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Software%20Defined%20Radio

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Title: Software%20Defined%20Radio


1
Software Defined Radio
GSC9/GRSC_013
SOURCE ETSI ERM-TG32
TITLE Software Defined Radio
AGENDA ITEM GRSC2 Item 5
CONTACT Phillipe Mege (philippe.mege_at_EADS-TELECOM.COM)
  • Activities within Europe in the European
    Commissions TCAM Committee and ETSI

1
GSC-9, Seoul
2
The European Commission's TCAM Committee (1)
  • The Commissions TCAM Committee is responsible
    for the regulatory environment created by the
    RTTE Directive
  • TCAM established a specialist ad hoc group to
    consider how Software Defined Radio (SDR)
    products should be handled under the RTTE
    Directive
  • The ad hoc group produced a questionnaire On the
    Impact of SDR on the RTTE Directive
  • The aim of this consultation was to obtain
    comments from interested parties on a variety of
    issues relating to Software Defined Radio
  • The questionnaire was published on the official
    European Commission Web Pages last autumn

3
The European Commission's TCAM Committee (2)
  • The Questionnaire covered four areas
  • Questions related to when SDR equipment is likely
    to appear on the market at the earliest (Q1, Q2)
  • Questions related to what SDR is likely to change
    in the applicability of RTTE (Q3 Q9)
  • Questions related to possible changes in the
    RTTE Directive (Q10, Q11)
  • Standardisation (Q12 Q13)

4
The European Commission's TCAM Committee (3)
  • General Summary of the Answers to the
    Questionnaire
  • Under the New approach guide the product is
    considered a new product if the software effects
    the essential requirements
  • The provisions of RTTE Directive are adequate as
    it requires an entity (manufacturer) to take
    responsibility for the placing of product on the
    market
  • For the Software provider the same requirements
    should apply as to hardware manufacture
    concerning the RTTE-Directive

5
ETSI Activities
  • Software Defined Radio
  • ETSI activities centre around Task Group32 of
    TC-ERM (EMC and Radio Spectrum Matters)
  • Link and impact to coexistence standards,
    methods of measurements and limits

6
What is Software Defined Radio ?
  • Objective Give more flexibility on Radio
    Front-End
  • For
  • Using the same Hardware Platform for different
    systems
  • Different standards
  • Different frequency bands and frequency
    bandwidths
  • Providing more easily interoperability
  • Downloading the air interface through the air for
    automatic reconfiguration
  • By
  • Transferring the maximum of radio functions from
    analogue to digital
  • Sharing the radio function between analogue and
    digital
  • Digitising at high sampling rate as close as
    possible to the antenna
  • instead of classically sampling at moderate rate
    in Intermediate Frequency or in Baseband

7
Classical Heterodyne architecture (Receiver chain)

Radio Domain ltgt Analogue Domain Baseband
Domain ltgt Digital Domain
8
The Normative Environment
  • SDR Forum co-ordinates the activities world-wide
  • A generic approach mainly devoted to military
    applications
  • Definition of software development approaches for
    simplifying portability (SCA Standard
    Communication Architecture)
  • Hardware implementation with FPGAs apart Baseband
    and with general purpose processors for Baseband
    (for maximum flexibility and reconfigurability)
  • Software development cost effectiveness is the
    target
  • Due to the huge amount of different systems and
    standards to be implemented on the universal
    Hardware platform
  • Equipment cost is not the major considered aspect

9
General Context
  • Software Defined Radio is pushed strongly for
    military applications
  • Due to the difficulties of interoperability with
    legacy equipment
  • Need to communicate with a very large number of
    different types of systems between the different
    armed forces, different Countries, different
    components of the armed forces (Air, Navy, Land
    forces, security forces)

10
Software Radio for PMR
  • Software Radio is also of primary interest for
    Private Mobile Radio (PMR)
  • PMR is characterised by a large number of
    different systems and standards in different
    frequency bands and with different bandwidths
  • Analogue systems
  • Narrowband (6.25 kHz)
  • DMR (12.5 kHz)
  • TETRAPOL (12.5 kHz, 10 kHz)
  • TETRA 1 (25 kHz)
  • APCO 25 Phase 1 (12.5 kHz)
  • APCO 25 Phase 2 (12.5 kHz equivalent 6.25 kHz)
  • Wideband Data TETRA 2 TEDS (25, 50, 100, 150, 200
    kHz)
  • Wideband Data TIA SAM/IOTA (50, 100, 150 kHz)
  • And interest for PMR/PAMR/Public systems with GSM
    also (or with other systems) on the same equipment

11
Software radio for PMR Objectives
  • Objectives
  • Reduce the development costs
  • A single Hardware Platform for several standards
    and systems
  • Reduce the equipment costs
  • Use as much as possible Off the Shelf
    Components
  • Develop highly integrated components (ASICs) for
    specific functions (and applicable for the
    different systems and standards)
  • Additional benefits
  • Reduction of size and weight of equipment
  • Improved autonomy of equipment
  • Capability of evolution of systems and equipment

12
Constraints for coexistence (Classical case)
  • Narrowband filtering early in the receiver chain
    means that
  • most of the interferers are rejected
  • only closest ones are important (adjacent,
    alternate, )
  • blocking shall also be considered (Broadband
    noise of the LO)
  • useful signal is dominant in the signal that
    comes into the Analogue/Digital Converter

13
Constraints for coexistence(Software Radio case)
  • Analogue/Digital Conversion is applied close to
    the antenna
  • a whole band is then digitised
  • not only the useful signal
  • but also all the signals going through the
    wideband filter placed before the ADC
  • Then contributors to interference are all the
    signals that are digitised
  • not necessarily only adjacent and alternate
  • many interference signals can be present
  • This means a need of large dynamic of the ADC
    because saturation of the wideband digital signal
    can damage dramatically the useful signal
  • So the approach for measurement applied in PMR
    (LMR) standards is not totally well suited for
    Software Radio case

14
Constraints for coexistence(Software Radio case)
  • We need to avoid over-specification and
    over-testing
  • The constraints of the base co-existence standard
    EN 300 113 are in practise relevant only when
    applied to an uncoordinated environment (Direct
    mode, or small systems with only few bands
    allocated for example)
  • In a large system, a bloc of channels is
    allocated to the whole system
  • Interference (co-channel, adjacent channel, )
    is limited thanks to adequate radio planning and
    frequency reuse
  • the protection limits (especially at receiver
    side) can be in practise relaxed in this case
  • Then, for a software radio structure for example,
    the constraints in the whole digitised band are
    not necessarily the addition of the most
    stringent constraints of EN 300 113
  • The number of channels effectively contributing
    to interference needs also to be taken into
    account

15
The Transmitter Chain case
  • A similar problem can appear with the
    transmitter, for example, the following
    conditions
  • Combination at the Base station of several
    channels in digital before Digital/Analogue
    Conversion and Power Amplifier
  • Multi-channel modulations (e.g. OFDM) where each
    sub-channel is modulated and all sub-channels are
    combined in the same transmitted signal
  • In these case problems of saturation in the DAC
    can also appear.

16
Conclusion
  • The Regulatory environment established in Europe
    under the RTTE Directive applies equally to
    Software Defined Radio products
  • Software Defined Radio products have the
    capability of providing both flexibility in their
    application and early market access for new
    products
  • Software Defined Radio products have the
    potential to combined radio systems to facilitate
    interoperability between potentially incompatible
    systems
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