Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment

A reverberation chamber is a convenient tool for over-the-air testing of MIMO devices in isotropic environments. Isotropy is typically achieved in the chamber through the use of a mode stirrer and a turntable on which the device under test (DUT) rides. The quality of the isotropic environment depend...

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Main Author: Thorkild B. Hansen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2012-01-01
Series:International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/540649
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spelling doaj-fa0d69f8ef9e41f09270072fd377df482020-11-25T02:25:20ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Antennas and Propagation1687-58691687-58772012-01-01201210.1155/2012/540649540649Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic EnvironmentThorkild B. Hansen0 Consultant, Azimuth Systems, Inc., 35 Nagog Park, Acton, MA 01720, USAA reverberation chamber is a convenient tool for over-the-air testing of MIMO devices in isotropic environments. Isotropy is typically achieved in the chamber through the use of a mode stirrer and a turntable on which the device under test (DUT) rides. The quality of the isotropic environment depends on the number of plane waves produced by the chamber and on their spatial distribution. This paper investigates how the required sampling rate for the DUT pattern is related to the plane-wave density threshold in the isotropic environment required to accurately compute antenna correlations. Once the plane-wave density is above the threshold, the antenna correlation obtained through isotropic experiments agrees with the antenna correlation obtained from the classical definition, as has been proven theoretically. This fact is verified for the good, nominal, and bad reference antennas produced by CTIA. MIMO channel capacity simulations are performed with a standard base station model and the DUT placed in a single-tap plane-wave reverberation chamber model. The capacity curves obtained with the good, nominal, and bad reference antennas are clearly distinguishable.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/540649
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thorkild B. Hansen
spellingShingle Thorkild B. Hansen
Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
author_facet Thorkild B. Hansen
author_sort Thorkild B. Hansen
title Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
title_short Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
title_full Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
title_fullStr Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
title_full_unstemmed Correlation and Capacity Calculations with Reference Antennas in an Isotropic Environment
title_sort correlation and capacity calculations with reference antennas in an isotropic environment
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Antennas and Propagation
issn 1687-5869
1687-5877
publishDate 2012-01-01
description A reverberation chamber is a convenient tool for over-the-air testing of MIMO devices in isotropic environments. Isotropy is typically achieved in the chamber through the use of a mode stirrer and a turntable on which the device under test (DUT) rides. The quality of the isotropic environment depends on the number of plane waves produced by the chamber and on their spatial distribution. This paper investigates how the required sampling rate for the DUT pattern is related to the plane-wave density threshold in the isotropic environment required to accurately compute antenna correlations. Once the plane-wave density is above the threshold, the antenna correlation obtained through isotropic experiments agrees with the antenna correlation obtained from the classical definition, as has been proven theoretically. This fact is verified for the good, nominal, and bad reference antennas produced by CTIA. MIMO channel capacity simulations are performed with a standard base station model and the DUT placed in a single-tap plane-wave reverberation chamber model. The capacity curves obtained with the good, nominal, and bad reference antennas are clearly distinguishable.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/540649
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