Title :
The impact of power limitations and adjacent residence interference on the performance of WLANs for home networking applications
Author :
Armour, S. ; Doufexi, A. ; Lee, B.-S. ; Nix, A. ; Bull, D.
Author_Institution :
Centre for Commun. Res., Bristol Univ., UK
fDate :
8/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper considers the application of 5 GHz wireless LAN technology to home networking applications. An assessment of physical layer performance is presented for both the IEEE 802.11a and HIPERLAN/2 standards in the form of achievable data rate as a function of received signal to noise ratio. The transmit power limitations imposed by the relevant regulatory bodies are presented and the implications of transmit power amplifier limitations considered. Based on this information, a state of the art propagation modelling tool is used to evaluate the performance of the 802.11a and HIPERLAN/2 systems in an example residential environment. The achievable data rate and coverage is evaluated for a variety of scenarios and the implications of potential co-residence interference are evaluated. It is found that data rates greater than 20 Mbits/s can be achieved with 100% coverage if the access point is well located and the transmit power is high. Even in the case where transmit power is severely limited, data rates in excess of 10 Mbits/s can be achieved throughout much of the example environment. Adjacent residence interference is found to have a severe debilitating effect and is thus identified as topic of crucial importance
Keywords :
IEEE standards; home computing; indoor radio; microwave power amplifiers; microwave propagation; radiofrequency interference; telecommunication standards; wireless LAN; 10 Mbit/s; 20 Mbit/s; 5 GHz; HIPERLAN/2 standards; IEEE 802.11a standard; SHF; WLAN performance; access point; achievable data rate; adjacent residence interference; co-residence interference; home networking applications; performance evaluation; physical layer performance; power limitations; propagation modelling tool; received signal to noise ratio; regulatory bodies; transmit power amplifier limitations; transmit power limitations; wireless LAN technology; Europe; Interference; North America; Physical layer; Power amplifiers; Power system modeling; Propagation losses; Signal to noise ratio; Throughput; Wireless LAN;
Journal_Title :
Consumer Electronics, IEEE Transactions on