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Enabling CBRS experimentation and ML-based Incumbent Detection using OpenSAS

In 2015, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) enabled shared commercial use of the 3.550-3.700 GHz band. A framework was developed to enable this spectrum-sharing capa- bility which included an automated frequency coordinator called Spectrum Access System (SAS). This work extends the open source SAS based on the aforementioned FCC SAS framework developed by researchers at Virginia Tech Wireless group, with real-time envi- ronment sensing capability along with intelligent incumbent detection using Software-defined Radios (SDRs) and a real-time graphical user interface. This extended version is called the OpenSAS. Furthermore, the SAS client and OpenSAS are extended to be compliant with the Wireless Innovation Forum (WINNF) specifications by testing the SAS-CBRS Base Station Device (CBSD) interface with the Google SAS Test Environment. The Environment Sensing Capability (ESC) functionality is evaluated and tested in our xG Testbed to verify its ability to detect the presence of users in the CBRS band. An ML-based feedforward neural net- work model is employed and trained using simulated radar waveforms as incumbent signals and captured 5G New Radio (NR) signals as a non-incumbent signal to predict whether the detected user is a radar incumbent or an unknown user. If the presence of incumbent radar is detected with an 85% or above certainty, incumbent protection is activated, terminating CBSD grants causing damaging interference to the detected incumbent. A 5G NR signal is used as a non-incumbent user and added to the training dataset to better the ability of the model to reject non-incumbent signals. The model achieves a maximum validation accuracy of 95.83% for signals in the 40-50 dB Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) range. It achieves an 85.35% accuracy for Over the air (OTA) real-time tests. The non-incumbent 5G NR signal rejection accuracy is 91.30% for a calculated SNR range of 10-20 dB. In conclusion, this work advances state of the art in spectrum sharing systems by presenting an enhanced open source SAS and evaluating the newly added functionalities. / Master of Science / In 2015, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) enabled shared commercial use of the 3.550-3.700 GHz band. A framework was developed to enable this spectrum-sharing capability which included an automated frequency coordinator called Spectrum Access System (SAS). The task of the SAS is to make sure no two users use the same spectrum in the same location causing damaging interference to each other. The SAS is also responsible for prioritizing the higher tier users and protecting them from interference from lower tier users. This work extends the open source SAS based on the aforementioned FCC SAS framework developed by researchers at Virginia Tech Wireless group, with real-time environment sensing capability along with intelligent incumbent detection using Software-defined Radios (SDRs) and a real-time graphical user interface. This extended version is called the OpenSAS. Furthermore, the SAS client and OpenSAS are extended to be compliant with the Wireless Innovation Forum (WINNF) specifications by testing the SAS-CBRS Base Station Device (CBSD) interface with the Google SAS Test Environment. The Environment Sensing Capability (ESC) functionality is evaluated and tested in our xG Testbed to verify its ability to detect the presence of users in the CBRS band. The ESC is used to detect incumbent users (the highest tier) that do not inform the SAS about their use of the spectrum. An ML-based feedforward neural net- work model is employed and trained using simulated radar waveforms as incumbent signals and captured 5G New Radio (NR) signals as a non-incumbent signal to predict whether the detected user is a radar incumbent or an unknown user. If the presence of incumbent radar is detected with an 85% or above certainty, incumbent protection is activated, terminating CBSD grants causing damaging interference to the detected incumbent. A 5G NR signal is used as a non-incumbent user and added to the training dataset to better the ability of the model to reject non-incumbent signals. The model achieves a maximum validation accuracy of 95.83% for signals in the 40-50 dB Signal to-Noise Ratio (SNR) range. It achieves an 85.35% accuracy for Over the air (OTA) real-time tests. The non-incumbent 5G NR signal rejection accuracy is 91.30% for a calculated SNR range of 10-20 dB. In conclusion, this work advances state of the art in spectrum sharing systems by presenting an enhanced open source SAS and evaluating the newly added functionalities.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/115629
Date03 July 2023
CreatorsCollaco, Oren Rodney
ContributorsElectrical and Computer Engineering, Pereira da Silva, Luiz Antonio, Dietrich, Carl B., Haj-Omar, Amr, Pereira da Silva, Aloizio
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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