Software defined radio (SDR) is one of the most important topics of research, and indeed development, in the area of mobile and personal communications. SDR is viewed as an enabler of global roaming and as a unique platform for the rapid introduction of new services into existing live networks. It t
Software defined radio: enabling technologies
โ Scribed by Tuttlebee, Wally H. W
- Publisher
- J. Wiley & Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 428
- Series
- Wiley series in software radio
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Software defined radio (SDR) is one of the most important topics of research, and indeed development, in the area of mobile and personal communications. SDR is viewed as an enabler of global roaming and as a unique platform for the rapid introduction of new services into existing live networks. It therefore promises mobile communication networks a major increase in flexibility and capability.
SDR brings together two key technologies of the last decade - digital radio and downloadable software. It encompasses not only reconfiguration of the air interface parameters of handset and basestation products but also the whole mobile network, to facilitate the dynamic introduction of new functionality and mass-customised applications to the user's terminal, post-purchase.
This edited book, contributed by internationally respected researchers and industry practitioners, describes the current technological status of radio frequency design, data conversion, reconfigurable signal processing hardware, and software issues at all levels of the protocol stack and network.
The book provides a holistic treatment of SDR addressing the full breadth of relevant technologies - radio frequency design, signal processing and software - at all levels. As such it provides a solid grounding for a new generation of wireless engineers for whom radio design in future will assume dynamic flexibility as a given.
In particular it explores
* The unique demands of SDR upon the RF subsystem and their implications for front end design methodologies
* The recent concepts of the 'digital front end' and 'parametrization'
* The role and key influence of data conversion technologies and devices within software radio, essential to robust product design
* The evolution of signal processing technologies, describing new architectural approaches
* Requirements and options for software download
* Advances in 'soft' protocols and 'on-the-fly' software reconfiguration
* Management of terminal reconfiguration and its network implications
* The concepts of the waveform description language
The book also includes coverage of
* Potential breakthrough technologies, such as superconducting RSFQ technology and the possible future role of MEMS in RF circuitry
* Competing approaches, eg all-software radios implemented on commodity computing vs advanced processing architectures that dynamically optimise their configuration to match the algorithm requirements at a point in time
The book opens with an introductory chapter by Stephen Blust, Chair of the ITU-R WP8F Committee and Chair of the SDR Forum presenting a framework for SDR, in terms of definitions, evolutionary perspectives, introductory timescales and regulation.
Suitable for today's engineers, technical staff and researchers within the wireless industry, the book will also appeal to marketing and commercial managers who need to understand the basics and potential of the technology for future product development. Its balance of industrial and academic contributors also makes it suitable as a text for graduate and post-graduate courses aiming to prepare the next generation of wireless engineers
โฆ Table of Contents
Content: Software Defined Radio
Contents
List of Contributors
Foreword --
by Dr Joseph Mitola III
Abbreviations
Biographies
Introduction
Part I: Perspective
1 Software Based Radio
1.1 A Multi-Dimensional Model Sets the Stage
1.2 What is Software Based Radio
1.2.1 Software Defined Radio and Software Radio
1.2.2 Adaptive Intelligent Software Radio and Other Definitions
1.2.3 Functionality, Capability and SBR Evolution
1.3 Architectural Perspectives for a Software Based Radio
1.3.1 The Radio Implementer plane
1.3.2 The Network Operator plane
1.4 Software Radio Concepts. 1.5 Adoption Timeframes for Software Based Radio1.6 Realization of Software Based Radio Requires New Technology
1.7 Power/Performance/Price Limitations of Handsets Dictates Inflexible Networks
1.8 Regulatory Concepts Facilitate SBR Introduction
1.9 Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References
Part II: Front End Technology
2 Radio Frequency Translation for Software Defined Radio
2.1 Requirements and Specifications
2.1.1 Transmitter Specifications
2.1.2 Receiver Specifications
2.1.3 Operating Frequency Bands
2.2 Receiver Design Considerations
2.2.1 Basic Considerations. 2.2.2 Receiver Architectures2.2.3 Dynamic Range Issues and Calculation
2.2.4 Adjacent Channel Power Ratio (ACPR) and Noise Power Ratio (NPR)
2.2.5 Receiver Signal Budget
2.2.6 Image Rejection
2.2.7 Filter Functions within the Receiver
2.3 Transmitter Design Considerations
2.3.1 Filtering Analogies between Receiver and Transmitter
2.3.2 Transmitter Architectures
2.3.3 Transmitter Efficiency and Linearity
2.4 Candidate Architectures for SDR
2.4.1 Zero IF Receivers
2.4.2 Quadrature Local Oscillator
2.4.3 Variable Preselect Filters
2.4.4 Low IF Receivers
2.5 Conclusions. AcknowledgementsReferences
Appendix
3 Radio Frequency Front End Implementations for Multimode SDRs
3.1 Evolution of Radio Systems
3.2 Evolution of RF Front Ends --
Superheterodyne Architecture
3.3 The AN2/6 Product Family --
Dual Band, Six Mode
3.3.1 The AN2/6 Architecture
3.3.2 Lessons Learned From the AN2/6
3.4 Alternative RF Front End Architectures
3.4.1 Direct Conversion RF Front Ends
3.4.2 Pure Digital RF Front Ends
3.4.3 Analog Digital Combination Solutions
3.4.4 Directions for a Completely Successful SDR RF Front End
3.5 Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References. 4 Data Conversion in Software Defined Radios4.1 The Importance of Data Converters in Software Defined Radios
4.1.1 ADCs for SDR Base Stations
4.1.2 ADCs for SDR Handsets
4.1.3 DACs for SDR Applications
4.2 Converter Architectures
4.2.1 Flash Converters
4.2.2 Multistage Converters
4.2.3 Sigma-Delta Converters
4.2.4 Digital-to-Analog Converters
4.3 Converter Performance Impact on SDR
4.3.1 Noise Sources --
Impact on SDR Sensitivity
4.3.2 SNR of Data Converter
4.3.3 Spurious Impact on Performance
4.3.4 Digital-to-Analog Converter Specification
4.4 Conclusions and Future Trends.
โฆ Subjects
Software radio.;TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING;Radio.;TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING;Mobile & Wireless Communications.;Mobile wireless communications.
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