Scattering in non-stationary mobile-to-mobile communications channels

peer-reviewed
Erstveröffentlichung
2016Authors
Walter, Michael
Referee
Fischer, RobertFiebig, Uwe-Carsten
Dissertation
Faculties
Fakultät für Ingenieurwissenschaften, Informatik und PsychologieInstitutions
Institut für NachrichtentechnikSeries
Kommunikationstechnik; 24
Publisher
München : Herbert Utz Verlag
ISBN
978-3-8316-4551-0
Document version
accepted versionAbstract
The aim of this thesis is to introduce a non-stationary model for the scattering in
mobile-to-mobile channels. Due to the evolution of wireless technology, fixed-to-mobile
communications systems are nowadays complemented by mobile-to-mobile
communications systems.
In the vehicular sector, mobile-to-mobile communications systems are used to
enable intelligent transportation systems. Such systems aim to make transportation
safer and more efficient by distributing sensor information among the cars. In
the aeronautical sector, mobile-to-mobile communications systems will be used, for
example, to exchange position, altitude, speed, and heading data between aircraft
during flight thus allowing a reduced separation between them. Hence, these systems
are necessary to further increase the air traffic density.
Stochastic channel models for the fixed-to-mobile channel are based on the assumption
that the channel is wide-sense stationary and exhibits uncorrelated scattering
behavior both in a stochastic sense. It has been shown that many mobile-to-mobile
channels do not adhere to such assumptions, especially vehicle-to-vehicle
and air-to-air channels. The need for new models is therefore due to the fact that
mobile-to-mobile channels are fundamentally different from fixed-to-mobile channels.
To overcome the limitations of current channel models, two measurement campaigns
to characterize both the vehicle-to-vehicle and the air-to-air channel as exemplary
mobile-to-mobile channels were conducted. The measurements confirm the
non-stationary behavior of those channels and subsequently, a theoretical model is
created on the basis of the measurement data. The employed model is a geometry-based
stochastic channel model, which means it consists of two parts. In the geometric
part, new expressions for channel parameters, such as delay and Doppler frequency,
are derived. In the stochastic part, those expressions enable us to determine
closed-form solutions for the required time-variant probability density functions.
The presented model can be seen as a generalization of the wide-sense stationary,
uncorrelated scattering models.
Since the calculations of the probability density functions are time consuming,
the application of a different coordinate system is investigated and we show that
computational gains are achieved by using prolate spheroidal coordinates. Additionally,
other important channel parameters, such as mean Doppler and Doppler
spread, are derived.
The presented theoretical channel model is validated by the measurement data
that has been recorded for both the vehicle-to-vehicle and the air-to-air channel.
In each case, there is a remarkable agreement between measurement data and the
channel model. The model also matches with measurement data recorded by other
institutions that used different scenarios. This versatility allows the model to be
very general and it can be applied to a wide range of scenarios.
Date created
2015
Subject headings
[GND]: Funktechnik[LCSH]: Mobile communication systems
[Free subject headings]: Geometric-stochastic channel modeling | Non-stationary channel | Vehicle-to-vehicle channel | Air-to-air channel
[DDC subject group]: DDC 620 / Engineering & allied operations
Metadata
Show full item recordDOI & citation
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-3953
Walter, Michael (2016): Scattering in non-stationary mobile-to-mobile communications channels. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm und Technischen Hochschule Ulm. Dissertation. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-3953
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