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WINNER II pdf - Final Report - Cept

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<strong>WINNER</strong> <strong>II</strong> D1.1.2 V1.2<br />

5.2 Space-time concept in simulations<br />

5.2.1 Time sampling and interpolation<br />

Channel sampling frequency has to be finally equal to the simulation system sampling frequency. To<br />

have feasible computational complexity it is not possible to generate channel realisations on the<br />

sampling frequency of the system to be simulated. The channel realisations have to be generated on<br />

some lower sampling frequency and then interpolated to the desired frequency. A practical solution is<br />

e.g. to generate channel samples with sample density (over-sampling factor) two, interpolate them<br />

accurately to sample density 64 and to apply zero order hold interpolation to the system sampling<br />

frequency. Channel impulse responses can be generated during the simulation or stored on a file<br />

before the simulation on low sample density. Interpolation can be done during the system simulation.<br />

To be able to obtain the deep fades in the NLOS scenarios, we suggest using 128 samples per<br />

wavelength (parameter ‘SampleDensity’ = 64). When obtaining channel parameters quasi-stationarity<br />

has been assumed within intervals of 10-50 wavelengths. Therefore we propose to set the drop<br />

duration corresponding to the movement of up to 50 wavelengths.<br />

5.3 Radio-environment settings<br />

5.3.1 Scenario transitions<br />

In the channel model implementation it is not possible to simulate links from different scenarios<br />

within one drop. This assumes that all propagation scenarios are the same for all simulated links. The<br />

change of the scenario in time can be simulated by changing the scenario in the consecutive drop.<br />

Similarly, to obtain different scenarios within radio-network in the same drop, multiple drops could be<br />

simulated – one for each scenario. Afterwards, merging should be performed.<br />

5.3.2 LOS\NLOS transitions<br />

Mix of LOS and NLOS channel realizations can be obtained by first calculating a set of LOS drops<br />

and after it a set of NLOS drops. This can be done by setting the parameter ‘PropagCondition’ to ‘LOS’<br />

and later to ‘NLOS’.<br />

5.4 Bandwidth/Frequency dependence<br />

5.4.1 Frequency sampling<br />

The <strong>WINNER</strong> system is based on the OFDM access scheme. For simulations of the system, channel<br />

realizations in time-frequency domain are needed. The output of WIM is the channel in time-delay<br />

domain. The time-frequency channel at any frequency can be obtained by applying next two steps:<br />

• define a vector of frequencies where the channel should be calculated<br />

• by use of the Fourier transform calculate the channel at defined frequencies<br />

5.4.2 Bandwidth down scaling<br />

The channel models are delivered for 100 MHz RF band-width. Some simulations may need smaller<br />

bandwidths. Therefore we describe below shortly, how the down-scaling should be performed. In<br />

doing so we assume that the channel parameters remain constant in down-scaling as indicated in our<br />

analyses.<br />

5.4.2.1 Down-scaling in delay domain<br />

There is a need for down-scaling, if the minimum delay sample spacing in the Channel Impulse<br />

Response (CIR) is longer than 5 ns in the simulation. Five nanoseconds is the default minimum<br />

spacing for the channel model samples (taps) and defines thus the delay grid for the CIR taps. For all<br />

smaller spacings the model shall be down-scaled. The most precise way would be filtering by e.g. a<br />

FIR filter. This would, however, create new taps in the CIR and this is not desirable. The preferred<br />

method in the delay domain is the following:<br />

- Move the original samples to the nearest location in the down-sampled delay grid.<br />

- In some cases there are two such locations. Then the tap should be placed in the one that has<br />

the smaller delay.<br />

- Sometimes two taps will be located in the same delay position. Then they should be summed<br />

as complex numbers.<br />

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