The present invention relates to a wireless access method and system in which there are installed a plurality of access point stations forming a communication link with a mobile wireless terminal which has entered a wireless service area, and a communication link is formed between the plurality of access point stations to perform communication.
The present inventor has studied a millimeter-wave ad hoc wireless access system utilizing the broadband characteristics of millimeter-wave band and the propagation characteristics suitable for relatively short distance communication since 2001. In the millimeter-wave ad hoc wireless access system which the present inventor aims to develop, under an environment where a plurality of communicatable terminals are present in the neighborhood, a network is instantly and automatically constructed as required. For example, in a comparatively small meeting or the like, each participant can carry a note-type PC or the like with a wireless communication terminal function and share presentation documents of the presenters in real time. In millimeter-wave communication, broadband frequency can be used for communication. Therefore, materials etc. including high-quality moving images, can also be shared without any stress.
In this manner, access point stations are connected by a cable network to expand a network, and an equivalent hotspot service is deployed under each access point station, whereby a millimeter-wave ad hoc communication network spreading two-dimensionally is realized.
However, in the above system of conventional art, each access point station (AP) must include a modulation/demodulation device (BB&IF: Baseband-IF device) and an access control device, thus resulting in a high cost.
Also, according to the present invention, as described later in detail, in order to allow an intermediate-frequency (IF) band signal processing without causing deterioration in frequency stability associated with frequency conversion, a self-heterodyne transceiver can be used. This self-heterodyne transceiver itself is known. The known self-heterodyne transceiver will be briefly described below.
The above technique is only related to a one-way wireless communication apparatus, but in actual communication, bi-directional communication is needed. Regarding a configuration in such a case, the present inventors have already proposed “bi-directional wireless communication system and bi-directional wireless communication method” described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-9655.
An object of the present invention is that when a plurality of access point stations deploying an equivalent hotspot service under each access point station are connected to expand a network, and a millimeter-wave ad hoc communication network spreading two-dimensionally is thereby realized, then each access point (AP) does not need to include a modulation/demodulation device and an access control device, and the network can be constructed and expanded only by wireless means, thus achieving cost reduction.
Another object of the present invention is to use a self-heterodyne transceiver and thereby allow an IF band signal processing without causing deterioration in frequency stability associated with frequency conversion.
According to the present invention, there are installed a plurality of access point stations deploying a wireless service area and forming a communication link with a mobile radio terminal which has entered the service area, and a communication link is formed between the plurality of access point stations. Each of the plurality of access point stations includes an RF transceiver used to form a point-to-multipoint type communication link with the mobile radio terminal and further includes one or more RF transceivers used to form a point-to-point type communication link with another access point station.
Accordingly, when constructing a hotspot type network constituted of access point stations and mobile radio terminals, the network can be constructed and expanded only by wireless means, thus achieving excellence in cost reduction and real-time nature.
One of the plurality of access point stations is a control access point station performing signal modulation/demodulation or access control, and the other access point stations are a repeater access point station. Upon receipt of a signal from an access point station other than the own station, the repeater access point station branches the signal into two signals, broadcasting and delivering one branched signal to all mobile radio terminals belonging to the coverage area of the own station and at the same time, relaying/transmitting the other branched signal to another repeater access point station based on a non-reproduction scheme. Upon receipt of a radio signal transmitted from a mobile radio terminal belonging to the coverage area of the own station, the repeater access point station relays/transmits this signal to another access point station based on a non-reproduction scheme. As described above, the repeater access point station used for network expansion does not need to include any modulation/demodulation function and access function, thus achieving cost reduction.
To a radio signal transmitted from the control access point station to another access point station, there is attached destination information for allowing a destination access point station to perform identification. Each repeater access point station identifies destination information of a received signal, relaying/transmitting the signal to another access point station based on a non-reproduction scheme when the signal is not destined for the own station, broadcasting the signal to the coverage area of the own station to deliver it to all mobile radio terminals when the signal is destined for the own station. The attaching of destination information allows a more effective use of network band, so improvement of throughput can be expected.
Signal processing at the access point station can be performed in IF frequency band obtained by performing down-converting from RF frequency band. In this case, as the RF transceiver included in the access point station, one based on a millimeter-wave self-heterodyne scheme can be used.
When signal processing is performed in IF band, the processings, such as signal detection and switching, are made easier. Further, when a self-heterodyne transceiver is used, IF band signal processing can be performed without causing any deterioration in frequency stability associated with frequency conversion.
The present invention will be described below with reference to the illustrations.
At least one (AP#1 of
In
Upon receipt of a signal from an access point station (including a control AP station) other than the own station, the repeater AP station divides the signal, and broadcasts one part of the signal to the coverage area of the own station to deliver it to all MTs, and relays/transmits, based on a non-reproduction scheme, the other part of the signal to a repeater AP station having another P-P link formed. Meanwhile, upon receipt of a radio signal transmitted from an MT belonging to the coverage area of the own station, the repeater AP station relays/transmits, based on a non-reproduction scheme, this signal to all the other AP stations having a P-P link formed. The term “non-reproduction scheme” as used in the present specification means a scheme of processing a signal in an RF frequency (RF) signal state or in a state obtained by performing frequency conversion to an intermediate frequency (IF) signal without performing demodulation to a base-band signal.
The circuit shown in
To a radio signal transmitted by a mobile terminal MT, there is attached destination information indicating a destination AP station, or destination information indicating that the signal is destined for a control AP station. In the former case, firstly, the repeater AP station receiving this signal transmits it to a neighboring repeater AP station or a control AP station without performing demodulation. As with downlink operation, a repeater AP station receiving a radio signal from another repeater AP station determines, according to destination of the received radio signal, whether or not the signal is destined for the own station, radiating it to the wireless zone of the own station based on a non-reproduction scheme when the signal is destined for the own station, transmitting it to a subsequent repeater AP station or a control AP station when the signal is not destined for the own station. In the latter case, the signal is unconditionally transferred toward a control AP station based on a non-reproduction repeating scheme.
To the signal detection/destination detection/switching circuit, there is introduced a repeating signal from another AP via an RF transceiver (
Meanwhile, the repeating signal (the input signal to the signal detection/destination detection/switching circuit) from another AP is branched out from the Splitter to a destination information detection circuit and in this circuit, it is determined whether or not the signal is destined for the own station. In the destination information detection circuit illustrated in
In a comparator (Comp.), it is detected whether the level of the radio signal branching out from the Splitter is greater than a predetermined level or not; if greater than the predetermined level (i.e., when a burst signal is detected), a switch (SW2) and an AP-specific signal generator are triggered. At this time, the branching burst signal is introduced to a first input of a correlator via SW2 and at the same time, to a second input of the correlator, there is introduced an output from the AP-specific signal generator. The correlator calculates whether or not these two inputs coincide with each other; if so, it is determined that the repeating signal from another AP is destined for the own station, and then the switch SW1 is controlled to send a radiation signal to the wireless zone. If these two inputs don't coincide with each other, i.e., if it is not determined that the repeating signal is destined for the own station, then the signal is transmitted as a repeating signal to another AP. The control signal from the correlator not only controls the switch SW1 but also is transferred as a signal for controlling the RF transceiver itself to change only an RF transceiver which should transmit a signal, to a transmission mode.
The circuit shown in
Upon receipt of a signal from another access point station (including a control AP station), a general access point station (repeater AP station) converts the radio signal to IF band. This IF band signal is branched, and one part is broadcasted to the coverage area of the own station at RF frequency via a self-heterodyne transceiver to be delivered to all MTs, and the other branched signal is directly sent as an IF band signal to a self-heterodyne transceiver based on a non-reproduction scheme, and then transmitted from the transceiver to another repeater AP station at RF frequency. When broadcasted to the coverage area of the own station, and when relayed/transmitted to another repeater AP station, frequency conversion into an arbitrary RF frequency is performed. As evident from the above description with reference to
Each repeater AP station identifies destination information of a received signal, relaying/transmitting the signal to another AP station based on a non-reproduction scheme when the signal is not destined for the own station, broadcasting the signal to the coverage area of the own station to deliver it to all MTs when the signal is destined for the own station. In each AP station, in order to identify destination information of a received radio signal to determine whether or not the signal is destined for the own station, the radio signal is converted to IF band. When broadcasted to the coverage area of the own station after it is determined that the signal is destined for the own station, or when relayed/transmitted to another repeater AP station, frequency conversion into the same or a given different RF frequency is performed. After this, similarly to the third embodiment shown in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP04/02204 | 2/25/2004 | WO | 8/3/2006 |