Lecture Large Scale Fading
Lecture Large Scale Fading
𝑃'
𝑃(
Radio propagation
𝑃! 𝐺! 𝐺'
EIRP = 𝑃' = EIRP×
𝐿! 𝑃( ×𝐿'
Transmitter
Cable Loss
(20 dBm)
[#$]
𝐿! =7 dB EIRP = 20 +3 -7 = 16 dBm
𝜆)
𝐴' = 𝐺 𝑃! 𝑃'
4𝜋 '
𝑆 = 𝑆(𝜃, 𝜙)
𝑃! 𝐺! 𝐺' 𝜆) 𝑃! 𝐺! 𝐺' 𝑐 )
𝑃' = 𝐴' 𝑆 = 𝑃' = 𝐿! = 1
4𝜋𝑑 ) 4𝜋𝑑 ) 𝑓*)
𝐿' = 1
q where 𝜆 is related to the carrier frequency by
𝑐
𝜆=
𝑓*
q 𝑓𝑐 is the carrier frequency in Hertz and 𝑐 is the speed of the light in meters/sec
https://commons
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d=2107870
𝐄 𝒓, 𝑡 = 𝐱U 𝐸. cos(𝑘𝑧 − 𝑤𝑡 + 𝜃. )
𝐲1
/ !
𝐁 Representation of the electric
B 𝒓, 𝑡 = cos(𝑘𝑧 − 𝑤𝑡 + 𝜃. ) 𝐇= field vector of a wave of
* 𝜇. circularly polarized
µà permeability electromagnetic radiation
ε à permittivity
𝜎 → conductivity
Z0 = 376.730313412(59) Ω
Transmitter Receiver
Receiver
Scattering occurs when the medium through
which the wave travels.
• consists of objects with dimensions that are
Transmitter small compared to the wavelength, or
Scattering
• the number of obstacles per unit volume is
large.
𝑑- 𝐸-
An observer in space
𝐸)
𝑑)
𝑒 3)45%! 𝐸.- 6378 𝐸.) 6378
𝐸 = 𝐸- + 𝐸) = 𝑒 & + 𝑒 '
4𝜋 𝑑- 𝑑)
q If the relative antenna gains are unity and the path lengths are only slightly
different: Δ𝑑 = 𝑑) − 𝑑-
𝜆) 𝐺' 𝐺! 𝑃! Δ𝑑
𝑃' = 2 1 − cos(𝑘Δ𝑑) ≪1
4𝜋𝑑 ) 𝑑-
q The nearly equal received signals from the two paths can then combine to produce a
received power that varies from zero to four times the power on one of the paths.
x 𝐺𝑏
x' 𝐺𝑑
q The magnitude of the received E-field which is combined from both paths
)
𝜆 Δ𝜙
𝑃' = 𝑃! 𝐺 sin)
4𝜋𝑑 2
ℎ!) ℎ')
𝑃' ≈ 𝑃! 𝐺' 𝐺! A
𝑑
q Significance: the received power and path loss
become independent of frequency at large
distance
q Critical distance 𝑑𝑐 where the rapid fall-off
starts
q The diffracted signal travels distance 𝑑 + 𝑑’ resulting in phase shift of 𝜙 = 2p(𝑑 + 𝑑’)/l
q The phase shift relative to the LOS
Two buildings
𝑃2
𝑆B =
4𝜋𝑑 )
𝐴>' 𝜎𝑆2 𝜆) 𝐺' 𝐺! 𝜎
𝑃' = 𝐴>' 𝑆B = = 𝑃!
4𝜋𝑑 ) 4𝜋 C 𝑑 A 𝑑
Receiver
“Multipath”
q Ray tracing over reflected paths: Two of each type of wall-reflected path, one for
each side of the street
Free Space 2
Suburban Area 3 to 5
q where C is the correction factor for mobile antenna height in urban areas and 𝐶H is 0 dB
for medium-sized cities and suburbs and 3 dB for metropolitan areas.
q Please see the following link for more discussions on these
http://www.wiley.com/legacy/wileychi/molisch/supp2/appendices/c07_Appendices.pdf
d à distance
TX RX
q Goal: Characterize the variation in received signal power over distance due to path
loss and shadowing
q Based on given TX-RX distance (large distance)
𝑑
𝑃' 𝑑 = 𝑃Q' (𝑑) + 𝜓8E 𝑃Q' (𝑑) = 𝑃! + 𝐾8E − 10𝛾 log-.
𝑑.
q Measurements have shown that at any value of d, path loss is random
q Distributed log-normal (normal in dB)
q Should we average in linear scale or in dB scale?
q dB scale (is there mathematical justification?)
q The distribution for log-normal shadow fading can be expressed as:
1 (𝜓8E − 𝜇K89 )
𝑓J89 𝜓8E = exp −
2𝜋 𝜎K89 2𝜎K)89
q 𝜓56 is a Gaussian distributed random variable (in dB) 𝜇7 %& = 0 with standard deviation 𝜎7 %& (also in
dB)
𝑑C
q Models attenuation from obstructions
q The attenuation through an object of depth d is
q Random due to random # of obstructions
𝑆L 𝑑 = 𝑒 6M8
q Typically follows a log-normal distribution
q dB value of power is normally distributed
q µ=0 (mean captured in path loss), 4 < 𝜎 < 12 (empirical)
q Lognormal is used to explain this model
q Decorrelated over decorrelation distance 𝑋:
-70
Loss in dBm
-90
%
1 /
𝐸 𝛾 = ? 𝑀&'()*+', 𝑑" − 𝑀&-,'. 𝑑"
(dBm)
5 -100
Received powerPath
"#$
𝜕𝐸 𝛾
-120
=0 γ = 3.71
𝜕𝛾 -130
10
1
10
2 3
10
Distance in log10 d
𝑑' = 1𝑚, 𝐾() = −31.54dB, and Pt = 0 dBm
B
Pr = Pt + K − 10𝛾 log10
B0
Pr = 0 − 31.54 − 10 × 3.71 log10(150) = −112.27 dBm.
q Clearly the measurements deviate from the simplified path loss model: this
variation can be attributed to shadow fading
q Estimated error variance
j8E , 𝛾k = 𝜎kK)
𝐸 𝐾 89
𝜕𝐸(𝐾,1 , 𝛾) 𝜕𝐸(𝐾,1 , 𝛾)
=0 =0
𝜕𝐾,1 𝜕𝛾
q Solving two equations simultaneously gives 𝐾56 = −31.54 dB and γ = 3.71
q Given Pt = 0 dBm, we can find the received power at 150m under the simplified path loss model:
𝑅 ≤ 𝑑. ×10..-(V</D)
q Define the outage probability 𝑃𝑜𝑢𝑡(𝑃𝑚𝑖𝑛, 𝑑) under path loss and shadowing to be the
probability that the received power at a distance d, 𝑃𝑟(𝑑) falls below 𝑃𝑚𝑖𝑛
q We can determine the outage probability that the received signal power at location 𝑑 (>
𝑑0) is below the threshold 𝑃𝑚𝑖𝑛,
𝛾*
𝛾+
𝛾,
q The dual slope model is characterized by a constant path loss factor K and a path loss
exponent 𝛾- above reference distance d0 up to some critical distance d1, after which point
power falls off with path loss exponent 𝛾) :
q Partition losses between floors are called floor attenuation factor (FAF)
g=6 g=5
g=4
g=3
g=2
g=1
𝑃',8EG
q The knife-edge diffraction model yields the following formula for the received
diffracted signal:
Principle of shadowing