Evaluation of an Outdoor-to-In-Car Radio Channel with a Four-Antenna Handset and a User Phantom
(2011) IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference VTC 2011-Fall- Abstract
- Based on static outdoor channel measurements we evaluate the influence of a vehicle on the MIMO radio channel, from a base station antenna array, to a multiple antenna handset in the hand of a user placed inside a test car. The measurement scenario is chosen to mimic a 2.6 GHz (LTE) macro-cell urban or rural scenario with two locations and orientations of the car, one at an open parking lot with a strong line-of-sight component, and one between buildings with no line-of-sight. The measurements are repeated several times with the user phantom plus handset positioned at the same spot within the car and with the car absent. Figures of the penetration loss, impact on fading statistics, mean delay, delay spread, terminal antenna correlation,... (More)
- Based on static outdoor channel measurements we evaluate the influence of a vehicle on the MIMO radio channel, from a base station antenna array, to a multiple antenna handset in the hand of a user placed inside a test car. The measurement scenario is chosen to mimic a 2.6 GHz (LTE) macro-cell urban or rural scenario with two locations and orientations of the car, one at an open parking lot with a strong line-of-sight component, and one between buildings with no line-of-sight. The measurements are repeated several times with the user phantom plus handset positioned at the same spot within the car and with the car absent. Figures of the penetration loss, impact on fading statistics, mean delay, delay spread, terminal antenna correlation, eigenvalue distributions, as well as the performance of various hybrid diversity combining and spatial multiplexing schemes, are evaluated and compared with and without the vehicle present. It is found that the car make the channel statistics become more Rayleigh like and increases multipath channel richness, improving the potential of diversity gain and, to some extent, spatial multiplexing. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/2520181
- author
- Harrysson, Fredrik LU ; Hult, Tommy LU and Tufvesson, Fredrik LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2011
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Channel measurement, multiple-input multiple-output, diversity, user interaction, vehicle
- host publication
- Vehicular Technology Conference VTC 2011-Fall
- pages
- 5 pages
- publisher
- IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
- conference name
- IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference VTC 2011-Fall
- conference location
- San Francisco, CA, United States
- conference dates
- 2011-09-05 - 2011-09-08
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:83755162309
- DOI
- 10.1109/VETECF.2011.6093240
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 2bdc0616-42c4-49ba-a73e-70aa0a964951 (old id 2520181)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 12:16:01
- date last changed
- 2022-05-17 06:01:57
@inproceedings{2bdc0616-42c4-49ba-a73e-70aa0a964951, abstract = {{Based on static outdoor channel measurements we evaluate the influence of a vehicle on the MIMO radio channel, from a base station antenna array, to a multiple antenna handset in the hand of a user placed inside a test car. The measurement scenario is chosen to mimic a 2.6 GHz (LTE) macro-cell urban or rural scenario with two locations and orientations of the car, one at an open parking lot with a strong line-of-sight component, and one between buildings with no line-of-sight. The measurements are repeated several times with the user phantom plus handset positioned at the same spot within the car and with the car absent. Figures of the penetration loss, impact on fading statistics, mean delay, delay spread, terminal antenna correlation, eigenvalue distributions, as well as the performance of various hybrid diversity combining and spatial multiplexing schemes, are evaluated and compared with and without the vehicle present. It is found that the car make the channel statistics become more Rayleigh like and increases multipath channel richness, improving the potential of diversity gain and, to some extent, spatial multiplexing.}}, author = {{Harrysson, Fredrik and Hult, Tommy and Tufvesson, Fredrik}}, booktitle = {{Vehicular Technology Conference VTC 2011-Fall}}, keywords = {{Channel measurement; multiple-input multiple-output; diversity; user interaction; vehicle}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.}}, title = {{Evaluation of an Outdoor-to-In-Car Radio Channel with a Four-Antenna Handset and a User Phantom}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/VETECF.2011.6093240}}, doi = {{10.1109/VETECF.2011.6093240}}, year = {{2011}}, }