

Type of Document Dissertation Author Ibrahim, Jihad E URN etd-02032007-110816 Title Algorithms and Architectures for UWB Receiver Design Degree PhD Department Electrical and Computer Engineering Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title R. Michael buehrer Committee Chair Claudio Da Silva Committee Member Jeffrey Reed Committee Member Michael Taaffe Committee Member Thomas Hou Committee Member Keywords
- narrowband interference (NBI)
- synchronization
- multipath channel
- Ultra wideband
Date of Defense 2007-01-25 Availability restricted Abstract Impulse-based Ultra Wideband (UWB) radio technology has recently gained significant research attention for various indoor ranging, sensing and communications applications due to the large amount of allocated bandwidth and desirable properties of UWB signals (e.g., improved timing resolution or multipath fading mitigation). However, most of the applications have focused on indoor environments where the UWB channel is characterized by tens to hundreds of resolvable multipath components. Such environments introducetremendous complexity challenges to traditional radio designs in terms of signal detection and synchronization. Additionally, the extremely wide bandwidth and shared nature of the medium means that UWB receivers must contend with a variety of interference sources. Traditional interference mitigation techniques are not amenable to UWB due to the complexity of straight-forward translations to UWB bandwidths.
Thus, signal detection, synchronization and interference mitigation are open research issues that must be met in order to exploit the potential benefits of UWB systems. This thesis seeks to address each of these three challenges by first examining and accurately characterizing common approaches borrowed from spread spectrum and then proposing new methods which provide an improved trade-off between complexity and performance.
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