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Multiple Access Techniques

Multiple Access Techniques

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views20 pages

Multiple Access Techniques

Multiple Access Techniques

Uploaded by

abanob
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Multiple Access Techniques

Dr. Francis LAU

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 1

Content
Introduction
Frequency Division Multiple Access
Time Division Multiple Access
Code Division Multiple Access

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 2

1
Introduction
multiple access
techniques allowing users to share
simultaneously a finite amount of radio
spectrum
duplexing
two-way communications to occur
simultaneously

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 3

Introduction
frequency division duplexing (FDD)
frequency separation between each forward and
reverse channel is constant throughout the
system, regardless of the particular channel
being used

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 4

2
Introduction
time division duplexing (TDD)

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 5

Introduction
narrowband systems
signal bandwidth is comparable to the
coherence bandwidth of the channel
radio spectrum divided into a large number of
narrowband channels
usually operated using FDD
frequency separation as large as possible to
minimize interference
TDD also possible
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 6

3
Introduction
wideband systems
signal bandwidth is much larger than the coherence
bandwidth of the channel
what type of fading occurs?
TDMA allocates time slots to many users on the
channel and allows only one user to access the channel
at any one time
CDMA allows all users to access the channel at the
same time
work with both FDD and TDD
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 7

Introduction

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 8

4
Frequency Division Multiple
Access (FDMA)

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 9

FDMA
each user is assigned a unique frequency
band or channel
no other user can share the same channel
during the period of the call
in FDD systems, a channel consists of a
frequency pair is assigned
one frequency for forward channel
one frequency for reverse channel

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 10

5
FDMA
each FDMA channel has a relatively narrow
bandwidth because only one user is being supported
symbol time is large compared to the average delay
spread
what type of fading occurs?
lower complexity and lower data rate compared with
TDMA
fewer bits needed for overhead compared with
TDMA

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 11

FDMA
nonlinear effects
many channels share the same antenna at the
base station
power amplifiers or power combiners are
nonlinear when operating at or near saturation
for maximum power efficiency
nonlinearities cause intermodulation (IM)
which can interfere with other channels

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 12

6
Example 9.1
Find the intermodulation frequencies
generated if a base station transmits two
carrier frequencies at 1930MHz and
1932MHz that are amplified by a saturated
clipping amplifier. If the mobile radio band
is allocated from 1920MHz to 1940MHz,
designate the IM frequencies that lies inside
and outside the band.
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 13

Solution 9.1
Intermodulation distortion products occurs at frequencies
mf1+nf2 for all integer values of m and n. Some of the possible
IM frequencies that are produced by a nonlinear device are
(2n+1)f1 2nf2, (2n+2)f1 (2n+1)f2, (2n+1)f2 2nf1, (2n+2)f2 (2n+1)f1

required signals

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 14

7
Time Division Multiple Access
(TDMA)

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 15

TDMA
divide the radio spectrum into time slots
only one user is allowed to either transmit
or receive in each time slot
N time slots comprise a frame
data transmitted in a buffer-and-burst
method
noncontinuous transmission
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 16

8
TDMA

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 17

TDMA
mobile assisted handoff (MAHO) can be
performed by a subscriber by listening on an idle
slot in the TDMA frame
possible to allocate different number of time slots
per frame to different users (e.g. GPRS)
higher transmission rate gives rise to a signal
bandwidth larger than the coherence bandwidth of
the channel
What type of fading occurs?
larger overheads compared with FDMA
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 18

9
TDMA
Efficiency
frame efficiency: percentage of bits per frame
that contain transmitted data
information rate/transmission rate

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 19

Example 9.3
Consider GSM, which is a TDMA/FDD
system that uses 25MHz for the forward
link, which is broken into radio channels of
200kHz. If 8 speech channels are supported
on a single radio channel, and if no guard
band is assumed, find the number of
simultaneously users that can be
accommodated in GSM.
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 20

10
Solution 9.3
number of simultaneously users that can be
accommodated in GSM
N = (25MHz/200kHz) x 8 = 1000

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 21

Example 9.4
If GSM uses a frame structure where each frame
consists of eight time slots, and each time slot
contains 156.25 bits, and data are transmitted at
270.833 kbps in the channel, find
(a) the time duration of a bit,
(b) the time duration of a slot,
(c) the time duration of a frame,
(d) how long must a user occupying a single time
slot wait between two successive transmissions.

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 22

11
Solution 9.4
If GSM uses a frame structure where each frame
consists of eight time slots, and each time slot
contains 156.25 bits, and data are transmitted at
270.833 kbps in the channel, find
(a) the time duration of a bit Tb = 1/270.833 kbps = 3.692 s
(b) the time duration of a slot Ts = 156.25 Tb = 0.577ms
(c) the time duration of a frame Tf = 8 Ts = 4.615 ms
(d) a user needs to wait one frame duration, i.e., 4.615 ms,
between two successive transmissions

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 23

Example 9.5
If a normal GSM time slot consists of six
trailing bits, 8.25 guard bits, 26 training
bits, and two traffic bursts of 58 bits of data,
find the frame efficiency

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 24

12
Solution 9.5
If a normal GSM time slot consists of six
trailing bits, 8.25 guard bits, 26 training
bits, and two traffic bursts of 58 bits of data,
find the frame efficiency
no. of data bits per time slot = 2 x 58 = 116
equivalent no. of bits per time slot = 2 x 58
+ 6 + 8.25 + 26 = 156.25
frame efficiency = 116/156.25 = 74.24%
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 25

Code Division Multiple Access


(CDMA)

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 26

13
CDMA

Binary Phase 2 P cos[ 0 t + d (t )]


data modulator
2 P c(t ) cos[ 0 t + d (t )]

c(t) transmitted
2 P cos 0 t
signal
BPSK DS-SS transmitter
BPSK spreading accomplished by
multiplying sd(t) by a function c(t)= 1
representing the spreading waveform
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 27

CDMA
Binary Phase 2 P cos[ 0 t + d (t )]
data modulator
2 Pc(t ) cos[ 0 t + d (t )]

c(t)
2 P cos 0 t

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 28

14
BPSK DS-SS

Power spectral density of data-modulated carrier


1
{
S d ( f ) = PT sinc 2 [( f f 0 )T + sinc 2 [( f + f 0 )T
2
}
(two-sided psd of a BPSK carrier)

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 29

BPSK DS-SS

psd of data- and spreading code-modulated carrier


spreading
st(t) is also a BPSK carrier with T replaced by Tc code chip
Tc = T/3 bandwidth of the transmitted signal spread by a
factor of 3 level of the psd reduced by a factor of 3

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 30

15
BPSK DS-SS
distortionless channel

2 Pc (t Td ) cos[ 0 t + d (t Td ) + ] transmission delay


+ interference
interference
Data
and/or Bandpass Estimated
Gaussian noise phase
filter data
demodulator
signal component
c(t Td ) Despreading mixer 2 Pc (t Td )c (t Td ) cos[ 0 t + d (t Td ) + ]
receiver's best
estimate of the
transmission delay BPSK DS-SS receiver
despreading: re-modulation or correlation of the
received signal with the delayed spreading
waveform
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 31

Spreading Codes
pseudorandom (PN) codes
m-sequence
Gold codes
Walsh Codes

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 32

16
Hadamard matrix Mn
n x n matrix
n = even integer
elements are 1
one row of the matrix contains all ones
other rows contain n/2 no. of +1 and n/2
no. of 1
any row differs from the other row in
exactly n/2 positions
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 33

Hadamard matrix Mn

1 1 M Mn
M2 = M 2n = n

1 1 M n M n

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
M4 = ; M4 =
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 34

17
Walsh-Hadamard Codes
rows of the Hadamard matrix used as code
words 1 1 1 1 code 1
1 1 1 1
mutually orthogonal M = code 2
code 3
4
1 1 1 1

1 1 1 1 code 4
e.g. row 1 and 2, 1.1+1.(1)+1.1+1.(1) = 0
breaks down in the presence of multipath

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 35

CDMA
narrowband message signal is multiplied by a very
large bandwidth signal called the spreading signal
all users use the same carrier frequency and may
transmit simultaneously, TDD or FDD may be
used
unlike FDMA or TDMA, CDMA has a soft
capacity limit
increasing the no. of users raises the noise level, more
errors occur
Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 36

18
CDMA
near-far problem
mitigated using power control
spread spectrum bandwidth much greater than the
coherence bandwidth
what type of fading?
frequency reuse factor in CDMA cellular system
is 1
all cells use the same spectrum
soft handoff

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 37

Summary
multiple access techniques
frequency division multiple access
time division multiple access
code division multiple access

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 38

19
Summary
Reading
Rappaport T. S., Wireless Communications:
Principles and Practice, Prentice Hall PTR,
Sections 9.1-9.4.2, 2002.
Problems
Rappaport T. S., Wireless Communications:
Principles and Practice, Prentice Hall PTR,
Problems 9.1-9.5, 2002.

Dr. Francis CM Lau, Associate Professor, EIE, PolyU 39

20

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