ITU-R REPORT M 2040-2004 Adaptive antennas concepts and key technical aspects《自适应天线概念及关键技术方面》.pdf
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1、 Rep. ITU-R M.2040 1 REPORT ITU-R M.2040 Adaptive antennas concepts and key technical aspects (Question ITU-R 224/8) (2004) 1 Introduction This Report identifies the key adaptive antenna concepts and describes their technical aspects. The traditional approach to the analysis and design of wireless s
2、ystems has generally been to address antenna systems separately from other key systems aspects, such as: propagation issues; interference mitigation techniques; system organization (access techniques, power control, etc.); modulation. Adaptive antenna technologies are best implemented with an overal
3、l system approach, where all the system components, including the antenna system, are integrated in an optimal way, leading to substantial coverage improvements (e.g. larger coverage area, reduced “holes” in coverage) for each cell, vastly superior mitigation of interference problems, and substantia
4、l system capacity improvements. This Report reviews the various concepts of adaptive antennas, including the concept of “spatial channels”, provides a theoretical analysis of the potential of the technology and identifies the key characteristics. Attached as Annex 1 is a glossary of relevant termino
5、logy for adaptive antenna systems. 1.1 Related Recommendations The following ITU-R Recommendations may be useful in that they address mobile systems to which the concepts considered here may be considered appropriate to a greater or lesser degree: Recommendation ITU-R M.622: Technical and operationa
6、l characteristics of analogue cellular systems for public land mobile telephone use Recommendation ITU-R M.1032: Technical and operational characteristics of land mobile systems using multi-channel access techniques without central controller Recommendation ITU-R M.1033: Technical and operational ch
7、aracteristics of cordless tele-phones and cordless telecommunication systems Recommendation ITU-R M.1073 Digital cellular land mobile telecommunication systems Recommendation ITU-R M.1074: Integration of public mobile radiocommunication systems Recommendation ITU-R M.1221: Technical and operational
8、requirements for cellular multimode mobile radio stations 2 Rep. ITU-R M.2040 Recommendation ITU-R M.1457: Detailed specifications of the radio interfaces of International Mobile Telecommunications-2000 (IMT-2000) Recommendation ITU-R M.1678: Adaptive antennas for mobile systems Recommendation ITU-R
9、 SM.856: New spectrally efficient techniques and systems. 2 Antennas and adaptive antenna concepts 2.1 Antennas and coverage Adaptive antennas may be defined as an array of antennas and associated signal processing that together are able to change its radiation pattern dynamically to adjust to noise
10、, interference and multipath. Adaptive antennas are used to enhance received signal-to-interference noise ratios (SINR) and may also be considered as forming beams for transmission. Likewise, switched beam systems use a number of fixed beams at an antenna site. The receiver selects the beam that pro
11、vides the greatest signal enhancement and interference reduction. Switched beam systems may not offer the degree of performance improvement offered by adaptive systems, but they are much less complex and are easier to retro-fit to existing wireless technologies. Finally smart antennas are similarly
12、defined as systems that can include both adaptive antenna and switched beam technologies. A glossary of relevant adaptive antenna terms is provided in Annex 1; this section provides further discussion on the terminology and its general usage. The reader is cautioned that there is some variation in t
13、erminologies here; for example, non-adaptive or non-switched systems are sometimes termed smart simply due to the incorporation of masthead RF electronics, and often the terms adaptive and beam-forming are used rather loosely or narrowly. (For example, Recommendation ITU-R SM.856, seemingly the only
14、 other ITU-R Recommendation that mentions any aspect of adaptive antennas, uses the term adaptive rather than fully adaptive correctly, but briefly describes an example of a very narrow and specific interpretation of this as used in an earlier system at VHF.) Further, care is needed when the term ad
15、aptive is applied in discussing land mobile systems, but used alone without a further descriptor e.g. as applied to dynamic control of modulation or of bandwidth resources or of coding, power or other attributes of an air interface protocol. Adequate for simple RF environments where no specific know
16、ledge of the users location is available, the omnidirectional approach scatters signals, reaching target users with only a tiny fraction of the overall energy radiated into the environment (or, conversely, for emissions from the users towards the base station (BS). Given this limitation, omnidirecti
17、onal strategies attempt to overcome propagation challenges by simply boosting the power level of the signals. In settings where numerous users (hence, interferers) are relatively close to each other, this makes a bad situation worse in that the vast majority of the RF signal energy becomes a source
18、of potential interference for other users in the same or adjacent cells, rather than increasing the amount of information conveyed by the link. Rep. ITU-R M.2040 3 In uplink applications (user to BS), omnidirectional antennas offer no gain advantage for the signals of served users, limiting the rang
19、e of the systems. Also, this single element approach has no multi-path mitigation capabilities. Therefore omnidirectional strategies directly and adversely impact spectral efficiency, limiting frequency reuse. A single antenna can also be constructed to have certain fixed preferential transmission a
20、nd reception directions: today many conventional antenna systems split or “sectorize” cells. Sectorized antenna systems take a traditional cell area and subdivide it into “sectors” that are covered using multiple directional antennas sited at the BS location. Operationally, each sector is treated as
21、 a different cell. Directional antennas have higher gain than omnidirectional antennas, all other things being equal, and hence the range of these sectors is generally greater than that obtained with an omnidirectional antenna. Sectorized cells can improve channel reuse by confining the interference
22、 presented by the BS and its users to the rest of the network, and are widely used for this purpose. As many as six sectors per cell have been used in commercial service. 2.2 Adaptive antenna systems and diversity Understanding diversity is an important element in this context. As noted by Winters 1
23、, the three primary cellular wireless system impairments may be grouped under three categories viz. multipath fading, delay spread and co-channel interference. As explained later, multiple antennas, M in number, can generally provide increased gain of M and additionally effect diversity gain against
24、 multipath fading. The gain M may be considered as the reduction in required receive power for a given average output S/N (independent of the environment) whereas the diversity gain component (only possible with multipath evident) is the reduction in required average output S/N for a given error rat
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