Showing posts with label Mimo Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mimo Technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

ABSTRACT

MIMO is a technique for boosting wireless bandwidth and range by taking advantage of multiplexing.

MIMO algorithms in a radio chipset send information out over two or more antennas. The radio signals reflect off objects, creating multiple paths that in conventional radios cause interference and fading. But MIMO uses these paths to carry more information, which is recombined on the receiving side by the MIMO algorithms.

A conventional radio uses one antenna to transmit a DataStream. A typical smart antenna radio, on the other hand, uses multiple antennas. This design helps combat distortion and interference. Examples of multiple-antenna techniques include switched antenna diversity selection, radio-frequency beam forming, digital beam forming and adaptive diversity combining.

These smart antenna techniques are one-dimensional, whereas MIMO is multi-dimensional. It builds on one-dimensional smart antenna technology by simultaneously transmitting multiple data streams through the same channel, which increases wireless capacity.

INDEX

1.TRENDS IN WIRELESS AND MOBILE COMMUNICATION
2.MIMO Technology in wireless communications
3.MULTIPATH FADING
4.ANTENNAS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
5.WHAT IS MIMO?
6.MIMO SCALABILITY
7.EXAMPLES OF MIMO TECHNOLOGY
8.HSDPA and MIMO
9.MIMO HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS
10.APPLICATION AND BENEFITS OF MIMO
11.COMPANIES USING MIMO TECHNOLOGY
12.CHALLENGES IN MIMO DESIGN
13.UNDERSTANDING MIMO
14.PROMISES MADE BY MIMO
15.LIMITATIONS IN MIMO
16.BIBLIOGRAPHY

TRENDS IN WIRELESS AND MOBILE COMMUNICATION

Last few years have seen rapid development of wireless technologies. The stage is set for third generation technology (3G) and R&D is already aiming at fourth generation (4G) technology.(see fig 1 and 2)

Fig 1: PCN evolution/migration

The 2G technology for mobile communication revolved around GSM mainly for voice communication. It was focused on voice services with circuit switching, whereas the current 2.5G technology is focused on circuit switched voice service and packet switched data service.

The 2G technology offered quite satisfactory voice communication services, but with growing data traffic, the 3G technology has mainly targeted data services, particularly the Internet traffic. Thus the main service component of the 3G technology is quality and reliable Internet data traffic. The migration from 2G to 3G was started for providing new reliable services with minimal investment. To offer quality service and advanced traffic management, the asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) technology is being explored with the IMT 2000 core network node system





The 3G technology still evolves around GSM- based IMT 2000 or universal mobile telecommunication system(UTMS), although alternatives like freedom of mobile multimedia access(FOMA) of Japan and GSM-evolved core network (CN) exist. Comprehensive, broadband, integrated mobile communication will step forward into all-mobile 4G services and communication, The 4G technology will be a migration from the other generation of mobile services to overcome the limitation of boundary and achieve total integration.

The evolutionary approach towards a wireless information age is shown in fig 1. the 4G systems will be developed to provide high-speed transmission, next-generation Internet support (IPv6, VoIP and mobile IP), high-capacity, seamless integrated services and coverage, utilization of higher frequency, lower system cost, seamless personal mobility, mobile multimedia(standard), efficient spectrum use, quality of service(QoS), reconfiguration network and end-to-end IP systems.

MIMO Technology in wireless communications

Digital communication using MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) or also called volume to volume wireless links is emerging as one of the most promising research areas in wireless communications. In wireless MIMO the transmitting end as well as the receiving end is equipped with multiple antenna elements, as such MIMO can be viewed as an extension of the very popular ‘smart antennas’. In MIMO though the transmit antennas and receive antennas are jointly combined in such a way that the quality (Bit Error Rate) or the rate (Bit/Sec) of the communication is improved. At the system level, careful design of MIMO signal processing and coding algorithms can help increase dramatically capacity and coverage and thus can improve the economics of network deployment for operators. Today, MIMO wireless is widely recognized as one of three or four key technologies in the forthcoming high-speed high-spectrum efficiency wireless networks (4G, and to some extent 3G). Applications also exist in fixed wireless and wireless LAN networks.

Progress in MIMO research poses strong scientific challenges in the areas of modeling (of mobile space-time wireless channels), information theory (coding, channel capacity and other bounds on information transfer rates), signal processing (signaling and modulation design, receiver algorithms), and finally the design of the wireless fixed or mobile networks that will incorporate those MIMO links in order to maximize their gain. More specifically, joint design of sensible multiple access solutions (CDMA, OFDMA, TDMA and variants) as well as medium access (MAC) protocol for wireless MIMO is challenging.

MULTIPATH FADING

Wireless technologies are not free from problems like limitation of the available frequency spectrum, fading and multipath fading. Fading results in sudden drop of signal power in the receiver. Multipath fading results when the transmitted signal bounces off objects like buildings, office cabinets and hills, creating multiple paths for the signal to reach the receiver. The same transmitted signal that follows the different paths reaches the receiver at different times with different phases. Added together, the several incidences of the same signalwith different phases and amplitude may cancel each other, causing signal loss or drop of signal power.







The consequences of multipath fading(fig 3) may be delay spread, short-term fading, long-term fading and Doppler effect. Delay spread results in spreading of the transmitted pulse on the time axis and even in generation of multiple low amplitude pulse trains. It occurs in fixed radio stations.

In mobile environments as the channel condition changes with motion of the receiver, fading causes the short term effect, resulting in fluctuation of the received power over time. The receiver may not adapt to the changes. This degrades the service quality. Short term fading occurs over short term duration. Long term fading results in decreased received power over long time/distance; as time increases, the moving receiver usually goes further away.

The Doppler effect occurs in fast moving mobiles. It results in shift of the frequency randomly. Multipath fading, in effect, either causes low recied signal power or degraded quality of service, both of which are highly unexpected in the future all-wireless and mobile communication. The low received power increases the bit error rate, which, in turn, limits the data rate.

ANTENNAS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION

A conventional radio uses one antenna to transmit a datastream.
A smart antenna uses multiple antenna to transmit a datastream.
Smart antenna techniques are one-dimensional.
MIMO uses multi-dimensional antenna.
It builds on one-dimensional smart antenna technology by simultaneously transmitting multiple datastreams through the same channel, which increases wireless capacity
The use of antennas at both transmitter and receiver allows –
1.Multiplicative increase in capacity and spectral efficiency
2.Dramatic reductions of fading thanks to diversity
3.Increased system capacity (number of users)
4.Lower probability of detection
5.Improved resistance to interference

Smart antenna techniques use multiple antennas to improve wireless performance and reliability
– Antennas themselves are “dumb” pieces of metal
– “Smartness” comes from signal processing that is applied to the multiple antennas
– There are differing degrees of smartness

Conventional, “single-dimension” (1D) smart antenna techniques transmit just one data stream per channel
– RF beamforming
– Digital beamforming
– Digital receive diversity combining

• MIMO makes smart antennas “multi-dimension”
– Multiple data streams in the same channel
– 2-D signals

WHAT IS MIMO?

Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) is a smart antenna technique that increases speed, range, reliability and spectral efficiency for wireless systems. MIMO is a new wireless technology conceived in the mid 90’s A technique for boosting wireless bandwidth and range by taking advantage of multiplexing. It is based on an entirely new paradigm for digital signal processing that multiplies the data rate throughput achievable in wireless communication products. Greatly improves the reliability, range and robustness of the connection providing a much better user experience that is closer to “wired” Ethernet quality.

MIMO is one technology being considered for 802.11n, a standard for next-generation 802.11 that boosts throughput to 100M bit/sec. In the meantime, proprietary MIMO technology improves performance of existing 802.11a/b/g networks.

During the 1990s, Stanford University researchers Greg Raleigh and VK Jones showed that a characteristic of radio transmission called multipath, which had previously been considered an impairment to radio transmission, is actually a gift of nature. Multipath occurs when signals sent from a transmitter reflect off objects in the environment and take multiple paths to the receiver. The researchers showed that multipath can be exploited to multiplicatively increase the capacity of a radio system.

If each multipath route could be treated as a separate channel, it would be as if each route were a separate virtual wire. A channel with multipath then would be like a bundle of virtual wires. MIMO uses multiple, spatially separated antennas. MIMO encodes a high-speed datastream across multiple antennas. Each antenna carries a separate, lower-speed stream. Multipath virtual wires are utilized to send the lower-speed streams simultaneously.

MIMO SCALABILITY

One of the benefits of MIMO technology is its ability to scale data transmission speed with the number of antennas and radio and signal processing hardware. When coupled with the increasing integration levels governed by Moore’s law, it provides a communications roadmap to the future.

The data rate of a SISO system is determined by:

R = ES * BW

Where R is the data rate (bits/second or bps),
ES is the spectralefficiency (bits/second/Hertz or bps/Hz),
and BW is the communications bandwidth (Hz).

For instance, for 802.11a, the peak data rate is obtained by:
BW = 20MHz
ES = 2.7 bps/Hz
yielding R = 54Mbps

SISO systems obtain greater performance by using greater
bandwidth. For instance, Atheros’ Turbo® mode allows for:
BW = 40MHz
ES = 2.7 Bps/Hz
yielding R = 108Mbps

Using MIMO, an additional variable is introduced – the number of independent data streams, NS, that are communicated simultaneously in the same bandwidth, in different spatial paths. The spectral efficiency is now measured per-stream as ESS. The data rate of a MIMO system becomes:
R = ESS * BW * NS


For the current 802.11n proposal, there are 10, 20, and 40MHz modes allowed, yielding peak rates with the following parameters
BW = 10, 20, or 40MHz
ESS = 3.6 bps/Hz (BW = 10 or 20)
ESS = 3.75 bps/Hz (BW = 40)
NS = 2, 3, 4
yielding R=144Mbps (20MHz, Ns = 2)
yielding R=300Mbps (40MHz, Ns = 2)
yielding R=600Mbps (40MHz, Ns = 4)

Thus peak data rates ranging from 144Mbps to 600Mbps can be obtained by modifying the bandwidth and number of spatial streams.

HSDPA and MIMO

HSDPA is a packet-based data service in W-CDMA downlink with data transmission up to approximately 10 Mbps over a 5MHz bandwidth
MIMO technology is used, in which multiple antennas are implemented at both base station and mobile terminals to attain a speed of 20Mbps .
At the transmitter, the information bits are divided into several bit streams and transmitted through different antennas.
The transmitted information are recovered from the received signals at multiple receive antennas by using an advanced receiver.
Due to the high data rate transmission, the trade off between complexity and system performance becomes an important issue, especially for the UE designs.

MIMO HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS

In order to maintain multiple independent data streams, multiple RF and baseband chains are required. There must be at least as many chains on each side as the number of spatial streams. I.e.:
NS = min (NR, NT)

In practice, to obtain better radio link robustness, NR and/or NT are typically chosen to be larger than NS for greater spatial diversity and link budget margin. I.e. for a robust NS = 2 system, NR could be 3. Or for increased link margin, diversity, and performance with a single stream systems, NR = NT = 2 could be used.

Figures 3 and 4 show block diagrams of the MIMO transmitter and receiver, indicating the parallelism and required data rate scaling.

The scaling factors indicate the growth in complexity of each of the blocks as a function of the design variables. This complexity in turn scales the power consumption and area of each block. The complexity scaling is due to both sample rates as well as required sample precision.

As a reference point, an 802.11g single-chip transceiver fabricated in 0.18m CMOS reported in ISSCC 2005 occupies 41mm2 total area, with 72% in digital logic. In transmit mode, the systemon- a-chip consumes 498mW of power, 226mW from the digital components. In receive mode, it consumes 513mW total, 330mW from the digital components.

APPLICATION AND BENEFITS OF MIMO

For Business:

• Enables truly wireless office – replaces Ethernet
– Improves wireless reliability and robustness
Reduces infrastructure cost - Doubles coverage area of each AP
Rates to 108 Mbps in each channel – similar to wired Ethernet speed

• Improves VoIP performance
– Extends handset battery life
– Increases call capacity

For Consumers:

• One AP covers your whole home with reliable service
Penetrates more walls at higher rates
No need to sit in the right place to use your laptop

• Supports new wireless multimedia applications
Whole-home coverage for high-speed broadband access
Reliable SDTV and HDTV video transport in home networks
Multi-service applications – voice, video, data

COMPANIES USING MIMO TECHNOLOGY

Airgo Networks Inc.'s True MIMO
Asian manufacturers Taiyo Yuden Inc. and Askey Computer Corp., are also readying products based on True MIMO
at Atheros Communications Inc., in Sunnyvale, Calif.,
Intel Corp. has MIMO in the labs as well, with plans to include it in its Centrino chip sets.
Cisco Systems Inc.
Generation IX Technologies Inc.,Los Angeles.
Broadcom releases "prestandard 802.11n" products.

CHALLENGES IN MIMO DESIGN

MIMO systems deliver greater performance, but with additional cost and power consumption. Competitive pressures of consumer markets impact tolerable cost (area), while thermal and battery life constraints limit tolerable power consumption in wireless portable devices. Additionally, mixed signal issues including coupling and cross-talk become critical in integrated high performance wireless systems which co-locate the digital circuitry with the analog RF electronics. Lastly, the quest for ultra-low cost solutions leads to additional systems-level integration of CPUs and other peripherals.

UNDERSTANDING MIMO

The first step in clarifying the confusion is to understand the major approaches taken by the different MIMO camps. In general, all agree that MIMO uses multiple antennas to send multiple distinct signals across different spatial paths at the same time, increasing throughput.

They also agree that multipath reflection isn't the enemy. In any enclosed space, radio signals propagate at different speeds through different materials and are partially or fully reflected by some materials. If you took high school physics, you might remember an experiment with a laser beam and a tank of water that showed how light can be deflected through materials of different refractive index. A simpler experiment is to look through a bottle of water (or old window glass) to see distortions as light travels at slower speeds.

Radio signals are more susceptible than light to diffraction, reflection and absorption, which has traditionally limited speed and range. The higher the data rate, the more likely it is that multiple paths for transmitted signals will emerge and have to be reassembled at the receiver.

Enter OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplexing), which was the bridge technology that took wireless networking from the old 802.11b standard to 802.11a and g. Instead of having data symbols - constellations of information in a signal forming a retrievable chunk - spread across a whole Wi-Fi channel, OFDM subdivides a frequency into a set of slower subchannels. A Byte sent over each subchannel is much easier to recognize because it takes longer to transmit and thus many slightly time-offset versions can be reconciled more easily. One player at the heart of this debate is Airgo, a company that provides MIMO technology to WLAN equipment vendors such as Linksys and Belkin. The company's founder, Greg Raleigh, was an early voice in the wilderness about MIMO and he is still defending his definition of the technology. The company has even trademarked the term "true MIMO" to describe its approach.

Airgo's MIMO builds on OFDM by using spatial multiplexing in which different radio signals are sent over the same frequencies at the same time. Multipath reflection allows the transmitting and receiving antennas to essentially create a unique path in space for each signal using separate radios.

The MIMO delivered by Video54 - appearing first in equipment from Netgear - uses several antennas that can be switched off and on in 50 combinations on a per-packet basis but a single radio. Video54 says its technology dramatically improves the ability of a receiver to reassemble signals. This increases range and throughput.

Selina Lo, Video54's CEO, noted that "if you have a lot of redundant routes, you can always find the route that has the lowest latency or the least cost" in terms of signal usage. Atheros will offer similar technology to its OEM partner D-Link. Spatial multiplexing will be incorporated, at least in large part, into the 802.11n standard, and the folks pursuing just multiple antennas say that that's the time to add it: when both adapters and gateways can take advantage of multiple signal paths. And both approaches are currently available in the marketplace, retrofitted on top of 802.11g equipment and protocols. Besides Linksys and Belkin, SOHOware also uses the Airgo technology. Netgear has adopted the Video54 technology.

In addition, D-Link reportedly will use MIMO technology from a third vendor, Atheros. Atheros has reportedly developed a beam-forming MIMO chipset that offers features like Video54. All the technologies are different, none is standardized and each uses a different theory for delivering greater speed and range over wireless LANs.

PROMISES MADE BY MIMO

MIMO technology promises higher data rate, higher quality of service and better reliability by exploiting antenna array at both the sides (transmitter and receiver) are mixed such that they either generate multiple parallel, spatial bit-pipes and/or add diversity to decrease the bit-error rate.

The fundamental gain in MIMO is increased data rate. MIMO is better and the only stratergy for achieving both the higher data rate and better quality of service. By spreading the transmitted signal over multiple paths, the MIMO technology increases the chances of signal reception at the receiver. It also increases the range of the operation.


In the fig6 MIMO covers all the three base regions of convential cellular telephony. The transmitter can adjust power and phase of the signal fed to antennae, which allows the best transmission quality.

LIMITATIONS IN MIMO

Complex design requirements
More energy
Complex algorithms and design are required for operation of multiple antenna.
Handsets and other mobile devices becomes costlier($199 for the router and $129 for each laptop card, vs. $79 and $69, respectively, for comparable non-Mimo equipment. ).
Capacity of MIMO is low for uncorrelated signals.
Requires robust encryption

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Books:

Electronics For You(January 2006)
Wireless Communications-Principles and practices,Theodore S Rappaport

Links from google search:

G:\MIMO Research @ UT Austin.htm
G:\ carltemme@airgonetworks.com.
G:\Research on Multi-Antenna and MIMO Wireless Systems Signals.htm
G:\MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output).htm

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