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Free-space path loss

In telecommunication, the free-space path loss (FSPL) (also known as free-space loss, FSL) is the attenuation of radio energy between the feedpoints of two antennas that results from the combination of the receiving antenna's capture area plus the obstacle-free, line-of-sight (LoS) path through free space (usually air).[1] The "Standard Definitions of Terms for Antennas", IEEE Std 145-1993, defines free-space loss as "The loss between two isotropic radiators in free space, expressed as a power ratio."[2] It does not include any power loss in the antennas themselves due to imperfections such as resistance. Free-space loss increases with the square of distance between the antennas because the radio waves spread out by the inverse square law and decreases with the square of the wavelength of the radio waves. The FSPL is rarely used standalone, but rather as a part of the Friis transmission formula, which includes the gain of antennas.[3] It is a factor that must be included in the power link budget of a radio communication system, to ensure that sufficient radio power reaches the receiver such that the transmitted signal is received intelligibly.

Free-space path loss formula edit

The free-space path loss (FSPL) formula derives from the Friis transmission formula.[3] This states that in a radio system consisting of a transmitting antenna transmitting radio waves to a receiving antenna, the ratio of radio wave power received   to the power transmitted   is:

 

where

  •   is the directivity of the transmitting antenna
  •   is the directivity of the receiving antenna
  •   is the signal wavelength
  •   is the distance between the antennas

The distance between the antennas   must be large enough that the antennas are in the far field of each other  .[4] The free-space path loss is the loss factor in this equation that is due to distance and wavelength, or in other words, the ratio of power transmitted to power received assuming the antennas are isotropic and have no directivity ( ):[5]

 

Since the frequency of a radio wave   is equal to the speed of light   divided by the wavelength, the path loss can also be written in terms of frequency:

 

Beside the assumption that the antennas are lossless, this formula assumes that the polarization of the antennas is the same, that there are no multipath effects, and that the radio wave path is sufficiently far away from obstructions that it acts as if it is in free space. This last restriction requires an ellipsoidal area around the line of sight out to 0.6 of the Fresnel zone be clear of obstructions. The Fresnel zone increases in diameter with the wavelength of the radio waves. Often the concept of free space path loss is applied to radio systems that don't completely meet these requirements, but these imperfections can be accounted for by small constant power loss factors that can be included in the link budget.

Influence of distance and frequency edit

 
In free space the intensity of electromagnetic radiation decreases with distance by the inverse square law, because the same amount of power spreads over an area proportional to the square of distance from the source.

The free-space loss increases with the distance between the antennas and decreases with the wavelength of the radio waves due to these factors:[6]

  • Intensity ( ) – the power density of the radio waves decreases with the square of distance from the transmitting antenna due to spreading of the electromagnetic energy in space according to the inverse square law[1]
  • Antenna capture area ( ) – the amount of power the receiving antenna captures from the radiation field is proportional to a factor called the antenna aperture or antenna capture area, which increases with the square of wavelength.[1] Since this factor is not related to the radio wave path but comes from the receiving antenna, the term "free-space path loss" is a little misleading.
  • Directivity of receiving antenna- while the above formulas are correct, the presence of Directivities Dt and Dr builds the wrong intuition in the FSPL Friis transmission formula. The formula seems to say that "free space path loss" increases with frequency in vacuum, which is misleading. The frequency dependence of path loss does not come from free space propagation, but rather from receiving antenna capture area frequency dependence. As frequency increases, the directivity of an antenna of a given physical size will increase. In order to keep receiver antenna directivity constant in the formula, the antenna size must be reduced, and a smaller size antenna results in less power being received as it is able to capture less power with a smaller area. In other words, the path loss increases with frequency because the antenna size is reduced to keep directivity constant in the formula, and has nothing to do with propagation in vacuum.
  • Directivity of transmitting antenna - the directivity of transmitting antenna does not have the same role as directivity of receiving antenna. The difference is that the receiving antenna is receiving the power from free space, and hence captures less power as it becomes smaller. The transmitting antenna does not transmit less power as it becomes smaller (for example half wave dipole), because it is receiving its RF power from a generator or source, and if the source is 1 Watt or Pt, the antenna will transmit all of it (assuming ideal efficiency and VSWR for simplicity).
  • System Loss Factor (L) : Miscellaneous loses or system loses (L=>1) are usually due to transmission line attenuation, filter loses, and antenna loses in communication system. A value of L = 1 indicates no loss in the system hardware.[7]

Derivation edit

The radio waves from the transmitting antenna spread out in a spherical wavefront. The amount of power passing through any sphere centered on the transmitting antenna is equal. The surface area of a sphere of radius   is  . Thus the intensity or power density of the radiation in any particular direction from the antenna is inversely proportional to the square of distance

 

(The term   means the surface of a sphere, which has a radius  . Please remember, that   here has a meaning of 'distance' between the two antennas, and does not mean the diameter of the sphere (as notation usually used in mathematics).) For an isotropic antenna which radiates equal power in all directions, the power density is evenly distributed over the surface of a sphere centered on the antenna

 

The amount of power the receiving antenna receives from this radiation field is

 

The factor  , called the effective area or aperture of the receiving antenna, which has the units of area, can be thought of as the amount of area perpendicular to the direction of the radio waves from which the receiving antenna captures energy. Since the linear dimensions of an antenna scale with the wavelength  , the cross sectional area of an antenna and thus the aperture scales with the square of wavelength  .[6] The effective area of an isotropic antenna (for a derivation of this see antenna aperture article) is

 

Combining the above (1) and (2), for isotropic antennas

 
 

Free-space path loss in decibels edit

A convenient way to express FSPL is in terms of decibels (dB):[8]

 

using SI units of meters for  , hertz (s−1) for  , and meters per second (m⋅s−1) for  , (where c=299 792 458 m/s in vacuum, ≈ 300 000 km/s)

For typical radio applications, it is common to find   measured in kilometers and   in gigahertz, in which case the FSPL equation becomes

 

an increase of 240 dB, because the units increase by factors of 103 and 109 respectively, so:

 

(The constants differ in the second decimal digit when the speed of light is approximated by 300 000 km/s. Whether one uses 92.4, 92.44 or 92.45 dB, the result will be OK as the average measurement instruments cannot provide more accurate results anyway. A logarithmic scale is introduced to see the important differences (i.e. order of magnitudes), so in engineering practice dB results are rounded)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Islam, Syad Kamrul; Haider, Mohammad Rafiqul (10 December 2009). Sensors and Low Power Signal Processing (2010 ed.). Springer. p. 49. ISBN 978-0387793917.
  2. ^ IEEE Std 145-1993(R2004), IEEE Standard Definitions of Terms for Antennas. New York, NY: The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 1993. p. 14. ISBN 1-55937-317-2.
  3. ^ a b Friis, H.T. (May 1946). "A Note on a Simple Transmission Formula". IRE Proc. 34 (5): 254–256. doi:10.1109/JRPROC.1946.234568. S2CID 51630329.
  4. ^ Johnson, Richard (1984). Antenna Engineering Handbook (2nd ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, Inc. pp. 1–12. ISBN 0-07-032291-0.
  5. ^ Whitaker, Jerry C. (1996). The Electronics Handbook. CRC Press. p. 1321. ISBN 9780849383458.
  6. ^ a b Cerwin, Steve (2019). Radio Propagation and Antennas: A Non-Mathematical Treatment of Radio and Antennas. Author House. pp. 31–35. ISBN 9781728320328., Section 1.8
  7. ^ Rappaport, Theodore S. (2010). Wireless communications: principles and practice (Second edition, twentieth impression 2019, Indian subcontinent adaption ed.). Noida: Pearson India Education Services. p. 107. ISBN 978-81-317-3186-4.
  8. ^ "Free Space Path Loss Calculator". Pasternack. Retrieved October 16, 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Balanis, C.A. (2003). Antenna Theory. John Wiley and Sons.
  • Derivation of the dB version of the Path Loss Equation
  • Path loss Pages for free space and real world – includes free-space loss calculator
  • Hilt, A. “Throughput Estimation of K-zone Gbps Radio Links Operating in the E-band”, Journal of Microelectronics, Electronic Components and Materials, Vol.52, No.1, pp.29-39, 2022. DOI:10.33180/InfMIDEM2022.104, [1] shows Fresnel zone and its calculation

free, space, path, loss, telecommunication, free, space, path, loss, fspl, also, known, free, space, loss, attenuation, radio, energy, between, feedpoints, antennas, that, results, from, combination, receiving, antenna, capture, area, plus, obstacle, free, lin. In telecommunication the free space path loss FSPL also known as free space loss FSL is the attenuation of radio energy between the feedpoints of two antennas that results from the combination of the receiving antenna s capture area plus the obstacle free line of sight LoS path through free space usually air 1 The Standard Definitions of Terms for Antennas IEEE Std 145 1993 defines free space loss as The loss between two isotropic radiators in free space expressed as a power ratio 2 It does not include any power loss in the antennas themselves due to imperfections such as resistance Free space loss increases with the square of distance between the antennas because the radio waves spread out by the inverse square law and decreases with the square of the wavelength of the radio waves The FSPL is rarely used standalone but rather as a part of the Friis transmission formula which includes the gain of antennas 3 It is a factor that must be included in the power link budget of a radio communication system to ensure that sufficient radio power reaches the receiver such that the transmitted signal is received intelligibly Contents 1 Free space path loss formula 2 Influence of distance and frequency 3 Derivation 4 Free space path loss in decibels 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingFree space path loss formula editThe free space path loss FSPL formula derives from the Friis transmission formula 3 This states that in a radio system consisting of a transmitting antenna transmitting radio waves to a receiving antenna the ratio of radio wave power received P r displaystyle P r nbsp to the power transmitted P t displaystyle P t nbsp is P r P t D t D r l 4 p d 2 displaystyle frac P r P t D t D r left frac lambda 4 pi d right 2 nbsp where D t displaystyle D t nbsp is the directivity of the transmitting antenna D r displaystyle D r nbsp is the directivity of the receiving antenna l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the signal wavelength d displaystyle d nbsp is the distance between the antennas The distance between the antennas d displaystyle d nbsp must be large enough that the antennas are in the far field of each other d l displaystyle d gg lambda nbsp 4 The free space path loss is the loss factor in this equation that is due to distance and wavelength or in other words the ratio of power transmitted to power received assuming the antennas are isotropic and have no directivity D t D r 1 displaystyle D t D r 1 nbsp 5 FSPL 4 p d l 2 displaystyle begin aligned mbox FSPL left frac 4 pi d lambda right 2 end aligned nbsp Since the frequency of a radio wave f displaystyle f nbsp is equal to the speed of light c displaystyle c nbsp divided by the wavelength the path loss can also be written in terms of frequency FSPL 4 p d f c 2 displaystyle begin aligned mbox FSPL left 4 pi df over c right 2 end aligned nbsp Beside the assumption that the antennas are lossless this formula assumes that the polarization of the antennas is the same that there are no multipath effects and that the radio wave path is sufficiently far away from obstructions that it acts as if it is in free space This last restriction requires an ellipsoidal area around the line of sight out to 0 6 of the Fresnel zone be clear of obstructions The Fresnel zone increases in diameter with the wavelength of the radio waves Often the concept of free space path loss is applied to radio systems that don t completely meet these requirements but these imperfections can be accounted for by small constant power loss factors that can be included in the link budget Influence of distance and frequency edit nbsp In free space the intensity of electromagnetic radiation decreases with distance by the inverse square law because the same amount of power spreads over an area proportional to the square of distance from the source The free space loss increases with the distance between the antennas and decreases with the wavelength of the radio waves due to these factors 6 Intensity I displaystyle I nbsp the power density of the radio waves decreases with the square of distance from the transmitting antenna due to spreading of the electromagnetic energy in space according to the inverse square law 1 Antenna capture area A eff displaystyle A text eff nbsp the amount of power the receiving antenna captures from the radiation field is proportional to a factor called the antenna aperture or antenna capture area which increases with the square of wavelength 1 Since this factor is not related to the radio wave path but comes from the receiving antenna the term free space path loss is a little misleading Directivity of receiving antenna while the above formulas are correct the presence of Directivities Dt and Dr builds the wrong intuition in the FSPL Friis transmission formula The formula seems to say that free space path loss increases with frequency in vacuum which is misleading The frequency dependence of path loss does not come from free space propagation but rather from receiving antenna capture area frequency dependence As frequency increases the directivity of an antenna of a given physical size will increase In order to keep receiver antenna directivity constant in the formula the antenna size must be reduced and a smaller size antenna results in less power being received as it is able to capture less power with a smaller area In other words the path loss increases with frequency because the antenna size is reduced to keep directivity constant in the formula and has nothing to do with propagation in vacuum Directivity of transmitting antenna the directivity of transmitting antenna does not have the same role as directivity of receiving antenna The difference is that the receiving antenna is receiving the power from free space and hence captures less power as it becomes smaller The transmitting antenna does not transmit less power as it becomes smaller for example half wave dipole because it is receiving its RF power from a generator or source and if the source is 1 Watt or Pt the antenna will transmit all of it assuming ideal efficiency and VSWR for simplicity System Loss Factor L Miscellaneous loses or system loses L gt 1 are usually due to transmission line attenuation filter loses and antenna loses in communication system A value of L 1 indicates no loss in the system hardware 7 Derivation editThe radio waves from the transmitting antenna spread out in a spherical wavefront The amount of power passing through any sphere centered on the transmitting antenna is equal The surface area of a sphere of radius d displaystyle d nbsp is 4 p d 2 displaystyle 4 pi d 2 nbsp Thus the intensity or power density of the radiation in any particular direction from the antenna is inversely proportional to the square of distance I P t 4 p d 2 displaystyle I propto P t over 4 pi d 2 nbsp The term 4 p d 2 displaystyle 4 pi d 2 nbsp means the surface of a sphere which has a radius d displaystyle d nbsp Please remember that d displaystyle d nbsp here has a meaning of distance between the two antennas and does not mean the diameter of the sphere as notation usually used in mathematics For an isotropic antenna which radiates equal power in all directions the power density is evenly distributed over the surface of a sphere centered on the antenna I P t 4 p d 2 1 displaystyle I P t over 4 pi d 2 qquad qquad qquad text 1 nbsp The amount of power the receiving antenna receives from this radiation field is P r A eff I 2 displaystyle P r A text eff I qquad qquad qquad text 2 nbsp The factor A eff displaystyle A text eff nbsp called the effective area or aperture of the receiving antenna which has the units of area can be thought of as the amount of area perpendicular to the direction of the radio waves from which the receiving antenna captures energy Since the linear dimensions of an antenna scale with the wavelength l displaystyle lambda nbsp the cross sectional area of an antenna and thus the aperture scales with the square of wavelength l 2 displaystyle lambda 2 nbsp 6 The effective area of an isotropic antenna for a derivation of this see antenna aperture article is A eff l 2 4 p displaystyle A text eff lambda 2 over 4 pi nbsp Combining the above 1 and 2 for isotropic antennas P r P t 4 p d 2 l 2 4 p displaystyle P r Big P t over 4 pi d 2 Big Big lambda 2 over 4 pi Big nbsp FSPL P t P r 4 p d l 2 displaystyle text FSPL P t over P r Big 4 pi d over lambda Big 2 nbsp Free space path loss in decibels editA convenient way to express FSPL is in terms of decibels dB 8 FSPL dB 10 log 10 4 p d f c 2 20 log 10 4 p d f c 20 log 10 d 20 log 10 f 20 log 10 4 p c 20 log 10 d 20 log 10 f 147 55 displaystyle begin aligned operatorname FSPL text dB amp 10 log 10 left left frac 4 pi df c right 2 right amp 20 log 10 left frac 4 pi df c right amp 20 log 10 d 20 log 10 f 20 log 10 left frac 4 pi c right amp 20 log 10 d 20 log 10 f 147 55 end aligned nbsp using SI units of meters for d displaystyle d nbsp hertz s 1 for f displaystyle f nbsp and meters per second m s 1 for c displaystyle c nbsp where c 299 792 458 m s in vacuum 300 000 km s For typical radio applications it is common to find d displaystyle d nbsp measured in kilometers and f displaystyle f nbsp in gigahertz in which case the FSPL equation becomes FSPL dB 20 log 10 d k m 20 log 10 f G H z 92 45 displaystyle operatorname FSPL text dB 20 log 10 d km 20 log 10 f GHz 92 45 nbsp an increase of 240 dB because the units increase by factors of 103 and 109 respectively so 20 log 10 10 3 20 log 10 10 9 240 displaystyle 20 log 10 10 3 20 log 10 10 9 240 nbsp The constants differ in the second decimal digit when the speed of light is approximated by 300 000 km s Whether one uses 92 4 92 44 or 92 45 dB the result will be OK as the average measurement instruments cannot provide more accurate results anyway A logarithmic scale is introduced to see the important differences i e order of magnitudes so in engineering practice dB results are rounded See also editComputation of radiowave attenuation in the atmosphere Friis transmission equation Radio propagation model ITU R P 525 Link budget Two ray ground reflection model Free space optical communicationReferences edit a b c Islam Syad Kamrul Haider Mohammad Rafiqul 10 December 2009 Sensors and Low Power Signal Processing 2010 ed Springer p 49 ISBN 978 0387793917 IEEE Std 145 1993 R2004 IEEE Standard Definitions of Terms for Antennas New York NY The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc 1993 p 14 ISBN 1 55937 317 2 a b Friis H T May 1946 A Note on a Simple Transmission Formula IRE Proc 34 5 254 256 doi 10 1109 JRPROC 1946 234568 S2CID 51630329 Johnson Richard 1984 Antenna Engineering Handbook 2nd ed New York NY McGraw Hill Inc pp 1 12 ISBN 0 07 032291 0 Whitaker Jerry C 1996 The Electronics Handbook CRC Press p 1321 ISBN 9780849383458 a b Cerwin Steve 2019 Radio Propagation and Antennas A Non Mathematical Treatment of Radio and Antennas Author House pp 31 35 ISBN 9781728320328 Section 1 8 Rappaport Theodore S 2010 Wireless communications principles and practice Second edition twentieth impression 2019 Indian subcontinent adaption ed Noida Pearson India Education Services p 107 ISBN 978 81 317 3186 4 Free Space Path Loss Calculator Pasternack Retrieved October 16 2021 Further reading editBalanis C A 2003 Antenna Theory John Wiley and Sons Derivation of the dB version of the Path Loss Equation Path loss Pages for free space and real world includes free space loss calculator Hilt A Throughput Estimation of K zone Gbps Radio Links Operating in the E band Journal of Microelectronics Electronic Components and Materials Vol 52 No 1 pp 29 39 2022 DOI 10 33180 InfMIDEM2022 104 1 shows Fresnel zone and its calculation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Free space path loss amp oldid 1194601441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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