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SPREAD SPECTRUM MODULATION UNIT-3 PART-2 February 2005 Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved
Define spread spectrum technologies and how they are used Describe modulation and the different data rates Explain and compare FHSS, DSSS List the factors that impact signal throughput and range OBJECTIVES Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Upon completion of this chapter you will be able to:
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread Spectrum Spread spectrum  is a communication technique that spreads a narrowband communication signal over a wide range of frequencies for transmission then de-spreads it into the original data bandwidth at the receive.  Spread spectrum  is characterized by: wide bandwidth and  low power Jamming  and  interference  have less effect on Spread spectrum because it is: Resembles noise Hard to detect Hard to intercept
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread Spectrum Use  In the 1980s FCC implemented a set of rules making Spread Spectrum available to the public. Cordless Telephones  Global Positioning Systems (GPS)  Cell Phones Personal Communication Systems Wireless video cameras Local Area Networks Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN) Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN)  Wireless Metropolitan Area Network (WMAN) Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN)
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FCC Specifications  The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 15 originally only described two spread spectrum techniques to be used in the licensed free  Industrial, Scientific, Medical (ISM)   band, 2.4 GHz,  thus  802.11  and  802.11b . Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS)  and  Direct Sequence spread Spectrum (DSSS)
Wireless LAN Networks Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Wireless LANs RF spread spectrum management techniques Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS).  Operates in the 2.4 Ghz range  Rapid frequency switching – 2.5 hops per second w/ a dwell  time of 400ms. A predetermined pseudorandom pattern Fast Setting frequency synthesizers. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)   Operates in the 2.4 GHz range Digital Data signal is inserted into a higher data rate  chipping code . A  Chipping code  is a bit sequence consisting of a redundant bit  pattern. Barker, Gold, M-sequence and Kasami codes are employed
FCC Radio Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 VLF 10 kHz - 30 kHz Cable Locating Equipment LF 30 kHz - 300 kHz Maritime Mobile Service. MF 300 kHz - 3 MHz Aircraft navigation, ham radio and  Avalanche transceivers. HF 3 MHz - 30 MHz CB radios, CAP, Radio telephone, and  Radio Astronomy. VHF 30 MHz - 328.6 MHZ Cordless phones, Televisions, RC Cars,  Aircraft, police and business radios. UHF 328.6 MHz - 2.9 GHz police radios, fire radios, business radios,  cellular phones, GPS, paging,  wireless  networks and cordless phones. SHF 2.9 GHz - 30 GHz Doppler weather radar, satellite  communications. EHF 30 GHz and above Radio astronomy, military systems,  vehicle radar systems, ham radio. Band Name   Range   Usage
ISM  Frequency Bands  Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 UHF ISM 902 - 928 Mhz S-Band 2 - 4 Ghz S-Band ISM (802.11b) 2.4 - 2.5 Ghz C-Band 4 - 8 Ghz C-Band Satellite downlink 3.7 - 4.2Ghz C-Band Radar (weather) 5.25 - 5.925 Ghz C-Band ISM (802.11a) 5.725 - 5.875 Ghz C-Band satellite uplink 5.925-6.425 Ghz X-Band 8-12 Ghz X-Band Radar (police/weather) 9.5-10.55 Ghz Ku-band 12-18 Ghz Ku-band Radar (Police) 13.5-15 Ghz 15.7-17.7 Ghz ISM - Industrial, Scientific and Medical
DSSS Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread spectrum  increases the bandwidth of the signal compared to narrow band by spreading the signal.  There are two major types of spread spectrum techniques: FHSS and DSSS. FHSS  spreads the signal  by hopping from one frequency to another across a bandwidth of 83 Mhz. DSSS  spreads the signal by adding  redundant bits  to the signal prior to transmission which spreads the signal across 22 Mhz. The process of adding redundant information to the signal is called  Processing Gain  . The redundant information bits are called  Pseudorandom Numbers (PN).
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS works by combining information  bits  (data signal)  with higher data rate bit sequence ( pseudorandom number (PN) ).  The PN is also called a  Chipping Code  (eg., the Barker chipping code) The bits resulting from combining the information bits with the chipping code are called  chips  - the result- which is then transmitted. The higher  processing gain  (more chips) increases the signal's resistance to interference by spreading it across a greater number of frequencies. IEEE has set their  minimum processing gain to 11.  The number of chips in the chipping code equates to the signal  spreading ratio . Doubling the chipping speed doubles the signal spread and the required bandwidth.
Signal Spreading Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 The  Spreader  employs an  encoding  scheme ( Barker  or  Complementary Code Keying (CCK). The spread signal is then  modulated  by a carrier employing either  Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying (DBPSK),  or  Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK). The  Correlator  reverses this process in order to recover the original data.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Fourteen channels are identified, however, the FCC specifies only  11 channels  for non-licensed (ISM band) use in the US. Each channels is a contiguous band of frequencies 22 Mhz wide with each channel separated by 5 MHz.  Channel 1 = 2.401 – 2.423 (2.412 plus/minus 11 Mhz). Channel 2 = 2.406 – 2.429 (2.417 plus/minus 11 Mhz).  Only Channels 1, 6 and 11 do not overlap DSSS Channels
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spectrum Mask A spectrum Mask represents the maximum power output for the channel at various frequencies. From the center channel frequency,  11 MHz and  22 MHZ the signal must be attenuated 30 dB. From the center channel frequency, outside  22 MHZ, the signal is attenuated 50 dB.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Frequency Assignments Channel 1 2.412 GHz Channel 6 2.437 GHz Channel 11 2.462 GHz 25 MHz 25 MHz The Center DSSS frequencies of each channel are only  5 Mhz apart  but each channel is  22 Mhz wide  therefore adjacent channels will overlap.  DSSS systems with overlapping channels in the same physical space would cause interference between systems. Co-located DSSS systems should have frequencies which are at least  5 channels apart , e.g., Channels 1 and 6, Channels 2 and 7, etc. Channels 1, 6 and 11 are the only theoretically non-overlapping channels.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Non-overlapping Channels Each channel is  22 MHz wide .  In order for two bands not to overlap (interfere), there must be  five  channels between them. A maximum of three channels may be co-located (as shown) without overlap (interference). The transmitter spreads the signal sequence across the 22 Mhz wide channel so only a few chips will be impacted by interference.
DSSS Encoding and Modulation Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS (802.11b) employs two types of encoding schemes and two types of modulation schemes depending upon the speed of transmission.  Encoding Schemes Barker Chipping Code : Spreads 1 data bit across 11 redundant bits at both 1 Mbps and 2 Mbps Complementary Code Keying (CCK):   Maps 4 data bits into a  unique redundant  8 bits for 5.5 Mbps Maps 8 data bits into a  unique redundant  8 bits for 11 Mbps. Modulation Schemes Differential Binary Phase Shift  Keying (DBPSK):   Two phase shifts  with each phase shift representing  one transmitted bit.  Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK):   Four phase shifts  with each phase shift representing two bits.
DSSS Encoding  Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
Barker Chipping Code Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 802.11  adopted an 11 bit Barker chipping code.   Transmission . The  Barker  sequence, 10110111000, was chosen to spread each 1 and 0 signal. The Barker sequence has  six 1s  and  five 0s . Each data bit, 1 and 0, is modulo-2 (XOR) added to the eleven bit Barker sequence. If a one is encoded  all the bits change . If a zero is encoded  all bits stay the same. Reception . A  zero bit   corresponds to an  eleven bit  sequence of  six 1s . A  one bit   corresponds to an  eleven bit  sequence of  six 0s .
Barker Sequence Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 One Bit 1 0 1  0  1  1  0  1  1  1  0  0  0  1  0  1  1  0  1  1  1  0  0  0  Chipping Code (Barker Sequence) Original Data Spread Data 0  1  0  0  1  0  0  0  1  1  1  1  0  1  1  0  1  1  1  0  0  0  Six 0s = 1 Six 1s = 0 One Bit 10110111000
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Contd
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK)  Barker encoding along with DBPSK and DQPSK modulation schemes allow 802.11b to transmit data at 1 and 2  Mbps Complementary Code Keying (CCK)  allows 802.11b to transmit data at 5.5 and 11 Mbps. CCK employs an 8 bit chipping code. The 8 chipping bit pattern is generated based upon the data to be transmitted.  At 5.5 Mbps, 4 bits of incoming data is mapped into a unique 8 bit chipping pattern. At 11 Mbps, 8 bits of data is mapped into a unique 8 bit chipping pattern.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd  To transmit 5.5 Mbps 4 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits.. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 4 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3 b2 and b3  determine the unique pattern of the 8 bit CCK chipping code. Note : j represents the imaginary number, sqrt(-1), and appears on the imaginary or quadrature axis of the complex plane.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd  To transmit 5.5 Mbps 4 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits.. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 4 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3 b0 and b1  determine the DQPSK phase rotation that is to be applied to the chip sequence.  Each phase change is relative to the last chip transmitted.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd  To transmit 11 Mbps 8 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 8 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3, b4, b5, b6 ,b7 b2, b3, b4 ,b5, b6 and b7  selects one unique pattern of the 8 bit CCK chipping code out of 64 possible sequences. b0 and b1  are used to select the phase rotation sequence.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Modulation
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying (DBPSK)   0  Phase Shift A Zero phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 0. A 180 degree  phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 1. 180 degree Phase Shift 180 degree Phase Shift Previous carrier symbol
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK)  A Zero phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 00. Previous carrier symbol 0 Phase Shift A 90 degree  phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 01. A 180 degree  phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 11. A 270 degree  phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 10. 90 Phase Shift 180 Phase Shift 270 Phase Shift
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Summary 1 Barker Coding   11 chips encoding 1 bit DBPSK 2 Barker Coding  11 chips encoding 1 bit  DQPSK 5.5 CCK Coding   8 chips encode 8 bits DQPSK 11 CCK Coding   8 chips encode 4 bits DQPSK Data Rate   Encoding    Modulation
FHSS  Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum Carrier changes frequency (HOPS) according to a pseudorandom Sequence. Pseudorandom sequence is a list of frequencies. The carrier hops through this lists of frequencies. The carrier then repeats this pattern. During  Dwell Time  the carrier remains at a certain frequency. During  Hop Time  the carrier hops to the next frequency. The data is spread over 83 MHz in the 2.4 GHz ISM band. This signal is resistant but not immune to narrow band interference.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum An Example of a Co-located Frequency Hopping System
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd The original 802.11 FHSS standard supports 1 and 2 Mbps data rate.  FHSS uses the 2.402 – 2.480 GHz frequency range in the ISM band. It splits the band into  79  non-overlapping channels with each channel  1 MHz  wide. FHSS hops between channels at a minimum rate of 2.5 times per second. Each hop must cover at least 6 MHz  The hopping channels for the US and Europe  are shown below.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd Dwell Time The Dwell time per frequency is around 100 ms ( The FCC specifies a dwell time of 400 ms per carrier frequency in any 30 second time period) .  Longer dwell time = greater throughput. Shorter dwell time = less throughput Hop Time Is measured in microseconds (us) and is generally around 200-300 us.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying The FHSS Physical sublayer modulates the data stream using  Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying (GFSK). Each symbol, a zero and a one, is represented by a different frequency (2 level GFSK) two symbols can be represented by four frequencies (4 level GFSK). A Gaussian filter smoothes the abrupt jumps between frequencies. f c  + f d2 f c  + f d1 f c  - f d1 f c  – f d2 10 11 01 00 f c
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Disadvantages Not as fast as a wired Lan or the newer WLAN Standards Lower throughput due to interference.  FHSS is subject to interference from other frequencies in the ISM band because it hops across the entire frequency spectrum. Adjacent FHSS access points can synchronize their hopping sequence to increase the number of co-located systems, however, it is prohibitively expensive.
FHSS vs DSSS Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS is  more susceptible  to narrow band noise. DSSS channel is  22 Mhz  wide whereas FHSS is  79 Mhz  wide. The FCC regulated that DSSS use a maximum of  1 watt  of transmitter power in  Pt-to-Multipoint system .  DSSS costs less then FHSS FHSS can have more systems co-located than DSSS. DSSS systems have the advantage in throughput The Wi-Fi alliance tests for DSSS compatibility No such testing alliance exists for FHSS.
FHSS vs DSSS contd Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS generally has a throughput  of 5-6 Mbps while FHSS is generally between 1-2 Mbps. Both FHSS and DHSS are equally insecure. DSSS has gained much wider acceptance due to its low cost, high speed and interoperability.  This market acceptance is expected to accelerate. FHSS advancement includes  HomeRF  and  802.15 (WPAN) (Bluetooth),  however, it is expected to not advance into the enterprise.
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Co-location Comparison Date Rate in Mbps
Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 End of Lecture

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Spread spectrum modulation

  • 1. SPREAD SPECTRUM MODULATION UNIT-3 PART-2 February 2005 Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved
  • 2. Define spread spectrum technologies and how they are used Describe modulation and the different data rates Explain and compare FHSS, DSSS List the factors that impact signal throughput and range OBJECTIVES Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Upon completion of this chapter you will be able to:
  • 3. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread Spectrum Spread spectrum is a communication technique that spreads a narrowband communication signal over a wide range of frequencies for transmission then de-spreads it into the original data bandwidth at the receive. Spread spectrum is characterized by: wide bandwidth and low power Jamming and interference have less effect on Spread spectrum because it is: Resembles noise Hard to detect Hard to intercept
  • 4. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread Spectrum Use In the 1980s FCC implemented a set of rules making Spread Spectrum available to the public. Cordless Telephones Global Positioning Systems (GPS) Cell Phones Personal Communication Systems Wireless video cameras Local Area Networks Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN) Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) Wireless Metropolitan Area Network (WMAN) Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN)
  • 5. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FCC Specifications The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 15 originally only described two spread spectrum techniques to be used in the licensed free Industrial, Scientific, Medical (ISM) band, 2.4 GHz, thus 802.11 and 802.11b . Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) and Direct Sequence spread Spectrum (DSSS)
  • 6. Wireless LAN Networks Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Wireless LANs RF spread spectrum management techniques Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS). Operates in the 2.4 Ghz range Rapid frequency switching – 2.5 hops per second w/ a dwell time of 400ms. A predetermined pseudorandom pattern Fast Setting frequency synthesizers. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) Operates in the 2.4 GHz range Digital Data signal is inserted into a higher data rate chipping code . A Chipping code is a bit sequence consisting of a redundant bit pattern. Barker, Gold, M-sequence and Kasami codes are employed
  • 7. FCC Radio Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 VLF 10 kHz - 30 kHz Cable Locating Equipment LF 30 kHz - 300 kHz Maritime Mobile Service. MF 300 kHz - 3 MHz Aircraft navigation, ham radio and Avalanche transceivers. HF 3 MHz - 30 MHz CB radios, CAP, Radio telephone, and Radio Astronomy. VHF 30 MHz - 328.6 MHZ Cordless phones, Televisions, RC Cars, Aircraft, police and business radios. UHF 328.6 MHz - 2.9 GHz police radios, fire radios, business radios, cellular phones, GPS, paging, wireless networks and cordless phones. SHF 2.9 GHz - 30 GHz Doppler weather radar, satellite communications. EHF 30 GHz and above Radio astronomy, military systems, vehicle radar systems, ham radio. Band Name Range Usage
  • 8. ISM Frequency Bands Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 UHF ISM 902 - 928 Mhz S-Band 2 - 4 Ghz S-Band ISM (802.11b) 2.4 - 2.5 Ghz C-Band 4 - 8 Ghz C-Band Satellite downlink 3.7 - 4.2Ghz C-Band Radar (weather) 5.25 - 5.925 Ghz C-Band ISM (802.11a) 5.725 - 5.875 Ghz C-Band satellite uplink 5.925-6.425 Ghz X-Band 8-12 Ghz X-Band Radar (police/weather) 9.5-10.55 Ghz Ku-band 12-18 Ghz Ku-band Radar (Police) 13.5-15 Ghz 15.7-17.7 Ghz ISM - Industrial, Scientific and Medical
  • 9. DSSS Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
  • 10. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spread spectrum increases the bandwidth of the signal compared to narrow band by spreading the signal. There are two major types of spread spectrum techniques: FHSS and DSSS. FHSS spreads the signal by hopping from one frequency to another across a bandwidth of 83 Mhz. DSSS spreads the signal by adding redundant bits to the signal prior to transmission which spreads the signal across 22 Mhz. The process of adding redundant information to the signal is called Processing Gain . The redundant information bits are called Pseudorandom Numbers (PN).
  • 11. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS works by combining information bits (data signal) with higher data rate bit sequence ( pseudorandom number (PN) ). The PN is also called a Chipping Code (eg., the Barker chipping code) The bits resulting from combining the information bits with the chipping code are called chips - the result- which is then transmitted. The higher processing gain (more chips) increases the signal's resistance to interference by spreading it across a greater number of frequencies. IEEE has set their minimum processing gain to 11. The number of chips in the chipping code equates to the signal spreading ratio . Doubling the chipping speed doubles the signal spread and the required bandwidth.
  • 12. Signal Spreading Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 The Spreader employs an encoding scheme ( Barker or Complementary Code Keying (CCK). The spread signal is then modulated by a carrier employing either Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying (DBPSK), or Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK). The Correlator reverses this process in order to recover the original data.
  • 13. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Fourteen channels are identified, however, the FCC specifies only 11 channels for non-licensed (ISM band) use in the US. Each channels is a contiguous band of frequencies 22 Mhz wide with each channel separated by 5 MHz. Channel 1 = 2.401 – 2.423 (2.412 plus/minus 11 Mhz). Channel 2 = 2.406 – 2.429 (2.417 plus/minus 11 Mhz). Only Channels 1, 6 and 11 do not overlap DSSS Channels
  • 14. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Spectrum Mask A spectrum Mask represents the maximum power output for the channel at various frequencies. From the center channel frequency, 11 MHz and 22 MHZ the signal must be attenuated 30 dB. From the center channel frequency, outside 22 MHZ, the signal is attenuated 50 dB.
  • 15. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Frequency Assignments Channel 1 2.412 GHz Channel 6 2.437 GHz Channel 11 2.462 GHz 25 MHz 25 MHz The Center DSSS frequencies of each channel are only 5 Mhz apart but each channel is 22 Mhz wide therefore adjacent channels will overlap. DSSS systems with overlapping channels in the same physical space would cause interference between systems. Co-located DSSS systems should have frequencies which are at least 5 channels apart , e.g., Channels 1 and 6, Channels 2 and 7, etc. Channels 1, 6 and 11 are the only theoretically non-overlapping channels.
  • 16. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Non-overlapping Channels Each channel is 22 MHz wide . In order for two bands not to overlap (interfere), there must be five channels between them. A maximum of three channels may be co-located (as shown) without overlap (interference). The transmitter spreads the signal sequence across the 22 Mhz wide channel so only a few chips will be impacted by interference.
  • 17. DSSS Encoding and Modulation Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS (802.11b) employs two types of encoding schemes and two types of modulation schemes depending upon the speed of transmission. Encoding Schemes Barker Chipping Code : Spreads 1 data bit across 11 redundant bits at both 1 Mbps and 2 Mbps Complementary Code Keying (CCK): Maps 4 data bits into a unique redundant 8 bits for 5.5 Mbps Maps 8 data bits into a unique redundant 8 bits for 11 Mbps. Modulation Schemes Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying (DBPSK): Two phase shifts with each phase shift representing one transmitted bit. Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK): Four phase shifts with each phase shift representing two bits.
  • 18. DSSS Encoding Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
  • 19. Barker Chipping Code Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 802.11 adopted an 11 bit Barker chipping code. Transmission . The Barker sequence, 10110111000, was chosen to spread each 1 and 0 signal. The Barker sequence has six 1s and five 0s . Each data bit, 1 and 0, is modulo-2 (XOR) added to the eleven bit Barker sequence. If a one is encoded all the bits change . If a zero is encoded all bits stay the same. Reception . A zero bit corresponds to an eleven bit sequence of six 1s . A one bit corresponds to an eleven bit sequence of six 0s .
  • 20. Barker Sequence Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 One Bit 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 Chipping Code (Barker Sequence) Original Data Spread Data 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 Six 0s = 1 Six 1s = 0 One Bit 10110111000
  • 21. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Contd
  • 22. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Barker encoding along with DBPSK and DQPSK modulation schemes allow 802.11b to transmit data at 1 and 2 Mbps Complementary Code Keying (CCK) allows 802.11b to transmit data at 5.5 and 11 Mbps. CCK employs an 8 bit chipping code. The 8 chipping bit pattern is generated based upon the data to be transmitted. At 5.5 Mbps, 4 bits of incoming data is mapped into a unique 8 bit chipping pattern. At 11 Mbps, 8 bits of data is mapped into a unique 8 bit chipping pattern.
  • 23. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd To transmit 5.5 Mbps 4 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits.. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 4 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3 b2 and b3 determine the unique pattern of the 8 bit CCK chipping code. Note : j represents the imaginary number, sqrt(-1), and appears on the imaginary or quadrature axis of the complex plane.
  • 24. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd To transmit 5.5 Mbps 4 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits.. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 4 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3 b0 and b1 determine the DQPSK phase rotation that is to be applied to the chip sequence. Each phase change is relative to the last chip transmitted.
  • 25. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Complementary Code Keying (CCK) Contd To transmit 11 Mbps 8 data bits is mapped into 8 CCK chipping bits. The unique 8 chipping bits is determined by the bit pattern of the 8 data bits to be transmitted. The data bit pattern is: b0, b1, b2, b3, b4, b5, b6 ,b7 b2, b3, b4 ,b5, b6 and b7 selects one unique pattern of the 8 bit CCK chipping code out of 64 possible sequences. b0 and b1 are used to select the phase rotation sequence.
  • 26. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Modulation
  • 27. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying (DBPSK) 0 Phase Shift A Zero phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 0. A 180 degree phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 1. 180 degree Phase Shift 180 degree Phase Shift Previous carrier symbol
  • 28. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DQPSK) A Zero phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 00. Previous carrier symbol 0 Phase Shift A 90 degree phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 01. A 180 degree phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 11. A 270 degree phase shift from the previous symbol is interpreted as a 10. 90 Phase Shift 180 Phase Shift 270 Phase Shift
  • 29. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS Summary 1 Barker Coding 11 chips encoding 1 bit DBPSK 2 Barker Coding 11 chips encoding 1 bit DQPSK 5.5 CCK Coding 8 chips encode 8 bits DQPSK 11 CCK Coding 8 chips encode 4 bits DQPSK Data Rate Encoding Modulation
  • 30. FHSS Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005
  • 31. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum Carrier changes frequency (HOPS) according to a pseudorandom Sequence. Pseudorandom sequence is a list of frequencies. The carrier hops through this lists of frequencies. The carrier then repeats this pattern. During Dwell Time the carrier remains at a certain frequency. During Hop Time the carrier hops to the next frequency. The data is spread over 83 MHz in the 2.4 GHz ISM band. This signal is resistant but not immune to narrow band interference.
  • 32. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum An Example of a Co-located Frequency Hopping System
  • 33. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd The original 802.11 FHSS standard supports 1 and 2 Mbps data rate. FHSS uses the 2.402 – 2.480 GHz frequency range in the ISM band. It splits the band into 79 non-overlapping channels with each channel 1 MHz wide. FHSS hops between channels at a minimum rate of 2.5 times per second. Each hop must cover at least 6 MHz The hopping channels for the US and Europe are shown below.
  • 34. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd Dwell Time The Dwell time per frequency is around 100 ms ( The FCC specifies a dwell time of 400 ms per carrier frequency in any 30 second time period) . Longer dwell time = greater throughput. Shorter dwell time = less throughput Hop Time Is measured in microseconds (us) and is generally around 200-300 us.
  • 35. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Contd Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying The FHSS Physical sublayer modulates the data stream using Gaussian Frequency Shift Keying (GFSK). Each symbol, a zero and a one, is represented by a different frequency (2 level GFSK) two symbols can be represented by four frequencies (4 level GFSK). A Gaussian filter smoothes the abrupt jumps between frequencies. f c + f d2 f c + f d1 f c - f d1 f c – f d2 10 11 01 00 f c
  • 36. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 FHSS Disadvantages Not as fast as a wired Lan or the newer WLAN Standards Lower throughput due to interference. FHSS is subject to interference from other frequencies in the ISM band because it hops across the entire frequency spectrum. Adjacent FHSS access points can synchronize their hopping sequence to increase the number of co-located systems, however, it is prohibitively expensive.
  • 37. FHSS vs DSSS Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS is more susceptible to narrow band noise. DSSS channel is 22 Mhz wide whereas FHSS is 79 Mhz wide. The FCC regulated that DSSS use a maximum of 1 watt of transmitter power in Pt-to-Multipoint system . DSSS costs less then FHSS FHSS can have more systems co-located than DSSS. DSSS systems have the advantage in throughput The Wi-Fi alliance tests for DSSS compatibility No such testing alliance exists for FHSS.
  • 38. FHSS vs DSSS contd Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 DSSS generally has a throughput of 5-6 Mbps while FHSS is generally between 1-2 Mbps. Both FHSS and DHSS are equally insecure. DSSS has gained much wider acceptance due to its low cost, high speed and interoperability. This market acceptance is expected to accelerate. FHSS advancement includes HomeRF and 802.15 (WPAN) (Bluetooth), however, it is expected to not advance into the enterprise.
  • 39. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 Co-location Comparison Date Rate in Mbps
  • 40. Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved February 2005 End of Lecture