Title :
Path-Loss Characteristics of Urban Wireless Channels
Author :
Herring, Keith T. ; Holloway, Jack W. ; Staelin, David H. ; Bliss, Daniel W.
Author_Institution :
Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
Wireless channel data was collected in Cambridge, Massachusetts for diverse propagation environments over distances ranging from tens of meters to several kilometers using mobile 2.4-GHz transmitters and receivers. The 20-MHz bandwidth signals from eight individually movable van-top antennas were Nyquist sampled simultaneously with 12-bit accuracy. Although path-loss variance for any given link length within single residential/urban neighborhoods was large, single streets typically exhibited path-loss, L(dB)=-10 log10 (Pr/Pt) ?? 10?? log10 r + C, where P is the received or transmitted power, r the link-length, ?? the street-dependent path-loss coefficient, and C the loss incurred at street intersections. Measurements yielded ?? ?? 1.5 + 3.2?? ?? 0.27 for 2 < ?? < 5; ?? is the fraction of the street length having a building gap on either side. Experiments over links as short as 100 meters indicate a 10-dB advantage in estimating path loss for this model compared to optimal linear estimators based on link length alone. Measured air-to-ground links were well modeled by ?? = 2 for the elevated LOS path, and by stochastic log-normal attenuation for the ground-level scattering environment. These models permit path-loss predictions based on readily accessible environmental parameters, and lead to efficient nodal placement strategies for full urban coverage.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; UHF antennas; electromagnetic wave scattering; fading channels; microwave propagation; wireless channels; MIMO systems; Nyquist sampling; air-to-ground links; bandwidth 20 MHz; bandwidth signals; diverse propagation environments; elevated LOS path; fading channels; frequency 2.4 GHz; ground-level scattering environment; microwave propagation; movable van-top antennas; multiple-input multiple-output systems; optimal linear estimators; path loss estimation; path-loss characteristics; path-loss predictions; path-loss variance; receivers; stochastic log-normal attenuation; street-dependent path-loss coefficient; transmitters; urban wireless channels; Antennas and propagation; Attenuation; Attenuation measurement; Bandwidth; Electromagnetic propagation; Equations; Frequency; Laboratories; Lifting equipment; MIMO; Marine technology; Microwave communication; Microwave propagation; Power system modeling; Transmitters; Attenuation; communication channels; data models; fading channels; microwave propagation; multipath channels; multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems; propagation; statistics; urban areas;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2009.2036278