Wi Fi
Wi Fi
Wi Fi
Table of Contents
Table of Contents .............................................................................................................. 1
Executive Summary...... ................................................................................................... 2
Introduction ................... .................................................................................................. 3
Wireless LANs and Wi-Fi™.. ........................................................................................... 4
Benefits of Wireless LANs ................................................................................................ 4
802.11 Basics ..................................................................................................................... 4
The Evolving 802.11 Standard........................................................................................... 5
RF Fundamentals for WLANs............................................................................................ 8
Propagation Characteristics Must Be Considered.............................................................. 8
Data Rate and Range are Related ...................................................................................... 9
Regulations......................................................................................................................... 9
Sharing the Airwaves ........................................... ..............................................................9
Allocated Spectrum ............................................................................................................ 9
Mandated Use of Spread Spectrum Techniques............................................................... 10
Appendix ............................................................... ......................................................... 12
Acronyms ......................................................................................................................... 12
References on the Web. ......................................... ......................................................13
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Executive Summary
The IEEE 802.11 working group published the 802.11 standard for wireless LANs in
1999.802.11b is a supplement to 802.11 that specifies a higher data rate and is currently
the industry-accepted standard for WLANs. 802.11b products that meet a base standard
of interoperability are certified by the Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance (WECA)
with the Wi-Fi™ logo.
Several IEEE 802.11 working groups are creating standards for improvements in data
rates, quality of service, and security. Options for higher data rates will soon be available
as 802.11a and 802.11g products begin to appear on the market. The 802.11e working
group will be publishing recommendations for adding quality of service features to
802.11 as well.
An understanding of some basic radio frequency (RF) principles will help ensure a
successful network design. Range is limited by the physical nature of RF energy to
disperse as the distance from the transmitter increases, as well as its tendency to be
absorbed by materials such as walls and furniture. Range also decreases as data rate is
increased.
WLANs are unregulated in the sense that users are not required to be licensed. However,
characteristics of the equipment itself, such as transmitter power and how the signal is
transmitted, are governed by the FCC.
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Introduction
This paper is targeted at individuals who are already familiar with traditional wired
networks and who wish to become familiar with wireless networks and some of the issues
concerning their development.
Once confined only to specialty niches, wireless networks are now beginning to
proliferate in the form of IEEE 802.11b (Wi-Fi™) wireless LANs, allowing users to roam
throughout a building with a laptop while still remaining connected to their network.
Wi-Fi™ networks are described, as well as how the 802.11 standard is evolving to supply
higher data rates and better quality of service.
The reader is introduced to the concept of radio frequency propagation and how it affects
wireless networks, as well as the FCC regulations that govern their use of the spectrum,
and what technologies are utilized to meet these requirements.
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It costs far less to deploy a wireless LAN than to deploy a wired version. The savings
isn’t just in the falling cost of wireless components; it’s in the installation of the
infrastructure as well. A major cost of installing and modifying a wired network is the
expense to run network and power cables, all in accordance with local building codes.
For this reason, WLANs are being installed even when the network is comprised only of
non-roaming desktops. Examples of additional applications where the decision to deploy
WLANs results in large cost savings include:
Additions, moves, and changes within an organization
Installation of temporary networks
Installation of hard-to-wire locations
Elimination of costly leased lines
Wireless LANs give the enterprise more mobility and flexibility by allowing workers to
stay connected to the Internet and to the network as they roam from one coverage area to
another.
802.11 Basics
Wireless LAN Product Certification
The Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance1 (WECA) is the industry organization that
certifies 802.11 products that are deemed to meet a base standard of interoperability. The
first family of products to be certified by WECA is that based on the 802.11b standard.
These products are stamped with the Wi-Fi™ logo and referred to as Wi-Fi devices.
802.11a
products will be stamped with the Wi-Fi5™ logo. The Wi-Fi logos certify that the
product will work with any other Wi-Fi certified device, regardless of manufacturer.
Network Topology
Each component of a WLAN requires a radio transceiver and antenna. Components are
either stations or access points. Stations (STAs) are wireless LAN client radios. They can
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Since that time many task groups have been formed to create supplements and
enhancements to the original 802.11 standard. At present there are task groups “a”
through “i” (the 802.11 WG refers to task groups by lower case letter), which are working
on various methods to standardize improvements to the 802.11 standard.
Some of the supplements are considered optional from an IEEE point of view and may
never become an industry accepted standard.
The Current Standard
802.11b
The 802.11b TG created a supplement to the original 802.11 standard, called 802.11b,
which has become the industry standard for WLANs. It uses DSSS and provides data
rates up to 11 Mbps at 2.4 GHz. 802.11b will eventually be replaced in the marketplace
by products built to standards with higher data rates, more quality of service (QoS)
features, and better security.
The Battle for Higher Data Rates
The same evolution that increased the speed of wired Ethernet is now being played out in
the wireless realm. There are presently two options for higher data rates in the near future
– one clearly defined in a published standard, and the other currently being developed.
Market forces will decide which wins. Either option means big gains for the user beyond
seeing just faster data throughput rates, as more stations can now be added to an Access
Point without noticeable performance degradation.
802.11a
The 802.11a supplement to 802.11 was published in 1999. It uses Orthogonal Frequency
Division Multiplexing (OFDM) to provide data rates to 54 Mbps in the 5 GHz U-NII
bands.
In addition to being uncrowded, more spectrum in the U-NII bands allows room for 12
non-overlapping channels, compared to just three in the 2.4 GHz ISM bands. Both of
these factors make operating in the U-NII bands far less prone to interference.
However, at 5 GHz, more path loss occurs due to increased absorption of the RF energy
by walls and other solid objects. This, combined with a decrease in range due to the
higher data rates, may require that more access points be installed to effectively cover an
area comparable to that of 802.11b.
There are now chip sets appearing that include both 802.11a and 802.11b capability, and
technology is being developed to allow the seamless handoff of communication between
overlapping 802.11a and 802.11b networks.
802.11g
The 802.11g task group is working on a supplement to the 802.11 standard that defines a
technology for operation at 2.4 GHz that offers higher data rates (up to 22 Mbps) using
OFDM, while remaining backwards compatible to 802.11b. In addition, the supplement
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will specify even higher data rates using two different methods (up to 33 Mbps using
PBCC-DSSS and up to 54 Mbps using CCK-OFDM) which manufactures can optionally
incorporate.
When compared to 802.11a, 802.11g offers the advantages of lower cost, backwards
compatibility to existing 802.11b equipment, and less path loss than 802.11a. This
translates into higher data rates for a given range, or increased range for a given data rate.
The Need for Addition of QoS
802.11e
The 802.11e task group is working to enhance the current 802.11 MAC to expand support
for applications with quality of service requirements. (Note: Security issues formerly
being considered by the 802.11e task group are now being considered by the 802.11i task
group.)
The intent is to make 802.11 fully capable of supporting applications from both business
and home environments, including multimedia.
Data transmission is relatively immune to interruptions caused when packets are resent or
shuffled in transmission. However, these interruptions and time delays can wreak havoc
on information that must be streamed across in a continuous fashion, such as voice or
video.
802.11e has created a QoS Baseline Document (eventually to become a draft) that
proposes methods for handling time-sensitive traffic. Among other things, it guarantees
collision avoidance and provides mechanisms for scheduling transmissions and
improving channel robustness. 802.11e expects to publish a draft supplement in 2002.
Higher data rates and QoS will be welcome additions to the evolving 802.11 family of
standards. However, the most pressing and immediate need for 802.11 is an improvement
in security.
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openers, security devices, etc. Within the ISM bands, all users share the airwaves and
must tolerate interference from one another.
Mandated Use of Spread Spectrum Techniques
Radio transmission of information relies upon the concept of superimposing information
on, or modulating, a carrier wave. Traditional narrowband radio transmission centers this
carrier at a specific frequency. As the carrier is modulated, its power is confined to a
relatively narrow band around the carrier’s center frequency. The listener must then tune
his receiver to that frequency to receive the transmission.
For those bands becoming crowded with users, the FCC is embracing a different
philosophy, that of spreading or smearing a signal’s power over a very large band of
frequencies. At any one frequency the signal’s average power over a given period of time
will be very low – in many cases down in the noise level. Signals that use the same
spreading technology can still interfere with one another, but the interference presented to
all other signals is much reduced, allowing more users to occupy the same band.
To minimize interference in this crowded spectrum, the Part 15 rules specify that all
transmissions with a power level exceeding 0 dBm (1 mW) must utilize either frequency
hopping or direct sequence spread spectrum techniques. The FCC is in the process of
modifying the Part 15 rules to allow Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
(OFDM) as well. All of these techniques serve the same purpose, to spread the signal’s
power over a wider range of frequencies, thus reducing the average power density of the
signal at any particular frequency and minimizing interference to other signals occupying
the same band.
A brief explanation of these signal-spreading techniques follows:
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS)7 was originally conceived as a means to
hide a transmission from unwanted listeners. It is now utilized for another purpose - the
reduction of interference. Frequency hopping works by transmitting the signal carrier for
a short period of time on one narrow band, then hopping to another, and so on. Over a
period of time, the average signal power is thus spread over a very wide band of
frequencies.
The frequency hops appear random to anyone who doesn’t know the pre-arranged hop
pattern. Fifty years ago this made it impossible to tune in and listen to a transmission,
because the signal carrier never stayed on one frequency long enough for the listener to
locate it and retune the receiver to the new frequency. Today, wireless LANs or PANs
that incorporate FHSS do so on predetermined hopping sequences that are not secret, and
the technology to follow the hopping pattern and retrieve the signal is available for the
cost of a wireless card. Thus, FHSS, as employed by wireless LANs and PANs, no
longer offers any inherent security. It does, however, serve to reduce interference to and
from other devices.
Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS)8 is a more complex technique which spreads
the signal’s power across a wider bandwidth by spreading the carrier itself, instead of
rapidly moving it around as FHSS does. It does this by directly modulating the carrier
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with a high-speed code sequence which has the characteristics of pseudo-random noise
(PN). The faster a carrier is modulated, the wider its bandwidth becomes.
The spreading sequence is produced by modulating the data stream with a PN spreading
code, thus resulting in a signal which has a much higher bandwidth than the information
bandwidth alone. For example, with 1 and 2 Mbps 802.11 DSSS, each bit of data is
logically combined with an 11-bit Barker code. Because the bit-rate (chip-rate) of the
spreading sequence is much higher than that of the data rate, the bandwidth is effectively
spread over a much larger area than would otherwise be occupied if the carrier was
modulated by the data stream alone. The result is that the signal power is spread over a
much larger band and appears to other users as low-power noise.
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)9, which utilizes multiple
carriers (referred to as subcarriers), is technically not a spread spectrum technique
because the subcarriers remain stationary and are not spread, but it serves the same
purpose of spreading the signal power over a large band. It does this by breaking the
signal up into parts and transmitting each of the parts on a different subcarrier at a
different center frequency. Thus a fast transmission is sent as many slow transmissions,
simultaneously, on many different frequencies.
This effective slowing of the symbol transmission rate, without slowing the actual data
transmission rate, makes OFDM resistant to intersymbol interference resulting from
multipath. In theory, if higher data rates are required, then the signal can just be broken
up into more parts and transmitted on additional subcarriers, each part still being sent at a
slow enough rate to avoid intersymbol interference. In practice, the amount of bandwidth
available for additional subcarriers is limited by the FCC.
These different techniques for spreading the signal’s carrier, and the different digital
modulation techniques employed to put information on the carrier, are central to defining
the different wireless technologies and standards, as well as putting a perspective on
interference issues among 802.11 LANs and Bluetooth networks.
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with a high-speed code sequence which has the characteristics of pseudo-random noise
(PN). The faster a carrier is modulated, the wider its bandwidth becomes.
The spreading sequence is produced by modulating the data stream with a PN spreading
code, thus resulting in a signal which has a much higher bandwidth than the information
bandwidth alone. For example, with 1 and 2 Mbps 802.11 DSSS, each bit of data is
logically combined with an 11-bit Barker code. Because the bit-rate (chip-rate) of the
spreading sequence is much higher than that of the data rate, the bandwidth is effectively
spread over a much larger area than would otherwise be occupied if the carrier was
modulated by the data stream alone. The result is that the signal power is spread over a
much larger band and appears to other users as low-power noise.
Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM)9, which utilizes multiple
carriers (referred to as subcarriers), is technically not a spread spectrum technique
because the subcarriers remain stationary and are not spread, but it serves the same
purpose of spreading the signal power over a large band. It does this by breaking the
signal up into parts and transmitting each of the parts on a different subcarrier at a
different center frequency. Thus a fast transmission is sent as many slow transmissions,
simultaneously, on many different frequencies.
This effective slowing of the symbol transmission rate, without slowing the actual data
transmission rate, makes OFDM resistant to intersymbol interference resulting from
multipath. In theory, if higher data rates are required, then the signal can just be broken
up into more parts and transmitted on additional subcarriers, each part still being sent at a
slow enough rate to avoid intersymbol interference. In practice, the amount of bandwidth
available for additional subcarriers is limited by the FCC.
These different techniques for spreading the signal’s carrier, and the different digital
modulation techniques employed to put information on the carrier, are central to defining
the different wireless technologies and standards, as well as putting a perspective on
interference issues among 802.11 LANs and Bluetooth networks.
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Appendix
Acronyms
AP - Access Point
BER - Bit Error Rate
BSS – Basic Service Set
CCK - Complementary Code Keying
DSSS - Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum
ESS – Extended Service Set
FCC -Federal Communications Commission
FHSS - Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum
IBSS – Independent Basic Service Set
IEEE - Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers
ISM - Industrial, Scientific, Medical
IT - Information Technology
MAC - Media Access Control
MAN - Metropolitan Area Network
Mbps - Megabits per second
MBps - Megabytes per second
OFDM - Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
OSI - Open System Interconnection
PAN - Personal Area Network
PBCC - Packet Binary Convolution Coding
PCMCIA - Personal Computer Memory Card International Association
PHY - Physical (Layer)
PN - Pseudo-random Noise
QoS - Quality of Service
RF - Radio Frequency
S/N ratio - Signal-to-Noise Ratio
SNR - Signal-to-Noise Ratio
STA - Station
TG - Task Group
U-NII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure
USB – Universal Serial Bus
WECA – Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance
WG - Working Group
WLAN - Wireless LAN
XOR - exclusive OR (a mathematical logic operation)
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