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Books > Professional & Technical > Electronics & communications engineering > Electronics engineering > Applied optics
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Channel Modeling and Physical Layer Optimization in Copper Line Networks (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2019)
Loot Price: R2,660
Discovery Miles 26 600
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Channel Modeling and Physical Layer Optimization in Copper Line Networks (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2019)
Series: Signals and Communication Technology
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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This book investigates the physical layer aspects of high-speed
transmission on twisted-pair copper wires, where the most
performance-critical components are multi-input multi-output (MIMO)
precoding and multi-line spectrum optimization as well as optimized
scheduling of the transmission time slots on the fiber to the
distribution point (FTTdp) copper link. The book brings theoretical
results into the implementation, which requires the introduction of
realistic channel models and more practical implementation
constraints as found in the copper access network. A good
understanding of the transmission medium, twisted-pair telephone
cable bundles is the basis for this work. Starting from the
analysis of measurement data from twisted-pair cable bundles at
high frequencies, it presents a MIMO channel model for the FTTdp
network, which allows the characteristic effects of high-frequency
transmission on copper cable bundles in simulation to be reproduced
and the physical layer transmission methods on the copper channels
to be analyzed and optimize. The book also presents precoding
optimization for more general power constraints and implementation
constraints. The maximization of data rate in a transmission system
such as G.fast or VDSL is a combinatorial problem, as the rate is a
discrete function of the number of modulated bits. Applying convex
optimization methods to the problem offers an efficient and
effective solution approach that is proven to operate close to the
capacity of the FTTdp channel. In addition to higher data rates,
low power consumption is another important aspect of the FTTdp
network, as it requires many access nodes that are supplied with
power from the subscriber side over the twisted- pair copper wires.
Discontinuous operation is a method of quickly adding and removing
lines from the precoding group. To implement this, the system
switches between different link configurations over time at a high
frequency. The transmission times of all lines are jointly
optimized with respect to the current rate requirements.
Discontinuous operation is used to save power, but also makes it
possible to further increase the data rates, taking the current
subscriber traffic requirements into account. These methods are
compared with theoretical upper bounds, using realistic channel
models and conditions of a system implementation. The performance
analysis provides deeper insights into implementation complexity
trade-offs and the resulting gap to channel capacity.
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