DocumentCode :
2286045
Title :
Adjacent channel interference in IEEE 802.11n
Author :
Zubow, Anatolij ; Sombrutzki, Robert
Author_Institution :
Humboldt Univ. Berlin, Berlin, Germany
fYear :
2012
fDate :
1-4 April 2012
Firstpage :
1163
Lastpage :
1168
Abstract :
In this paper we analyze the adverse effects of Adjacent Channel Interference (ACI) on 802.11 with a focus on new 802.11n standard. ACI is causing problems that are related to the carrier sensing mechanism in 802.11. On the one hand, the carrier sensing is sometimes too restrictive thus preventing concurrent transmissions which leads to a variant of the exposed terminal problem. On the other hand, the carrier sensing is sometimes too optimistic thus causing packet collisions which is a form of the hidden node problem. Both problems are especially severe in multi-radio systems, where the radios are very closely spaced. Such problems already investigated in 802.11a/b/g still remain with 802.11n. Our results show that the number of available orthogonal channels in IEEE 802.11n depends on the spatial spacing between the radios, channel width (20MHz vs. 40 MHz), RF band (2.4 vs. 5GHz) and traffic pattern. In a multi-radio system the situation is worst, e.g. in the 2.4 GHz we were not able to find 2 orthogonal channels. The adverse effect of ACI can be reduced in two ways. First, by increasing the spatial separation between the radios; a spacing of less than 1 meter already improves the situation significantly, e.g. 40 cm are sufficient to get 2-3 orthogonal 20 MHz channels in the 2.4 GHz band with reduced transmission power. Furthermore, a distance of 90 cm is also sufficient so that a 40 and a 20MHz channel can be used simultaneously without any interference. However, in a multi-radio system the spatial spacing between the radios cannot be increased due to space limitations. The only option to overcome ACI related problems is to reduce the transmit power making power control essential. Finally, our analysis revealed that 802.11 is an inappropriate protocol for multi-channel MAC/routing protocols based on multi-radio systems where an explicit MAC layer link-scheduling is more promising.
Keywords :
access protocols; radiofrequency interference; telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; ACI; IEEE 802.11n; adjacent channel interference; carrier sensing mechanism; distance 40 cm; distance 90 cm; explicit MAC layer link-scheduling; frequency 2.4 GHz; frequency 20 MHz; frequency 40 MHz; frequency 5 GHz; hidden node problem; multi-radio systems; multichannel MAC-routing protocols; orthogonal channels; packet collisions; power control; spatial separation; spatial spacing; traffic pattern; transmit power reduction; Channel spacing; IEEE 802.11n Standard; OFDM; Protocols; Radio transmitters; Receivers; Adjacent Channel Interference; IEEE 802.11n; Measurements; Multi Channel; Multi Radio; Orthogonal Channels; Wireless Networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
ISSN :
1525-3511
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0436-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/WCNC.2012.6213952
Filename :
6213952
Link To Document :
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