1 / 52

CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition

CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition. Chapter Three How Wireless Works. Objectives. Explain the principals of radio wave transmissions Describe RF loss and gain, and how it can be measured List some of the characteristics of RF antenna transmissions

gage
Download Presentation

CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition Chapter Three How Wireless Works

  2. Objectives • Explain the principals of radio wave transmissions • Describe RF loss and gain, and how it can be measured • List some of the characteristics of RF antenna transmissions • Describe the different types of antennas

  3. Radio Wave Transmission Principles • Understanding principles of radio wave transmission is important for: • Troubleshooting wireless LANs • Creating a context for understanding wireless terminology

  4. What Are Radio Waves? • Electromagnetic wave: Travels freely through space in all directions at speed of light • Radio wave: When electric current passes through a wire it creates a magnetic field around the wire • As magnetic field radiates, creates an electromagnetic radio wave • Spreads out through space in all directions • Can travel long distances • Can penetrate non-metallic objects

  5. What Are Radio Waves? (continued) Table 3-1: Comparison of wave characteristics

  6. Analog vs. Digital Transmissions Figure 3-2: Analog signal (continuous) Figure 3-4: Digital signal (on/off)

  7. Analog vs. Digital Transmissions (continued) • Analog signals are continuous • Digital signals are discrete • Modem (MOdulator/DEModulator): Used when digital signals must be transmitted over analog medium • On originating end, converts distinct digital signals into continuous analog signal for transmission • On receiving end, reverse process performed • WLANs use digital transmissions

  8. Frequency Figure 3-5: Long waves Figure 3-6: Short Waves (e.g. short wave radio)

  9. Frequency (continued) • Frequency: Rate at which an event occurs • Cycle: Changing event that creates different radio frequencies • When wave completes trip and returns back to starting point it has finished one cycle • Hertz (Hz): Cycles per second • Kilohertz (KHz) = thousand hertz • Megahertz (MHz) = million hertz • Gigahertz (GHz) = billion hertz

  10. Frequency (continued) Figure 3-7: Sine wave

  11. Frequency (continued) Table 3-2: Electrical terminology

  12. Frequency (continued) • Frequency of radio wave can be changed by modifying voltage • Radio transmissions send a carrier signal • Increasing voltage will change frequency of carrier signal

  13. Frequency (continued) Figure 3-8: Lower and higher frequencies

  14. Modulation • Carrier signal is a continuous electrical signal • Carries no information • Three types of modulations enable carrier signals to carry information • Height of signal • Frequency of signal • Relative starting point • Modulation can be done on analog or digital transmissions

  15. Analog Modulation • Amplitude: Height of carrier wave • Amplitude modulation (AM): Changes amplitude so that highest peaks of carrier wave represent 1 bit while lower waves represent 0 bit • Frequency modulation (FM): Changes number of waves representing one cycle • Number of waves to represent 1 bit more than number of waves to represent 0 bit • Phase modulation (PM): Changes starting point of cycle • When bits change from 1 to 0 bit or vice versa

  16. Analog Modulation (continued) Figure 3-9: Amplitude

  17. Analog Modulation (continued) Figure 3-10: Amplitude modulation (AM)

  18. Analog Modulation (continued) Figure 3-11: Frequency modulation (FM)

  19. Analog Modulation (continued) Figure 3-12: Phase modulation (PM)

  20. Digital Modulation • Advantages over analog modulation: • Better use of bandwidth • Requires less power • Better handling of interference from other signals • Error-correcting techniques more compatible with other digital systems • Unlike analog modulation, changes occur in discrete steps using binary signals • Uses same three basic types of modulation as analog

  21. Digital Modulation (continued) Figure 3-13: Amplitude shift keying (ASK)

  22. Digital Modulation (continued) Figure 3-14: Frequency shift keying (FSK)

  23. Digital Modulation (continued) Figure 3-15: Phase shift keying (PSK)

  24. Radio Frequency Behavior: Gain • Gain: Positive difference in amplitude between two signals • Achieved by amplification of signal • Technically, gain is measure of amplification • Can occur intentionally from external power source that amplifies signal • Can occur unintentionally when RF signal bounces off an object and combines with original signal to amplify it

  25. Radio Frequency Behavior: Gain (continued) Figure 3-16: Gain

  26. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss • Loss: Negative difference in amplitude between signals • Attenuation • Can be intentional or unintentional • Intentional loss may be necessary to decrease signal strength to comply with standards or to prevent interference • Unintentional loss can be cause by many factors

  27. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-18: Absorption

  28. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-19: Reflection

  29. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-20: Scattering

  30. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-21: Refraction

  31. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-22: Diffraction

  32. Radio Frequency Behavior: Loss (continued) Figure 3-23: VSWR

  33. RF Measurement: RF Math • RF power measured by two units on two scales: • Linear scale: • Using milliwatts (mW) • Reference point is zero • Does not reveal gain or loss in relation to whole • Relative scale: • Reference point is the measurement itself • Often use logarithms • Measured in decibels (dB) • 10’s and 3’s Rules of RF Math: Basic rule of thumb in dealing with RF power gain and loss

  34. RF Measurement: RF Math (continued) Table 3-3: The 10’s and 3’s Rules of RF Math

  35. RF Measurement: RF Math (continued) • dBm: Reference point that relates decibel scale to milliwatt scale • Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP): Power radiated out of antenna of a wireless system • Includes intended power output and antenna gain • Uses isotropic decibels (dBi) for units • Reference point is theoretical antenna with 100 percent efficiency

  36. RF Measurement: WLAN Measurements • In U.S., FCC defines power limitations for WLANs • Limit distance that WLAN can transmit • Transmitter Power Output (TPO): Measure of power being delivered to transmitting antenna • Receive Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI): Used to determine dBm, mW, signal strength percentage Table 3-4: IEEE 802.11b and 802.11g EIRP

  37. Antenna Concepts • Radio waves transmitted/received using antennas Figure 3-24: Antennas are required for sending and receiving radio signals

  38. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions • Polarization: Orientation of radio waves as they leave the antenna Figure 3-25: Vertical polarization

  39. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) • Wave propagation: Pattern of wave dispersal Figure 3-26: Sky wave propagation

  40. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) Figure 3-27: RF LOS propagation

  41. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) • Because RF LOS propagation requires alignment of sending and receiving antennas, ground-level objects can obstruct signals • Can cause refraction or diffraction • Multipath distortion: Refracted or diffracted signals reach receiving antenna later than signals that do not encounter obstructions • Antenna diversity: Uses multiple antennas, inputs, and receivers to overcome multipath distortion

  42. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) • Determining extent of “late” multipath signals can be done by calculating Fresnel zone Figure 3-28: Fresnel zone

  43. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) • As RF signal propagates, it spreads out • Free space path loss: Greatest source of power loss in a wireless system • Antenna gain: Only way for an increase in amplification by antenna • Alter physical shape of antenna • Beamwidth: Measure of focusing of radiation emitted by antenna • Measured in horizontal and vertical degrees

  44. Characteristics of RF Antenna Transmissions (continued) Table 3-5: Free space path loss for IEEE 802.11b and 802.11g WLANs

  45. Antenna Types and Their Installations • Two fundamental characteristics of antennas: • As frequency gets higher, wavelength gets smaller • Size of antenna smaller • As gain increases, coverage area narrows • High-gain antennas offer larger coverage areas than low-gain antennas at same input power level • Omni-directional antenna: Radiates signal in all directions equally • Most common type of antenna

  46. Antenna Types and Their Installations (continued) • Semi-directional antenna: Focuses energy in one direction • Primarily used for short and medium range remote wireless bridge networks • Highly-directional antennas: Send narrowly focused signal beam • Generally concave dish-shaped devices • Used for long distance, point-to-point wireless links

  47. Antenna Types and Their Installations (continued) Figure 3-29: Omni-directional antenna

  48. Antenna Types and Their Installations (continued) Figure 3-30: Semi-directional antenna

  49. WLAN Antenna Locations and Installation • Because WLAN systems use omni-directional antennas to provide broadest area of coverage, APs should be located near middle of coverage area • Antenna should be positioned as high as possible • If high-gain omni-directional antenna used, must determine that users located below antenna area still have reception

  50. Summary • A type of electromagnetic wave that travels through space is called a radiotelephony wave or radio wave • An analog signal is a continuous signal with no breaks in it • A digital signal consists of data that is discrete or separate, as opposed to continuous • The carrier signal sent by radio transmissions is simply a continuous electrical signal and the signal itself carries no information

More Related