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IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demonstrations

IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demonstrations. Cavin Wang, IDA, Singapore Ser Wah Oh, I2R, Singapore Przemysław Pawełczak , UCLA, USA. IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demos: Stats. 12 Demos submitted, 10 accepted, 9 presented Number of IEEE DySPAN demos stays relatively constant over the years

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IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demonstrations

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  1. IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demonstrations Cavin Wang, IDA, Singapore Ser Wah Oh, I2R, Singapore PrzemysławPawełczak, UCLA, USA

  2. IEEE DySPAN 2010 Demos: Stats • 12 Demos submitted, 10 accepted, 9 presented • Number of IEEE DySPAN demos stays relatively constant over the years • Dublin (9), Chicago (13) • Location • EU (5 - !), USA (2), Canada (1), Singapore (1)

  3. Software Defined Radio (SDR) Implementation of Spectrally Modulated Spectrally Encoded (SMSE) Based Overlay Cognitive Radio (CR) Ruolin Zhou, WSU Clifton Bullmaster, AFRL

  4. Cognitive Radio Overlay CR – utilizes the white space (unused spectrum)‏ Underlay CR – UWB‏ Hybrid Overlay/Underlay CR – utilizes both the white space and the gray space. Do not need UWB for underlay V. Chakravarthy, Z. Wu, M. Temple, and F. Garber, “Novel Overlay/Underlay Cognitive Radio Waveforms Using SD-SMSE Framework to Enhance Spectrum Efficiency - Part I: Theoretical Framework and Analysis in AWGN Channel," IEEE Transactions on Communications, vol. 57, no. 12, pp. 3794-3804, December 2009

  5. SMSE Framework M. L. Roberts, M. A. Temple, R. A. Raines, R. F. Mills, and M. E. Oxley, “Communication Waveform Design Using an Adaptive Spectrally Modulated, Spectrally Encoded (SMSE) Framework,” IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing, June 2007

  6. Demonstration • Flexibly generates SMSE based non-contiguous OFDM, MC-CDMA, CI/MC- CDMA, and TDCS waveforms to take advantage of multiple spectrum holes • Adaptively avoids interference from and to the primary users, and intelligently provides coexistence • Future Work – “SD-SMSE Based Hybrid Overlay/Underlay CR”

  7. Cognitive Radio for Home Networking Vladimir Atanasovski (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies - Skopje, MK); Daniel Denkovski (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies, MK); Tim Farnham (Toshiba Research Europe Ltd., UK); LiljanaGavrilovska (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies, MK); Alain Gefflaut (European Microsoft Innovation Center, DE); VinayKolar (Carnegie Mellon University, QA); Petri Mähönen (RWTH Aachen University, DE); Elena Meshkova (RWTH Aachen University, DE); Benjamin Motz (Toshiba Research Europe Ltd., UK); JadNasreddine (RWTH Aachen University, DE); ValentinaPavlovska (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technologies, Skopje, MK); Marina Petrova (RWTH Aachen University, DE); SadiaQuadri (Toshiba Research Europe Ltd., UK); KrisakornRerkrai (RWTH Aachen University, DE)

  8. What has this man to do with…

  9. … wireless home networking

  10. ARAGORN… http://www.ict-aragorn.eu/ • A cooperation project between 4 universities and 4 companies: • RWTH Aachen University, CFR, UCL and Univ. Ss. Cyril and Methodius • Microsoft, Toshiba, ST Microelectronics and Huawei • Develops Cognitive Radio and DSA solutions with learning capabilities for low-cost commercial applications. • Highlighting in DySPAN 2010: • Cognitive Resource Management Architecture • Cross-Layer Optimization and Interference Management • Policy Management and Application Priorities through hierarchical policy servers Welcome to our demo!

  11. Decomposable MAC Framework for Highly Flexible and Adaptable MAC Realizations JunaidAnsari, Xi Zhang, Andreas Achtzehn, Marina Petrova, Petri Mähönen Institute for Networked Systems RWTH Aachen University, Germany

  12. Concept Decomposition of MAC protocols into fundamental functional blocks based on the commonalitiesamong different MACs. Realization of a particular MAC solution by binding the blocks together appropriately through a Wiring Engine. On-the-fly composition and reconfiguration of MAC protocols with high degree of code reuse. A key enabling technology for implementing and prototyping Cognitive Radios and dynamic wireless devices. MAC 1 MAC 2

  13. Design and Implementation Granular MAC blocks are implemented with flexible APIs on WARP boards. A MAC DescriptionLanguageeasesimplementationeffortforusers. Interpretertranslatesuserinputsintoexecutableinstructions. Wiring Engine coordinates data and control flow between blocks and allows run-time configuration by block insertion and removal through a set of dependency tables. Implementation Modules

  14. Demonstration and Visualizations Users can interactively compose and modify MACs at runtime through flowcharts. Corresponding auto-generatedMACcode is shown. Live performance statistics of the MAC is displayed. A spectrum-agile MAC developed using the framework is shown to reconfigure based on the user controlled interferences.

  15. Demonstration of Sequence Detection Algorithms for Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks Zhanwei Sun, Glenn J. Bradford and J. Nicholas Laneman Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, USA

  16. Sequence Detection Algorithms for Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks • Energy Detection does not consider the PU’s channel access pattern. • Sequence Detection • - Based upon hidden Markov model, integrating memory into spectrum sensing • - Different cost factors for missed detections and false alarms • - Minimizing detection risk

  17. Network Setup • A PU pair and a SU pair operate at the same frequency band, with video streaming for each user • Primary transmitter accesses the channel in a Markov chain • Secondary transmitter accesses the channel opportunistically on detecting spectrum hole

  18. Demonstration

  19. Cognitive, Radio-Aware, Low-Cost (CORAL) Research Platform John Sydor, Siva Palaninathan, Bernard Doray, David Roberts, MuhmudarRahman, Li Pan, JiangsinHu, Amir Ghasemi, Wayne Brett, Larry Stone Communications Research Centre, Canada

  20. What is CORAL*? • A Wi-Fi® router with a cognitive radio control shell around it, thus creating the WIFI_CR unit • WIFI_CR: has IEEE 802.11g PHY attributes. However with the CR_NMS control system we implement a cognitive radio as defined by the ITU….which uses environment knowledge, dynamically & autonomously adjusts, learns… • It implements all the functionality of CR: Radio Environment sensing, virtual environment memory, cognitive engines, control channel, undertakes network and terminal re-configurability, and can be used create numerous wireless topologies: Mesh, Pico-cell networks, Femtocells, P-MP/P-P, relays, etc.. • CORAL is a CR developmentplatform allowing implementation of Cognitive Networks in the ISM band…where interference, fallow spectrum, primary users, and poor propagation are the norm….If Cognitive Radio can solve wireless problems in the ISM band, it will probably solve them in other, less demanding band…like the TV bands • Will give developers fresh approaches to wireless…especially in the ISM band which uses a technology ( WIFI/IEEE 802.11) that is not spectrum efficient in high interference and is in need of improvement after 15 years of the same old access algorithms… • How about a cognitive ISM band MIMO router in the home that shares spectrum with its neighbors..and acts as a femtocell for cellular? New approaches to old wireless concepts.

  21. A demonstration of CORAL’s CR capabilities.. for Dyspan 2010 (1) Creation of a Radio Environment Awareness MAP • A virtual representation of the Radio Environment • is required for learning and decision making by • the Cognitive Engines. We will show how CORAL: • Captures full ISM band WI-Fi interference by providing occupancy information, interference power, identity, IP Link associations; undertakes spectrum analysis; can incorporate specific sensors, • Can ‘Sniff’ specific sectors capturing interference that is spatially dependent, • Collects throughput and channel utilization data by the members of the CRN to aid in bandwidth allocation, • Creates a map of the interference and occupancy attributes of the CRN that can be searched by time, space, spectrum, RSSI, identity, IP link, occupancy, etc.

  22. A demonstration of CORAL’s CR capabilities.. for Dyspan 2010 (2) Dynamic Spectrum Assignment • Using the REAM and Sensor information, the CORAL CRN ( AP with 3 clients) selects the most appropriate ISM channel based on occupancy, interference. power level, duration, and user terminal’s bandwidth (fairness) requirements. • Dynamically moves to alternate channel when interference environment changes. (3) Primary User detection-alternative channel move • On detection of a Mimicked Primary User that appear on-channel, CORAL moves to an alternative channel…mimicking TV band/radar detection type actions. (4) Spatial Selection for Interference Mitigation • Demonstration of how CORAL system can change its reception pattern, allowing • selection of direction and sectors less prone to interference. • Demonstration of CORAL’s TDD/TDMA Wi-Fi capability; per packet directional switching that can be used by cognitive engines with spatial interference knowledge.

  23. OFDM Pulse-Shaped Waveforms for DynamicSpectrum Access Networks Paul Sutton, Barış Özgül, Irene Macaluso, Linda Doyle CTVRat University of Dublin, Trinity College, Ireland

  24. OFDM Pulse-Shaped Waveforms for DynamicSpectrum Access NetworksPaul Sutton, Barış Özgül, Irene Macaluso, and Linda DoyleCTVRat University of Dublin, Trinity College, Ireland BACKGROUND: • OFDM is the modulation scheme preferred in many wireless communication systems (DSA networks, DVB, ISDB, variants of Wifi, Wimax, LTE, LTE-advanced ...) • OFDM has flexibility to support adaptive bit/power loading, embedded signatures, non-contiguous transmissions, and pulse shaping DEMO: • GOAL: Suppressing out-of-band radiation of an OFDM signal through shaping • for coexistence of more signals in a limited frequency band • SCENARIO: A high-power OFDM-based secondary transmission at a frequency adjacent to an OFDM-based primary system • Secondary Tx is positioned next to the primary Rx • Baseband Tx/Rx chains run on our highly reconfigurable Iris 2.0 software radio platform. USRP is the RF front-end • Primary system transmits audio over air • Primary RX cannot receive and play audio due to adjacent channel interference, when secondary Tx applies no shaping PAPERS in DySPAN 2010: 1) “Experiences from the Iris Testbed in Cognitive Radio and Dynamic Spectrum Access Experimentation” – Thu, 14:15-15:45, Room: Ocean 1 , 2) “Dynamic Block-Edge Masks (BEMs) for Dynamic Spectrum Emission Masks (SEMs)” – Thu, 14:15-15:45, Room: Ocean 3

  25. SETUP: 3 pairs of “1 Laptop+1 USRP” for interfering Tx, primary Tx and primary Rx • Laptops run baseband TX and RX chains implemented on Iris 2.0 • Baseband samples transferred to/received from USRP over USB • USRP transmits/receives signal over air Suppression of adjacent channel interference through shaping No shaping → Harmful adjacent interference, no audio

  26. OFDM-based Dynamic Spectrum Access Milan Zivkovic, Dominik Auras, Rudolf Mathar RWTH Aachen University

  27. Demonstration scenario • Interference-free coexistence of two OFDM systems within a common frequency band • SU system detects parts of unused spectrum and adapts its transmission parameters (used subchannels, rate and power allocation) satisfying given requirements (constrained total power, required rate, BER) • Theperformance of PU transmissionisnotaffectedby SU communication PU 500 kHz USRP USRP SU USRP USRP 2 MHz Lehrstuhl für Theoretische Informationstechnik

  28. System architecture • Reconfigurable continuous one-way transmission of OFDM symbol frames • Baseband signal processing is implemented in GNU Radio • Blocks for adaptive (de)mapping and power loading allows for capacity achieving functionality • The backbone of the system is realized over local Ethernet network by CORBA event service • The central control unit (resource manager) determines optimal transmission parameters for given requirements • Resource manager can be easily configured for different DSA scenarios Lehrstuhl für Theoretische Informationstechnik

  29. Digital and Analog Solution for Low-power Multi-band Sensing SofiePollin, Eduardo Lopez, Anthony Antoun, Peter Van Wesemael, LievenHollevoet, Andre Bourdoux, Antoine Dejonghe, Liesbet Van derPerre IMEC

  30. A single reconfigurable analog front-end: Scanning from 100MHz to 6GHz Prototype demonstrating sensing capabilities of IMEC Scaldio2B RFIC 500 MHz 2.5 GHz • 40 nm RFIC • On chip ADC • 100 MHz -> 6 GHz  imec/restricted 2010

  31. A sensing enabled digital front-end:Further band selection and FFT processing Digital Channel Selection Digital Multi-band Processing imec confidential 2009

  32. An algorithm for multi-band sensing:Iterative Leakage Removal Transmitted Signal: Many small spectrum holes Filtered Received Signal After FFT After leakage removal Holes Identified

  33. TV White Space Video Streaming Demo Ser Wah Oh, YonghongZeng, Weiqiang Zhang, SyedNaveen A. A., Francois Chin Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R), A*STAR

  34. Imagination to Reality http://www.i2r.a-star.edu.sg Goals and Architecture • Goals • Testing spectrum sensing in real-world environment • Showcasing opportunistic utilization of unoccupied spectrum for communication • Architecture Jun 7, 10

  35. Imagination to Reality http://www.i2r.a-star.edu.sg Demo 1 Jun 7, 10

  36. Imagination to Reality http://www.i2r.a-star.edu.sg Demo 2 Frequency: 512 – 698 MHz Bandwidth: 6 MHz Jun 7, 10

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