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- Published: 23 Jun 2011
- Uploaded: 05 Aug 2011
- Author: AgilentEEsof
UWB communications transmit in a way that doesn't interfere largely with other more traditional narrowband and continuous carrier wave uses in the same frequency band. However first studies show that the rise of noise level by a number of UWB transmitters puts a burden on existing communications services. This may be hard to bear for traditional systems designs and may affect the stability of such existing systems.
Ultra Wideband was traditionally accepted as pulse radio, but the FCC and ITU-R now define UWB in terms of a transmission from an antenna for which the emitted signal bandwidth exceeds the lesser of 500 MHz or 20% of the center frequency. Thus, pulse-based systems—wherein each transmitted pulse instantaneously occupies the UWB bandwidth, or an aggregation of at least 500 MHz worth of narrow band carriers, for example in orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) fashion—can gain access to the UWB spectrum under the rules. Pulse repetition rates may be either low or very high. Pulse-based UWB radars and imaging systems tend to use low repetition rates, typically in the range of 1 to 100 megapulses per second. On the other hand, communications systems favor high repetition rates, typically in the range of 1 to 2 giga-pulses per second, thus enabling short-range gigabit-per-second communications systems. Each pulse in a pulse-based UWB system occupies the entire UWB bandwidth, thus reaping the benefits of relative immunity to multipath fading (but not to intersymbol interference), unlike carrier-based systems that are subject to both deep fades and intersymbol interference.
One of the valuable aspects of UWB radio technology is the ability for a UWB radio system to determine "time of flight" of the direct path of the radio transmission between the transmitter and receiver at various frequencies. This helps to overcome multi path propagation, as at least some of the frequencies pass on radio line of sight. With a cooperative symmetric two-way metering technique distances can be measured to high resolution as well as to high accuracy by compensating for local clock drifts and stochastic inaccuracies.
Another valuable aspect of pulse-based UWB is that the pulses are very short in space (less than 60 cm for a 500 MHz wide pulse, less than 23 cm for a 1.3 GHz bandwidth pulse), so most signal reflections do not overlap the original pulse, and thus the traditional multipath fading of narrow band signals does not exist. However, there still is multipath propagation and inter-pulse interference for fast pulse systems which have to be mitigated by coding techniques.
Deliberations in the International Telecommunication Union Radiocommunication Sector (ITU-R) resulted in a Report and Recommendation on UWB in November 2005. National jurisdictions around the globe are expected to act on national regulations for UWB very soon. The UK regulator Ofcom announced a similar decision on 9 August 2007.
More than four dozen devices have been certified under the FCC UWB rules, the vast majority of which are radar, imaging or locating systems.
There has been much concern over the interference of narrow band signals and UWB signals that share the same spectrum; traditionally the only radio technology that operated using pulses was spark-gap transmitters, which were banned due to excessive interference. However, UWB is much lower power. The subject was extensively covered in the proceedings that led to the adoption of the FCC rules in the US, and also in the meetings relating to UWB of the ITU-R that led to the ITU-R Report and Recommendations on UWB technology. In particular, many common pieces of equipment emit impulsive noise (notably hair dryers) and the argument was successfully made that the noise floor would not be raised excessively by wider deployment of wideband transmitters of low power.
Ideally, the receiver signal detector should match with the transmitted signal in bandwidth, signal shape and time. Any mismatch results in loss of margin for the UWB radio link.
Channelization (sharing the channel with other links) is a complex problem subject to many practical variables. Typically two UWB links can share the same spectrum by using orthogonal time-hopping codes for pulse-position (time-modulated) systems, or orthogonal pulses and orthogonal codes for fast-pulse based systems.
Current forward error correction technology, as demonstrated recently in some very high data rate UWB pulsed systems (like Low density parity check code) can — perhaps in combination with Reed–Solomon error correction — provide channel performance very closely approaching the Shannon limit (See Shannon–Hartley theorem). When stealth is required, some UWB formats (mainly pulse-based) can fairly easily be made to look like nothing more than a slight rise in background noise to any receiver that is unaware of the signal’s complex pattern.
Multipath (distortion of a signal because it takes many different paths to the receiver with various phase shift and various polarisation shift) is an enemy of narrow-band radio. It equally affects UWB transmissions, but according to the Shannon-Hartley theorem and with reference to the variety of geometries applying to various frequencies, the capability for compensating is significantly enhanced. It causes fading where wave interference is destructive. Some UWB systems use "rake" receiver techniques to recover multi path generated copies of the original pulse to improve performance of the receiver. Other UWB systems use channel equalization techniques to achieve the same purpose. Narrow band receivers can use similar techniques, but are limited due to the poorer resolution capabilities of narrow band systems.
UWB is used as a part of location systems and real time location systems. The precision capabilities combined with the very low power makes it ideal for certain radio frequency sensitive environments such as hospitals and healthcare. Another benefit of UWB is the short broadcast time which enables implementers of the technology to install orders of magnitude more transmitter tags in an environment relative to competitive technologies. U.S.-based Parco Merged Media Corporation was the first systems developer to deploy a commercial version of this system in a Washington, DC hospital.
UWB is also used in "see-through-the-wall" precision radar imaging technology, precision locating and tracking (using distance measurements between radios), and precision time-of-arrival-based localization approaches. It exhibits excellent efficiency with a spatial capacity of approximately 1013 bit/s/m².
UWB has been a proposed technology for use in personal area networks and appeared in the IEEE 802.15.3a draft PAN standard. However, after several years of deadlock, the IEEE 802.15.3a task group was dissolved in 2006. The work was completed by the WiMedia Alliance and the USB Implementer Forum. Slow progress in UWB standards development, high cost of initial implementations and performance significantly lower than initially expected are some of the reasons for the limited success of UWB in consumer products, which caused several UWB vendors to cease operations during 2008 and 2009.
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