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Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

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Page 1: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streetsfor UHF Communications

Dana PorratAdvisor: Professor Donald Cox

Page 2: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Outline

• Propagation in cellular systems• The over-moded waveguide model• Comparison to measurements• Applications of the model

Page 3: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Propagation Models

• Ray tracing – requires a lot of detail and computation (Bell Labs, Bertoni, Rappaport)

• Power laws – give a very general picture, weakly linked to geometry

• Usage:• Power levels – Coverage and

Interference• Other properties of link

Page 4: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

• Street canyon effects in cities have been measured many times

• Guiding by indoor hallways – shown by measurements

Guided Radiation

Page 5: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Motivation

• Insight into the propagation mechanism in hallways and streets

• Average predictions based on geometry, with reasonable detail and low complexity

Page 6: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Outline

• The multi-moded waveguide model• Comparison to measurements• Applications of the model

Page 7: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Key Features

• The wavelength at 1 GHz is 30 cm – much smaller than hallways and streets Multi-moded waveguide

• The walls are not smooth Mode coupling

Page 8: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Smooth Waveguidex

z

d

-d

1st 2nd

8th

Page 9: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The TEM mode

• Field components: Hy and Ex

• Present for 2D smooth waveguide• Not present for 3D rough

waveguide

Page 10: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Rough Waveguide

x=f(z)

x=h(z)

D

s

Correlation Length

PerturbationVariance

x

z

d

-d

Dielectric Waveguide: D. Marcuse, 1970’s

Page 11: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Expansion in terms of the waveguide modes

are the amplitudes of the modes

Rough Walls

Page 12: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

• The wave equation for the smooth guide:

• For the rough guide:

• After manipulation:

The Perturbation Approach

Page 13: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Fn(z)

Page 14: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Perturbation Solution

hold the spectrum of f(z), h(z)

Page 15: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Coupled Modes

The coupling coefficients among modes:

Page 16: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

• Air filled waveguide, homogeneous material, rough boundaries

• Two dimensional model• Small roughness, compared to

• Coupling coefficients , has a Gaussian correlation with s, D• Coupling between TE-TM modes

behaves as single polarization coupling

Assumptions

Page 17: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Coupled Power Equations

Loss of the nth mode Coupling from the nth mode into other modes

Coupling from other modes into the nth mode

Page 18: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Power Coupling Coefficients

The coupling coefficients:

Page 19: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Solution of the Coupled Eq

Solution:

Page 20: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Steady State Solution

The steady state distribution has most of power in lowest order TE mode

Mode (n)

P [d

B]

Page 21: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

• Development along hallway / street

• Initial conditions:• Small antenna • Junction

n

zPn

Dynamic Solutions

Page 22: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Junctions

Low order modes of the main hallway couple into high order modes of the side hallway

Side Hallway

Main Hallway

Page 23: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Floor and Ceiling

• Full 3D model is very complicated• Simplification: smooth perfectly

conducting floor and ceiling• Vertical and horizontal are

independent

Page 24: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Indoor Measurements

Page 25: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Packard BasementPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Tx

1234

5

6

Page 26: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Hallway 1 Power

Simulation parameters: = 3, = 0.085 S/m s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 2 m

TE initial conditions

Pow

er

[dB

]

y [m]

Page 27: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Packard BasementPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Tx

1234

5

6

Page 28: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Power Across Hallway 1

x [m]

Pow

er

[dB

]

4.4 m

12 m

Page 29: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Packard BasementPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Tx

1234

5

6

Page 30: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Hallway 6 Power

Simulation parameters: = 3, = 0.085 S/m s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 2 m

Uniform initial conditions

Pow

er

[dB

]

y [m]

Page 31: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Packard BasementPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Tx

1234

5

6

Page 32: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Hallway 6 and Rooms

Simulation parameters: = 3, = 0.085 S/m s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 2 m

Uniform initial conditions

Pow

er

[dB

]

y [m]

Page 33: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Packard BasementPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Tx

1234

5

6

Page 34: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Hallway 5 and RoomsPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

Simulation parameters: = 3, = 0.085 S/m s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 2 m

Uniform initial conditions

Page 35: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Ray TracingPow

er

[dB

]

x [m]

y

[m]

Page 36: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Ray Tracing – Hallway 3

Simulation parameters: = 3, = 0.085 S/m, s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 2 m,

Uniform initial conditions

Pow

er

[dB

]

y [m]

Page 37: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Ottawa Measurements

J. Whitteker, 1987

Page 38: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Queen St Measurements

Distance along Street [m]

Pow

er

[dB

]

Simulation parameters: = 2.6, = 0.27 S/m s2 = 0.3 m2, D = 30 m

TE initial conditions

Page 39: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Ottawa Measurements

J. Whitteker, 1987

Page 40: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Metcalf St Measurements

Distance along Street [m]

Pow

er

[dB

]

Simulation parameters: = 2.4, = 0.26 S/m, s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 10 m,

Uniform initial conditions

Page 41: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Ottawa Measurements

J. Whitteker, 1987

Page 42: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Wellington St

Measurements

Distance along Street [m]

Pow

er

[dB

]

Simulation parameters: = 2.9, = 0.26 S/m, s2 = 0.2 m2, D = 10 m,

Uniform initial conditions

Page 43: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Applications of the Model

• Channel Capacity

• Delay Spread

Page 44: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Channel CapacityThe channel becomes ‘narrow’ at large distances, all the paths become similar

Distance along Hallway [m]

Capaci

ty [

bps/

Hz]

Max: 84 bps/Hz12 x 15

Antennas

SNR =20 dB

P. Kyritsi, 2001

Page 45: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

400 m

The Delay Profile

The group velocity v = c cosn k

n z

[sec]

Pow

er

[dB

]

Page 46: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Contributions• A new waveguide model for hallways and

streets with reasonable geometric input. This low complexity model agrees with indoor and outdoor measurements and provides insight to observed phenomena

• Demonstration of guiding effects in indoor hallways

• A ‘Keyhole’ effect which limits capacity in long hallways and streets

• Insight into delay profiles from the multi-moded waveguide model

Page 47: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Publications• D. Porrat and D. C. Cox, UHF Propagation in Indoor Hallways.

Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, June 2002

• D. Porrat, P. Kyritsi and D. C. Cox, MIMO Capacity in Hallways and Adjacent Rooms. IEEE Globecom, November 17-21, 2002

• D. Porrat and D. C. Cox, Microcell Coverage and Delay Spread Prediction Using Waveguide Theory. URSI General Assembly August 17-24 2002

• D. Porrat and D. C. Cox, Delay Spread in Microcells Analysed with Waveguide Theory. IEEE 55th Vehicular Technology Conference 2002 Spring, May 6-9

• D. Porrat and D. C. Cox, A Waveguide Model for UHF Propagation in Streets. The 11th Virginia Tech/MPRG Symposium on Wireless Personal Communications, June 6-8, 2001

Page 48: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

Extra Slides

Page 49: Radio Propagation in Hallways and Streets for UHF Communications Dana Porrat Advisor: Professor Donald Cox

The Over-Moded Waveguide

• A single long waveguide

• A junction of waveguides