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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.
21

Antennas for Modern Indoor Wireless Communication Systems

Serguei Zagriatski Unknown Date (has links)
Recent years have witnessed a growing demand for broadband wireless communication services such as on-the-go web-browsing, high speed data transfer and streaming of high definition multimedia. In response to this growth, there has been a rapid progress in research and development of technologies supporting high-speed wireless networks offering flexibility and scalability to heterogeneous consumer requirements. A fundamental challenge to the reliable operation of a wireless communication link is the wireless channel which is influenced by time-variant noise, interference, multipath and scarcity of the available frequency spectrum. Due to the wireless nature of the signal transmission and the manner in which energy is distributed or collected, an antenna has a profound influence on an efficient operation of wireless link. Because nowadays an antenna is required to work with many wireless standards, it poses one of the most difficult design and development technological problems. In the past, many antenna designs were concentrated on conventional outdoor applications such as satellite communications, terrestrial point to point communications and cellular base stations. In these applications, the primary design goal was the antenna electrical performance. In case of indoor applications, the designer has to pay attention not only to the electrical performance but also to mechanical, environmental and aesthetic features of antenna. In this thesis, the investigations into design and development of antenna for indoor wireless communication systems that are either currently widespread or quickly entering the consumer market are carried out. First, a single band circularly polarized Radial Line Slot Array antenna covering 2.4GHz ISM frequency spectrum of IEEE 802.11b/g protocol is proposed. Then, an access point antenna for IEEE 802.11a/b/g WLAN applications operating in a dual frequency band covering 2.4GHz and 5.2GHz frequency spectra is described. It consists of a RLSA antenna and a patch antenna combined in one body. During the design stage, in addition to characteristics such as return loss, radiation pattern and polarization, attention is paid to mechanical rigidity, light weight and low visual impact of these radiating structures. A low manufacturing cost is also part of the design strategy. This is important because of competitive commercial market of WLAN applications which is sensitive to the development cost. In theoretical investigations, a Field Matching Method is utilized to achieve a first order approximation to the coaxial-to-waveguide transition forming the feeding element of the RLSA antenna. Next, the full EM analysis (HFSS™) based on Field Element Method is applied to simulate the single and dual band antennas. Both types of access point antennas are manufactured and tested. Experimental results are compared with simulation results. The next part of this thesis presents the investigations into antenna diversity techniques for a wireless communication link in an indoor environment. The design of the automated experimental testbed is presented. This testing facility is used to measure the signal strength levels of a communication link between a mobile wireless device and an access point when they are equipped with multiple element antennas (MEAs). Special attention is given to the benefits of using MEA in a rich scattering environment that is accompanied the experiment. Full design details including electrical and mechanical features are provided. For a given feeding configuration, the testbed allows for measuring the received signal strength when the receiving module is moved over a circular area in an indoor environment. First set of experiments concerns the MEA system that utilizes two single-port transceivers each equipped with either 180º or 90º 3dB hybrid. By using alternatively one of the two input ports of the hybrids to feed a pair of monopole antennas several different transmission or reception modes of the 2x2 MEA communication link are investigated. The next set of experiments focuses on the performances of an indoor wireless system which uses either linearly or circularly polarized antennas at the two sides of the communication link. The overall diversity results indicate that by marginally increasing an overall system complexity (by using simple hybrid circuits and antennas), traditional transceiver systems equipped with MEA can provide significant improvements in the quality of indoor wireless link. The final part of this thesis presents the investigations into the design of planar monopole antennas that offer good return loss and omni-directional radiation pattern characteristics over an Ultra Wide frequency Band (UWB) spanning from 3.1GHz to 10.6GHz. Two types of planar monopole antennas are investigated. First, the ring type square with semi-circular base monopole antenna placed vertically above a finite ground plane is introduced followed by its design, manufacturing and testing. The second UWB antenna which is proposed in this thesis is a printed square with semi-circular base monopole antenna. This antenna is positioned in the same plane as ground and thus offers direct integration with a front-end circuitry of wireless transceiver. Several variations of this type of antenna featuring different outlines are designed, manufactured and tested. The obtained experimental results show a good agreement with the simulation results, as accomplished with the full EM analysis and simulation software HFSS™.
22

Antennas for Modern Indoor Wireless Communication Systems

Serguei Zagriatski Unknown Date (has links)
Recent years have witnessed a growing demand for broadband wireless communication services such as on-the-go web-browsing, high speed data transfer and streaming of high definition multimedia. In response to this growth, there has been a rapid progress in research and development of technologies supporting high-speed wireless networks offering flexibility and scalability to heterogeneous consumer requirements. A fundamental challenge to the reliable operation of a wireless communication link is the wireless channel which is influenced by time-variant noise, interference, multipath and scarcity of the available frequency spectrum. Due to the wireless nature of the signal transmission and the manner in which energy is distributed or collected, an antenna has a profound influence on an efficient operation of wireless link. Because nowadays an antenna is required to work with many wireless standards, it poses one of the most difficult design and development technological problems. In the past, many antenna designs were concentrated on conventional outdoor applications such as satellite communications, terrestrial point to point communications and cellular base stations. In these applications, the primary design goal was the antenna electrical performance. In case of indoor applications, the designer has to pay attention not only to the electrical performance but also to mechanical, environmental and aesthetic features of antenna. In this thesis, the investigations into design and development of antenna for indoor wireless communication systems that are either currently widespread or quickly entering the consumer market are carried out. First, a single band circularly polarized Radial Line Slot Array antenna covering 2.4GHz ISM frequency spectrum of IEEE 802.11b/g protocol is proposed. Then, an access point antenna for IEEE 802.11a/b/g WLAN applications operating in a dual frequency band covering 2.4GHz and 5.2GHz frequency spectra is described. It consists of a RLSA antenna and a patch antenna combined in one body. During the design stage, in addition to characteristics such as return loss, radiation pattern and polarization, attention is paid to mechanical rigidity, light weight and low visual impact of these radiating structures. A low manufacturing cost is also part of the design strategy. This is important because of competitive commercial market of WLAN applications which is sensitive to the development cost. In theoretical investigations, a Field Matching Method is utilized to achieve a first order approximation to the coaxial-to-waveguide transition forming the feeding element of the RLSA antenna. Next, the full EM analysis (HFSS™) based on Field Element Method is applied to simulate the single and dual band antennas. Both types of access point antennas are manufactured and tested. Experimental results are compared with simulation results. The next part of this thesis presents the investigations into antenna diversity techniques for a wireless communication link in an indoor environment. The design of the automated experimental testbed is presented. This testing facility is used to measure the signal strength levels of a communication link between a mobile wireless device and an access point when they are equipped with multiple element antennas (MEAs). Special attention is given to the benefits of using MEA in a rich scattering environment that is accompanied the experiment. Full design details including electrical and mechanical features are provided. For a given feeding configuration, the testbed allows for measuring the received signal strength when the receiving module is moved over a circular area in an indoor environment. First set of experiments concerns the MEA system that utilizes two single-port transceivers each equipped with either 180º or 90º 3dB hybrid. By using alternatively one of the two input ports of the hybrids to feed a pair of monopole antennas several different transmission or reception modes of the 2x2 MEA communication link are investigated. The next set of experiments focuses on the performances of an indoor wireless system which uses either linearly or circularly polarized antennas at the two sides of the communication link. The overall diversity results indicate that by marginally increasing an overall system complexity (by using simple hybrid circuits and antennas), traditional transceiver systems equipped with MEA can provide significant improvements in the quality of indoor wireless link. The final part of this thesis presents the investigations into the design of planar monopole antennas that offer good return loss and omni-directional radiation pattern characteristics over an Ultra Wide frequency Band (UWB) spanning from 3.1GHz to 10.6GHz. Two types of planar monopole antennas are investigated. First, the ring type square with semi-circular base monopole antenna placed vertically above a finite ground plane is introduced followed by its design, manufacturing and testing. The second UWB antenna which is proposed in this thesis is a printed square with semi-circular base monopole antenna. This antenna is positioned in the same plane as ground and thus offers direct integration with a front-end circuitry of wireless transceiver. Several variations of this type of antenna featuring different outlines are designed, manufactured and tested. The obtained experimental results show a good agreement with the simulation results, as accomplished with the full EM analysis and simulation software HFSS™.
23

RTSCup: testbed for multiagent systems evaluation / Vicente Vieira Filho.

Vieira Filho, Vicente 31 January 2008 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-12T15:57:40Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 arquivo3218_1.pdf: 3612539 bytes, checksum: 40d4ce8fc0d298c91987ed31e8b8fc74 (MD5) license.txt: 1748 bytes, checksum: 8a4605be74aa9ea9d79846c1fba20a33 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / A avaliação de sistemas computacionais é uma importante fase em seu processo de desenvolvimento, e isso não é diferente para sistemas que utilizam Inteligência Artificial (IA). Para esses sistemas, em particular, existe uma tendência à utilização de ambientes de simulação, conhecidos como testbeds, os quais auxiliam na avaliação desses sistemas em diferentes cenários de teste. A área de concentração desse trabalho é Sistemas Multiagentes (SMA). Essa área de pesquisa encontra-se em fase de expansão devido aos SMAs estarem sendo empregados em problemas considerados difíceis ou até mesmo impossíveis de serem solucionados por um único agente ou por sistemas monolíticos. Além disso, vários problemas interessantes surgem durante a interação entre os agentes normalmente envolvendo a resolução distribuída de problemas em tempo real. Atualmente existem vários testbeds utilizados na atividade de pesquisa na área de SMA tais como Trading Agent Competition, RoboCup Rescue e ORTS. Entretanto, a maioria desses testbeds não apresenta as características necessárias para auxiliar os pesquisadores na definição, implementação e validação de suas hipóteses. Este trabalho apresenta um ambiente de simulação, chamado RTSCup, para ser utilizado como testbed para implementação de aplicações na área de Sistemas Multiagentes. O RTSCup já foi utilizado com sucesso em experimentos práticos durante competições realizadas entre estudantes da Universidade Federal de Pernambuco
24

FIBREOSS: um sistema de gerência para o testbed FIBRE

Farias, Vitor dos Santos 03 July 2017 (has links)
Submitted by Patrícia Cerveira (pcerveira1@gmail.com) on 2017-06-13T16:42:58Z No. of bitstreams: 1 VITOR FARIAS_VS_Dissertacao_FINAL.pdf: 7493676 bytes, checksum: 8737be6711720e0101b59c0a980267f0 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Biblioteca da Escola de Engenharia (bee@ndc.uff.br) on 2017-07-03T13:55:19Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 VITOR FARIAS_VS_Dissertacao_FINAL.pdf: 7493676 bytes, checksum: 8737be6711720e0101b59c0a980267f0 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-07-03T13:55:19Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 VITOR FARIAS_VS_Dissertacao_FINAL.pdf: 7493676 bytes, checksum: 8737be6711720e0101b59c0a980267f0 (MD5) / A federação de testbeds para pesquisas rede de computadores trouxe um grande potencial de inovação criando um ambiente onde recursos são compartilhados entre pesquisadores ao redor do mundo. Porém, manter um laboratório distribuído de larga escala em funcionamento não é uma tarefa trivial. A existência de diversos domínios administrativos e a natureza heterogênea dos recursos torna a operação complexa. Este trabalho compartilha o conhecimento adquirido na operação e manutenção do testbed FIBRE e desenvolve uma solução de monitoração chamada FIBREOSS para auxiliar os administradores do testbed. Essa solução tem como objetivo auxiliar a detecção de falhas, fornecer um ponto centralizado de agregação de informações provenientes de monitoração e realizar um controle do nível de serviço testando as capacidades do testbed com uma profundidade e detalhamento que não são possíveis utilizando ferramentas tradicionais de monitoração. O sistema de monitoração proposto é aplicado ao FIBRE. O intuito do FIBREOSS é observar serviços e sistemas que não puderam ser monitorados com ferramentas tradicionais como: os serviços de experimentação OpenFlow, experimentação sem-fio e a disponibilidade dos serviços do testbed. Com essa adição à monitoração foi possível obter uma medição mais precisa da disponibilidade do testbed encontrando falhas que não eram observáveis antes da implantação do FIBREOSS. Como principais contribuições deste trabalho estão: uma comparação da monitoração com as ferramentas tradicionais com a monitoração do FIBREOSS, estatísticas de falhas do testbed e testes de escalabilidade do FIBREOSS. / Federated testbeds for computer network research brought a great innovation potential by creating an environment where resources are shared among researchers around the world. However, maintaining a distributed large-scale laboratory functional is not a trivial task. The operation becomes a complex task due to the existence of many different administrative domains and the heterogeneous nature of the resources. In this work we share operation and maintenance knowledge obtained with the FIBRE testbed and develop a monitoring solution named FIBREOSS to assist testbed administrators. This solution aims to help fault detection, providing a centralized point of aggregation of monitoring information and performs a service level control by testing the capabilities of testbed with a depth and detail that are not possible using traditional monitoring tools. We integrate the proposed monitoring system to FIBRE. The purpose of FIBREOSS is to observe services and systems that could not be monitored using traditional tools such as the OpenFlow experimentation services, wireless experimentation and the availability of services of the testbed. With this addition to monitoring it was possible to obtain a more accurate measurement of the availability of testbed finding flaws that were not observable before.
25

A Multi-core Testbed on Desktop Computer for Research on Power/Thermal Aware Resource Management

Dierivot, Ashley 06 June 2014 (has links)
Our goal is to develop a flexible, customizable, and practical multi-core testbed based on an Intel desktop computer that can be utilized to assist the theoretical research on power/thermal aware resource management in design of computer systems. By integrating different modules, i.e. thread mapping/scheduling, processor/core frequency and voltage variation, temperature/power measurement, and run-time performance collection, into a systematic and unified framework, our testbed can bridge the gap between the theoretical study and practical implementation. The effectiveness for our system was validated using appropriately selected benchmarks. The importance of this research is that it complements the current theoretical research by validating the theoretical results in practical scenarios, which are closer to that in the real world. In addition, by studying the discrepancies of results of theoretical study and their applications in real world, the research also aids in identifying new research problems and directions.
26

LTE-Advanced/WLAN testbed / LTE-Advanced/WLAN testbed

Plaisner, Denis January 2017 (has links)
This thesis deals with the investigation and assessment of communication standards LTE-Advance and WiFi (IEEE 802.11n/ac). The EVM error parameter is examined for each standard. To work with different standards a universal workplace have been proposed (testbed). This universal workplace serves for adjusting transmitting and receiving means and for processing signals transmitted and interpreted. Matlab was chosen for this work, through which only control devices such as generators and analyzers from Rohde & Schwarz. This workplace also measures the coexistence of these standards. At the conclusion of this thesis, different coexistence scenarios were designed and evaluated through testbed results.
27

Testing of Current-Only Directional Relay Algorithm in a Realistic Distribution Network Testbed

Vivent Barahona, Francisco Javier 30 August 2023 (has links)
The growth of Distributed Energy Resources is accelerating, causing significant changes in utility distribution systems due to the bidirectionality of power flow. As a result, protection systems will require upgrades to operate with these new requirements. The current-only directional relay (CODR) is a novel proposal that detects the direction of fault currents without the need for new devices, but instead upgrades the software logic of existing devices, making it a cost-effective solution. This work provides a complete description of how to implement a hardware testbed to review the CODR method. Findings show that CODR performs successfully in a real environment, but its algorithm needs to be upgraded if used in distribution systems where lines have a non-negligible resistive component. / Master of Science / The use of renewable energy sources, such as solar panels and wind turbines, is growing rapidly. This is causing changes in the way electricity is distributed, as power can now flow in both directions. To keep up with these changes, the systems that protect the electricity grid need to be updated. One cost-effective solution is to use a new type of relay, called the current-only directional relay (CODR), which can detect the direction of fault currents without the need for new devices. This work describes how to test the CODR method using a hardware testbed. The results show that the CODR performs well in a real environment, but its algorithm needs to be updated for use in certain types of distribution systems.
28

Reasoning about Wireless Protocol Behavior

Kwon, Taewoo 19 July 2012 (has links)
No description available.
29

Design and Implementation of An Emulation Testbed for Optimal Spectrum Sharing in Multi-hop Cognitive Radio Networks

Liu, Tong 14 August 2007 (has links)
Cognitive Radio (CR) capitalizes advances in signal processing and radio technology and is capable of reconfiguring RF and switching to desired frequency bands. It is a frequency-agile data communication device that is vastly more powerful than existing multi-channel multi-radio (MC-MR) technology. In this thesis, we investigate the important problem of multi-hop networking with CR nodes. In a CR network, each node has a set of frequency bands (not necessarily of equal size) that may not be the same as those at other nodes. The uneven size of frequency bands prompts the need of further division into sub-bands for optimal spectrum sharing. We characterize behaviors and constraints for such multi-hop CR network from multiple layers, including modeling of spectrum sharing and sub-band division, scheduling and interference constraints, and flow routing. We give a formal mathematical formulation with the objective of maximizing the network throughput for a set of user communication sessions. Since such problem formulation falls into mixed integer non-linear programming (MINLP), which is NP-hard in general, we develop a lower bound for the objective by relaxing the integer variables and linearization. Subsequently, we develop a nearoptimal algorithm to this MINLP problem. This algorithm is based on a novel sequential fixing (SF) procedure, where the integer variables are determined iteratively via a sequence of linear program (LP). In order to implement and evaluate these algorithms in a controlled laboratory setting, we design and implement an emulation testbed. The highlights of our experimental research include: • Emulation of a multi-hop CR network with arbitrary topology; • An implementation of the proposed SF algorithm at the application layer; • A source routing implementation that can easily support comparative study between SF algorithm and other schemes; • Experiments comparing the SF algorithm with another algorithm called Layered Greedy Algorithm (LGA); • Experimental results show that the proposed SF significantly outperforms LGA. In summary, the experimental research in this thesis has demonstrated that SF algorithm is a viable algorithm for optimal spectrum sharing in multi-hop CR networks. / Master of Science
30

Architecting IoT-Enabled Smart Building Testbed

Amanzadeh, Leila 29 October 2018 (has links)
Smart building's benefits range from improving comfort of occupant, increased productivity, reduction in energy consumption and operating costs, lower CO2 emission, to improved life cycle of utilities, efficient operation of building systems, etc. [65]. Hence, modern building owners are turning towards smart buildings. However, the current smart buildings mostly are not capable of achieving the objectives they are designed for and they can improve a lot better [22]. Therefore, a new technology called, Internet of Things, or IoT, is combined with the smart buildings to improve their performance [23]. IoT is the inter-networking of things embedded with electronics, software, sensors, actuators, and network connectivity to collect and exchange data, and things in this definition is anything and everything around us and even ourselves. Using this technology, e.g. a door can be a thing and can sense how many people have passed it's sensor to enter a space and let the lighting system know to prepare appropriate amount of light, or the HVAC (Heating Ventilation Air Conditioning) system to provide desirable temperature. IoT will provide a lot of useful information that before that accessibility to it was impossible, e.g., condition of water pipes in winter, which helps avoiding damages like frozen or broken pipes. However, despite all the benefits, IoT suffers from being vulnerable to cyber attacks. Examples have been provided later in Chapter 1. In this project among building systems, HVAC system is chosen to be automated with a new control method called MPC (Model Predictive Control). This method is fast, very energy efficient and has a lower than 0.001 rate of error for regulating the space temperature to any temperature that the occupants desire according to the results of this project. Furthermore, a PID (Proportional–Integral–Derivative) controller has been designed for the HVAC system that in the exact same cases MPC shows a much better performance. To design controllers for HVAC system and set the temperature to the desired value a method to automate balancing the heat flow should be found, therefore a thermal model of building should be available that using this model, the amount of heat, flowing in and out of a space in the building disregarding the external weather would be known to estimate. To automate the HVAC system using the programming languages like MATLAB, there is a need to convert the thermal model of the building to a mathematical model. This mathematical model is unique for each building depending on how many floors it has, how wide it is, and what materials have been used to construct the building. This process is needs a lot of effort and time even for buildings with 2 floors and 2 rooms on each floor and at the end the engineer might have done it with error. In this project you will see a software that will do the conversion of thermal model of buildings in any size to their mathematical model automatically, which helps improving the HVAC controllers to set temperature to the value occupants desire and avoid errors and time loss which is put both into calculations and troubleshooting. In addition, a test environment has been designed and constructed as a cyber physical system that allows us to test the IoT- enabled control systems before implementing them on real buildings, observe the performance, and decide if the system is satisfying or not. Also, all cyber threats can be explored and the solutions to those attacks can be evaluated. Even for the systems that are already out there, there is an opportunity to be assessed on this testbed and if there is any vulnerability in case of cyber security, solutions would be evaluated and help the existing systems improve. / Master of Science / Buildings function as shelters more than any thing else, and this has allowed humans to use it as a space to store important things like private and important information. Therefore, this space should be safe and secure from any vulnerabilities for occupants and their information. Smart buildings, have made a great difference in increasing the comfort level of occupants, but they haven’t been greatly successful achieving their objectives [50]. Therefore, a new technology called, Internet of Things, or IoT, is combined with the smart buildings to improve their performance [23]. IoT is the inter-networking of things embedded with electronics, software, sensors, actuators, and network connectivity to collect and exchange data, and things in this definition is anything and everything around us and even ourselves. Internet of Things (IoT) has helped improving the smart buildings and getting a considerable amount of energy efficiency [27]. But adding Internet of Things has added a network of things connected to internet, which gives the cyber hackers an opportunity to hack the buildings, and get access to the information stored inside the building or put even occupants lives in danger. Therefore, in this thesis the following items have been contributed: • Designing and programming a novel control system for HVAC system of the buildings (Model Predictive Control): This is a new method to control HVAC system of buildings and in comparison with the methods available in the market, it is the most energy efficient, it is faster, and it has a lower error rate in following the desired temperature of the occupants. • Design and construction of IoT- enabled smart building testbed: Since cyber attacks make buildings vulnerable, the author believes it is better to build a test environment to simulate the buildings and the control methods that are used inside the buildings, and try to evaluate performance of the control methods before implementing them on real buildings. Also, by installing IoT sensors inside the test environment, the engineers can perform some cyber attack tests, and also evaluate the solutions for each attack on the testbed. • Design and program a software to convert thermal model of buildings to mathematical model : In designing a new control method for HVAC system of buildings, the first required information is the thermal model of the buildings. Eventually, there is a need to program. Thus, the thermal model should be converted to a mathematical model. However, there is a heavy manual calculation behind it that is really overwhelming, tiring, with a high possibility of error, and time-consuming even for a very small sized building. Therefore, automating this process in terms of a software that takes the information of thermal model of buildings as an input and giving the output of the mathematical model of building is a considerable achievement.

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