| Literature DB >> 35009608 |
Deyvid L Leite1, Pablo Javier Alsina1, Millena M de Medeiros Campos1, Vicente A de Sousa1, Alvaro A M de Medeiros2.
Abstract
The use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) to provide services such as the Internet, goods delivery, and air taxis has become a reality in recent years. The use of these aircraft requires a secure communication between the control station and the UAV, which demands the characterization of the communication channel. This paper aims to present a measurement setup using an unmanned aircraft to acquire data for the characterization of the radio frequency channel in a propagation environment with particular vegetation (Caatinga) and a lake. This paper presents the following contributions: identification of the communication channel model that best describes the characteristics of communication; characterization of the effects of large-scale fading, such as path loss and log-normal shadowing; characterization of small-scale fading (multipath and Doppler); and estimation of the aircraft speed from the identified Doppler frequency.Entities:
Keywords: Doppler; UAV; channel; fading; multipath; shadowing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35009608 PMCID: PMC8747279 DOI: 10.3390/s22010065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Characterization of channels with UAVs.
| Work | Frequency | UAV | Scenario | Height | Channel |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 2 GHz | Airship | Urban | 100–170 m | PDF, CDF, AFD, |
| [ | 2 GHz | Airship | Urban | 150–300 m | PL |
| [ | 5.76 GHz | Hexacopter | Suburban | 0–50 m | PL, SF, K, RMS, |
| [ | 4.3 GHz | Quadcopter | Open field, | 4–16 m | PL, SF, |
| [ | 2.4 GHz | Hexacopter | Laboratory, | 10–40 m | PL, PAS, K, |
| [ | 802.11a | Quadcopter | Open field | 15–110 m | PL, PAS, CDF |
| [ | 802.11a | Quadcopter | Open field, | 20–100 m | PL |
| [ | 802.11a | Fixed Wing | Aerodrome | 46 m | PL |
| [ | 802.11a/g, | Fixed Wing | Aerodrome, Rural | 46 m, | PL |
| [ | GSM, UMTS | Fixed Wing, | Urban, Rural | 0–500 m | PL |
| [ | GSM, UMTS, | Weather balloon | Urban | 11–18 m | PL |
| [ | LTE (800 MHz) | Hexacopter | Rural | 15–100 m | PL, SF |
| [ | LTE (850 MHz) | Quadcopter | Suburban | 15–120 m | PL, SF |
| [ | 2 GHz | Airship | Urban, Wooded Region | 100–170 m | CDF, DG, |
| [ | 5.8 GHz | Octocopter | Residential | - | RMS, DS, |
| [ | 802.11b/g | Fixed Wing | Agricultural region | 75 m | AF, DG |
| [ | PCS, AWS, | Quadcopter | Mix Suburban | 122 m | PL, CDF |
| [ | EDGE, HSPA+, | Hexacopter | - | 10–100 m | RTT, J |
| [ | 909 MHz | Quadcopter | Open field, | 40–60 m | PL, PES |
| [ | 2/3.5/5.5 GHz | HAP airship | Built-up areas | - | SF |
| [ | 2.585 GHz | Hexacopter | Suburban | 15–300 m | PDP, RMS, DS |
| [ | 3.4/3.8 GHz | Commercial UAV | Open area | 5–15 m | PDP, RMS |
| This work | 915 MHz | Quadcopter | Lake, | 8–80 m | PL, LCR, CDF, DS, SF, |
AF: Autocorrelation function, AFD: Average fade duration, BC: Coherence bandwidth; CDF: Cumulative distribution function, DG: Diversity gain, DS: Doppler spread, J: Jitter, K: Rician factor; LCR: Level crossing rate, PAS: Power azimuth spectrum, PDF: Probability density function; PDP: Power delay profile, PES: Power elevation spectrum, PL: Path loss, RMS: RMS delay spread; RTT: Round trip time, SF: Shadow fading, e , : Mean and standard deviation of Nakagami m factor; : Weibull shape parameter, : Rayleigh parameter.
Figure 1Scheme of reception and storage of the wireless signal measurement data.
Figure 2Equipment used in measurement campaigns. (a) UAV with XBee and power battery modules. (b) Base station for collecting measurement data.
Table of temperature and average wind speed on the day of measurement.
| Schedule | Temperature | Average Wind Speed |
|---|---|---|
| 10:00 | 31 °C | 31 km/h |
| 11:00 | 31 °C | 28 km/h |
| 12:00 | 31 °C | 33 km/h |
| 13:00 | 31 °C | 28 km/h |
| 14:00 | 30 °C | 33 km/h |
| 15:00 | 30 °C | 35 km/h |
| 16:00 | 30 °C | 28 km/h |
| 17:00 | 29 °C | 24 km/h |
Scenario 1 parameters.
| Velocity | Height | Traveled Distance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 8 m | 120 m |
| 1 km/h | 80 m | 150 m |
| 3 km/h | 8 m | 120 m |
| 3 km/h | 80 m | 150 m |
Figure 3Lake photos taken at different heights. (a) Photo taken with UAV over the lake at a height of 8 m. (b) Photo taken with UAV over the lake at a height of 80 m. (c) Showing the base station (BS) and the lake area.
Scenario 2 parameters.
| Velocity | Height | Traveled Distance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 80 m | 130 m |
| 3 km/h | 80 m | 250 m |
Figure 4Caatinga biome region. (a) Flight region over the Caatinga vegetation. (b) Area of the flight over the Caatinga vegetation.
Figure 5Mixed scenario. (a) Mixed scenario photo taken by the UAV at 80 m. (b) Full view of the mixed scenario.
Scenario 3 parameters.
| Velocity | Height | Traveled Distance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 80 m | 150 m |
| 3 km/h | 80 m | 150 m |
Figure 6Path loss of flights over the lake.
Path loss exponent for different environments.
| Environment | Path Loss Exponent | Speed (km / h) | Height (m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lake | −7.8 | 1 | 8 |
| Lake | −8.9 | 3 | 8 |
| Lake | 2.9 | 1 | 80 |
| Lake | 2.0 | 3 | 80 |
| Mixed region | 3.7 | 1 | 80 |
| Mixed region | 3.8 | 3 | 80 |
| Caatinga | 3.7 | 1 | 80 |
| Caatinga | 1.9 | 3 | 80 |
Figure 7Path loss of flights over the Caatinga.
Figure 8Path loss of flights over the mixed region.
Figure A2Illustration of gain composition of the BS and drone antennas.
Shadowing parameters for different environments.
| Environment | Height (m) | Speed (km/h) | Average ( | Standard Deviation ( | Window |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake | 8 | 1 | −0.036457 | 4.9594 | 10 |
| Lake | 8 | 3 | −0.00010684 | 5.1219 | 5 |
| Lake | 80 | 1 | 0.014171 | 1.5940 | 15 |
| Lake | 80 | 3 | 0.019407 | 1.3563 | 15 |
| Mixed region | 80 | 1 | 0.021741 | 1.8036 | 10 |
| Mixed region | 80 | 3 | 0.023567 | 1.4659 | 20 |
| Caatinga | 80 | 1 | 0.0089469 | 2.6579 | 10 |
| Caatinga | 80 | 3 | −0.0052443 | 3.0010 | 15 |
Parameters of small-scale fading distributions for different environments.
| Window | Nakagami | Rice (K) | Rayleigh | Weibull | Height | Environment | Velocity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 0.42621, | 0.00033815 | 1.415 | 1.1251, | 8 | Lake | 1 |
| 5 | 0.54171, | 0.00032789 | 0.96315 | 1.3129, | 8 | Lake | 3 |
| 15 | 0.4374, | 0.00027749 | 1.1612 | 1.1512, | 80 | Caatinga | 1 |
| 15 | 0.43961, | 0.00027911 | 1.1447 | 1.1688, | 80 | Caatinga | 3 |
| 10 | 0.44587, | 0.0002916 | 1.1054 | 1.1751, | 80 | Mixed region | 1 |
| 20 | 0.37927, | 0.00020356 | 1.265 | 1.0619, | 80 | Mixed region | 3 |
| 10 | 0.35111, | 0.00027483 | 1.0953 | 1.0072, | 80 | Lake | 1 |
| 15 | 0.37418, | 0.00019419 | 1.2859 | 1.0548, | 80 | Lake | 3 |
Figure 9Estimated CDFs over the lake for the same height. (a) CDFs over the lake at 8 m. (b) CDFs over the lake at 80 m.
Figure 10Estimation of CDFs over the lake at the same speed. (a) CDFs over the lake at 1 km/h. (b) CDFs over the lake at 3 km/h.
Figure 11Estimation of CDFs for the Caatinga and Mixed environments. (a) CDFs for the Caatinga region. (b) CDFs for mixed region.
Figure 12Doppler frequency estimation. (a) Doppler frequency for Lake region. (b) Doppler frequency for Caatinga and Mixed regions.
Maximum and minimum variation of theoretical Doppler scattering.
| UAV Speed (km/h) | Doppler Frequency |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0–0.86 Hz |
| 3 | 0–2.6031 Hz |
Figure 13Estimated speeds. (a) Estimated speeds for Lake region. (b) Estimated speeds for the Caatinga and Mixed regions.