Author :
Wang, Qixin ; Liu, Xue ; Chen, Weiqun ; Sha, Lui ; Caccamo, Marco
Abstract :
Wireless LAN for industrial control (IC-WLAN) provides many benefits, such as mobility, low deployment cost, and ease of reconfiguration. However, the top concern is robustness of wireless communications. Wireless control loops must be maintained under persistent adverse channel conditions, such as noise, large-scale path loss, fading, and many electromagnetic interference sources in industrial environments. The conventional IEEE 802.11 WLANs, originally designed for high bandwidth instead of high robustness, are therefore inappropriate for IC-WLAN. A solution lies in the direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) technology: by deploying the largest possible processing gain (slowest bit rate) that fully exploits the low data rate feature of industrial control, much higher robustness can be achieved. We hereby propose using DSSS-CDMA to build IC-WLAN. We carry out fine-grained physical layer simulations and Monte Carlo comparisons. The results show that DSSS-CDMA IC-WLAN provides much higher robustness than IEEE 802.11/802.15.4 WLAN, so that reliable wireless industrial control loops become feasible. We also show that deploying larger processing gain is preferable, to deploying more intensive convolutional coding. The DSSS-CDMA IC-WLAN scheme also opens up a new problem space for interdisciplinary study, involving real-time scheduling, resource management, communication, networking, and control
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; cellular radio; code division multiple access; convolutional codes; industrial control; spread spectrum communication; wireless LAN; 802.15.4 WLAN; DSSS-CDMA cell phone network paradigm; IEEE 802.11 WLAN; Monte Carlo comparisons; convolutional coding; direct sequence spread spectrum technology; electromagnetic interference; fine-grained physical layer simulations; industrial control; large-scale path loss; persistent adverse channel conditions; real-time scheduling; resource management; robust wireless LAN; wireless communications; wireless control loops; Cellular phones; Communication system control; Costs; Electromagnetic interference; Industrial control; Noise robustness; Robust control; Spread spectrum communication; Wireless LAN; Wireless communication; Real-time and embedded systems; industrial control.; reliability and robustness; wireless communication;