Ray Tracing

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Ray Tracing A radio signal will typically encounter multiple objects and will be reflected, diffracted, or scattered These are called multipath signal components

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Ray Tracing. A radio signal will typically encounter multiple objects and will be reflected, diffracted, or scattered These are called multipath signal components. Represent wavefronts as simple particle Geometry determines received signal from each signal component - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Ray Tracing

Page 1: Ray Tracing

Ray Tracing

A radio signal will typically encounter multiple objects and will be reflected, diffracted, or scattered

These are called multipath signal components

Page 2: Ray Tracing

• Represent wavefronts as simple particle

• Geometry determines received signal from each signal component

• Typically includes reflected rays, can also include scattered and diffracted rays

• Requires site parameters• Geometry• Dielectric properties

• Error is smallest when the receiver is many wavelengths from the nearest scatterer and when all the scatterers are large relative to a wavelength

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• Accurate model under these conditions

• Rural areas

• City streets when the TX and RX are close to the ground

• Indoor environments with adjusted diffraction coefficients

• If the TX, RX, and reflectors are all immobile, characteristics are fixed

• Otherwise, statistical models must be used

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Two – Ray Model

Used when a single ground reflection dominates the multipath effects.

Approach:

• Use the free – space propagation model on each ray

• Apply superposition to find the result

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c

x x'j j

r j f tray

G u t e R G u t er t Re e

x x'

2 2

22 4

l

l

l

x x'

c

l time delay of the ground reflection relative to the LOS ray

a bG G G l

product of the transmit and receive antenna field radiation patterns in the LOS direction

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r c dG G G product of the transmit and receive antenna field radiation patterns corresponding to x and x’, respectively

R = Ground reflection coefficient

c

x x'j j

r j f tray

G u t e R G u t er t Re e

x x'

2 2

22 4

l

l

l

Page 7: Ray Tracing

c

x x'j j

r j f tray

G u t e R G u t er t Re e

x x'

2 2

22 4

l

l

l

Delay spread = delay between the LOS ray and the reflected ray

x x'

c

l

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c

x x'j j

r j f tray

G u t e R G u t er t Re e

x x'

2 2

22 4

l

l

l

If the transmitted signal is narrowband wrt the delay spread

uB u t u t 1

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c

x x'j j

r j f tray

G u t e R G u t er t Re e

x x'

2 2

22 4

l

l

l

jr

r t

G R G eP P

x x'

22

4l

l

x x'

2

l phase difference between the two received signal components

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d = Antenna separation

h t = Transmitter height

h r = Receiver height

t r t rx x' h h d h h d 2 22 2l

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t r t rx x' h h d h h d 2 22 2l

When d is large compared to h t + h r :

x x'

2

lExpand into a Taylor series

t rh hx x'

d

4

2l

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The ground reflection coefficient is given by

sin ZR

sin Z

rr

cosZ

2

vertical polarization

rZ cos 2 horizontal polarization

r 15 for ground, pavement, etc...

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For very large d:

l rx x' d , , G G , R 0 1l

t rt rr t t

G G h hh hP P P

d d d

2 22

2

4

4l l

r t t rP dBm P dBm log G log h h log d 10 10 1010 20 40l

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t r

r t

G h hP P

d

2

2

l

• As d increases, the received power

• Varies inversely with d 4

• Independent of

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f = 900 MHz

R = - 1

h t = 50 m

h r = 2 mG l = 1

G r = 1

P t = 0 dBm

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The path can be divided into three segments

1. d < h t

• The two rays add constructively

• Path loss is slowly increasing

• Path loss td h

2 2

1

t r

t rt

d h h

for h hd h

22

2 2 2

1 1

l

l

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2. h t < d c

• Wave experiences constructive and destructive interference

• Small – scale (Multipath) fading

• If power is averaged in this area, the result is a piecewise linear approximation

3. d c < d

• Signal power falls off by d – 4

• Signal components only combine destructively

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t rh hx x'

d

4

2l

To find d c , set

t rc

h hd

4

• In segment 1, d < h t power falls off by

• In segment 2, h t < d < d c power falls off by – 20 db/decade

• In segment 3, d c < d, power falls off by – 40 db/decade

• Cell sizes are typically much less than d c and power falls off by t/ h 21

t/ h 21

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Problem 2 – 5

Find the critical distance, d c , under the two – ray model for a large macrocell in a suburban area with the base station mounted on a tower or building (h t = 20 m), the receivers at height h r = 3 m, and f c = 2 GHz. Is this a good size for cell radius in a suburban macrocell? Why or why not?

Solution

c. m

f

8

9

3 100 15

2 10

t rc

h hd . km

. 4 4 20 3

1 60 15

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Ten – Ray Model (Dielectric Canyon)

• Assumptions:

• Rectilinear streets

• Buildings along both sides of the street

• Transmitter and receiver heights close to street level

• 10 rays incorporate all paths with 1, 2, or 3 reflections

• LOS (line of sight)

• GR (ground reflected)

• SW (single wall reflected)

• DW (double wall reflected

• TW (triple wall reflected)

• WG (wall – ground reflected)

• GW (ground – wall reflected)

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Overhead view of 10 – ray model

i

i c

xjj

i x i j f tray

i i

R G u t eG u t er t Re e

x

22

92

1014

l

l

l

x i = path length of the i th reflected ray

ii

x

c

lix

G Product of the transmit and receive antenna gains of the i th ray

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Assume a narrowband model such that

iu t u t for all i

i

i

ji x

r ti i

R G eGP P

x

22

9

14l

l

ii

x

2l

• Power falloff is proportional to d - 2

• Multipath rays dominate over the ground reflected rays that decay proportional to d - 4

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General Ray Tracing

• Models all signal components– Reflections– Scattering– Diffraction

• Requires detailed geometry and dielectricproperties of site– Site specific

• Similar to Maxwell, but easier math• Computer packages often used• The GRT method uses geometrical optics to trace

the propagation of the LOS and reflected signal components

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• Diffraction occurs when the transmitted signal "bends around" an object in its path

• Most common model uses a wedge which is asymptotically thin

• Fresnel knife – edge diffraction model

Diffraction

Shadowing: Diffraction and Spreading

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For h small wrt d and d', the signal must travel an additional distance d

h d d 'd

d d '

2

2

The phase shift is

dv

d d 'v h

d d '

22

2

2

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d d 'v h

d d '

2 is called the Fresnel – Kirchhoff

diffraction parameter

Approximations for the path loss relative to LOS are

. v

L v dB log . . v . v

log . e v

log . . . . v v .

.log v .

v

10

0 9510

2

10

10

20 0 5 0 62 0 8 0

20 0 5 0 1

20 0 4 0 1184 0 38 0 1 1 2 4

0 22520 2 4

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Scattering

c

s s'j

s j f tG er t Re u t e

ss'

2

2

3

24

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r t sP dBm P dBm log G log log

log log s log s'

10 10 10

10 10 10

10 20 10

30 4 20 20

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• Okumura model• Empirically based (site/freq specific)• Awkward (uses graphs)

• Hata model• Analytical approximation to Okumura model

• Cost 136 Model: • Extends Hata model to higher frequency (2 GHz)

• Walfish/Bertoni:• Cost 136 extension to include diffraction from

rooftops

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Simplified Path – Loss Model

r t

dP P K

d

0

r t

dP dBm P dBm K dB log

d

10

0

10

K = dimensionless constant that depends on the antenna characteristics and the average channel attenuation

d 0 = reference distance for the antenna far field

= path – loss exponent

LOS, 2 – ray model, Hata model, and the COST extension all have this basic form

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Generally valid where d > d 0

d 0 = 1 – 10 m indoors

= 10 – 100 m outdoors

K dB logd

100

204

General approach:

• Take data at three values of d

• Solve for K, d o , and

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