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5991-3239EN Testing WLAN Devices According to the 802.11x Standards - Application Note c20131021 [15]


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Testing WLAN Devices
According to IEEE 802.11
Standards

Application Note
Table of Contents
The Evolution of 802.11 ........................................................................... 4
Frequency Channels and Frame Structures ......................................... 5
  Frame structure: 802.11a...................................................................... 5
  Frame structure: 802.11b...................................................................... 6
  Frame structure: 802.11g...................................................................... 7
  Frame structure: 802.11n...................................................................... 8
  Frame structure: 802.11ac.................................................................... 9
Transmitter Test ...................................................................................... 10
Receiver Test ........................................................................................... 13
Conclusion................................................................................................ 14
Related Information ................................................................................ 14




                         2
Introduction
Wireless local area networking (WLAN) capabilities are being integrated into an
increasing number of products: smartphones, digital cameras, printers, tablets,
HDTVs, Blu-ray players and more. This trend is leading to a greater number of
simultaneous connections to any given network in a home, school or business
environment. Even though each individual connection may not require a high
data rate, the cumulative demand results in higher requirements for total data
throughput.

To keep pace with these trends, every new generation of the various IEEE 802.11
standards--a, b, g, n, and ac--supports increased data capacity by providing
greater throughput and wider bandwidths. As the standards evolve, backward
compatibility remains a fundamental requirement. For example, modulation tech-
niques used in older standards, such as DSSS and FHSS, have carried forward
into newer standards of OFDM and MIMO.

The continuing evolution of 802.11 standards and products has important
implications for those who test WLAN or Wi-Fi transmitters, receivers, and
transceivers from R&D, through design verification and manufacturing. The
testing of receivers and transceivers requires the use of vector signal generators
capable of producing the complex modulated signals used by the 802.11 wire-
less connectivity standards. Software such as Agilent Signal Studio can be used
to create test signals--with or without impairments--and then download the
waveforms to a vector signal generator.

Testing transmitters and transceivers requires a signal analyzer configured
with sufficient frequency coverage and analysis bandwidth. Standard-specific
measurement and analysis capabilities are available in the Agilent N/W9077A
WLAN measurement applications that can run inside the Agilent X-Series signal
analyzers. These measurement applications provide one-button measurements
with pass/fail indicators.

This application note provides a broad survey of transmitter and receiver test
requirements with a focus on 802.11a, b, g, n, and ac. It also presents an over-
view of Agilent's test equipment, software, and measurement applications for
WLAN testing.




                   3
                                              The Evolution of IEEE 802.11
                                              Since the release of the initial version of 802.11 in 1997, the standard has
                                              evolved to satisfy new applications and meet the need for ever-faster data rates.
A closer look:                                Along the way, a series of amendments have defined changes to the physical or
                                              PHY layer (Table 1).
Modulation techniques
                                              Table 1. Overview of the evolution of the 802.11 standards
The following modulation
techniques are used in the various             IEEE     Year               Notes
                                               standard released
802.11 standards.
                                               802.11      1997            Provides 1- or 2-Mbps transmission in the 2.4 GHz band
Direct-sequence spread spectrum                                            using either frequency-hopping, spread spectrum (FHSS),
(DSSS): This spreads a single carrier                                      or direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)
over a wider spectrum by multiplying the       802.11a     1999            Uses orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM)
data bits with a special bit pattern called                                in the 5 GHz band and provides connections as fast as
a Barker key. Although this is typically                                   54 Mbps
an 11-bit pattern, 802.11b uses an 8-bit       802.11b     1999            Uses DSSS in the 2.4 GHz band and provides connections
key, at an 11 MHz chip rate. The net                                       as fast as 11 Mbps, with fallback to 5.5, 2 and 1 Mbps,
result is a reduction in the interference                                  depending on signal strength
caused by narrowband sources.
                                               802.11g     2003            Uses OFDM in the 2.4 GHz band and provides 54 Mbps
Complementary code keying (CCK):                                           connections
Used as a supplement to the Barker             802.11n     2009            Includes many enhancements to extend WLAN range,
Code, CCK enables a 2-Mbps data rate                                       reliability and throughput. PHY-layer examples include
but reduces the transmission range due                                     multiple-input/multiple-output (MIMO) and 20 or 40 MHz
to greater susceptibility to narrowband                                    bandwidth. Operates in the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands and
interference.                                                              provides data rates of up to 600 Mbps. Also called High
                                                                           Throughput or HT LAN.
Packet binary convolution coding               802.11ac    2012 (draft)    Expected to provide very high throughput (VHT) data rates
(PBCC): Uses forward error correction                                      of 1 Gbps in the 5 GHz band. Uses RF bandwidth of up to
to improve link performance in the                                         160 MHz, higher-order modulation such as 256QAM and
presence of excess noise. Scrambled                                        up to eight MIMO spatial streams.
data is fed into a convolutional encoder,
which has a six-stage memory and
taps that are combined to produce             When 802.11g was introduced, it became the preferred standard over
two outputs. The four possible output         both 802.11a and 802.11b and was widely adopted by both consumers and
states (00, 01, 10 and 11) are mapped         businesses. While 802.11a and 802.11g use the same OFDM modulation
onto a pair of QPSK states (11 Mbps). A       scheme, they operate on different frequency bands- 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz,
codeword controls how the chosen state        respectively- however, backward compatibility is still required. Later, when
alternates over time.
                                              the 802.11n standard was introduced, offering breakthrough benefits including
                                              enabling Wi-Fi networks to do more, faster, and over a larger area, IEEE
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplex
                                              defined three modes in the physical layer and required backward compatibility
(OFDM): This splits the transmission
into a high-rate data stream and several      with 802.11 a/b/g gear, even though they were later designated as legacy
lower-rate streams that are transmitted       technologies.
simultaneously over several subcarriers.
Lower data rates in the parallel              Three upcoming versions of the standard are also worth noting:
subcarriers result in longer symbol
duration, which decreases the relative        



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