The disclosures herein relate generally to communication systems and more particularly to wireless ultra-wideband (UWB) data communication systems.
The proliferation of wireless communication devices in unlicensed spectrum (such as in the 915 MHz, and 2.4 GHz ISM bands and the 5 GHz UNII bands), and the ever increasing consumer demands for higher data bandwidths have placed a severe strain on these frequency spectrum bands. New devices and new standards are continually emerging, such as the IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11a, IEEE802.11g, IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.15.3, HiperLAN/2 standards, for example. These new devices and standards are placing an additional burden on those frequency bands. Coexistence among the many communications systems is taking on an increasing level of importance as consumer devices proliferate.
It is also well known that the available data bandwidth and capacity of wireless systems is constrained by the available bandwidth of the license-free bands. Data rate throughput capability varies proportionally with available bandwidth, but only logarithmically with available signal to noise ratio. Hence, to accommodate high capacity systems within a constrained bandwidth requires the use of complex signal modulation technologies which need significantly increased signal to noise ratios, making the higher data rate systems more fragile and more easily susceptible to interference from other users of the spectrum. Moreover, these complex modulation technologies are also highly susceptible to multipath interference thereby aggravating the coexistence concerns. Furthermore, regulatory limitations within the license-free bands constrain the maximum available signal to noise ratio. Increasingly, the cost of devices becomes critically important as device use permeates an increasingly larger consumer base. That consumer base includes more and more devices that are small, have small batteries, and have small demands on power.
What is needed is a high data capacity wireless communication system that can readily coexist with other existing wireless communication systems operating in the license-free bands, that can operate at moderate data dates, that can be scaled to expand data rate capability very easily, that can be easily embedded in host devices, that has suppressed energy emission characteristics outside the desired bands, and that consumes small amounts of energy from the host device.
Accordingly, in one embodiment, a method of communicating is disclosed including transmitting an ultra-wideband signal having first and second signal components exhibiting diversity. The method also includes receiving the ultra-wideband signal by combining the first and second signal components to provide a diversity gain. The method further includes supplying the first and second signal components respectively to first and second antennas which exhibit a low cross-correlation therebetween at a transmit end of a communication link. Antennas similar to the first and second antennas are employed at the receive end of the communication link to receive the first and second signal components to realize a diversity gain.
In another embodiment, a communication system is disclosed that includes a transmitter that transmits an ultra-wideband signal including first and second signal components exhibiting diversity. The system also includes a receiver that receives the ultra-wideband signal by combining the first and second signal components to provide a diversity gain. The transmitter is coupled to first and second antennas to which the first and second signal components are supplied at a transmit end of a communication link. The first and second antennas exhibit a cross-correlation that is relatively low. Antennas similar to the first and second antennas are employed at a receive end of the communication link to help receive the first and second signal components to realize a diversity gain.
With the advent of the FCC ruling permitting ultra-wideband (UWB) emissions, many UWB transmission and reception systems have been proposed. The FCC ruling does not define UWB, but instead describes a UWB transmitter as one whose emissions are at least 500 MHz wide as measured between points 10 dB down from the peak emission, and operating in the 3.1 to 10.6 GHz spectrum at an effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP) level below −41.3 dBm/MHz. This broad regulatory definition effectively does not in itself prohibit conventional radio technologies like the well known Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) system from qualifying as “UWB” under the rules. Such OFDM solutions have been proposed as UWB solutions in the IEEE 802 project 802.15.3a.
One such OFDM system employs 128 carriers or tones, of which 122 are actually transmitted, spaced at 4.125 MHz intervals. The problem with such an OFDM type of “UWB” solution is that to a receiver of such a signal, the receiver bandwidth is effectively approximately 4 MHz per carrier. This means that signal is subjected to nearly full Rayleigh fading, which has a large effect on the link margin, perhaps in the range of approximately 6 dB. High data rate UWB systems of the OFDM type can not afford such a substantial link margin “hit”. Hence a solution is needed that preferably does not experience significant Rayleigh fading.
Conventional true UWB impulse signal radios do not encounter Rayleigh fading because the impulse signals of such radios do not persist long enough in time to encounter the constructive and destructive interference that narrow band OFDM signals, which persist for comparatively long times, encounter.
A high capacity UWB transmitting and receiving system of the OFDM type is disclosed which exhibits substantially less multi-path loss than conventional OFDM type UWB solutions. Briefly, the disclosed communication system includes a UWB transmitter for transmitting data through a UWB antenna system coupled thereto. The system also includes a receiver with a UWB antenna system at the other end of a data link formed between the transmitter and receiver. The UWB antennas are configured so that signals are transferred using diversity transmission over the link from transmitter to receiver. The UWB antennas on both ends of the link are configured so that emissions from the transmitter when received by the receiver exhibit sufficiently low cross-correlation that they produce a diversity gain improvement at the receiver. The cross-correlation of two signals is defined as the integral of the product of the two signals divided by the product of their RMS (root mean square) values. In one embodiment of the disclosed system, values of cross-correlation below about 0.7 are deemed sufficiently low for diversity improvement. It is noted that values of cross correlation more that 0.7 may also produce acceptable results as long as the multipath conditions are less than full Raleigh fading.
The diversity gain improvement can be achieved by transmitting and receiving on 2 polarizations and/or by antennas having spatial separation and/or by antennas that are sensitive to each of two different field components such as the electric field and the magnetic field. For example, a dipole is primarily sensitive to the electric filed while a loop antenna is sensitive primarily to the magnetic field. The electric and magnetic fields of a signal are generally uncorrelated in multipath. The diversity improvement can be obtained by having diversity antennas at the receiver end of the link, or at the transmitter end of the link or at both ends of the link. Thus, in one embodiment, a two-way link may be configured with the benefit of diversity improvement in both link directions, yet the diversity complexity of multiple antennas is entirely at one end of the link
In
The receive system 310 of the corresponding transceiver at the receive end of the link employs diversity antennas 341 and 342 that are decoupled or exhibit low cross correlation similar to the manner of antennas 331 and 332 discussed above. Receive system 310 includes a receive stage 350. In this embodiment, receive stage 350 includes one receiver for each receive antenna. Thus, receive stage 350 includes receivers 351 and 352 that are coupled to antennas 341 and 342, respectively. Receivers 351 and 352 are coupled to a detector and diversity combiner 360 that monitors the signal outputs of receivers 351 and 352 and determines how the signals are selected or weighted and combined. In “selection diversity”, detector/combiner 360 selects the higher quality signal of the two signals provided thereto and then employs the selected signal as the receive signal. The selected receive signal is supplied as a data stream to output 360A. In “combining diversity”, the signals are weighted and combined in an optimal method such as “equal gain combining” or “maximal ratio combining”, for example. Equal gain combining and maximum ratio combining are combining diversity methods known in the art. The data stream thus retrieved is provided to output 360A and may be supplied to other stages for further handling, depending on the particular application.
It is noted that whatever coding scheme is used to encode data signals at data source 315, the corresponding decoding methodology is employed in detector and diversity combiner 360 to provide the retrieved data stream. For example, if IEEE 802.15 standard coding is used in data source 315 of transmit system 305, then IEEE 802.15 standard decoding is used in detector and diversity combiner 360 of receive system 310. In more detail, such coding and decoding includes the appropriate application layer, logic link control (LLC) layer and media access control (MAC) layer of the particular standard employed.
In system 800 of
The signal transmitted by transmit system 811 is received at receive system 812 via antenna pair 341, 342. Antennas 341 and 342 are switchably coupled to receiver 835 by an antenna switch 840 therebetween. Receiver 835 is coupled to a detector and diversity combiner 845 which receives the incoming signal from receiver 835. Detector/combiner 845 is coupled to an antenna switching controller 850 that is coupled to antenna switch 840 so that detector combiner 845 can determine which antenna 341 or 342 results in a higher quality received signal. Under the direction of detector/combiner 845, controller 850 instructs antenna switch 840 to alternatingly switch between antenna 341 and 342 until detector/combiner 845 determines which antenna results in the superior quality received signal. The antenna controller 850 then causes antenna switch 840 to couple the particular one of antennas 341 and 342 which provides a better signal to receiver 835. In yet another embodiment, the functionality of antenna switching controller 850 can be included in detector/combiner 845.
More detail is now provided with respect to the operation of antenna switching controller 830 and antenna switch 825 in transmit system 811. When communication is initiated between transceivers 801 and 802, switching controller 830 of transceiver 801 alternatingly switches between antennas 331 and 332. During this switching time, detector/combiner 845 of transceiver 802 listens to the signals it receives to determine which of antennas 331 and 332 results in the higher quality received signal. Once this is determined, detector/combiner 845 sends antenna selection information (ANT. SELECT INFO) to transceiver 801 over a return path provided by transmit system 811′ of transceiver 802 and receive system 812′ of transceiver 801. Antenna switching controller 830 is supplied with this antenna selection information, and in response, controller 830 then connects transmitter 820 to the particular one of antennas 331 and 332 indicated as providing a better signal by the antenna selection information.
The disclosed OFDM type UWB communication system mitigates the impact of multipath fading by transmitting and receiving with UWB antennas having two orthogonal polarizations, or two spatially separated antennas, or a pair of left and right handed chiral polarization antennas in the illustrated embodiments. Uncorrelated or low cross correlation diversity signals are thus generated which are captured by diversity antennas and combined in a receiver to provide diversity gain. The diversity technique can be “combining diversity” wherein the signals having low cross correlation are weighted and combined in an embodiment such as depicted in
Although illustrative embodiments have been shown and described, a wide range of modification, change and substitution is contemplated in the foregoing disclosure and in some instances, some features of an embodiment may be employed without a corresponding use of other features. For example, while transceiver 701 has two transmit antennas, 331,332 in transmit system 315 and two receive antennas in receive system 310′, an embodiment is possible where transmit system 305 and receive system 310′ share the same two antennas. Similar antenna sharing can be employed in transceiver 702. Accordingly, it is appropriate that the appended claims be construed broadly and in manner consistent with the scope of the embodiments disclosed herein.
This patent application claims priority to, and incorporates by reference, provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/535,268, Attorney Docket No. DDT002, filed on Jan. 9, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60535268 | Jan 2004 | US |