DocumentCode :
1939726
Title :
Deployable WiMAX in a forest area; channel measurements and modelling
Author :
Voldhaug, Jan Erik ; Bråten, Lars Erling ; Sander, Jostein
Author_Institution :
Norwegian Defence Res. Establ. (FFI), Kjeller, Norway
fYear :
2010
fDate :
Oct. 31 2010-Nov. 3 2010
Firstpage :
2400
Lastpage :
2405
Abstract :
The performance of vehicle mounted WiMAX equipment has been tested in a forest environment. Path attenuation was measured at 2.3 GHz with a bandwidth of 5 MHz during the summer season. With a base station sector antenna with adjustable mast height and an omni-directional vehicle antenna at 2 m height, the received signal strength was recorded in a number of stationary positions. The excess attenuation caused by the vegetation is found to be reasonably well modelled by the current ITU-R prediction method for one terminal in woodland. The maximum attenuation was extracted from the measurements to adjust the ITU-R model to the local environment and the four base station antenna heights employed. Only moderate variation in vegetation attenuation was observed between the base station antenna heights of 3.5, 5.5, and 10.5 m, while at 14 m height the attenuation was about 5 dB lower. Shadow attenuation in dB follows a Gaussian distribution reasonably well. The highest standard deviation was observed for transmit antenna height of 14 m, where it reached 8 dB. Thus, moderate improvement in signal strength was achieved by elevating the transmit antenna, with somewhat lower average path loss at the highest antenna position. When utilising 2nd order base station antenna diversity the lowest base station antenna height benefitted most from diversity. The downlink diversity gain observed is significantly less than in the uplink. The measurements indicate that a range of about 700 m can be achieved for this setup in this environment.
Keywords :
Gaussian distribution; WiMax; attenuation measurement; forestry; omnidirectional antennas; transmitting antennas; Gaussian distribution; ITU-R prediction method; bandwidth 5 MHz; base station antenna diversity; base station sector antenna; channel measurements; channel modelling; forest area; forest environment; frequency 2.3 GHz; omni-directional vehicle antenna; path attenuation; signal strength; transmit antenna; vegetation attenuation; vehicle mounted WiMAX equipment; woodland; Antenna measurements; Antennas; Attenuation; Attenuation measurement; Base stations; Current measurement; Vegetation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS CONFERENCE, 2010 - MILCOM 2010
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
ISSN :
2155-7578
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8178-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.2010.5680326
Filename :
5680326
Link To Document :
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