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SYSTEM
2
Mobile Radio Propagation
Propagation study: provides prediction models for estimating the power
required to close a communications link and provide reliable
communications.
Modeling of radio channels is done in statistical fashion, measuring
propagation characteristics in a variety environments and then
developing a model based on the measured statistics for a particular
class of environments.
Wired channels are stationary and predictable, radio channels are
extremely random and have complex models.
Propagation Models
Propagation
Models
Large-Scale Small-Scale
Model Model
4
Propagation Models
Propagation Models
Deterministic/Analytical Empirical/Statistical
Models Models
5
Propagation Models
Large-scale model:
predict the average received signal strength over large distance from
the transmitter.
variations due to path loss and shadowing
wavelengths).
rapid variation caused by local scatterers around the Rx
Propagation Models
7
Propagation Models
Three components
Path-loss (long-term average)
certain distance
Depend on the distance
walls.
Log-normal distribution
9
Statistical Fluctuations
Area-mean power
is determined by path loss
is an average over 100 m - 5 km
Relevant to
Local-mean power
operator
is caused by local 'shadowing' effects
has slow variations
is an average over 40 (few meters)
Relevant to
Instantaneous power manufacturer
fluctuations are caused by multipath reception
depends on location and frequency
depends on time if antenna is in motion
has fast variations (fades occur about every half a wave
length)
10
Free Space Propagation Model
unobstructed line-of-sight (LOS) propagation
(e.g. satellite channels, microwave LOS radio
links)
11
Free Space Propagation Model
Isotropic antenna: power is distributed homogeneously over surface
area of a sphere.
2Gr
where Ae
4
is the antenna effective aperture or the
effective receiving surface area.
12
Free Space Propagation Model
PR PT GT GR
4d
Free Space Propagation Model
GtGr 2 1
Pr (d ) P (Valid if d2D2/- The far-field or Fraunhofer region)
(4 ) L d
2 2 t
Pt = 21.52 dBW
Pt = 36.42 dBW
Basic Propagation Mechanism:
Reflection
Reflection
Happens when electro-magnetic wave meets a large object
Plane boundary
Medium 1
Medium 2
Reflection: Specular vs Diffuse
Specular reflection: smooth surface
Angle of incidence = angle of reflection
Effects
Propagation behind obstructions
Snells Law
Radio Propagation Effects
Building
Direct Signal
hb Reflected Signal
Diffracted
Signal hm
d
Transmitter Receiver
Fresnel Zone
d1 d2
Tx Rx
a b d1 d 2 n / 2
d1
2
rn2
1/ 2
d 22 rn2
1/ 2
d1 d 2 n / 2
r 2 r 2
d1 1 2 d 2 1 2 d1 d 2 n / 2
n n
2d 2d
1 2
n d1d 2
Radius of the nth Fresnel zone: rn
d1 d 2
Example 2.4
condition.
(ii)Repeat (i) if plane earth path loss exists and both
ht
Reflected wave
hr
For a flat earth and ht, hr << d and making use of the binomial
expansion 1+a2 1+0.5a2 for a<<1,
dd d 2 ht hr d 1 ht hr / d 2 d 1 0.5 ht hr / d 2
2 2 2
dr d 2 ht hr d 1 ht hr / d 2 d 1 0.5 ht hr / d 2
2 2 2
dr dd 2ht hr / d and = dr dd 4 ht hr / d [rad ]
2
, propagation constant
Plane Earth Path Loss Model
The magnitudes of Ed and Er are almost
identical since d>>ht and approximately
equal to E1/d, where E1 is the direct
unattenuated field at 1 km.
The two waves have a phase lag +
because the reflection coefficient
H=1|180 adds radians. Thus we have:
E1 E1 2 ht hr
E Er Ed 2 cos 2 sin
d 2 d d
Plane Earth Path Loss Model
At large a distance [sin ], the received E-field:
E1 2ht hr
E2
d d
4Ae E1 2ht hr
Combining equations; G Pr Pd Ae E2
r
2 d d
2
Power received for flat earth reflection: E
Pd
2
ht hr 120
Pr PG
t t Gr 2
for d ht hr
d
In large distance (d ht hr ) the received power falls with d at
40 db/decade
Reflection from ground
(a) Find the length (m) and the effective aperture of the receiving
antenna (m2)
[8.33cm, 0.016m2]
(b) Find the received power at the mobile using the two ray ground
reflection model assuming the height of the transmitting antenna is
50 m and the receiving antenna is 1.5 m above ground.
[ER = 1.131 x 10-4 V/m, Pr = -122.7 dBW]
Example 2.7
Pr = -49.48 dBm
General Path Loss Models
effects
Example Okumura, Hatta Models
41
Path Loss Exponent
Example 2.8
d
PL (dB) PL (d 0 ) 10n log X ,
d0
X ~ N (0, 2 )
Rec. ITU-R P.1057-2
44
Calculation of Carrier to Noise Ratio (C/N)
GT
PT Path loss
GR C/N dB
kTB
NF
Example 2.9
dBm
Noise Floor & Sensitivity
Fade Margin is the difference between the un-faded received signal level
and the receiver threshold sensitivity in dB
Fade margin is the extra signal power added to a given radio link to
ensure that the link will continue working if it suffers signal propagation
effects (such as fading)
The fade margin is the result of the path equation
RSL
0 dB
Fade
Margin
-20 dB
Threshold Level
(Sensitivity) -40 dB
Time
Fade
Duration
Outdoor Propagation Models
Longley-Rice model
Model point-to-point propagation
etc
Can use the terrain path profile if available
considerations
Measurement Model: Okumura
Model
Okumura model
Most widely used model in urban areas
The Hata model is the empirical formulation of the graphical path loss
data provided by Okumura and is valid from 150 MHz to 1500 MHz.
The standard formula for median path loss in urban is given by
L50 urbandB 69.55 26.16 log f c 13.82 log ht ahr 44.9 6.55 log ht log d
For a small to medium sized city, the mobile antenna correction factor
is given by
69
COST-WI
COST-Walfisch-Ikegami-Model [11] considers more data to describe
the character of the urban environment,
heights of buildings, hroof
widths of roads w,
building separation b and
road orientation with respect to the direct radio path
Differentiate LOS and non-LOS situations.
70
Erceg Model
Hata-Okumura model was found that it is not suitable for shorter base station
heights (<30m), higher frequency (>1.5GHz).
Erceg model used the experimental data collected by AT&T Wireless Services
across United States in 95 existing macro cells operating at 1.9GHz.
Proposed for broadband fixed wireless, multichannel multipoint distribution
services (MMDS)
PL A 10a bhb c / hb log( d / d 0 )
10 x log( d / d 0 ) y yz ; d d 0
71
ITU-R P.1546 R
point-to-area predictions for terrestrial services in the frequency range
30 MHz to 3000 MHz at distances from 1 to 1,000 km
72
Standard Propagation Model
The Forsk Atoll SPM model is a derivative of the Hata formula.
Suitable for predication in the 150MHz~3500MHz band over long distance
(1Km<d<20Km)