A Wireless Network for Wide-Band Indoor Communications |
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Authors: | Acampora A. Winters J. |
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Affiliation: | AT&T Bell Labs., Holmdel, NJ, USA; |
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Abstract: | We propose and analyze a wide-band indoor communication system that uses radio as the transmission medium either on a stand-alone basis or to supplement a hard-wired network for those situations where complete portability is desired. One principal impairment to such a system is intersymbol interference caused by frequencyselective fading. A novel media-access scheme is proposed which permits the use of resource sharing, wherein a small pool of time slots is effectively shared among all users to provide added protection against channel impairments on an as-needed basis. Our results show that the use of resource sharing and diversity provide excellent protection against intersymbol interference caused by frequency-selective fading with negligible impact on throughput. Furthermore, resource sharing plus diversity can permit significantly higher data rates without large queueing delays. For example, a wireless network with a 10 Mbit/s data rate in a 10 MHz bandwidth using four antennas at the base station has a less than 10-4outage probability at a 10-4BER in buildings with less than 58 ns rms delay spread. A loading of 75 percent is permitted for a queueing delay of less than 20 packet transmission times all but 0.01 percent of the time. |
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