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COGNITIVE RADIO

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Title: COGNITIVE RADIO


1
COGNITIVE RADIO
  • TECHNICAL SEMINAR
  • Presented by
  • Sangeetha Nandan (1ay05cs057)

2
INTRODUCTION
  • Cognitive radio is a paradigm for wireless
    communication in which either a network or
    a wireless node changes its transmission or
    reception parameters to communicate efficiently
    avoiding interference with licensed or unlicensed
    users. This alteration of parameters is based on
    the active monitoring of several factors in the
    external and internal radio environment, such as
    radio frequency spectrum, user behavior and
    network state.

3
ARCHITECTURE OF CR
4
A. Physical Layer Functions
  • 1) Spectrum Sensing The main function of the
    physical layer is to sense the spectrum over all
    available degrees of freedom (time, frequency and
    space) in order to identify sub-channels
    currently available for transmission.

5
2) Channel Estimation
  • In order to set up the link, channel sounding is
    used to estimate the quality of sub-channels
    between SUs that want to communicate. The
    transmission parameters (transmit power, bit
    rate, coding, etc.) are determined based on the
    channel sounding results

6
3) Data Transmission
  • CRs optimally uses the available spectrum as
    determined by the spectrum sensing and channel
    estimation functions. Therefore it should have
    the ability to operate at variable symbol rates,
    modulation formats (e.g. low to high order QAM),
    different channel coding schemes, power levels
    and be able to use multiple antennas for
    interference nulling, capacity increase (MIMO) or
    range extension

7
B. Link Layer Functions
  • Group Management
  • It is assumed that any secondary station will
    belong to a SU Group. A newly arriving user can
    either join one of the existing groups or create
    a new one through the Universal Control Channel.
  • Link Management
  • covers the setup of a link in order to enable the
    communication between two SUs and afterwards the
    maintenance of this SU Link for the duration of
    the communication.
  • Medium Access Control
  • As long as it can be assured that all
    Sub-Channels are used exclusively, i.e. all
    Sub-Channels used by one SU Link cannot be used
    by any other SU Link this problem comes down to a
    simple token-passing algorithm ensuring that only
    one of the two communication peers is using the
    link.

8
Types of Cognitive Radio
  • Depending on the set of parameters taken into
    account in deciding on transmission and reception
    changes, we can distinguish certain types of
    cognitive radio.
  • The main two are
  • Full cognitive radio
  • Spectrum sensing cognitive radio

9
(Contd.)
  • depending on the parts of the spectrum available
    for cognitive radio, we can distinguish
  • Licensed Band Cognitive Radio (IEEE
    802.22)
  • Unlicensed Band Cognitive Radio (IEEE
    802.15)

10
FUNCTIONS OF CR
  • The main functions of Cognitive Radios are
  • Spectrum Sensing
  • detecting the unused spectrum and sharing it
    without harmful interference with other users.

11
(Contd.)
  • Spectrum sensing techniques can be classified
    into three categories
  • Transmitter detection cognitive radios must have
    the capability to determine if a signal from a
    primary transmitter is locally present in a
    certain spectrum, there are several approaches
    proposed
  • matched filter detection
  • energy detection
  • cyclostationary feature detection

12
Match filter detection
  • is obtained by correlating a known signal, or
    template, with an unknown signal to detect the
    presence of the template in the unknown signal.

13
(Contd.)
  • Cooperative detection refers to spectrum sensing
    methods where information from multiple Cognitive
    radio users are incorporated for primary user
    detection.

14
(Contd.)
  • Spectrum Management Capturing the best available
    spectrum to meet user communication requirements
  • management functions can be classified as
  • spectrum analysis
  • spectrum decision

15
(Contd.)
  • Spectrum Mobility is defined as the process
    when a cognitive radio user
    exchanges its frequency of operation. Cognitive
    radio networks target to use the spectrum in a
    dynamic manner by allowing the radio terminals to
    operate in the best available frequency band,
    maintaining seamless communication requirements
    during the transition to better spectrum .

16
(Contd.)
  • Spectrum Pooling is a resource sharing strategy
    that organizes the available spectrum into a
    spectrum pool which is then optimized for a given
    application . Once a primary user appears,
    secondary users need to cease transmission if
    they will cause interference.

17
Cognitive radio network
  • The cognitive radio network is an intelligent
    multi user wireless communication system that
    embodies the following list of primary tasks
  • to perceive the radio environment (i.e., outside
    world) by empowering each users receiver to
    sense the environment on a continuous-time basis
  • to learn from the environment and adapt the
    performance of each transceiver

18
(Contd.)
  • to facilitate communication between multiple
    users through cooperation in a self-organized
    manner
  • to control the communication processes among
    competing users through the proper allocation of
    available resources

19
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20
Software defined radio
  • Software-Defined Radio (SDR) system is a radio
    communication system where components that have
    typically been implemented in hardware (e.g.
    mixers, filters, amplifiers, modulators/demodulato
    rs, detectors. etc.) are instead implemented
    using software on a personal computer or other
    embedded computing devices.

21
(Contd.)
  • A basic SDR may consist of a computer (PC)
    equipped with a sound card, or other
    analog-to-digital converter, preceded by some
    form of RF front end. Significant amounts of
    signal processing are handed over to the general
    purpose processor, rather than done using
    special-purpose hardware. Such a design produces
    a radio that can receive and transmit a different
    form of radio protocol (sometimes referred to as
    a waveform) just by running different software.
    It is the enabler of Cognitive radio.

22
Functions provided by SDRs
  • 1. The radio hardware. The radio hardware
    includes radio frequency circuitry and signal
    processing devices.
  • 2. Software modules. Software modules represent
    code that has been loaded into field programmable
    gate arrays (FPGAs), digital signal processors
    (DSPs), or embedded general purpose processors.

23
(Contd.)
  • 3. Middleware. The middleware layer attempts to
    reduce the details of specific devices and
    software modules to common abstractions.
  • 4. Device Manager The device manager loads radio
    configurations into the hardware components and
    sets-up the logical radios.

24
(Contd.)
  • 5. Logical Radio Layer Depending on the radio
    configuration, the hardware and software can be
    programmed to act like multiple radio links .
  • 6. Module Libraries The module libraries are
    collections of radio functions.

25
(Contd.)
  • 7. Rules Engine and Policies Policies are used
    to limit the operation of the radio due to
    regulatory, geographical, or physical
    constraints.
  • 8. Smart Controller A smart controller manages
    all of the radio resources outlined above.

26
ISSUES IN CR
  • Spectrum management
  • Spectrum utilization presence of white spaces
  • Spectral co-existence
  • Spectrum sharing

27
Spectrum management
  • spectrum management involves assigning particular
    frequencies to specified users. This can be done
    through administrative methods or by means of a
    market process, such as an auction. Additionally,
    some spectrum may be reserved for unlicensed use
    (this is sometimes referred to as the spectrum
    commons). All users satisfying certain
    restrictions, for example on power levels, might
    have access to unlicensed bands.

28
Spectral utilization
  • white spaces refer to frequencies allocated to a
    broadcasting service but not used locally
  • unlicensed devices that can guarantee that they
    will not interfere with assigned broadcasts can
    use the empty white spaces in spectrum

29
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30
Spectral coexistence
  • Two approaches have been given
  • Collaborative approach radio of different
    technologies exchange information regarding the
    frequency usage of the spectrum.
  • Non collaborative radio devices sense the
    frequency spectrum occupancy and determine by
    itself the channel definition without
    communicating with other users.

31
Spectral sharing
  • Stringent spectrum sensing requirements
  • Various types of primary users
  • Low SNR environment
  • Fast wideband sensing
  • Robust sensing (to noise uncertainty,
    interference )
  • Can the acquired on/off status be used to protect
    primary users?
  • Channel asymmetry
  • Shadowing, hidden terminal issue
  • Transmission power asymmetry

32
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33
CONCLUSION
  • There are opportunities to explore spectrum
    white spaces
  • To promote white space reuse
  • technically, though challenging, effective
    solutions are needed to protect the primary users
  • economically, good business models are needed to
    make both primary users and secondary users
    happy!

34
(Contd.)
  • Cognitive radio -gt cognitive radio networks
  • How to acquire cognition
  • PHY sensing
  • Network layer traffic sensing
  • Cognitive MAC Control information sharing,
    cooperation,
  • Distributed processing
  • Other issues (security, trust, )
  • Let us work together to make cognitive radio
    (networks) from imagination to reality!

35
(Contd.)
  • Cognitive radio can be used in the following
    fields
  • Signal processing
  • Communication theory
  • Radar systems
  • Control theory

36
bibliography
  • Wikipedia.org
  • IEEE xplore
  • www.technologyreview.com
  • www.cognitiveradio.wireless.vt.edu
  • IEEE papers

37
  • THANK YOU
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