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High-Density and De-Densified Smart Campus Communications. Daniel MinoliЧитать онлайн книгу.

High-Density and De-Densified Smart Campus Communications - Daniel  Minoli


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that may be located in an area where a frame transmitted from the STA1, a frame transmitted from the second station STA2, or both can be received. STA1 may determine whether the channel is busy by carrier sensing. The STA1 may determine the channel occupation based on an energy level in the channel or autocorrelation of signals in the channel or may determine the channel occupation by using a Network Allocation Vector (NAV) timer. After determining that the channel is not used by other devices (that is, that the channel is IDLE) during a DIFS (and performing backoff if required), STA1 may transmit an RTS frame to STA2. Upon receiving the RTS frame, after a SIFS, STA2 may transmit a CTS frame as a response of the RTS frame. If Dual‐CTS is enabled and the second station STA2 is an AP, the AP may send two CTS frames in response to the RTS frame: a first CTS frame in the legacy non‐HT format and a second CTS frame in the HT format.

Schematic illustration of carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance-based frame transmission procedure.

      When Dual‐CTS is enabled, a station that has obtained a transmission opportunity (TXOP) and that has no data to transmit may transmit a CF‐End frame to cut short the TXOP. An AP receiving a CF‐End frame having a BSSID of the AP as a destination address may respond by transmitting two more CF‐End frames: a first CF‐End frame using STBC and a second CF‐End frame using non‐STBC. A station receiving a CF‐End frame resets its NAV timer to 0 at the end of the PPDU containing the CF‐End frame.

      Figure 2.6 also shows the second station STA2 transmitting an ACK frame to acknowledge the successful reception of a frame by the recipient.

      Figure 2.2, called out above, further illustrates components of a wireless device configured to transmit data, including a Transmission (Tx) Signal Processing Unit (TxSP), an RF transceiver, an antenna unit, and four illustrative antennas. The TxSP, RF transmitter, and antenna unit may be components of the transmitting signal processing unit, RF transmitter, and antenna unit of the WLAN device. Each spatial stream needs its own dedicated transmit/receive chain; for example, 802.11ac 8 × 8 AP capable of supporting all eight spatial streams needs eight independent radio chains and antennas.

      The RF transceiver includes an RF transmitter and an RF receiver. The RF transceiver is configured to transmit information received from the baseband processor to the WLAN, and provide information received from the WLAN to the baseband processor. The antenna unit includes one or more antennas; when MIMO or MU‐MIMO is used, the antenna unit may include a plurality of antennas [2].

      The TxSP includes a stream encoder; a stream parser; first and second interleavers; first and second mappers; a diversity encoder; a spatial mapper; in this example, a first to fourth inverse Fourier Transformers (iFTs), and in this example, a first to fourth Guard Interval (GI) inserters.

Type Approach Method Timeframe Application Feature
Convolutional State Machine BCC Viterbi I960 WLAN (11a/g) Simple and widely used
Turbo 1993 3G, 4G Iterative decoder (close to Shannon limit)
Block Code Algebra Hamming 19S0 Computer memory Simple Detect up to 2 simultaneous bit error and can correct 1 bit
Reed‐Solomon 1960 CD/MP3, Satellite, DVB Widely used in digital storage and communication
LDPC 1962/1996 WLAN(11n~) 5G NR Low density and complexity
Polar 2009 5G NR

      The stream parser is configured to divide outputs of the encoder into one or more spatial streams. The stream parser may allocate consecutive blocks of bits to the one or more spatial streams in a round robin fashion. The blocks of bits typically have a length according to number of bits on an axis of a constellation point of a modulation and coding scheme, such as the length being 2 bits for 16‐QAM, 3 bits for 64‐QAM, 4 bits for 256‐QAM [2]. The respective bits of the first and second spatial streams are interleaved by first and second interleavers when BCC encoding is used.

      The first and second mappers map the sequence of bits of the first and second spatial stream to first and second sequences of constellation points, respectively. A constellation point may include a (mathematical) complex number representing an amplitude and a phase. Within each of the first and second sequences of constellation points, the constellation points are divided into groups. Each group of constellation points corresponds


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