+
*[http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/search/freesearchresult.jsp?history=yes&queryText=%28%28wimax%29%3Cin%3Emetadata%29 IEEE Search, ASU Library]
 +
*[http://www.wimaxtrends.com/ WiMAX Trends Newsletter]
 +
*[http://users.ece.utexas.edu/~jandrews/molabview.html WiMAX MIMO-OFDM simulation in LabView]
 +
*Martin Sauter, ''Communication Systems for the Mobile Information Society", Wiley, Chichester, England, 2006
 +
:-pp. 257-258 Theoretical capacity (78 Mbit/s) and Realistic capacity (24.12 Mbit/s) of 802.16
 +
*Jeffrey G. Andrews, Arunabha Ghosh, ''Fundamentals of WiMAX: Understanding Broadband Wireless Networking'', Prentice Hall, 2007
 +
 +
 +
== Project: Document due Tuesday, 11 December 2007 ==
 +
*[http://users.ece.utexas.edu/~jandrews/ee381k/ee381k_proj.html Projects from UT], Multi-user OFDM including some doppler information, Multi-user OFDM-MIMO
 +
*Wookbong Lee, Binchul Ihm, Ronny (Yong-Ho) Kim, [http://www.ieee802.org/16/tgm/contrib/C80216m-07_007.pdf "Requirements for 802.16m"], IEEE, January 12, 2007
 +
*[http://www.ieee-mobilewimax.org/ IEEE Mobile WiMAX Symposium, 2007]
 +
:-Source of Alamouti's slides from Intel
 +
*P. Varzakas, [http://www3.interscience.wiley.com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/cgi-bin/fulltext/112622235/PDFSTART "Optimization of an OFDM Rayleigh fading system"], International Journal of Communcications Systems: 20, 2007
 +
 +
=== Theoretical capacity ===
 +
*[http://www.wimaxforum.org/technology/downloads/Mobile_WiMAX_Part1_Overview_and_Performance.pdf "Mobile WiMAX – Part I: A Technical Overview and Performance Evaluation"], WiMAX Forum, August, 2006
 +
:-Scalable OFDMA (SOFDMA) [3] is introduced in the IEEE 802.16e Amendment to support scalable channel bandwidths from 1.25 to 20 MHz.
 +
*[http://www.srtelecom.com/en/products/whitepapers/WiMAX-Capacity.pdf "WiMAX Capacity White Paper"], SR Telecom Inc., 2006
 +
*Kai Dietze, Ted Hicks, Greg Leon, [http://www.edx.com/files/WiMaxPaperv1.pdf WiMAX System Performance Studies"], EDX Wireless, LLC
 +
:-"The frequencies higher than 10 GHz are practical only for fixed line-of-sight (LOS) type services. Non-line of sight (NLOS) communications perform better when the frequencies of operation are kept under 10 GHz. The frequencies below 6 GHz have better propagation properties and are better suited for mobile communications because they most likely guarantee service to all the niches of the coverage area."
 +
:-"To approach the theoretical capacity of the system, WiMAX uses a combination of adaptive modulation schemes and coding ranging from ½ rate QPSK to 5/6 rate 64QAM. The amount of error correction applied to each transmission is adjustable and can be changed depending on the required QoS and based on the reliability of the link between each user and the base station."
 +
:-"The extensive flexibility introduced into the WiMAX standard also makes it harder to model correctly."
 +
*Y. Takatori, F. Fitzek, K. Tsunekawa, R. Prasad, [http://www.springerlink.com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/content/f13ul22144806474/fulltext.pdf "Channel Capacity of TDD-OFDM-MIMO for Multiple Access Points in a Wireless Single-Frequency-Network"], Wireless Personal Communications, 2005
 +
*Shamik Mukherjee, [http://www.wimax.com/commentary/spotlight/wimax-antennas-primer-a-guide-to-mimo-and-beamforming WiMAX Antennas Primer - A guide to MIMO and beamforming"], Wi|MAX.com May 21, 2007
 +
*David Gesbert, Jabran Akhtar, [http://www.eurecom.fr/~gesbert/papers/TelektronikkMIMO.pdf "Breaking the barriers of Shannon's capacity: An overview of MIMO wireless systems"], Telenor's Journal: Telektronikk
 +
*[http://www.wimax.com/commentary/wimax_weekly/2-7-1-throughput-and-spectral-efficiency-cont Chart from ''Fundamentals of WiMAX: Understanding Broadband Wireless Networking]
 +
 +
=== Channelization ===
 +
*Kai Dietze, Ted Hicks, Greg Leon, [http://www.edx.com/files/WiMaxPaperv1.pdf WiMAX System Performance Studies"], EDX Wireless, LLC
 +
:-"Time Division Duplex (TDD) transmission scheme of the 802.16e standard will be considered. In the initial working group release, the standard supports 5 and 10 MHz bandwidth allocations for each radio frequency channel. The available channel bandwidth is made up of sub-carriers each of which can be modulated individually with information. WiMAX uses Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) to assign sub-carriers to different users. The number of sub-carriers available for assignment in the UL and DL are a function of the channel bandwidth, the frame size, and the UL/DL transmit ratio. In mobile WiMAX, the smallest unit of frequency-time allocation available is a slot which contains 48 data sub-carriers."
 +
:-"The sub-carriers comprising a slot can be made up of adjacent sub-carriers or can be allocated in a distributed fashion throughout the available carrier space. In general, distributed carrier allocations perform better in mobile environments, while adjacent sub carriers are better suited for fixed links. The number of slots assigned to a particular user per frame is a function of their data needs."
 +
*Lawrence Rigby, [http://mobilehandsetdesignline.com/198100012;jsessionid=4HTCRLHD51VJ2QSNDLQSKHSCJUNN2JVN?printableArticle=true "How to design a scalable OFDMA engine for WiMAX"], Mobile Handset Design Line, March 13, 2007
 +
:-The FFT size is a parameter that must be specified at synthesis time, but can change the guard interval at run time.
 +
*[http://www.intel.com/netcomms/technologies/wimax/304471.pdf "Understanding Wi-Fi and WiMAX as Metro-Access Solutions"], Intel White Paper, 2004
 +
*[http://www.itr-rescue.org/bin/pubdocs/mtg-weekly/9-16-05%20Intel_WiMAX_White_Paper%20(Hassib).pdf "Understanding WiMAX and 3G for Portable/Mobile Broadband Wireless"], Intel Technical White Paper, December 2004
 +
*Eugene Crozier, Allan Klein, [http://www.wimaxforum.org/technology/downloads/WiMAXNLOSgeneral-versionaug04.pdf"WiMAX’s technology for LOS and NLOS environments"], WiMAX Forum White Paper
 +
*[http://www.conniq.com/WiMAX/fractional-frequency-reuse.htm "Fractional Frequency Reuse in Mobile WiMAX"], Conniq WiMAX basic tutorial
 +
*[http://www.alvarion.com/upload/contents/291/Radio_Mobile_WiMAX_wp.pdf "Understanding the Radio Technologies of Mobile WiMAX And their effect on network deployment optimization"], Alvarion White Paper, 2006
 +
 +
=== Doppler considerations ===
 +
 +
=== Computational Complexity ===
 +
*Siavash M. Alamouti, [http://www.ieee-mobilewimax.org/downloads/Alamouti.pps#389,11,Complexity_of_MIMO-OFDM_vs._MIMO-CDMA Mobile WiMAX: Vision & Evolution], Intel Mobility Group presentation, March 27, 2007
 +
:-Receiver complexity gor MIMO-CDMA grows exponentially with bandwidth and linearly for MIMO-OFDM
 +
:-"On Multivariate Communication Theory and Data Rate Multiplying Techniques for Multipath Chanels", PhD dissertaion, Greg Raleigh, December, 1998
 +
*Zhendong Luo, Hong Gao, Yuanan Liu, ["Adaptive Transmission With Linear Computational Complexity in MIMO-OFDM Systems"], IEEE Transactions on Communications, October 2007
 +
:-the total complexity of the enhanced mode is roughly 3K flops (K = subchannels x subcarriers)
 +
*Pavle Belanović, [http://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/pub-et_11323.pdf An Open Tool Integration Environment for Efficient Design of Embedded Systems in Wireless Communications"], Ph.D. Dissertation, Technischen Universität Wien, February 2006
 +
*Takayuki Fukatani, Ryutaroh Matsumoto, Tomohiko Uyematsu, [http://xxx.arxiv.org/PS_cache/cs/pdf/0410/0410040v1.pdf "Two Methods for Decreasing the Computational Complexity of the MIMO ML Decoder"], IEICE Transactions, October 2004
 +
*Youngok Kim, Jaekwon Kim, [http://ietcom.oxfordjournals.org.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/cgi/reprint/E90-B/11/3290?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=Low+Complexity+FFT+Schemes+for+Multicarrier+Demodulation+in+OFDMA+Systems&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&resourcetype=HWCIT Low Complexity FFT Schemes for Multicarrier Demodulation in OFDMA Systems"], IEICE Transactions on Communications, November 2007
 +
*Soonchul Park, Hongchao Zhang, William W. Hager, Dong Seog Han, [http://www.ksiam.org/conference/annual071/upfile/Box_abstract.pdf "Box Constrained Optimization for Signal Detection in MIMO Channels"], KSIAM, 2007
 +
 +
 +
=== Computational capability in mobile devices ===
 +
 +
=== Gbps Evolution ===
 +
*[http://www.dailywireless.org/2007/02/20/wimax-80216m-100-mbps/ "WiMAX 802.16m: 1Gbps"], Dailywireless.org, February 20, 2007
 +
:-Good graph on bandwidth/mobility evolution to 4G with WiMAX and mobile WiMAX
 +
:-Information on [http://iaf-bs.de/projects/gigabit-mimo-ofdm-testbed.en.html Siemens MIMO testbed for 1 Gbps] wireless: "They used an RF channel with 100 MHz bandwidth, with 82 MHz occupied by the OFDM signal. The maximum data rate of 1 GBPS is achieved with 64 QAM modulation on all subcarriers."
 +
:-Convergence chart for LTE and 802.16 into 4G
 +
 
== Project: Presentation on Thursday, 8 November ==
 
== Project: Presentation on Thursday, 8 November ==
 
[[WiMAX]]
 
[[WiMAX]]
 
"OFDM and Wimax (4G) Networking"
 
"OFDM and Wimax (4G) Networking"
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX WiMAX on Wikipedia]
+
*(4.2) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX WiMAX on Wikipedia]
 
*[http://www.wimaxforum.org/home/ WiMAX Forum, wimaxforum.org]
 
*[http://www.wimaxforum.org/home/ WiMAX Forum, wimaxforum.org]
 
*[http://www.wimaxforum.org/technology/downloads/ WiMAX Forum white papers]
 
*[http://www.wimaxforum.org/technology/downloads/ WiMAX Forum white papers]
Exception encountered, of type "Error"