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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.
11

Energy efficient topology control algorithm for wireless mesh networks

Aron, Felix Odhiambo. January 2008 (has links)
M. Tech. Electrical Engineering.. / Wireless mesh networks (WMNs) have become a better alternative for extending wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) to provide network coverage up to the furthest of far flung rural areas. This has been implemented by using a meshed backbone network interconnecting the mesh access points (MAPs) that manage each of the WLANs, thus providing a vital mode complimentary to the wireless infrastructure-based networks. The benefits of WMN deployments, however, come with certain challenges e.g., power management. Due to the limited availability of power in typical rural areas in Africa, this dissertation presents an energy efficient localized distributed topology control algorithm to efficiently manage power consumption at the backbone of the wireless mesh networks. The goal is to extend these networks’ lifetimes, as well as improve on throughput. The focus of the project is on the application of the WMNs in rural areas in Africa and in remote urban areas where the mesh nodes are mostly powered by exhaustible power sources like wet-cells or diesel controlled power generators and hence, are considered power constrained. The proposed algorithm uses the propagation models and the concept of relay region to obtain an optimal transmission power per node. It further applies a topology management protocol framework to limit the average number of neighbours per node, which helps to reduce internodes interferences during communication. The performance of the algorithm is validated through extensive simulations in the Network Simulator (NS-2) environment. The results are further compared to those of the conventional IEEE 802.11b mesh network, without transmission power control. It is shown that with a reduction in per node transmission power via topology control it is possible to reduce the total energy consumption in the overall network. It is further shown that this reduction may lead to poor performance in capacity. Hence, it is important to ensure a proper balance in the transmit power to obtain a balance in energy efficiency as well as in throughput.
12

Cross-layer optimization for video-streaming applications over IEEE 802.11 wireless Mesh network

Moleme, Nametshego Hanah. January 2008 (has links)
M. Tech. Electrical Engineering. / Discusses the transport of real time data in WMNs as a challenging problem. The main cause of this problem is transport layer protocols. These protocols have traditionally been used successfully for wired networks. However, their raw implementation in wireless networks has proven to be inefficient, since wireless channels are characterized by a higher Bit Error Rate (BER), Packet Loss Rate (PLR), interference, bandwidth limitations and mobility when compared to wired network channels. Thus, for the efficient transport of real time video in WMNs, transport protocols need to be adapted to be adapted to wireless networks since they were not originally developed for this application.
13

Design of Power-Efficient Optical Transceivers and Design of High-Linearity Wireless Wideband Receivers

Zhang, Yudong January 2021 (has links)
The combination of silicon photonics and advanced heterogeneous integration is promising for next-generation disaggregated data centers that demand large scale, high throughput, and low power. In this dissertation, we discuss the design and theory of power-efficient optical transceivers with System-in-Package (SiP) 2.5D integration. Combining prior arts and proposed circuit techniques, a receiver chip and a transmitter chip including two 10 Gb/s data channels and one 2.5 GHz clocking channel are designed and implemented in 28 nm CMOS technology. An innovative transimpedance amplifier (TIA) and a single-ended to differential (S2D) converter are proposed and analyzed for a low-voltage high-sensitivity receiver; a four-to-one serializer, programmable output drivers, AC coupling units, and custom pads are implemented in a low-power transmitter; an improved quadrature locked loop (QLL) is employed to generate accurate quadrature clocks. In addition, we present an analysis for inverter-based shunt-feedback TIA to explicitly depict the trade-off among sensitivity, data rate, and power consumption. At last, the research on CDR-based​ clocking schemes for optical links is also discussed. We introduce prior arts and propose a power-efficient clocking scheme based on an injection-locked phase rotator. Next, we analyze injection-locked ring oscillators (ILROs) that have been widely used for quadrature clock generators (QCGs) in multi-lane optical or wireline transceivers due to their low power, low area, and technology scalability. The asymmetrical or partial injection locking from 2 phases to 4 phases results in imbalances in amplitude and phase. We propose a modified frequency-domain analysis to provide intuitive insight into the performance design trade-offs. The analysis is validated by comparing analytical predictions with simulations for an ILRO-based QCG in 28 nm CMOS technology. This dissertation also discusses the design of high-linearity wireless wideband receivers. An out-of-band (OB) IM3 cancellation technique is proposed and analyzed. By exploiting a baseband auxiliary path (AP) with a high-pass feature, the in-band (IB) desired signal and out-of-band interferers are split. OB third-order intermodulation products (IM3) are reconstructed in the AP and cancelled in the baseband (BB). A 0.5-2.5 GHz frequency-translational noise-cancelling (FTNC) receiver is implemented in 65nm CMOS to demonstrate the proposed approach. It consumes 36 mW without cancellation at 1 GHz LO frequency and 1.2 V supply, and it achieves 8.8 MHz baseband bandwidth, 40dB gain, 3.3dB NF, 5dBm OB IIP3, and −6.5dBm OB B1dB. After IM3 cancellation, the effective OB-IIP3 increases to 32.5 dBm with an extra 34 mW for narrow-band interferers (two tones). For wideband interferers, 18.8 dB cancellation is demonstrated over 10 MHz with two −15 dBm modulated interferers. The local oscillator (LO) leakage is −92 dBm and −88 dB at 1 GHz and 2 GHz LO respectively. In summary, this technique achieves both high OB linearity and good LO isolation.
14

High-Performance Reconfigurable Radio-Frequency Integrated-Circuit Receiver Architectures for Concurrent Signal Reception

Han, Guoxiang January 2021 (has links)
The ever-increasing demand for wireless throughput requires modern handset receivers to aggregate signals from multiple non-contiguously allocated RF carriers. This poses significant receiver design challenges, including concurrent signal reception, RF input interface, out-of-band (OB) linearity, and suppression of spurious responses. Commercial solutions use external antenna switches and off-chip RF multiplexers to provide non-tunable, narrowband filtering and impedance matching. The RF signal is then divided into separate signal chains, each with a dedicated receiver for signal reception. Although this solution allows the selection of any carrier combinations supported by the available RF filters, as the number of aggregation band combinations increases, the scale of the passive front-end module grows rapidly, leading to increased system complexity, extra signal loss, and degraded performance. This thesis presents the design and implementation of two receiver architectures that support reconfigurable operations and flexible, concurrent reception from two inter-band carriers with a tuned RF interface. We first present a multi-branch receiver with modulated mixer clocks (MMC). It unifies the functions of single-carrier and dual-carrier reception, as well as compressive-sampling spectrum scanning into a single architecture. With continuous-wave-modulated mixer clocks, the receiver supports concurrent reception from two distinct bands and realizes tuned impedance matching that greatly improves the OB linearity. With pseudo-noise-modulated mixer clocks, the receiver supports spectrum scanning. Disabling modulation reverts the receiver into a single-carrier receiver with good OB linearity. The 65nm CMOS prototype is developed that operates from 300 to 1300MHz and offers 2.7dB minimum NF, -1.3dBm B1dB, and +8.0dBm IIP3 for single-carrier reception. Concurrent dual-carrier reception is demonstrated that offers -8.4dBm B1dB and sub-6dB NF with the two carriers separated from 200 to 600MHz apart. For spectrum scanning, the receiver achieves a 66dB dynamic range with -75dBm sensitivity over a 630MHz RF span. In addition, a discussion of the higher-order MMC technique is included to improve the receiver’s spurious and noise performance by suppressing the higher-order responses and mitigating the noise-folding effect. Next, we present an IF-filterless, double-conversion receiver. The concurrent, narrowband RF interface is realized with two layers of passive mixing in its mixer-first branches, which translate the low-pass, baseband impedance twice to two distinct bands and improve the OB linearity. Branches with DDS-modulated LNTAs for multi-phase, switched-Gm mixing offer rejection of spurious responses and improved noise performance. The 65nm CMOS prototype is developed that operates from 100 to 1200MHz. For single-carrier reception, the receiver delivers 4.8dB minimum NF, +7.9dBm B1dB, and +22.8dBm IIP3. For concurrent signal reception, two arbitrarily-allocated RF carriers, separated from 200 to 600MHz apart, can be received concurrently. The receiver delivers a +1.9dBm B1dB and supports 8-/16-phase DDS modulation with a 30dB spurious rejection across its operating range. In addition, a theoretical study of a modified, mixer-first branch is included. By re-arranging the connections of the baseband termination resistors, the baseband noise can be fully cancelled, thus improving the receiver’s noise performance.
15

Hierarchical and predictive design techniques for improving QoS and performance in modern wired and wireless networks

Cui, Wei 01 July 2003 (has links)
No description available.
16

A Fully Integrated Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer for Wireless Communications

Son, Han-Woong 12 April 2004 (has links)
A fully integrated, fast-locking fractional-N frequency synthesizer is proposed and demonstrated in this work. In this design, to eliminate the need for large, inaccurate capacitors and resistors in a loop filter, an analog continuous-time loop filter whose performance is sensitive to process and temperature variations and aging has been replaced with a programmable digital Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filter. In addition, using the adaptive loop gain control proportional to the frequency difference, the frequency-locking time has been reduced. Also, the phase noise and spurs have been reduced by a Multi-stAge noise SHaping (MASH) controlled Fractional Frequency Detector (FFD) that generates a digital output corresponding directly to the frequency difference. The proposed frequency synthesizer provides many benefits in terms of high integration ability, technological robustness, fast locking time, low noise level, and multimode flexibility. To prove performance of the proposed frequency synthesizer, the frequency synthesizers analysis, design, and simulation have been carried out at both the system and the circuit levels. Then, the performance was also verified after fabrication and packaging.
17

Channel State Information in Multiple Antenna Systems

Yang, Jingnong 22 August 2006 (has links)
In a MIMO system, a transmitter with perfect knowledge of the underlying channel state information (CSI) can achieve a higher channel capacity compared to transmission without CSI. When reciprocity of the wireless channel does not hold, the identification and utilization of partial CSI at the transmitter are important issues. This thesis is focused on partial CSI acquisition and utilization techniques for MIMO channels. We propose a feedback algorithm for tracking the dominant channel subspaces for MIMO systems in a continuously time-varying environment. We exploit the correlation between channel states of adjacent time instants and quantize the variation of channel states. Specifically, we model a subspace as one point in a Grassmann manifold, treat the variations in principal right singular subspaces of the channel matrices as a piecewise-geodesic process in the Grassmann manifold, and quantize the velocity matrix of the geodesic. We design a complexity-constrained MIMO OFDM system where the transmitter has knowledge of channel correlations. The transmitter is constrained to perform at most one inverse Discrete Fourier Transform per OFDM symbol on the average. We show that in the MISO case, time domain beamforming can be used to do two-dimensional eigen-beamforming. For the MIMO case, we derive design criteria for the transmitter beamforming and receiver combining weighting vectors and show some suboptimal solutions. The feedback channel may have uncertainties such as unexpected delay or error. We consider channel mean feedback with an unknown delay and propose a broadcast approach that is able to adapt to the quality of the feedback. Having considered CSI feedback problems where the receiver tries to convey its attained CSI to the transmitter, we turn to noncoherent coding design for fast fading channels, where the receiver does not have reliable CSI. We propose a data-dependent superimposed training scheme to improve the performance of training based codes. The transmitter is equipped with multiple training sequences and dynamically selects a training sequence for each data sequence to minimize channel estimation error. The set of training sequences are optimized to minimize pairwise error probability between codewords.
18

Capacities of erasure networks

Smith, Brian Matthew, 1975- 11 September 2012 (has links)
We have investigated, in various multiple senses, the “capacity” of several models of erasure networks. The defining characteristic of a memoryless erasure network is that each channel between any two nodes is an independent erasure channel. The models that we explore differ in the absence or presence of interference at either the transmitters, the receivers, or both; and in the availability of feedback at the transmitters. The crux of this work involves the investigation and analysis of several different performance measures for these networks: traditional information capacity (including multicast capacity and feeback capacity), secrecy capacity, and transport capacity. / text
19

High Speed Wireless Networking for 60GHz

Yiu, Candy 01 January 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the problem of providing high data-rate wireless connectivity to users in indoor environments. The goal is to be able to reach Gbps/user rates even when there are multiple users present. The technology that we study is to use the 60 GHz spectrum whose special propagation properties make it ideally suited to this task. The approaches developed include using multiple spatially distributed smart antennas in a room or multiple co-located antennas to provide coverage where needed and when needed. All the antennas are connected to a single access point which allows us to dynamically change spectrum and link allocation among the users (as they move or as their needs change). The innovations in this work include the exploitation of the special properties of 60 GHz and the corresponding design of algorithms for efficient spectrum allocation. We use detailed simulations to demonstrate that very high data rates are indeed achievable.
20

Mechanisms for prolonging network lifetime in wireless sensor networks

Unknown Date (has links)
Sensors are used to monitor and control the physical environment. A Wireless Sen- sor Network (WSN) is composed of a large number of sensor nodes that are densely deployed either inside the phenomenon or very close to it [18][5]. Sensor nodes measure various parameters of the environment and transmit data collected to one or more sinks, using hop-by-hop communication. Once a sink receives sensed data, it processes and forwards it to the users. Sensors are usually battery powered and it is hard to recharge them. It will take a limited time before they deplete their energy and become unfunctional. Optimizing energy consumption to prolong network lifetime is an important issue in wireless sensor networks. In mobile sensor networks, sensors can self-propel via springs [14], wheels [20], or they can be attached to transporters, such as robots [20] and vehicles [36]. In static sensor networks with uniform deployment (uniform density), sensors closest to the sink will die first, which will cause uneven energy consumption and limitation of network life- time. In the dissertation, the nonuniform density is studied and analyzed so that the energy consumption within the monitored area is balanced and the network lifetime is prolonged. Several mechanisms are proposed to relocate the sensors after the initial deployment to achieve the desired density while minimizing the total moving cost. Using mobile relays for data gathering is another energy efficient approach. Mobile sensors can be used as ferries, which carry data to the sink for static sensors so that expensive multi-hop communication and long distance communication are reduced. In this thesis, we propose a mobile relay based routing protocol that considers both energy efficiency and data delivery delay. It can be applied to both event-based reporting and periodical report applications. / Another mechanism used to prolong network lifetime is sensor scheduling. One of the major components that consume energy is the radio. One method to conserve energy is to put sensors to sleep mode when they are not actively participating in sensing or data relaying. This dissertation studies sensor scheduling mechanisms for composite event detection. It chooses a set of active sensors to perform sensing and data relaying, and all other sensors go to sleep to save energy. After some time, another set of active sensors is chosen. Thus sensors work alternatively to prolong network lifetime. / by Yinying Yang. / Vita. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.

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