5.1.2 Simo

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5.1.

2 SIMO
The SIMO or Single Input Multiple Output version of MIMO occurs where the transmitter has a
single antenna and the receiver has multiple antennas. This is also known as receiver diversity. It
is often used to enable a receiver system that receives signals from a number of independent
sources to combat the effects of fading. It has been used for many years with short wave listening
/receiving stations to combat the effects of ionospheric fading and interference.

Fig 5.2 SIMO-Single input Multiple Output

SIMO has the advantage that it is relatively easy to implement although it does have
some disadvantages in that the processing is required in the receiver. The use of SIMO may be
quite acceptable in many applications, but where the receiver is located in a mobile device such
as a cell phone handset, the levels of processing may be limited by size, cost and battery drain.
There are two forms of SIMO that can be used:
Switched diversity SIMO: This form of SIMO looks for the strongest signal and
switches
To that antenna.
Maximum ratio combining SIMO: This form of SIMO takes both signals and sums
them to give a combination. In this way, the signals from both antennas contribute to the
overall signal
.To increase channel capacity and dont change bandwidth, this form used with Capacity
C=B*log21+SNR) bit/s
For example, if n=2 (two transmitter antenna), B = 5 MHz, SNR = 100, in SISO system C= 33.3
Mb/s (Mbps); in SIMO system C = 38.3 Mb/s. This capacity is large than a bit, but it have some
other function like reduce fading (diversity gain).

5.1.3.MISO

MISO is also termed transmit diversity. In this case, the same data is transmitted
redundantly from the two transmitter antennas. The receiver is then able to receive the optimum
signal which it can then use to receive extract the required data.

Fig 5.3 MISO - Multiple Input Single Output


The advantage of using MISO is that the multiple antennas and the redundancy coding
processing is moved from the receiver to the transmitter. In instances such as cellphone UEs, this
can be a significant advantage in terms of space for the antennas and reducing the level of
processing required in the receiver for the redundancy coding. This has a positive impact on size,
cost and battery life as the lower level of processing requires less battery consumption.
5.1.4 MIMO
Where there are more than one antenna at either end of the radio link, this is termed
MIMO- Multiple Input Multiple Output. MIMO can be used to provide improvements in both
channel robustness as well as channel throughput.

Fig 5.4 MIMO - Multiple Input Multiple Output


In order to be able to benefit from MIMO fully it is necessary to be able to utilize coding on the
channels to separate the data from the different paths. This requires processing, but provides
additional channel robustness / data throughput capacity.
There are many formats of MIMO that can be used from SISO, through SIMO and MISO to the
full MIMO systems. These are all able to provide significant improvements of performance, but
generally at the cost of additional processing and the number of antennas used. Balances of
performance against costs, size, processing available and the resulting battery life need to be
made when choosing the correct option.

Its capacity is given by:


C= B*log2 (1+nT.nR.SNR )bit/s
nT: transmitter antenna
nR: receiver antenna

For above example, nT = nR =2 => C= 43.3Mb/s.

5.2 Need for MIMO System


Digital communication using multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) has been regarded
as one of the most significant technical breakthrough modern communications. A key feature of
MIMO system is the ability to turn multi-path propagation, traditionally a pitfall of wireless
transmission, into a benefit for the user. The wireless system before MIMO is been constrained
by network capacity which is related with channel quality and coverage. To see how problem
occurred, we need to talk about the transmission on a multipath channel. In wireless
communication the propagation channel is characterized by multipath propagation due to
scattering on different obstacle. The multipath problem is a typical issue in communication
system with time variations and time spread. For time variations the channel is fading and caused
SNR variations. For time spread, it becomes important for suitable frequency selectivity.

In an urban environment, these signals will bounce off trees, buildings, etc. and continue
on their way to their destination (the receiver) but in different directions. With MIMO, the
receiving end uses an algorithm or special signal processing to sort out the multiple signals to
produce one signal that has the originally transmitted data.

As the number of antenna element increasing, the channel capacity is increased too.
Instead of logarithmic-increasing of channel capacity in SIMO and MISO system, the MIMO
system owned linear-increasing of channel capacity as antenna increased.

5.3 Function of MIMO System


MIMO can be sub-divided into three main categories:
precoding
Spatial multiplexi

Diversity coding

5.3.1 Precoding
Precoding is a generalization of beam forming to support multi-layer transmission in multiantenna wireless communications. In conventional single-layer beam forming, the same signal is
emitted from each of the transmit antennas with appropriate weighting such that the signal power
is maximized at the receiver output. When the receiver has multiple antennas, single-layer beam
forming cannot simultaneously maximize the signal level at all of the receive antennas. Thus, in
order to maximize the throughput in multiple receive antenna systems, multi-layer beam forming
is required. The benefits of beam forming are to increase the received signal gain, by making
signals emitted from different antennas add up constructively, and to reduce the multipath fading
effect. The Precoding can be separated by two classifications:
Precoding for Single User MIMO
Precoding for Multi User MIMO
5.3.1.1 Precoding for Single User MIMO

In single user multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems, a transmitter equipped


with multiple antennas communicates with a receiver that has multiple antennas. Most classic
precoding results assume narrowband, slowly fading channels, meaning that the channel for a
certain period of time can be described by a single channel matrix which does not change faster.
In practice, such channels can be achieved, for example, through OFDM. The precoding strategy
that maximizes the throughput, called channel capacity, depends on the channel state
information available in the systems.
5.3.1.2 Precoding for Multi User MIMO
In multi-user MIMO, a multi-antenna transmitter communicates simultaneously with
multiple receivers (each having one or multiple antennas). This is known as space-division
multiple access (SDMA). From an implementation perspective, precoding algorithms for SDMA
systems can be sub-divided into linear and nonlinear precoding types. The capacity achieving
algorithms are nonlinear, but linear precoding approaches usually achieve reasonable
performance with much lower complexity. Linear precoding strategies include MMSE precoding
and the simplified zero-forcing (ZF) precoding. There are also precoding strategies tailored for
low-rate feedback of channel state information, for example random beam forming. Nonlinear
precoding is designed based on the concept of dirty paper coding (DPC), which shows that any
known interference at the transmitter can be subtracted without the penalty of radio resources if
the optimal precoding scheme can be applied on the transmit signal.
5.3.2 Spatial multiplexing
Spatial multiplexing requires MIMO antenna configuration. In spatial multiplexing, a
high rate signal is split into multiple lower rate streams and each stream is transmitted from a
different transmit antenna in the same frequency channel. If these signals arrive at the receiver

antenna array with sufficiently different spatial signatures, the receiver can separate these
streams into (almost) parallel channels. Spatial multiplexing is a very powerful technique for
increasing channel capacity at higher signal-to-noise ratios (SNR). The maximum number of
spatial streams is limited by the lesser of the number of antennas at the transmitter or receiver.
Spatial multiplexing can be used with or without transmit channel knowledge. Spatial
multiplexing can also be used for simultaneous transmission to multiple receivers, known as
space-division multiple accessing. The scheduling of receivers with different spatial signatures
allows good reparability
5.3.3 Diversity coding
Diversity Coding techniques are used when there is no channel knowledge at the
transmitter. In diversity methods, a single stream (unlike multiple streams in spatial
multiplexing). is transmitted, but the signal is coded using techniques called space-time
coding.The signal is emitted from each of the transmit antennas with full or near orthogonal
coding. Diversity coding exploits the independent fading in the multiple antenna links to enhance
signal diversity. Because there is no channel knowledge, there is no beam forming or array gain
from diversity coding.

5.1.2 SIMO

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