Design, Simulate, and Document Proprietary Wireless Systems
Introduction A sensible designer faced with the task of wirelessly connecting two or more devices will usually look to these standards for a solution, but the available wireless standards are not always the best fit for the application’s requirements. One reason is that these standards mainly specify operation in the license-free band at 2.4 GHz—due to its worldwide acceptance and approximately 84-MHz bandwidth. The 2.4-GHz band suffers from nontrivial coexistence issues and lower propagation distances for a given power budget, however, causing increased interest in the lower UHF bands. Common frequencies include 868 MHz and 433 MHz in Europe, 902 MHz to 928 MHz in the United States, and 426 MHz in Japan. These are usually collectively termed the sub-GHz bands, and they include other unlicensed bands below 1 GHz. Due to the shortage of wireless standards below 1 GHz, designers tend to use a proprietary physical layer (PHY) and communication protocol stack, which can then be tailored to their specific needs. Figure 1 shows the locations where most of the unlicensed sub-GHz bands are utilized.
Figure 1. Worldwide sub-GHz bands. Simulation of
Sub-GHz Wireless Connectivity Systems At sub-GHz frequencies, however, the problem is a little different. The fragmented nature of the bands results in fewer standards at sub-GHz, so most system designers operating at sub-GHz tend to use proprietary wireless protocols, exercising the freedom to choose the various system parameters themselves. The risk of doing so is that a given set of parameters may not meet national regulations. Thus, the ADI SRD Design Studio™ tool was developed to allow users to simulate various scenarios before going to the lab; it guides the user through the design process, while keeping the underlying regulations in mind. A graphical overview of the main tasks it performs is shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2. Overview of ADI SRD Design Studio’s main tasks. The range of subsystem operations and parameters to be considered in the development process includes PLL optimization, RF filtering and matching, data rate and modulation type, demodulation process, packet-data formatting, and average power consumption. System designers typically rely on a combination of spreadsheet-based tools and iterative lab work to help with the optimization of these parameters. Conventionally, time domain analysis can be performed using a SPICE-based simulator, but performing accurate phase-noise simulations in the frequency domain is usually possible only by using specialized software. Alternatively, designers can make multiple trips to a local regulatory test-house to optimize the system, but this can be expensive. To help with these challenges, Analog Devices has released a free software package called ADI SRD Design Studio to allow real-time simulation and optimization of various system parameters using the ADF7xxx family of transceivers and transmitters. The development tool is based on the popular ADIsimPLL™ software, enhanced to allow users to view modulation in both the time and frequency domains using a virtual spectrum analyzer. Beyond this, ADI SRD Design Studio greatly simplifies the overall development process, creating a path along which a user can be guided and breaking down the design workflow into a number of distinct tasks, summarized in Table 1.
Table 1. List of tasks available in ADI SRD Design Studio. Basic Overview
of Operation The versatile spectrum analyzer allows the user to adjust resolution bandwidth, detector type, and number of sweeps like a commercial spectrum analyzer. The resolution bandwidth can be set from 100 Hz to 300 kHz, while the span is selectable from 1 kHz to 3 MHz. Users can also choose whether to use peak- or average detectors, instructing the analyzer to take the maximum or average number, respectively, in each FFT bin. Having these parameters adjustable is useful because each regulatory standard specifies different measurement conditions—including the resolution bandwidth, span, and detector type that should be used in the measurement equipment. The simulator takes all of these into account in the various preset tests available in the spectrum analyzer mode. These useful preset tests, listed in Table 2, mean that users can quickly test to the relevant standard without poring over the documentation.
Table 2. List of preset measurements in spectrum-analyzer mode. In addition to the transient- and spectrum-analyzer modes, a PLL frequency-domain analysis is performed to calculate PLL loop filter components and estimate phase- and gain margin. By adjusting the PLL loop bandwidth in the simulation, users can see the effect on the transmit modulation spectrum and phase-plot eye opening. This allows a proper optimization of the loop filter without having to rely on a small subset of vendor filter tables or basic guidelines. All three of these main simulations run in less than two seconds in a typical setup. Propagation Models The link analysis first calculates the link budget, that is, the difference between the transmit power and the receive sensitivity, taking any filter- or antenna loss into account. The device setup for this simulation is shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Link analysis blocks. The range can then be determined by increasing the distance between the antennas in the simulation until the path loss equals the link budget, that is the point at which the link margin is 0 dB. The path loss is calculated using a user-selected propagation model; three different propagation models are supported: free-space, over-ground, and simple-indoor. A. Free-Space
Propagation Model
B. Over-Ground
Propagation Model
C. Simple-Indoor Propagation Model
where P0 is the path loss at 1 m, and n is an exponent whose value depends on the environment. Reference 3 lists some reported values for n in various environments, such as a factory floor, multistory office building, etc. Most designers simply insert a value of n based on empirical results. Another useful task in ADI SRD Design Studio is the packet-formatting worksheet. This allows users to input a given packet format and see the effect of packet length on battery life, choose a sync word that will result in low false-trigger probability, and translate the bit error rate (BER) into a corresponding packet error rate (PER), based on the packet length. The BER-to-PER conversion is useful because some IC vendors specify sensitivity in terms of BER—and others specify it in terms of PER. Testing a Simulation
Setup in the Lab
Figure 4. Comparison of simulation and lab measurements. Summary New wireless devices will be added to the software tool as Analog Devices expands its portfolio, including devices at different frequencies—and supporting different modulation schemes. ADI SRD Design Studio should become a very useful part of the wireless connectivity designer’s toolkit and a must for anyone designing with the Analog Devices ADF7xxx family of transmitters or transceivers. REFERENCES
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