• DocumentCode
    756845
  • Title

    Fast-polarization-hopping transmission diversity to mitigate prolonged deep fades in indoor wireless communications

  • Author

    Wong, Kainam Thomas ; Chan, S.L.A. ; Torres, Rafael P.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Waterloo Univ., Ont.
  • Volume
    48
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    6/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    20
  • Lastpage
    27
  • Abstract
    Fast-polarization-hopping (FPH) transmission diversity is herein proposed to mitigate prolonged deep fades at the mobile receiver in, for example, the indoor propagation environment. Even if the individual multipaths are each sufficiently strong for detection, deep fades may occur due to the multipath signals\´ destructive summation at the receiver. The relative immobility of the transmitter, the propagation environment, and the receiver in the indoor environment means that a deep fade may last for a very long duration, dropping calls or severing links. By rapidly hopping the transmission polarization (say, alternating transmission between a vertically-polarized-dipole antenna and a horizontally-polarized-dipole antenna - or between two "X"-oriented dipoles), the effective propagation channel experiences consecutive polarization modes (each involving a different multipath summation), all within the duration allowed by the channel-coder\´s interleaving depth. This scheme is usable for either frequency-shift keying (with incoherent demodulation), or for channel-coded phase-shift keying (with differential coding, or with pilot-symbol phase synchronization). This scheme requires no change in the mobile receiver (which does not need to be dual polarized). The base station also needs no spatially separated antenna array, nor any other additional hardware, no mechanical movement of the transmitting antenna(s), and no sophisticated signal processing (such as channel estimation or closed-loop feedback) nor any additional software. The proposed scheme\´s cost - relative to using antenna arrays at the base station and/or the mobile - is a potentially doubling of the transmission bandwidth. The proposed scheme\´s potential is illustrated by limited computer simulations using CINDOOR, a polarization-sensitive indoor wireless-propagation ray-tracing simulation software package based on geometrical optics and the uniform theory of diffraction (GO/UTD)
  • Keywords
    channel coding; demodulation; dipole antenna arrays; diversity reception; electromagnetic wave polarisation; fading channels; frequency hop communication; frequency shift keying; indoor radio; mobile radio; phase shift keying; software packages; telecommunication computing; antenna arrays; base station; channel-coded phase-shift keying; demodulation; differential coding; dropping calls; fast-polarization-hopping transmission diversity; frequency-shift keying; geometrical optics; horizontally-polarized-dipole antenna; indoor wireless communications; mobile receiver; multipath summation; pilot-symbol phase synchronization; prolonged deep fades; propagation channel; ray-tracing simulation software package; severing links; transmitter; uniform theory of diffraction; vertically-polarized-dipole antenna; Antenna arrays; Antenna feeds; Antennas and propagation; Base stations; Computer simulation; Dipole antennas; Optical transmitters; Polarization; Transmitting antennas; Wireless communication;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1045-9243
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MAP.2006.1703395
  • Filename
    1703395