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TGn Sync Complete Proposal Overview

TGn Sync Complete Proposal Overview. Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems Inc., ( mujtaba@agere.com ) Adrian P Stephens, Intel Corporation, ( adrian.p.stephens@intel.com ) Alek Purkovic, Nortel Networks ( apurkovi@nortelnetworks.com ) Andrew Myles, Cisco Systems ( amyles@cisco.com )

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TGn Sync Complete Proposal Overview

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  1. TGn Sync Complete ProposalOverview Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems Inc., (mujtaba@agere.com) Adrian P Stephens, Intel Corporation, (adrian.p.stephens@intel.com) Alek Purkovic, Nortel Networks (apurkovi@nortelnetworks.com) Andrew Myles, Cisco Systems (amyles@cisco.com) Brian Johnson, Nortel Networks Corporation, (brjohnso@nortelnetworks.com) Chiu Ngo, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., (chiu.ngo@samsung.com) Daisuke Takeda, Toshiba Corporation, (daisuke.takeda@toshiba.co.jp) Darren McNamara, Toshiba Corporation, (Darren.McNamara@toshiba-trel.com) Dongjun (DJ) Lee, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., (djthekid.lee@samsung.com) David Bagby, Calypso Consulting, (david.bagby@ieee.org) Eldad Perahia, Cisco Systems, (eperahia@cisco.com) Hiroshi Oguma, Tohoku University, (oguma@wit.riec.tohoku.ac.jp) Hiroyuki Nakase, Tohoku University, (nakase@riec.tohoku.ac.jp) Huanchun Ye, Atheros Communications Inc., (hcye@atheros.com) Hui-Ling Lou, Marvell Semiconductor Inc., (hlou@marvell.com) Isaac Lim Wei Lih, Panasonic (wllim@psl.com.sg) James Chen, Marvell Semiconductor Inc., (jamesc@marvell.com) Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  2. Authors (continued) James Mike Wilson, Intel Corporation, (james.mike.wilson@intel.com) Jan Boer, Agere Systems Inc., (janboer@agere.com) Jari Jokela, Nokia, (jari.jokela@nokia.com) Jeff Gilbert, Atheros Communications Inc., (gilbertj@atheros.com) Job Oostveen, Royal Philips Electronics, (job.oostveen@philips.com) Joe Pitarresi, Intel Corporation, (joe.pitarresi@intel.com) Jörg Habetha, Royal Philips Electronics, (joerg.habetha@philips.com) John Sadowsky, Intel Corporation, (john.sadowsky@intel.com) Jon Rosdahl, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., (jon.rosdahl@partner.samsung.com) Kiyotaka Kobayashi, Panasonic (kobayashi.kiyotaka@jp.panasonic.com) Li Yuan, Institute for Infocomm Research, (liyuan@i2r.a-star.edu.sg) Luke Qian, Cisco Systems, (lchia@cisco.com) Mary Cramer, Agere Systems (mecramer@agere.com) Masahiro Takagi, Toshiba Corporation, (masahiro3.takagi@toshiba.co.jp) Monisha Ghosh, Royal Philips Electronics, (monisha.ghosh@philips.com) Nico van Waes, Nokia, (nico.vanwaes@nokia.com) Osama Aboul-Magd, Nortel Networks Corporation, (osama@nortelnetworks.com) Paul Feinberg, Sony Electronics Inc., (paul.feinberg@am.sony.com) Pen Li , Royal Philips Electronics (pen.li@philips.com) Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  3. Authors (continued) Peter Loc, Marvell Semiconductor Inc., (ploc@marvell.com) Pieter-Paul Giesberts, Agere Systems Inc., (pgiesberts@agere.com) Richard van Leeuwen, Agere Systems Inc., (rleeuwen@agere.com) Ronald Rietman, Royal Philips Electronics, (ronald.rietman@philips.com) Seigo Nakao, SANYO Electric Co. Ltd., (snakao@gf.hm.rd.sanyo.co.jp) Sheung Li, Atheros Communications Inc., (sheung@atheros.com) Stephen Shellhammer, Intel, (stephen.j.shellhammer@intel.com) Sumei Sun, Institute for Infocomm Research, (sunsm@i2r.a-star.edu.sg) Taekon Kim, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., (taekon.kim@samsung.com) Takashi Fukagawa, Panasonic, (fukagawa.takashi@jp.panasonic.com) Takushi Kunihiro, Sony Corporation, (kuni@wcs.sony.co.jp) Teik-Kheong (TK) Tan, Royal Philips Electronics, (tktan@philips.com) Tomoko Adachi, Toshiba Corporation, (tomo.adachi@toshiba.co.jp) Tomoya Yamaura, Sony Corporation, (yamaura@wcs.sony.co.jp) Tsuguhide Aoki, Toshiba Corporation, (tsuguhide.aoki@toshiba.co.jp) Victor Stolpman, Nokia, (victor.stolpman@nokia.com) Won-Joon Choi, Atheros Communications Inc., (wjchoi@atheros.com) Xiaowen Wang, Agere Systems Inc., (xiaowenw@agere.com) Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  4. Authors (continued) Yasuhiko Tanabe, Toshiba Corporation, (yasuhiko.tanabe@toshiba.co.jp) Yasuhiro Tanaka, SANYO Electric Co. Ltd., (y_tanaka@gf.hm.rd.sanyo.co.jp) Yoshiharu Doi, SANYO Electric Co. Ltd., (doi@gf.hm.rd.sanyo.co.jp) Youngsoo Kim, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., (KimYoungsoo@samsung.com) Yuichi Morioka, Sony Corporation, (morioka@wcs.sony.co.jp) Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  5. Scalable PHY Architecture Mandatory Hooks for Optional Robustness Enhancement Closed Loop TX BF Open Loop SDM Robustness Enhancement LDPC Conv. Coding Rate Feedback Throughput Enhancement 2 Spatial Streams 4 Spatial Streams Regulatory Constraints Low Cost & Robust 20 MHz 40 MHz 6 to 140 Mbps 6 to630 Mbps 6 to243 Mbps Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  6. Benefits of TGn Sync Preamble • Simple baseline channel estimation algorithm • No need for complex interpolation/smoothing algorithms • 100% backward compatible • Low fluctuation of average receive power • low cost ADC & high precision AGC • Flexible per spatial stream training • SDM • Spatial Spreading (Walsh + CDD) for Nss < Ntx • TX Beam-forming • STBC (if TGn chooses to add that as an option) • Extensibility • upto 4 spatial streams, across 40MHz, with TX beamforming • Future PHYs will be backwards compatible to 11a/g/n Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  7. 2x2-40 MHz 4x4-20 MHz 2x3-20 MHz w/ short GI 2x2-20 MHz w/ short GI Why 40MHz is Mandatory? • 2x2 – 40 MHz • Only 2 RF chains => Cost effective & low power • Lower SNR at same throughput => Enhanced robustness 260 240 220 200 Sweet spot for 100Mbps top-of-MAC 180 160 140 Over the Air Throughput (Mbps) 120 100 80 Basic MIMO MCS set No impairments 1000 byte packets TGn channel model B 60 40 20 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 SNR (dB) Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  8. Why introduce TX Beamforming? 1000 byte packets No impairment 20MHz, channel D 4 TX-antenna AP  2 RX-antenna client ~10 dB gain of 4x2-ABF over 2x2-SDM => cost effective client Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  9. Scalable MAC Architecture • LEGACY INTEROP. • Long NAV • Pairwise Spoofing • Single-Ended Spoofing Robust & Scalable MAC Architecture • ADDITIONAL EFFICIENCY • Header Compression • Multi-Receiver Aggregation • Bi-Directional Data Flow • BA Enhancements • BASELINE MAC • Robust Aggregation • QoS Support (802.11e) • Rx assisted link adapt. • CHANNEL MANAGEMENT • 20/40 MHz Modes Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  10. MAC Summary of TGn Sync Proposal • Mandatory Features: • MAC level frame aggregation • RX assisted link adaptation • QoS support (802.11e) • MAC header compression • Block ACK compression • Legacy compatible protection • 20/40 MHz channel management • Optional Features: • Bi-directional data flow • MIMO RX Power management Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  11. RX Assisted Link Adaptation Protocol • Support for PHY closed-loop modes with on-the-air signalling • Request for training and feedback are carried in control frames • Rate feedback supported • Transmit beamforming training supported • sounding packet • calibration exchange • Timing of response is not constrained permitting a wide range of implementation options Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  12. Thank You! • We would like to thank all for their feedback, which has strengthed our proposal • We are a technology forum, and are looking forward to merger talks with other proposals • For more info, please visit www.tgnsync.org Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

  13. Key Features • Scalable PHY & MAC Architecture • 20 and 40 MHz channels – fully interoperable • Data rate scalable to 630 Mbps • Legacy interoperability – all modes • Robust preamble • Transmit beamforming • Robust frame aggregation • Bi-directional data flow • Receiver assisted fast link adaptation Syed Aon Mujtaba, Agere Systems, et. al.

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