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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Ultra-Wideband Technologies and Their Performance Analysis

Tsai, Cheng-Hsiun 03 August 2004 (has links)
In this thesis, we will address several important issues on the direct sequence ultra-wideband (DS-UWB) wireless system and will provide a comprehensive analytical study on DS-UWB with different channel models, as well as the impact of pulse shapes on the overall performance.
2

Efficient signal enhancement schemes for adaptive antenna arrays in DS-CDMA systems

Kim, Kyungseok January 2001 (has links)
Adaptive antenna array technology will undoubtedly form a vital part of third generation cellular systems owing to not only confining the radiated energy associated with a mobile to a small volume on the downlink but also reducing the interference due to cochannel users on the uplink. The objective of this thesis is to develop signal enhancement schemes for adaptive antenna arrays for the purpose of enhancing the quality and capacity of direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) systems. Firstly, The signal enhancement scheme using a real symmetric array covariance matrix (RSACM) method was proposed. This proposed scheme is composed of a unitary and persymmetric transformation methods. A real symmetric array covariance matrix has the same Toeplitz-plus-Hankel matrix structure that is produced by almost total noiseless data sequence. The second proposed signal enhancement scheme consists of the rotation of signal subspace (RSS) and Toeplitz matrix approximation (TMA) methods. This proposed scheme improved the system performance by reducing the interference- plus-noise effect from the complex array covariance matrix of the pre-correlation received signal vector. The third proposed signal enhancement scheme is a modified linear signal estimator (MLSE) which involves the rank N approximation by reducing total noise eigenvalues (RANE) and TMA methods. The aim of this proposed scheme is to improve the system performance by effectively reducing the interference-plus-noise effect from the post-correlation received signal. Secondly, the computational complexity and the performance for all proposed signal enhancement schemes in this thesis are investigated and compared. The signal enhancement scheme using the RSS+TMA and MLSE methods was also proposed for a multi-rate and multicell DS-CDMA systems. The relative other-cell interference factor was analysed for a multicell condition. Finally, the performance of all proposed signal enhancement schemes is shown to be much better than that of no signal enhancement method under a single cell, multicell, single rate, and multirate conditions.
3

A SYNCHRONOUS REAL TIME NETWORK BASED WIRELESS AIRBORNE DATA ACQUISTION SYSTEM

Long, Mark A., Zymowski, Paul H. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 23-26, 2000 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / The purpose of this paper is to present a chronology from a Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) showing the impact of a wireless network architecture on future airborne data acquisition systems. The major advantages and challenges associated with the use of wireless network data acquisition versus wired time division multiplexing systems are rooted in data latency, bandwidth efficient data transmission while maintaining a low bit error rate and not interfering with existing avionics. Many of the issues raised are subtle and complex. It is not the intent of this paper to give these issues the thorough academic and technical analysis they deserve. It is the hope of the authors that this paper will generate awareness and discussion on these issues.
4

Performance analysis of suboptimal soft decision DS/BPSK receivers in pulsed noise and CW jamming utilizing jammer state information

Juntti, J. (Juhani) 17 June 2004 (has links)
Abstract The problem of receiving direct sequence (DS) spread spectrum, binary phase shift keyed (BPSK) information in pulsed noise and continuous wave (CW) jamming is studied in additive white noise. An automatic gain control is not modelled. The general system theory of receiver analysis is first presented and previous literature is reviewed. The study treats the problem of decision making after matched filter or integrate and dump demodulation. The decision methods have a great effect on system performance with pulsed jamming. The following receivers are compared: hard, soft, quantized soft, signal level based erasure, and chip combiner receivers. The analysis is done using a channel parameter D, and bit error upper bound. Simulations were done in original papers using a convolutionally coded DS/BPSK system. The simulations confirm that analytical results are valid. Final conclusions are based on analytical results. The analysis is done using a Chernoff upper bound and a union bound. The analysis is presented with pulsed noise and CW jamming. The same kinds of methods can also be used to analyse other jamming signals. The receivers are compared under pulsed noise and CW jamming along with white gaussian noise. The results show that noise jamming is more harmful than CW jamming and that a jammer should use a high pulse duty factor. If the jammer cannot optimise a pulse duty factor, a good robust choice is to use continuous time jamming. The best performance was achieved by the use of the chip combiner receiver. Just slightly worse was the quantized soft and signal level based erasure receivers. The hard decision receiver was clearly worse. The soft decision receiver without jammer state information was shown to be the most vulnerable to pulsed jamming. The chip combiner receiver is 3 dB worse than an optimum receiver (the soft decision receiver with perfect channel state information). If a simple implementation is required, the hard decision receiver should be used. If moderate complex implementation is allowed, the quantized soft decision receiver should be used. The signal level based erasure receiver does not give any remarkable improvement, so that it is not worth using, because it is more complex to implement. If receiver complexity is not limiting factor, the chip combiner receiver should be used. Uncoded DS/BPSK systems are vulnerable to jamming and a channel coding is an essential part of antijam communication system. Detecting the jamming and erasing jammed symbols in a channel decoder can remove the effect of pulsed jamming. The realization of erasure receivers is rather easy using current integrated circuit technology.
5

DSSS Communication Link Employing Complex Spreading Sequences

Marx, Frans Engelbertius 24 January 2006 (has links)
The present explosion in digital communications and multi-user wireless cellular networks has urged a demand for more effective modulation methods, utilizing the available frequency spectrum more efficiently. To accommodate a large number of users sharing the same available frequency band, one requirement is the availability of large families of spreading sequences with excellent AC and CC properties. Another requirement is the availability of sets of orthogonal basis functions to extend capacity by exploiting all available degrees of freedom (e.g., temporal, frequency and spatial dimesions), or by employing orthogonal multi-code operation in parallel, such as used in the latest 3GPP and 3GPP2 Wide-band Code Division Multiple Access (WCDMA) modulation standards by employing sets of orthogonal Walsh codes to improve the overall data throughput capacity. The generic Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) transmitter developed in this dissertation has originally been designed and implemented to investigate the practicality and usefulness of complex spreading sequences, and secondly, to verify the concept of non-linearly interpolated root-of-unity (NLI-RU) filtering. It was found that both concepts have a large potential for application in point-to-point, and particularly micro-cellular Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) and Wireless-Local-Loop (WLL) environments. Since then, several novel concepts and subsystems have been added to the original system, some of which have been patented both locally and abroad, and are outlined below. Consequently, the ultimate goal of this research project was to apply the principles of the generic DSSS transmitter and receiver developed in this study in the implementation of a WLL radio-frequency (RF)-link, and particularly towards the establishment of affordable wireless multimedia services in rural areas. The extended coverage at exceptionally low power emission levels offered by the new design will be particularly useful in rural applications. The proposed WLL concept can for example also be utilized to add a unique mobility feature to for example existing Private Automatic Branch Exchanges (PABXs). The proposed system will in addition offer superior teletraffic capacity compared to existing micro-cellular technologies, e.g., the Digital European Cordless Telephony (DECT) system, which has been consider by Telkom for employment in rural areas. The latter is a rather outdated interim standard offering much lower spectral efficiency and capacity than competitive CDMA-solutions, such as the concept analyzed in this dissertation, which is based on the use of unique large families of spectrally well confined (i.e., band-limited) constant envelope (CE) complex spreading sequences (CSS) with superior correlation properties. The CE characteristic of the new spreading sequences furthermore facilitates the design of systems with superior power efficiency and exceptionally robust performance characteristics (much less spectral re-growth) compared to existing 2G and 3G modulation standards, in the presence of non-linear power amplification. This feature allows for a system with larger coverage for a given performance level and limited peak power, or alternatively, longer battery life for a given maximum communication distance and performance level, within a specified fixed spreading bandwidth. In addition, the possibility to extend the concept to orthogonal multi-code operation provides for comparable capacity to present 3G modulation standards, while still preserving superior power efficiency characteristics in non-linear power amplification. Conventional spread spectrum communication systems employ binary spreading sequences, such as Gold or Kasami sequences. The practical implementation of such a system is relatively simple. The design and implementation of a spread-spectrum communication system employing complex spreading sequences is however considerable more complex and has not been previously presented, nor been implemented in hardware. The design of appropriate code lock loops for CSS has led to a unique design with 3dB performance advantage compared to similar loops designed for binary spreading sequences. The theoretical analysis and simulation of such a system will be presented, with the primary focus on an efficient hardware implementation of all new concepts proposed, in the form of a WLL RF-link demonstrator. / Dissertation (MEng (Electronic Engineering))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering / unrestricted
6

Fundamentals of the Simplex Communication Channel With Retransmissions

Davidson, Boris 14 April 1997 (has links)
The need for multiple access strategies arises whenever a number of users have to share a communication resource, since it is usually either cost prohibitive or impractical to dedicate a communication channel to a particular user. A need for such algorithms arises in many instances, particularly in applications utilizing wireless systems where all users access a common channel or medium. Such random access techniques as ALOHA and slotted ALOHA have been successfully implemented in a number of wireless applications. One of the major drawbacks of these algorithms is the necessity of a return path from the central station to each system user, which makes their use both inefficient and expensive for applications where one-way communication would suffice. For such applications, a need remained for a random access algorithm which can maximize the probability of successful message transmission in a one-way communication environment. A random access technique that addresses the above-mentioned need is developed. With this technique, each user sends an original message of predetermined length to a central receiver. The user then retransmits the message a specified number of times in a predetermined interval reserved for the retransmission process. The time interval between each successive retransmission of a given message is random. Assuming total annihilation of all colliding messages, the expression for the probability of successful transmission of a given message in terms of the major channel parameters is theoretically formulated. This technique offers a significant improvement, compared to a single transmission, in ensuring that a message is successfully received. The actual message collision dynamics in this system are experimentally studied using two different types of direct-sequence spread spectrum receivers, one employing a sliding correlator and the other using a matched filter. The spreading code in such systems offers extra protection for messages against possible interferers. The results indicate that it is often possible to properly receive a given message in the presence of co-channel interferers, thus significantly improving the overall system performance. These results are subsequently incorporated with the propagation data for several different types of microcells to arrive at a more precise theory of the link. / Ph. D.
7

An implementation of acquisition using transform domain/cycle code shift keying system on a multipath channel

Al-Sharari, Hamed January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
8

Data Chunking in Quasi-synchronous DS-CDMA

Dalke, Trevor 01 June 2014 (has links) (PDF)
DS-CDMA is a popular multiple access technique used in many mobile networks to efficiently share channel resources between users in a cell. Synchronization between users maximizes the user capacity of these systems. However, it is difficult to perfectly synchronize users in the reverse link due to the geographic diversity of mobile users in the cell. As a result, most commercial DS-CDMA networks utilize an asynchronous reverse link resulting in a reduced user capacity. A possible compromise to increase the user capacity in the reverse link is to implement a quasi-synchronous timing scheme, a timing scheme in which users are allowed to be slightly out of synchronization. This paper suggests a possible way to implement a quasi-synchronous DS-CDMA reverse link using the method of “data chunking”. The basic premise is derived by making a link between TDMA and synchronous DS-CDMA. By considering some basic TDMA limitations, a proposed “data chunked” quasi-synchronous DS-CDMA system is derived from a TDMA system. The effects of such a system are compared to those of a chip interleaved system. MATLAB simulations are performed to analyze the performance of the system in the presence of small synchronization errors between users. Implementation of guard bands is explored to further reduce errors due to imperfect synchronization between users.
9

Performance of Multitone Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum in the Presence of Imperfect Carrier Synchronization

Li, Hongxiang January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
10

Applications of signal processing techniques in direct-sequence spread spectrum communication systems

Lee, Bong-Woon January 1990 (has links)
No description available.

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