Microwave
Introduction
to Microwave
Microwave is
a line-of-sight wireless communication technology that uses high
frequency beams of radio waves to provide high speed
wireless connections that can send and receive voice, video, and data
information.Microwave links are are widely used for point-to-point
communications because their small wavelength allows conveniently-sized
antennas to direct them in narrow beams, which can be pointed directly at the
receiving antenna. This allows nearby microwave equipment to use the same
frequencies without interfering with each other, as lower frequency radio waves
do. Another advantage is that the high frequency of microwaves gives the
microwave band a very large information-carrying capacity; the microwave band has
a bandwidth 30 times that of all the rest of the radio spectrum below it.Microwave
radio transmission is commonly used in point-to-point communication systems on
the surface of the Earth, in satellite communications, and in deep space radio
communications. Other parts of the microwave radio band are used for radars,
radio navigation systems, sensor systems, and radio astronomy.The higher part
of the radio electromagnetic spectrum with frequencies are above 30
GHz and below 100 GHz, are called “millimeter waves” because their wavelengths
are conveniently measured in millimeters, and their wavelengths range from 10
mm down to 3.0 mm. Radio waves in this band are usually strongly attenuated by
the Earthly atmosphere and particles contained in it, especially during wet
weather. Also, in wide band of frequencies around 60 GHz, the radio waves are
strongly attenuated by molecular oxygen in the atmosphere. The electronic
technologies needed in the millimeter wave band are also much more
complex and harder to manufacture than those of the microwave band,
hence cost of Millimeter Wave Radios are generally higher.
History of
Microwave Communication
James Clerk
Maxwell, using his famous “Maxwell’s equations,” predicted the existence of
invisible electromagnetic waves, of which microwaves are a part, in 1865. In
1888, Heinrich Hertz became the first to demonstrate the existence of such
waves by building an apparatus that produced and detected microwaves in the
ultra high frequency region. Hertz recognized that the results of his
experiment validated Maxwell’s prediction, but he did not see any practical
applications for these invisible waves. Later work by others led to the
invention of wireless communications, based on microwaves. Contributors to this
work included Nikola Tesla, Guglielmo Marconi, Samuel Morse, Sir William
Thomson (later Lord Kelvin), Oliver Heaviside, Lord Rayleigh, and Oliver Lodge.
Microwave Link over English Channel, 1931
In 1931 a
US-French consortium demonstrated an experimental microwave relay link across
the English Channel using 10 foot (3m) dishes, one of the earliest microwave
communication systems. Telephony, telegraph and facsimile data was transmitted
over the 1.7 GHz beams 40 miles between Dover, UK and Calais, France. However
it could not compete with cheap undersea cable rates, and a planned commercial
system was never built.
During the 1950s the AT&T Long Lines system of microwave relay links grew
to carry the majority of US long distance telephone traffic, as well as
intercontinental television network signals. The prototype was called TDX and
was tested with a connection between New York City and Murray Hill, the location
of Bell Laboratories in 1946. The TDX system was set up between New York and
Boston in 1947.
Modern
Commercial Microwave Links
Microwave Communication Tower
A microwave link
is a communications system that uses a beam of radio waves in the microwave
frequency range to transmit video, audio, or data between two locations, which
can be from just a few feet or meters to several miles or kilometers apart.
Modern Microwave Links can carry up to 400Mbps in a 56MHz channel using 256QAM
modulation and IP header compression techniques. Operating Distances for
microwave links are determined by antenna size (gain), frequency band, and link
capacity. The availability of clear Line of Sight is crucial for
Microwave links for which the Earth’s curvature has to be allowedMicrowave
links are commonly used by television broadcasters to transmit programmer
across a country, for instance, or from an outside broadcast back to a
studio. Mobile units can be camera mounted, allowing cameras the freedom
to move around without trailing cables. These are often seen on the touchlines
of sports fields on Steadicam systems.
Planning of
microwave links
Microwave links have to be
planned considering the following parameters:
- Required distance (km/miles) and capacity (Mbps)
- Desired Availability target (%) for the link
- Availability of Clear Line of
Sight (LOS) between end nodes
- Towers or masts if required to achieve clear LOS
- Allowed frequency bands specific to region/country
- Environmental constraints, including rain fade
- Cost of licenses for required frequency bands
Microwave
Frequency Bands
Microwave signals are often
divided into three categories:
ultra high frequency (UHF) (0.3-3 GHz);
super high frequency (SHF) (3-30 GHz); and
extremely high frequency (EHF) (30-300 GHz).
In addition, microwave frequency bands are designated by specific letters. The
designations by the Radio Society of Great Britain are given below.
Microwave frequency bands
Designation Frequency range
L band 1 to 2 GHz
S band 2 to 4 GHz
C band 4 to 8 GHz
X band 8 to 12 GHz
Ku band 12 to 18 GHz
K band 18 to 26.5 GHz
Ka band 26.5 to 40 GHz
Q band 30 to 50 GHz
U band 40 to 60 GHz
V band 50 to 75 GHz
E band 60 to 90 GHz
W band 75 to 110 GHz
F band 90 to 140 GHz
D band 110 to 170 GHz
The term “P band” is sometimes
used for ultra high frequencies below the L-band. For other definitions, see
Letter Designations of Microwave Bands
Lower Microwave frequencies
are used for longer links, and regions with higher rain fade. Conversely,
Higher frequencies are used for shorter links and regions with lower rain fade.
Rain Fade
on Microwave Links
Rain fade refers primarily to
the absorption of a microwave radio frequency (RF) signal by atmospheric rain,
snow or ice, and losses which are especially prevalent at frequencies above 11
GHz. It also refers to the degradation of a signal caused by the
electromagnetic interference of the leading edge of a storm front. Rain fade
can be caused by precipitation at the uplink or downlink location. However, it
does not need to be raining at a location for it to be affected by rain fade,
as the signal may pass through precipitation many miles away, especially if the
satellite dish has a low look angle. From 5 to 20 percent of rain fade or
satellite signal attenuation may also be caused by rain, snow or ice on the
uplink or downlink antenna reflector, radome or feed horn. Rain fade is not
limited to satellite uplinks or downlinks, it also can affect terrestrial point
to point microwave links (those on the earth’s surface).
Possible ways to overcome the
effects of rain fade are site diversity, uplink power control, variable rate
encoding, receiving antennas larger (i.e. higher gain) than the required size
for normal weather conditions, and hydrophobic coatings.
Diversity in
Microwave Links
Example of a 1+0 Unprotected Microwave Link
In terrestrial microwave links, a diversity scheme
refers to a method for improving the reliability of a message signal by using
two or more communication channels with different characteristics.
Diversity plays an important role in combatting fading and co-channel interference and
avoiding error
bursts. It is based on the fact that individual channels
experience different levels of fading and interference. Multiple versions of
the same signal may be transmitted and/or received and combined in the
receiver. Alternatively, a redundant forward error correction code may be added and
different parts of the message transmitted over different channels. Diversity
techniques may exploit the multipath
propagation, resulting in a diversity gain, often
measured in decibles.
The following classes of
diversity schemes are typical in Terrestrial Microwave Links:
- Unprotected: Microwave
links where there is no diversity or protection are classified as
Unprotected and also as 1+0. There is one set of equipment
installed, and no diversity or backup
- Hot Standby: Two sets of microwave
equipment (ODUs, or active radios) are installed generally connected to
the same antenna, tuned to the same frequency channel. One is
“powered down” or in standby mode, generally with the receiver active but
transmitter muted. If the active unit fails, it is powered down and
the standby unit is activated. Hot Standby is abbreviated as HSB,
and is often used in 1+1 configurations (one active, one standby).
- Frequency diversity: The signal is transmitted using
several frequency channels or spread over a wide spectrum that is affected
by frequency-selective fading.
Microwave radio links often use several active radio
channels plus one protection channel for automatic use by any
faded channel. This is known as N+1 protection
- Space Diversity: The signal is
transmitted over several different propagation paths. In the case of wired
transmission, this can be achieved by transmitting via multiple wires. In
the case of wireless transmission, it can be achieved by antenna
diversity using multiple transmitter antennas or
multiple receiving antennas .
- Polarization diversity:
Multiple versions of a signal are transmitted and received via antennas
with different polarization. A diversity combining technique
is applied on the receiver side.
Diverse Path
Resilient Failover
In terrestrial point to point
microwave systems ranging from 11 GHz to 80 GHz, a parallel backup link can be
installed alongside a rain fade prone higher bandwidth connection. In this
arrangement, a primary link such as an 80GHz 1 Gbit/s full duplex microwave
bridge may be calculated to have a 99.9% availability rate over the period of
one year. The calculated 99.9% availability rate means that the link may be
down for a cumulative total of ten or more hours per year as the peaks of rain
storms pass over the area. A secondary lower bandwidth link such as a 5.8 GHz
based 100 Mbit/s bridge may be installed parallel to the primary link, with
routers on both ends controlling automatic failover to the 100 Mbit/s bridge
when the primary 1 Gbit/s link is down due to rain fade. Using this
arrangement, high frequency point to point links (23GHz+) may be installed to
service locations many kilometers farther than could be served with a single
link requiring 99.99% uptime over the course of one year.
Automatic
Coding and Modulation (ACM)
Microwave Adaptive Coding and Modulation (ACM)
Link adaptation, or Adaptive
Coding and Modulation (ACM), is a term used in wireless communications to
denote the matching of the modulation, coding and other signal and protocol
parameters to the conditions on the radio link (e.g. the pathloss, the
interference due to signals coming from other transmitters, the sensitivity of
the receiver, the available transmitter power margin, etc.). For example, EDGE
uses a rate adaptation algorithm that adapts the modulation and coding scheme
(MCS) according to the quality of the radio channel, and thus the bit rate and
robustness of data transmission. The process of link adaptation is a dynamic
one and the signal and protocol parameters change as the radio link conditions
change.
The goal of Adaptive
Modulation is to improve the operational efficiency of Microwave links
by increasing network capacity over the existing infrastructure – while
reducing sensitivity to environmental interferences.
Adaptive Modulation means dynamically varying the modulation in an errorless
manner in order to maximize the throughput under momentary propagation
conditions. In other words, a system can operate at its maximum throughput
under clear sky conditions, and decrease it
gradually under rain fade. For example a link can change from 256QAM down
to QPSK to keep “link alive” without losing connection. Prior to the
development of Automatic Coding and Modulation, microwave designers had to
design for “worst case” conditions to avoid link outage The benefits of using
ACM include:
- Longer link lengths (distance)
- Using smaller antennas (saves on mast space,
also often required in residential areas)
- Higher Availability (link reliability)
Automatic
Transmit Power Control (ATPC)
Microwave links feature ATPC
which automatically increases the transmit power during “Fade” conditions such
as heavy rainfall. ATPC can be used separately to ACM or together to
maximize link uptime, stability and availability. When the “fade”
conditions (rainfall) are over, the ATPC system reduces the transmit power
again. This reduces the stress on the microwave power amplifiers, which
reduces power consumption, heat generation and increases expected lifetime
(MTBF)
Uses of
microwave links
- Backbone links and “Last Mile”
Communication for cellular network operators
- Backbone links for Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
and Wireless ISPs (WISPs)
- Corporate Networks for Building to Building and
campus sites
- Telecommunications, in linking remote and regional
telephone exchanges to larger (main) exchanges without the need for
copper/optical fibre lines.
- Broadcast Television with HD-SDI and SMPTE standards
Enterprise
Because of the scalability and
flexibility of Microwave technology, Microwave products can be deployed
in many enterprise applications including building-to-building connectivity,
disaster recovery, network redundancy and temporary connectivity for
applications such as data, voice and data, video services, medical imaging, CAD
and engineering services, and fixed-line carrier bypass.
Mobile
Carrier Backhaul
Microwave Backhaul in Cellular Networks
Microwave Links are a valuable
tool in Mobile Carrier Backhaul: Microwave technology can be deployed to
provide traditional PDH 16xE1/T1, STM-1 and STM-4, and Modern IP Gigabit
Ethernet backhaul connectivity and Greenfield mobile networks. Microwave
is far quicker to install and lower Total Cost of Ownership for Cellular
Network Operators compared to deploying or leasing fiber optic networks
Low Latency
Networks
Low Latency versions of
Microwave links uses Low Latency Technology, with absolutely
minimal delay between packets being transmitted and received at the other
end, except the Line of Sight propagation delay. The Speed of Microwave
propagation through the air is approximately 40% higher than through fiber
optics, giving customers an immediate 40% reduction in latency compared to
fiber optics. In addition, fiber optic installations are almost never in
a straight line, with realities of building layout, street ducts and
requirement to use existing telecom infrastructure, the fiber run can be 100%
longer than the direct Line of Sight path between two end points. Hence
Low Latency Microwave products are popular in Low Latency Applications such as
High Frequency Trading and other uses.
Content created by
Lakshmi Narasiman K
III B.Sc. Computer Science
SRMVCAS
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