1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to testing apparatuses for wireless communication devices and more particularly to apparatuses and methods that use simulators for testing communications between a wireless device and a wireless access device.
2. Description of Related Art
The use of wireless communication devices for data networking continues to grow at a rapid pace. Data networks that use “WiFi” (“Wireless Fidelity”), also known as “Wi-Fi,” are relatively easy to install, convenient to use, and supported by the IEEE 802.11 standard. WiFi data networks also provide performance that makes WiFi a suitable alternative to a wired data network for many business and home users.
WiFi networks operate by employing wireless access points that provide users, having wireless (or “client”) devices in proximity to the access point, with access to varying types of data networks such as, for example, an Ethernet network or the Internet. The wireless access points include a radio that operates according to the standards specified in different sections of the IEEE 802.11 specification. Generally, radios in the access points communicate with client devices by utilizing omni-directional antennas that allow the radios to communicate with client devices in any direction. The access points are then connected (by hardwired connections) to a data network system that completes the access of the client device to the data network.
High-end wireless devices recently developed include multiple radios to improve bandwidth, user density, signal strength, coverage area, signal management and load balancing. These new wireless devices may use spatial multiplexing to increase data transmission rates by using multiple antennas to simultaneously send and receive data. Spatial multiplexing involves dividing a data stream into multiple data signals and transmitting the data signals over multiple transmitting antennas operating on the same channel. A receiver receives the multiple data signals at multiple receiving antennas and recombines the data signals to obtain the original data stream.
Wireless implementations that use multiple antennas at the transmitter and the receiver may be referred to as Multiple-In/Multiple-Out (MIMO) implementations or environments. Accordingly, MIMO implementations may be described by the number of transmitting antennas and the number of receiving antennas. For example, a MIMO implementation having three transmitting antennas and three receiving antennas may be referred to as a 3×3 MIMO implementation. Some MIMO implementations may include one more receiving antenna than transmitting antenna. Thus, a MIMO implementation having two transmitting antennas and three receiving antennas may be referred to as a 2×3 MIMO implementation.
The development of MIMO implementations has resulted in the need for testing apparatuses to test wireless communication hardware during development. Known testing apparatuses may test wireless communication devices in a wired fashion. As a result, to perform certain tests, it may be necessary to bypass the wireless antennas of the wireless communication devices under test. Further, certain wireless tests may be performed in an open air environment. Open air tests may simulate attenuation and phase delay between wireless devices. However, interference from other transmissions propagating through the open air environment may affect and introduce uncertainty into the open air tests.
Thus, there is a need for a testing system that provides an isolated propagation environment as well as the ability to simulate open air conditions between two wireless devices using a MIMO implementation.
An apparatus for testing the communication between a wireless access device and a wireless device in communication with the wireless access device is provided. The apparatus includes a housing having a first interior chamber adapted to receive a wireless access device and a second interior chamber adapted to receive a wireless device. The apparatus also includes a simulator device for simulating one or more propagation scenarios between the wireless access device and the wireless device. Probes are positioned in the first interior chamber and the second interior chamber. The probes are coupled to the simulator device and are adapted to exchange signals between the wireless access device and the wireless device.
A method of testing the communication between a wireless access device and a wireless device in communication with the wireless access device is also provided. A wireless access device is placed into a first interior chamber of a housing and a wireless device is placed into a second interior chamber of the housing. The wireless access device and the wireless device are each placed adjacent to respective probes. The probes are adapted to receive signals from the wireless access device and the wireless device respectively. When signals are exchanged between the wireless access device and the wireless device, a propagation scenario is simulated.
In the following description of the preferred embodiment, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and which show, by way of illustration, a specific embodiment in which the invention may be practiced. Other embodiments may be utilized and structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
A testing apparatus with a propagation simulator for a wireless access device is described herein. Referring to
The testing system 100 also includes one or more probes 110 inserted into each chamber 106a-b. The probes 110 exchange wireless transmissions between the wireless access device 102 and the unit under test 108. Additionally, the probes 110 are coupled with a propagation simulator 112. Accordingly, transmissions between the wireless access device 102 and the unit under test 108 are routed through the propagation simulator 112 during testing.
The propagation simulator 112 may be used to simulate various conditions of WiFi communication. Interface cables 113 may couple the propagation simulator 112 to an external computing device (not shown), which may be used to control the propagation simulator as discussed further below. The propagation simulator may be enclosed within another chamber 114 of the housing 104 or otherwise attached to the housing of the testing system 100. The housing 104 of the testing system 100 may further include a set of wheels 115 for repositioning the system in a lab or testing environment.
Still referring to
The chambers 106a-b may also include a broadband foam absorber 116 applied to the interior walls 118 of each chamber. As seen in
As mentioned above, chamber 106a encloses a wireless access device 102, and chamber 106b encloses a unit under test 108. As shown in
Further, as seen in
The probes 110 are configured to operate in the WiFi frequence band, i.e., between 1.5 GHz and 8 GHz. For example, the probes 110 may be used to test wireless access devices and wireless devices conforming to the IEEE 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g standards. Further, the probes 110 in the example testing system 100 are designed to accommodate MIMO implementations of wireless architectures, e.g., 2×3 implementations or 3×3 implementations.
The example testing system 100 shown in
In order to maximize coupling between the wireless access device 102 and the unit under test 108, the probes 110 are adjustable in height. Those skilled in the art will recognize that signal strength may improve as the probe is positioned closer to the wireless access device 102 and/or the unit under test 108. Accordingly, the probes 110 in this example may operate in the near field zone of the wireless access device 102 and the unit under test 108. Those skilled in the art will understand that the near field zone is the area less than one wavelength from the front of an antenna. Because the probes 110 operate in the near field zone, the probe is less sensitive to interference from, for example, reflections or other antennas nearby. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that mutual coupling effects between an antenna and the probes 110 may occur if the probe is positioned too close to the antenna. Thus, those skilled in the art will understand that the optimum distance between an antenna and the probes 110 may depend on, for example, the testing environment and/or the characteristics of the antenna and the probe. However, in some situations, for example, a suitable distance between a probe 110 and a wireless access device 102 or unit under test 108 may be around 1″ (one inch) to 1.125″ (one and one-eighth inch).
Referring now to
Additionally, the probe 110 may be connected to a broadband power combiner 126. As discussed above, the probes 110 are designed to maximize the amount of energy collected from the antennas of a wireless access device 102 or a unit under test 108 in a MIMO implementation. The power combiner 126 may combine the power signals from each probe antenna 124a-b into a single power signal representing the total amount of energy collected from one antenna of wireless access device 102 or unit under test 108. For example, the vertical probe antenna 124a may collect 62% (sixty-two percent) of the energy emitted from a one antenna of a unit under test 108 in a MIMO implementation. Similarly, the horizontal probe antenna 124b may collect 37% (thirty-seven percent) of the energy emitted from the antenna of the unit under test 108. The power combiner 126 may combine the signals from each probe antenna 124a-b into a signal representing the overall amount of energy collected from one antenna of the unit under test 108, 99% (ninety-nine percent) in this example. A suitable power combiner may be, for example, a Wilkinson power divider/combiner. Further, the probe may include a Wilkinson power divider/combiner printed on the probe antennas 124a-b.
Each probe antenna 124a-b may be, for example, a patch antenna as shown in
Further, the example probe antennas 124a-b may also be a notch antenna as shown in
With reference to
As mentioned above, a propagation simulator 112 is positioned between corresponding probes 110 such that the signals from each probe pass through the propagation simulator during transmission.
As seen in the example shown in
The digital attenuators 138 and phase shifters 140 are designed to simulate, in a lab environment, propagation scenarios that may occur in the field, such as an open air office environment. Accordingly, the propagation simulator 112 may be used to simulate various attenuation conditions in order to test the communication between a wireless device and a wireless access device. Those skilled in the art will understand that attenuation (also referred to as path loss) relates to the reduction in power density of a signal as the signal propagates through space.
Attenuation may occur as a result of free-space path loss, refraction, diffraction, reflection, absorption, and various environmental factors such as terrain, obstructions, and conditions of the air. The propagation simulator 112 enables an operator to simulate these path loss effects by manipulating the attenuators 138 and the phase shifters 140 of the simulator. As discussed above, interface cables 113 may be connected to a serial port (not shown) and the propagation simulator 112 thus coupling the propagation simulator 112 to an external computing device. An operator may specify values for the attenuators 138 and the phase shifters 140 at the external computing device and transmit the specified values to the propagation simulator 112. Thus, an operator may simulate various propagation scenarios and determine how the communication between a wireless device and a wireless access device is affected in particular propagation scenarios.
Attenuation between the wireless access device 102 and the unit under test 108 may then be translated to a distance range corresponding to a similar attenuation or propagation loss. For example, an attenuation of 30 dB, under certain circumstances, may correspond to a distance of 60 feet from the wireless access device, and an attenuation of 10 dB may correspond to a distance of 20 feet from the access device. Attenuation may be translated to range using a lookup table or an appropriate curve-fit formula.
To determine the attenuation between the chambers 106a-b of the testing system 100. An example propagation loss formula may include the following values:
Attenuation may be calculated by adding the coupling and gain between the probes and the devices and then subtracting the insertion loss that occurs through the coaxial cables and the propagation simulator. An example propagation loss formula may be:
A=C
1
+G
1
−L
1
−L
A
−L
P
−L
2
+G
2
+C
2
The invention illustratively disclosed herein suitably may be practiced in the absence of any element, part, step, component, or ingredient which is not specifically disclosed herein.
While in the foregoing detailed description this invention has been described in relation to certain preferred embodiments thereof, and many details have been set forth for purposes of illustration, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention is susceptible to additional embodiments and that a certain of the details described herein can be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of the invention.