Wireless channel characterization and MIMO performance analysis in complex indoor scenarios at sub-6 GHz band
Date
2023Version
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Type
Tesis doctoral / Doktoretza tesia
Impact
|
10.48035/Tesis/2454/45305
Abstract
The continue evolution in wireless communication systems aims to
provide adequate parameters in terms of higher transmission bit rates,
capacity and increased spectral efficiency. All these deriving from the
context of IoT, IIoT and the 5G applications such as Enhanced Mobile
Broadband (eMBB), Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency Communications
(uRLLC) and Massive Machine-Type Communications (mMT ...
[++]
The continue evolution in wireless communication systems aims to
provide adequate parameters in terms of higher transmission bit rates,
capacity and increased spectral efficiency. All these deriving from the
context of IoT, IIoT and the 5G applications such as Enhanced Mobile
Broadband (eMBB), Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency Communications
(uRLLC) and Massive Machine-Type Communications (mMTC). Physical
layer functionalities such as MIMO can increase throughput and provide
higher coverage/capacity relations. However, its performance is directly
affected by radio channel characteristics defined in the radio channel matrix
and other conditions such as employed antenna spacing, human scattering
influence or phase evolution effect. In this research work, three particular and useful study cases have been
performed. Firstly, the performance of a MIMO system operating within a
5G NR FR1 capable band is analyzed, by considering volumetric channel
analysis in frequency/power as well as in time domain and the impact of
variable antenna spacing. The results show a clear benefit in received power
level as antenna spacing is increased from 1λ to 3λ in the case of a complex
indoor scenario. Secondly, we analyzed the influence of human scattering in a complex
indoor environment consisting in a conference room in a plenary layout. For
this study, 5G NR FR1 frequency band was also considered. Results show
that 0% of human occupancy has 3 dB enhancement over 100% occupancy
when analyzing BER values. Besides, it was also observed an important
decrease in total power levels received: there is a loss of around 10 dBm
when 50% occupancy, another 6 dBm loss when premise is complete
compering with 50% and a total of 16 dBm of loss between 100% occupancy
over empty place. In the context of IoT and IIoT, aiming to enable context aware
environments, distributed transceiver systems capable of providing low cost,
low latency capabilities are required. Single Input Multiple Output systems
provide an adequate solution by enabling non-coherent energy-based
detection. Phase distributions play a key role in transceiver location and
hence overall system operation. Finally, in this thesis, SIMO operation based on volumetric phase
analysis is performed on indoor scenarios, employing deterministic 3D Ray
Launching channel estimation. The proposed methodology enables the
estimation of system performance as a function of distributed transceiver
location, aiding in network planning and deployment tasks. [--]
Subject
Wireless communications,
MIMO performance analysis
Departament
Universidad Pública de Navarra. Departamento de Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación /
Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. Ingeniaritza Elektrikoa, Elektronikoa eta Telekomunikazio Ingeniaritza Saila Saila