palma IEEE Antenna and Propagation Magazine, Vol. 45, No. 3, June 2003 Presented by Lu-chuan Kung (kung@uiuc.edu)

  2. Outline • Mobile radio propagation • Models for Path Loss • Empirical (statistical) models • Site-specific (deterministic) models • Models for Small-scale Fading • Impulse-Response Models

  3. Mobile Radio Propagation • EM wave • Radio Wave Propagation: • Reflection • Diffraction • Scattering • Multi-path channel impulse response

  4. Basic Definitions • Path Loss • Friis free-space equation • Metrics (dBm, mW) • P(dBm) = 10 * log[ P(mW) ] • Power-Delay Profile • Take spatial average of |hb(t;τ)|2 over a local area

  5. Basic Definitions • Time-Delay Spread • First-arrival delay (τA) • Mean excess delay • RMS delay

  6. Inter-symbol Interference • Slide from R. Struzak

  7. Basic Definitions • Coherence Bandwidth • Range of frequency over which channel is “flat” • Relation to delay spread • Doppler spread • Measure spectral broadening caused by motion of the mobile • Coherence Time • Time duration over which channel impulse response is invariant

  8. Models of Path Loss • Log-distance Path Loss Model • Log-normal Shadowing • Xσ: N(0,σ) Gaussian distributed rv

  9. Models for Path LossEmpirical Models • Okumura Model • L50: median of propagation path loss • LF: free-space propagation loss • Amu(f,d): median attenuation • G(hte), G(hre): gain factors for BS and mobile antenna • GAREA: environment gain • Applicable frequncies: 150 MHz to 1920 MHz (typically is extrapolated up to 3000 MHz) • Disadvantage: slow response to rapid changes in terrain

  10. Models for Path LossEmpirical Models • Dual-slope model • P1=PL(d0): the path loss at d0 • dbrk: Fresnel breakpoint • Lb: basic transmission-loss parameter • n1,n2: slopes of the best-fit line before and after dbrk

  11. Models for Path LossEmpirical Models: Indoor Case • Indoor Log-distance path loss model • FAF(q): floor attenuation factor • WAF(p): wall attenuation factor

  12. Models for Path LossEmpirical Models: Indoor Case • Indoor Log-distance path loss model • γ ranges from 1.5 to 4 • γ depends on frequency and building materials

  13. Site-specific Path Loss ModelsRay-tracing • Ray-tracing Technique • Assume energy is radiated through infinitesimally small tubes, often called rays • Model signal propagation via ray propagation

  14. Ray-tracing Technique:Image Method • Image Method • Images of a source serve as secondary sources • N reflecting planes • N first-order images • N(N-1) two-reflection images • N(N-1)(N-1) three-reflection images • Efficient but cannot handle complex environments

  15. Ray-tracing Technique:Brute-force Method • Brute-force Method • Considers a bundle of transmitted rays • Generates reflecting and refracting rays when hits an object • Generates a family of diffracting rays when hits a wedge

  16. Ray-tracing Model • 2-D Ray-tracing model • Each ray is a ray sector of sector angle φ • Smallerφprovides higher accuracy • 3-D model • Each ray tube occupy the same solid angle • Antenna patterns are incorporated

  17. Site-specific Path Loss Model:FDTD Models • Ray-tracing fails for complex lossy structures with finite dimentions • Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) method • Solve Maxwell’s equations numerically • Complete solution for all points in the map • Requires large computational resources

  18. Site-specific Path Loss Model: Artificial Neural-Network Models • Artificial Neural-Network Models (ANNs) • Use neural network models to predict path loss from noisy measurements • Pros: • Better accuracy than statistical model • Better computational efficiency than other site-specific models • Cons: • Slow convergence • Unpredictable solutions during learning

  19. Models for Small-Scale Fading • Rayleigh fading • Assume a large number of scattering sources • By Central Limit Theorem, signal is a Gaussian rv with random phase between 0~2π • The power (envelope) of this random Gaussian vector is Rayleigh distributed

  20. An Example of Rayleigh Fading • A typical Rayleigh fading envelope at 900MHz, mobile unit velocity = 120km/hr

  21. Models for Small-Scale Fading • Ricean Distribution • A: peak amplitude of the dominant signal • I0(): modified Bessel function of the first kind • Add a dominant LOS signal to Rayleigh fading • Ricean factor: K=A2/2σ2

  22. Models for Small-Scale Fading • Log-normal Fading • m: median value • σ: standard deviation

  23. Models for Small-Scale Fading • Suzuki Model • Combines log-normal and Rayleight distributions

  24. Models for Small-Scale Fading • Nakagami Model • r: envelope amplitutde • Ω=<r2>: time-averaged power of received signal • m: the inverse of normalized variance of r2 • Get Rayleigh when m=1

  25. Impulse-Response Models • Complete characterization of the linear system • Model the effect of multi-path fading • Measurement-based Models • Statistical Models • Deterministic Models

  26. Impulse-Response Models Measurement-based Models: • Minimum resolvable delay = probing pulse width Tbb • Subject to interference and noise Direct Pulse Measurement

  27. Impulse-Response Models: Measurement-based Models • Spread-spectrum Sliding Correlator

  28. Impulse-Response Models: Measurement-based Models • Swept-frequency measurements • Pros: • Provide both amplitude and phase information • Cons: • Require hardwired synchronization between TX and RX • Need fast sweeping times but reduces time resolution

  29. Impulse-Response Models:Statistical Models • Two-ray Rayleigh Fading Model • α1 & α2: independent Rayleigh r.v. • θ1 & θ2 ~ Uni[0, 2π] • τ: time delay between the two rays

  30. Impulse-Response Models:Statistical Models • SIRCIM Model • Based on measurements at 1300MHz in 5 factory and other buildings • Model power-delay profile as a piecewise function For LOS: For OBS:

  31. Conclusion • With propagation models, we can • Provide installation guidelines • Mitigate interference • Design better wireless system

More Related