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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

GNSS-LTE/LTE-A interference mitigation : the adjacent channel rejection ratio approach

14 September 2015 (has links)
M.Ing. / The increase of interest in the development of radio communications, both terrestrial and satellite is reaching far and beyond the most optimistic expectations. There has been an accelerated emergence of newer technologies, all claiming highly coveted radio frequency spectrum resources. With the push for the development of location based services, utilizing satellite com- communications for military purposes and later for civilian use; there has been a parallel development in terrestrial communications technology making it possible to implement cost efficient reliable user systems for voice and data services ...
2

Discovering Network Control Vulnerabilities and Policies in Evolving Networks

Jermyn, Jill Louise January 2017 (has links)
The range and number of new applications and services are growing at an unprecedented rate. Computer networks need to be able to provide connectivity for these services and meet their constantly changing demands. This requires not only support of new network protocols and security requirements, but often architectural redesigns for long-term improvements to efficiency, speed, throughput, cost, and security. Networks are now facing a drastic increase in size and are required to carry a constantly growing amount of heterogeneous traffic. Unfortunately such dynamism greatly complicates security of not only the end nodes in the network, but also of the nodes of the network itself. To make matters worse, just as applications are being developed at faster and faster rates, attacks are becoming more pervasive and complex. Networks need to be able to understand the impact of these attacks and protect against them. Network control devices, such as routers, firewalls, censorship devices, and base stations, are elements of the network that make decisions on how traffic is handled. Although network control devices are expected to act according to specifications, there can be various reasons why they do not in practice. Protocols could be flawed, ambiguous or incomplete, developers could introduce unintended bugs, or attackers may find vulnerabilities in the devices and exploit them. Malfunction could intentionally or unintentionally threaten the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of end nodes and the data that passes through the network. It can also impact the availability and performance of the control devices themselves and the security policies of the network. The fast-paced evolution and scalability of current and future networks create a dynamic environment for which it is difficult to develop automated tools for testing new protocols and components. At the same time, they make the function of such tools vital for discovering implementation flaws and protocol vulnerabilities as networks become larger and more complex, and as new and potentially unrefined architectures become adopted. This thesis will present the design, implementation, and evaluation of a set of tools designed for understanding implementation of network control nodes and how they react to changes in traffic characteristics as networks evolve. We will first introduce Firecycle, a test bed for analyzing the impact of large-scale attacks and Machine-to-Machine (M2M) traffic on the Long Term Evolution (LTE) network. We will then discuss Autosonda, a tool for automatically discovering rule implementation and finding triggering traffic features in censorship devices. This thesis provides the following contributions: 1. The design, implementation, and evaluation of two tools to discover models of network control nodes in two scenarios of evolving networks, mobile network and censored internet 2. First existing test bed for analysis of large-scale attacks and impact of traffic scalability on LTE mobile networks 3. First existing test bed for LTE networks that can be scaled to arbitrary size and that deploys traffic models based on real traffic traces taken from a tier-1 operator 4. An analysis of traffic models of various categories of Internet of Things (IoT) devices 5. First study demonstrating the impact of M2M scalability and signaling overload on the packet core of LTE mobile networks 6. A specification for modeling of censorship device decision models 7. A means for automating the discovery of features utilized in censorship device decision models, comparison of these models, and their rule discovery
3

Análise das características de propagação em radio enlace de canais banda larga na faixa de UHF / Evaluation of a broadband radio channel propagation at UHF frequencies

Heinrich, Ralph Robert, 1954- 23 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Michel Daoud Yacoub / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica e de Computação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-23T14:27:26Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Heinrich_RalphRobert_M.pdf: 7113070 bytes, checksum: 2a64f903bc44fb31b9ee53ef545bb24e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013 / Resumo: Este projeto de pesquisa objetiva responder a algumas questões sistêmicas levantadas por ocasião do início do desenvolvimento do sistema LTE-450, parte integrante do projeto RASFA - Redes de Acesso Sem Fio Avançadas, conduzido pelo CPqD - Fundação Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento em Telecomunicações, com recursos do FUNTTEL - Fundo para o Desenvolvimento Tecnológico das Telecomunicações. Esse projeto visa, como um de seus objetivos, o desenvolvimento de um sistema de rádio acesso sem fio LTE-450, operando na faixa de 450 a 470 MHz, baseado na tecnologia LTE - Long Term Evolution. A faixa de 450 a 470 MHz está atribuída em base global desde 2007 para o Serviço Móvel, conforme identificado pela União Internacional de Telecomunicações na World Radiocommunication Conference 2007. A Anatel - Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações - publicou a nova destinação de uso para a faixa de 450 a 470 MHz em 20 de dezembro de 2010, através da Resolução n º 558. Várias ações vêm sendo empreendidas em apoio ao uso da faixa 450 a 470 MHz, para a prestação de serviços banda larga sem fio para áreas rurais, como consta do Programa Nacional de Telecomunicações Rurais, publicado pela Portaria 431/2009 do Ministério das Comunicações, e do Plano Nacional de Banda Larga, publicado em 13 de maio de 2010. Entende-se que a faixa de 450 a 470 MHz é ideal para a implantação de serviços de banda larga sem fio em áreas rurais, devido às suas características de propagação. Por outro lado, a base de conhecimento sobre o canal rádio em sistemas de rádio acesso móvel banda larga considera o uso, em áreas urbanas, de faixas de frequências situadas entre 850 MHz e 3500 MHz. São notórias as diferenças entre as características de propagação nessas faixas e nas faixas de UHF, principalmente quando a área de prestação do serviço deixa de ser a urbana e passa a ser a rural. Nesse sentido, alguns requisitos sistêmicos podem ser questionados e mesmo redimensionados. Esses requisitos foram aqui endereçados através de levantamento de dados em campo e posterior análise crítica contra a base de conhecimento disponível. São questões como a amplitude do desvanecimento seletivo e por despolarização, a intensidade do ruído impulsivo, os modelos de propagação aplicáveis à área rural e à faixa de UHF, a variação da perda de percurso com a altura da antena do terminal e a discriminação de polarização da antena do terminal / Abstract: This research project aims to answer some systemic issues raised during the early development of the LTE-450 radio access system, part of a project RASFA - Advanced Wireless Networks Access, led by CPqD Foundation - Center for Research and Development in Telecommunications with resources of FUNTTEL - Technological Development of Telecommunications Fund. This project aims, as one of its objectives, the development of a LTE-450 wireless system, operating in the 450-470 MHz band, based on LTE - Long Term Evolution technology. The 450-470 MHz band is allocated, on a global basis, since 2007 for Mobile Service, as identified by the International Telecommunication Union in the World Radiocommunication Conference 2007. Anatel - The Brazilian National Telecommunications Agency has published a new destination for the 450-470 MHz band on December 20, 2010, through Resolution No. 558. Several actions have been undertaken in support of the use of the 450-470 MHz band, to provide wireless broadband services to rural areas, as set out in the National Rural Telecommunications Plan, published by the Decree 431/2009 of the Ministry of Communications and the National Broadband Plan (PNBL), published on May 13, 2010. It is understood that the 450-470 MHz band is ideal for deploying wireless broadband services in rural areas, due to its propagation characteristics. On the other hand, the base of knowledge about the mobile broadband access radio systems channel, considering the use in urban areas, situated between 850 MHz and 3500 MHz bands have notable differences between the propagation characteristics of these bands and the UHF bands, especially when the area of service provision ceases to be the urban and goes to the rural areas. Thus, some systemic requirements can be questioned and even resized. These requirements are addressed here through field data gathering and subsequent critical analysis against the knowledge base available. These issues are such as the extent of selective fading and depolarization, the intensity of the impulse noise, the propagation models applicable to the rural area and the UHF band, the variation of the path loss with the height of the terminal antenna and of terminal antenna polarization discrimination / Mestrado / Telecomunicações e Telemática / Mestre em Engenharia Elétrica
4

Analysis of handover decision making in downlink Long Term Evolution networks

Elujide, Israel Oludayo 15 January 2015 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Technology Degree in Information Technology, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2014. / This dissertation reports on handover in downlink Long Term Evolution (LTE) networks. The LTE is seen as the technology that will bring about Fourth Generation (4G) mobile broadband experience. The necessity to maintain quality of service for delay sensitive data services and applications used by mobile users makes mobility and handover between base stations in the downlink LTE very critical. Unfortunately, several handover schemes in LTE are based on Reference Symbols Received Power (RSRP) which include measurement error due to limited symbols in downlink packets. However, prompt and precise handover decision cannot be based on inaccurate measurement. Therefore, the downlink LTE intra-system handover is studied with focus on user measurement report. The study centers on preparation stage of the LTE handover procedure. Two different types of physical layer filtering technique namely linear averaging and local averaging are focused upon among others investigated. The performance of LTE conventional physical layer filtering technique, linear filtering, is compared with an alternative technique called local averaging. The output of each physical layer filtering is then used for LTE standardized radio resource layer filtering (otherwise called L3 filtering). The analysis of results from handover decision is based on simulations performed in an LTE system-level simulator. The performance metrics for the results are evaluated in terms of overall system and mobility-related performance. The system performance is based on spectral efficiency and throughput while mobility-related performance is based on handover failure. The performance comparison of the results shows that local averaging technique provides improved system performance of about 51.2 % for spectral efficiency and 42.8% cell-edge throughput for high speed users. Local averaging also produces a reduction of about 26.95% in average number of handover failure when L 3 filtering is applied for low speed mobile terminal. This result confirms that both averaging techniques are suitable for LTE network. Moreover, in the case of high mobility local averaging tends to be better than linear averaging.
5

Practical Robust MIMO OFDM Communication System for High-Speed Mobile Communication

Grabner, Mitchell John James 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis presents the design of a communication system (PRCS) which improves on all aspects of the current state of the art 4G communication system Long Term Evolution (LTE) including peak to average power ratio (PAPR), data reliability, spectral efficiency and complexity using the most recent state of the art research in the field combined with novel implementations. This research is relevant and important to the field of electrical and communication engineering because it provides benefits to consumers in the form of more reliable data with higher speeds as well as a reduced burden on hardware original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). The results presented herein show up to a 3 dB reduction in PAPR, less than 10-5 bit errors at 7.5 dB signal to noise ratio (SNR) using 4QAM, up to 3 times increased throughput in the uplink mode and 10 times reduced channel coding complexity.
6

Channel assignment in multi-radio networks

Unknown Date (has links)
Channel assignment in multi-radio networks is a topic of great importance because the use of multiple channels and multiple radios reduces interference and increases the network throughput. The goal of our research is to design algorithms that maximize the use of available resources while providing robustness to primary users that could reclaim one or more channels. Our algorithms could be used in ad hoc networks, mesh networks, and sensor networks where nodes are equipped with multiple radios. We design algorithms for channel assignment which provide robustness to primary users without assuming an accurate primary user behavior model. We also compute bounds for capacity in grid networks and discuss how the capacity of a network changes when multiple channels are available. Since preserving energy is very important in wireless networks, we focus on algorithms that do not require powerful resources and which use a reduced number of messages. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2015. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
7

Power Spectrum Prediction of Amplified Dual-Band LTE-Advanced Signals

Yang, Xianzhen 30 March 2018 (has links)
In wireless communication, the nonlinearity of a radio frequency (RF) power amplifier is an important issue for power amplifier designers. Since the nonlinearity is generated by the properties of physical components, it is hard to avoid it in producing power amplifiers. Power amplifier designers should know about the nonlinearity in order to compensate for it. A two-tone test is a relatively widely used method to measure the nonlinearity of a power amplifier, which means the third order intercept point (IP3) can be measured from the two-tone test. Through the two-tone test, researchers have proposed some formulae to present what the amplified Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) signal is like. They derived formulae in terms of output power, bandwidth, IP3, and IP5 to express the amplified CDMA signal and further to Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) signals. With the development of wireless communication, researchers put their interest increasingly in Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) systems. A formula expressing amplified dual two-tone signals has been proposed. In their research, they discussed what the expressions of intermodulation and cross modulation are and what their locations are. In this research, dual band LTE-Advanced signals, whose modulation is OFDM are utilized, which means this research proposes a formula expression about the power spectrum of dual-band LTE-Advanced signals. Intermodulation and cross modulation caused by nonlinearity of power amplifiers are then specially discussed. This study will help RF designers to continuously compensate for them.
8

Evaluation of Call Mobility on Network Productivity in Long Term Evolution Advanced (LTE-A) Femtocells

Sawant, Uttara 12 1900 (has links)
The demand for higher data rates for indoor and cell-edge users led to evolution of small cells. LTE femtocells, one of the small cell categories, are low-power low-cost mobile base stations, which are deployed within the coverage area of the traditional macro base station. The cross-tier and co-tier interferences occur only when the macrocell and femtocell share the same frequency channels. Open access (OSG), closed access (CSG), and hybrid access are the three existing access-control methods that decide users' connectivity to the femtocell access point (FAP). We define a network performance function, network productivity, to measure the traffic that is carried successfully. In this dissertation, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network and determine optimized network productivity with variable call arrival rate in given LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells. In the second scenario, we evaluate call mobility in LTE integrated network with increasing femtocells and maximize network productivity with variable femtocells distribution per macrocell with constant call arrival rate in uniform LTE deployment with femtocell access modes (OSG, CSG, HYBRID) for a given call blocking vector. The solution to the optimization is maximum network productivity and call arrival rates for all cells for network deployment where peak productivity is identified. We analyze the effects of call mobility on network productivity by simulating low, high, and no mobility scenarios and study the impact based on offered load, handover traffic and blocking probabilities. Finally, we evaluate and optimize performance of fractional frequency reuse (FFR) mechanism and study the impact of proposed metric weighted user satisfaction with sectorized FFR configuration.
9

Nonlinear Analysis and Digital Pre-Distortion of the SC-FDMA Signals in LTE Uplink System

Zhu, Changwen 01 January 2015 (has links)
Single-carrier frequency division multiple access (SC-FDMA) has become a popular alternative to orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDM) in multi-user communication on LTE uplink systems. This is primarily due to the low peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) of SC-FDMA compared to that of OFDM. Long-term evolution (LTE) uses SC-FDMA on the uplink to exploit this PAPR advantage to reduce transmit power amplifier (PA) back-off in mobile user terminals. However, the latest generation of communication systems requires high power efficiency and a large quantity of capacity in transmitting mobile data, bringing out some other critical problems: 1) the nonlinearity of Radio Frequency (RF) power amplifiers inevitably affects the power efficiency. Working beyond the saturation point is the main reason for power amplifiers having nonlinear properties; 2) In order to obtain adequate capacity, wide bandwidth is applied to the latest communication systems. Since in previous systems the pre-distorter would focus on memory-less distortion with relatively narrow bandwidth, this change makes memory distortion become a serious issue, degrading the transmission quality in the wireless communication systems. The intent of this thesis is to present nonlinear analysis of the SC-FDMA Spectrum with the RF power amplifier. Relevant mathematical models were considered and applied to the RF power amplifier in terms of intermodulation products and the third-order intercept point. The equivalent mathematical model is applied for the first time to SC-FDMA signals and with the previous formulation of the PA model, the derivation of the expressions for spectrum regrowth of amplified SC-FDMA signals was first established and finally simulated with Matlab software. The digital pre-distortion (DPD) technology was also applied to SC-FDMA signals for the first time in this thesis. An inverse intermodulation and Autoregressive Moving-Average (IM-ARMA) model was introduced to linearize the PA distortion with memory in the LTE uplink system. The DPD was finally implemented by Matlab R2010b. Conclusions are drawn that amplified power emission levels can be expressed by the form of third-order intercept point (IP_3). The expressions for spectrum regrowth of amplified SC-FDMA signals have been verified for the first time with the comparison of simulation, measurement and calculation results. The effects of third order intermodulation have a greater impact than higher order components with respect to out-of-band emission power levels. Furthermore, the DPD algorithm reduced the spectrum regrowth of SC-FDMA signals by 12 dB. The proposed pre-distorter can effectively solve the distortion problem caused by the memory effect in RF power amplifier.
10

Effects of Adaptive Antenna Array Beamforming and Power Management with Antenna Element Selection

Unknown Date (has links)
This research is the array processing help wireless communication techniques to increase the signal accuracy. This technique has an important part of prevalent applications. The wireless communication system, radar, and sonar. Beamforming is one of methods in array processing that filters signals based on their capture time at each element in an array of antennas spatially. Numerous studies in adaptive array processing have been proposed in the last several decades, which are divided in two parts. The first one related to non-adaptive beamforming techniques and the next one related to digitally adaptive Beamforming methods. The trade-off between computational complexity and performance make them different. In this thesis, we concentrate on the expansion of array processing algorithms in both non-adaptive and adaptive ones with application of beamforming in 4G mobile antenna and radar systems. The conventional and generalized side-lobe canceller (GSC) structures beamforming algorithms were employed with a phase array antenna that changed the phase of arrivals in array antenna with common phased array structure antennas. An eight-element uniform linear array (ULA), consisting of di-pole antennas, represented as the antenna array. An anechoic chamber measures the operation of beamforming algorithms performance. An extended modified Kaiser weighting function is proposed to make a semi-adaptive structure in phased array beamforming. This technique is extended to low complexity functions like hyperbolic cosine and exponential functions. Furthermore, these algorithms are used in GSC beamforming. The side-lobe levels were so lower than other algorithms in conventional beamforming around -10 dB. On the other hand, a uniform linear arrays for smart antenna purposes designed to utilize in implementing and testing the proposed algorithms. In this thesis, performance of smart antenna with rectangular aperture coupled microstrip linear array which experimental investigations carried out for obtaining X-band operation of rectangular microstrip antenna by using aperture coupled feeding technique. Frequency range set at approximately 8.6 to 10.9 GHz, by incorporating frequency range of the antenna resonates for single wideband with an impedance bandwidth of 23%. The enhancement of impedance bandwidth and gain does not affect the nature of broadside radiation characteristics. This thesis describes the design, operation, and realization of the beamforming such as Sidelobe level (SLL) control and null forming array antenna are examined with the prototype. An antenna radiation pattern beam maximum can be simultaneously placed towards the intended user or Signal of interest (SOl), and, ideally nulls can be positioned towards directions of interfering signals or signals not of interest (SNOIs). Finally, we focused on the adaptive digitally algorithms in compact antenna that faces with mutual coupling. The variable step-size normalized lease mean square (VS-NLMS) algorithm is implemented in beamforming. This algorithm utilizes continuous adaptation. The weights are attuned that the final weight vector to the most satisfied result. The gradient vector can be achieved by iterative beamforming algorithm from the available data. This algorithm is compared with LMS, NLMS, VSS-NLMS algorithms, it is determined that the VSS-NLMS algorithm is better performance to other algorithms. Finally, we introduced novel adaptive IP-NNLMS beamformer. This beamformer reaches to faster convergence and lower error floor than the previous adaptive beamformers even at low SNRs in presence of mutual coupling. The experimental results verified the simulation results that the proposed technique has better performance than other algorithms in various situations. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection

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