Search results for "Code rate"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Refinements on IEEE 802.11 Distributed Coordination Function Modeling Approaches

2010

With the popularity of the IEEE 802.11 standards, many analytical saturation throughput studies for the distributed coordination function (DCF) have been reported. In this paper, we outline a number of issues and criticalities raised by previously proposed models. In particular, a careful look at backoff counter decrement rules allows us to conclude that, under saturation conditions, the slot immediately following a successful transmission can be accessed only by the station (STA) that has successfully transmitted in the previous channel access. Moreover, due to the specific acknowledgment (ACK) timeout setting adopted in the standard, the slot immediately following a collision cannot be ac…

Computer Networks and Communicationscomputer.internet_protocolComputer scienceAerospace EngineeringThroughputDistributed coordination functionIEEE 802.11Wireless lanWireless Application ProtocolElectrical and Electronic Engineeringbusiness.industrySettore ING-INF/03 - Telecomunicazioni802.11 Performance analysisWiFiPerformance analysisComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSCode ratemedium access protocolsAutomotive EngineeringbusinessTimeoutcomputerWireless sensor network802.11Computer networkCommunication channel
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Out-of-Band Signaling Scheme for High Speed Wireless LANs

2007

In recent years, the physical layer data rate provided by 802.11 Wireless LANs has dramatically increased thanks to significant advances in the modulation and coding techniques employed. However, previous studies show that the 802.11 MAC operation, namely the distributed coordination function (DCF), represents a limiting factor: the throughput efficiency drops as the channel bit rate increases, and a throughput upper limit does indeed exist when the channel bit rate goes to infinite high. These findings indicate that the performance of the DCF protocol will not be efficiently improved by merely increasing the channel bit rate. This paper shows that the DCF performance may significantly bene…

Computer scienceComputer network performanceWireless LANThroughputDistributed coordination functionBackward compatibilityIEEE 802.11Packet switchingWireless lanWireless LAN Throughput Bit rate Physical layer Modulation coding Access protocols Content management Signal design Media Access Protocol Performance analysisElectrical and Electronic EngineeringIEEE 802.11Settore ING-INF/03 - Telecomunicazionibusiness.industryApplied MathematicsComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSPhysical layerCode rateComputer Science ApplicationsComputer network performance; IEEE 802.11; Wireless LANBurst switchingModulationOut-of-band managementbusinessCommunication channelComputer networkIEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
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A performance analysis of block ACK scheme for IEEE 802.11e networks

2010

The demand for the IEEE 802.11 wireless local-area networks (WLANs) has been drastically increasing along with many emerging applications and services over WLAN. However, the IEEE 802.11 medium access control (MAC) is known to be limited in terms of its throughput performance due to the high MAC overhead, such as interframe spaces (IFS) or per-frame based acknowledgement (ACK) frame transmissions. The IEEE 802.11e MAC introduces the block ACK scheme for improving the system efficiency of the WLAN. Using the block ACK scheme can reduce the ACK transmission overhead by integrating multiple ACKs for a number of data frames into a bitmap that is contained in a block ACK frame, thus increasing t…

IEEE 802Settore ING-INF/03 - TelecomunicazioniComputer Networks and CommunicationsComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSAcknowledgementFrame (networking)medium access controlThroughputCode rateWireless lanOverhead (computing)Wirelessperformance analysisbusinesswireless lanBlock (data storage)Computer networkComputer Networks
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Mutual-information based rate-adaptation for Multi-User TH-IR-UWB coded system

2011

In this paper we present a coding rate adaptation technique for a Time-Hopping Impulse-Radio Ultra-Wide Band (TH-IR-UWB) system assuming that the Multi-User Interference (MUI) is modeled as an additive interference noise following a Generalized Gaussian Distribution (GGD). The shape parameter induced by the GGD model is in general time-variant since it strongly depends on the essential UWB system parameters and the received signal power of the active users. In this paper, we show that the performance of a TH-IR-UWB LDPC coded system is quite independent of the GGD shape parameter when we consider the mutual information between the soft input to the decoder and the transmitted sequence, espe…

Noise (signal processing)business.industryComputer science[INFO.INFO-TS] Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image Processing05 social sciences050801 communication & media studies020206 networking & telecommunicationsLink adaptationData_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORY02 engineering and technologyMutual informationCode rateInterference (wave propagation)0508 media and communicationsSignal-to-noise ratio[INFO.INFO-TS]Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image Processing0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringLow-density parity-check codeTelecommunicationsbusinessAlgorithm[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSComputer Science::Information Theory[SPI.SIGNAL] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processing
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Letter Throughput and Delay Analysis of the Ideal Window

1999

We consider the problem of random access communications over a time slotted channel with feedback of infinitely multiplicity at the beginning of each collision resolution interval (CRI), i.e., users know via instantaneous feedback the number of users involved in that collision. Once this is known, the resolution algorithm (CRA) operates with binary (successful / non successful, s/ns) feedback. The analysis of this simple full feedback sensing window random access algorithm, named ideal window stabilized ALOHA, (IWSA), algorithm, provides a throughput of 0.5052 packets/slot, Its delay is also analyzed and compared with similar algorithms.

Packet switchingAlohaNetwork packetComputer Science::Networking and Internet ArchitectureBinary numberCode rateElectrical and Electronic EngineeringCollisionAlgorithmTelecommunications networkRandom accessMathematicsEuropean Transactions on Telecommunications
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