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Two-ray ground-reflection model

The two-rays ground-reflection model is a multipath radio propagation model which predicts the path losses between a transmitting antenna and a receiving antenna when they are in line of sight (LOS). Generally, the two antenna each have different height. The received signal having two components, the LOS component and the reflection component formed predominantly by a single ground reflected wave.

2-Ray Ground Reflection diagram including variables for the 2-ray ground reflection propagation algorithm.

Mathematical derivation[1][2] edit

From the figure the received line of sight component may be written as

 

and the ground reflected component may be written as

 

where   is the transmitted signal,   is the length of the direct line-of-sight (LOS) ray,   is the length of the ground-reflected ray,   is the combined antenna gain along the LOS path,   is the combined antenna gain along the ground-reflected path,   is the wavelength of the transmission ( , where   is the speed of light and   is the transmission frequency),   is ground reflection coefficient and   is the delay spread of the model which equals  . The ground reflection coefficient is[1]

 

where   or   depending if the signal is horizontal or vertical polarized, respectively.   is computed as follows.

 

The constant   is the relative permittivity of the ground (or generally speaking, the material where the signal is being reflected),   is the angle between the ground and the reflected ray as shown in the figure above.

From the geometry of the figure, yields:

 

and

 ,

Therefore, the path-length difference between them is

 

and the phase difference between the waves is

 

The power of the signal received is

 

where   denotes average (over time) value.

Approximation edit

If the signal is narrow band relative to the inverse delay spread  , so that  , the power equation may be simplified to

 

where   is the transmitted power.

When distance between the antennas   is very large relative to the height of the antenna we may expand  ,

 

using the Taylor series of  :

 

and taking the first two terms only,

 

The phase difference can then be approximated as

 

When   is large,  ,

 
Reflection co-efficient tends to -1 for large d.
 

and hence

 

Expanding  using Taylor series

 

and retaining only the first two terms

 

it follows that

 

so that

 

and path loss is

 

which is accurate in the far field region, i.e. when   (angles are measured here in radians, not degrees) or, equivalently,

 

and where the combined antenna gain is the product of the transmit and receive antenna gains,  . This formula was first obtained by B.A. Vvedenskij.[3]

Note that the power decreases with as the inverse fourth power of the distance in the far field, which is explained by the destructive combination of the direct and reflected paths, which are roughly of the same in magnitude and are 180 degrees different in phase.   is called "effective isotropic radiated power" (EIRP), which is the transmit power required to produce the same received power if the transmit antenna were isotropic.

In logarithmic units edit

In logarithmic units :  

Path loss :  

Power vs. distance characteristics edit

When the distance   between antennas is less than the transmitting antenna height, two waves are added constructively to yield bigger power. As distance increases, these waves add up constructively and destructively, giving regions of up-fade and down-fade. As the distance increases beyond the critical distance   or first Fresnel zone, the power drops proportionally to an inverse of fourth power of  . An approximation to critical distance may be obtained by setting Δφ to π as the critical distance to a local maximum.

An extension to large antenna heights edit

The above approximations are valid provided that  , which may be not the case in many scenarios, e.g. when antenna heights are not much smaller compared to the distance, or when the ground cannot be modelled as an ideal plane . In this case, one cannot use   and more refined analysis is required, see e.g.[4][5]

Propagation modeling for high-altitude platforms, UAVs, drones, etc. edit

The above large antenna height extension can be used for modeling a ground-to-the-air propagation channel as in the case of an airborne communication node, e.g. an UAV, drone, high-altitude platform. When the airborne node altitude is medium to high, the relationship   does not hold anymore, the clearance angle is not small and, consequently,   does not hold either. This has a profound impact on the propagation path loss and typical fading depth and the fading margin required for the reliable communication (low outage probability).[4][5]

As a case of log distance path loss model edit

The standard expression of Log distance path loss model in [dB] is

 

where   is the large-scale (log-normal) fading,   is a reference distance at which the path loss is  ,   is the path loss exponent; typically  .[1][2] This model is particularly well-suited for measurements, whereby   and   are determined experimentally;   is selected for convenience of measurements and to have clear line-of-sight. This model is also a leading candidate for 5G and 6G systems[6][7] and is also used for indoor communications, see e.g.[8] and references therein.

The path loss [dB] of the 2-ray model is formally a special case with  :

 

where  ,  , and

 ,

which is valid the far field,   = the critical distance.

As a case of multi-slope model edit

The 2-ray ground reflected model may be thought as a case of multi-slope model with break point at critical distance with slope 20 dB/decade before critical distance and slope of 40 dB/decade after the critical distance. Using the free-space and two-ray model above, the propagation path loss can be expressed as

 

where   and   are the free-space and 2-ray path losses;   is a minimum path loss (at smallest distance), usually in practice;   dB or so. Note that   and also   follow from the law of energy conservation (since the Rx power cannot exceed the Tx power) so that both   and   break down when   is small enough. This should be kept in mind when using these approximations at small distances (ignoring this limitation sometimes produces absurd results).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Jakes, W.C. (1974). Microwave Mobile Communications. New York: IEEE Press.
  2. ^ a b Rappaport, Theodore S. (2002). Wireless Communications: Principles and Practice (2. ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall PTR. ISBN 978-0130422323.
  3. ^ Vvedenskij, B.A. (December 1928). "On Radio Communications via Ultra-Short Waves". Theoretical and Experimental Electrical Engineering (12): 447–451.
  4. ^ a b Loyka, Sergey; Kouki, Ammar (October 2001). "Using Two Ray Multipath Model for Microwave Link Budget Analysis". IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine. 43 (5): 31–36. Bibcode:2001IAPM...43...31L. doi:10.1109/74.979365.
  5. ^ a b Loyka, Sergey; Kouki, Ammar; Gagnon, Francois (Oct 2001). Fading Prediction on Microwave Links for Airborne Communications. IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference. Atlantic City, USA.
  6. ^ Rappaport, T. S.; et al. (Dec 2017). "Overview of millimeter wave communications for fifth-generation (5G) wireless networks — with a focus on propagation models". IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. 65 (12): 6213–6230. arXiv:1708.02557. Bibcode:2017ITAP...65.6213R. doi:10.1109/TAP.2017.2734243. S2CID 21557844.
  7. ^ Rappaport, T. S.; et al. (June 2019). "Wireless Communications and Applications Above 100 GHz: Opportunities and Challenges for 6G and Beyond". IEEE Access. 7: 78729–78757. Bibcode:2019IEEEA...778729R. doi:10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2921522. S2CID 195740426.
  8. ^ "ITU model for indoor attenuation", Wikipedia, 2021-03-14, retrieved 2022-01-24; see also [1]

Further reading edit

  • S. Salous, Radio Propagation Measurement and Channel Modelling, Wiley, 2013.
  • J.S. Seybold, Introduction to RF propagation, Wiley, 2005.
  • K. Siwiak, Radiowave Propagation and Antennas for Personal Communications, Artech House, 1998.
  • M.P. Doluhanov, Radiowave Propagation, Moscow: Sviaz, 1972.
  • V.V. Nikolskij, T.I. Nikolskaja, Electrodynamics and Radiowave Propagation, Moscow: Nauka, 1989.
  • 3GPP TR 38.901, Study on Channel Model for Frequencies from 0.5 to 100 GHz (Release 16), Sophia Antipolis, France, 2019 [2]
  • Recommendation ITU-R P.1238-8: Propagation data and prediction methods for the planning of indoor radiocommunication systems and radio local area networks in the frequency range 300 MHz to 100 GHz [3]
  • S. Loyka, ELG4179: Wireless Communication Fundamentals, Lecture Notes (Lec. 2-4), University of Ottawa, Canada, 2021 [4]

ground, reflection, model, rays, ground, reflection, model, multipath, radio, propagation, model, which, predicts, path, losses, between, transmitting, antenna, receiving, antenna, when, they, line, sight, generally, antenna, each, have, different, height, rec. The two rays ground reflection model is a multipath radio propagation model which predicts the path losses between a transmitting antenna and a receiving antenna when they are in line of sight LOS Generally the two antenna each have different height The received signal having two components the LOS component and the reflection component formed predominantly by a single ground reflected wave 2 Ray Ground Reflection diagram including variables for the 2 ray ground reflection propagation algorithm Contents 1 Mathematical derivation 1 2 1 1 Approximation 2 In logarithmic units 3 Power vs distance characteristics 4 An extension to large antenna heights 5 Propagation modeling for high altitude platforms UAVs drones etc 6 As a case of log distance path loss model 7 As a case of multi slope model 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingMathematical derivation 1 2 editFrom the figure the received line of sight component may be written as rlos t Re lGlos4p s t e j2pl ll displaystyle r los t Re left frac lambda sqrt G los 4 pi times frac s t e j2 pi l lambda l right nbsp and the ground reflected component may be written as rgr t Re lG 8 Ggr4p s t t e j2p x x lx x displaystyle r gr t Re left frac lambda Gamma theta sqrt G gr 4 pi times frac s t tau e j2 pi x x lambda x x right nbsp where s t displaystyle s t nbsp is the transmitted signal l displaystyle l nbsp is the length of the direct line of sight LOS ray x x displaystyle x x nbsp is the length of the ground reflected ray Glos displaystyle G los nbsp is the combined antenna gain along the LOS path Ggr displaystyle G gr nbsp is the combined antenna gain along the ground reflected path l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the wavelength of the transmission l cf displaystyle lambda frac c f nbsp where c displaystyle c nbsp is the speed of light and f displaystyle f nbsp is the transmission frequency G 8 displaystyle Gamma theta nbsp is ground reflection coefficient and t displaystyle tau nbsp is the delay spread of the model which equals x x l c displaystyle x x l c nbsp The ground reflection coefficient is 1 G 8 sin 8 Xsin 8 X displaystyle Gamma theta frac sin theta X sin theta X nbsp where X Xh displaystyle X X h nbsp or X Xv displaystyle X X v nbsp depending if the signal is horizontal or vertical polarized respectively X displaystyle X nbsp is computed as follows Xh eg cos28 Xv eg cos28eg Xheg displaystyle X h sqrt varepsilon g cos 2 theta X v frac sqrt varepsilon g cos 2 theta varepsilon g frac X h varepsilon g nbsp The constant eg displaystyle varepsilon g nbsp is the relative permittivity of the ground or generally speaking the material where the signal is being reflected 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the angle between the ground and the reflected ray as shown in the figure above From the geometry of the figure yields x x ht hr 2 d2 displaystyle x x sqrt h t h r 2 d 2 nbsp and l ht hr 2 d2 displaystyle l sqrt h t h r 2 d 2 nbsp Therefore the path length difference between them is Dd x x l ht hr 2 d2 ht hr 2 d2 displaystyle Delta d x x l sqrt h t h r 2 d 2 sqrt h t h r 2 d 2 nbsp and the phase difference between the waves is Dϕ 2pDdl displaystyle Delta phi frac 2 pi Delta d lambda nbsp The power of the signal received is Pr E rlos t rgr t 2 displaystyle P r E r los t r gr t 2 nbsp where E displaystyle E cdot nbsp denotes average over time value Approximation edit If the signal is narrow band relative to the inverse delay spread 1 t displaystyle 1 tau nbsp so that s t s t t displaystyle s t approx s t tau nbsp the power equation may be simplified to Pr E s t 2 l4p 2 Glos e j2pl ll G 8 Ggre j2p x x lx x 2 Pt l4p 2 Glosl G 8 Ggre jDϕx x 2 displaystyle begin aligned P r E s t 2 left frac lambda 4 pi right 2 times left frac sqrt G los times e j2 pi l lambda l Gamma theta sqrt G gr frac e j2 pi x x lambda x x right 2 amp P t left frac lambda 4 pi right 2 times left frac sqrt G los l Gamma theta sqrt G gr frac e j Delta phi x x right 2 end aligned nbsp where Pt E s t 2 displaystyle P t E s t 2 nbsp is the transmitted power When distance between the antennas d displaystyle d nbsp is very large relative to the height of the antenna we may expand Dd x x l displaystyle Delta d x x l nbsp Dd x x l d ht hr 2d2 1 ht hr 2d2 1 displaystyle begin aligned Delta d x x l d Bigg sqrt frac h t h r 2 d 2 1 sqrt frac h t h r 2 d 2 1 Bigg end aligned nbsp using the Taylor series of 1 x displaystyle sqrt 1 x nbsp 1 x 1 12x 18x2 displaystyle sqrt 1 x 1 textstyle frac 1 2 x frac 1 8 x 2 dots nbsp and taking the first two terms only x x l d2 ht hr 2d2 ht hr 2d2 2hthrd displaystyle x x l approx frac d 2 times left frac h t h r 2 d 2 frac h t h r 2 d 2 right frac 2h t h r d nbsp The phase difference can then be approximated as Dϕ 4phthrld displaystyle Delta phi approx frac 4 pi h t h r lambda d nbsp When d displaystyle d nbsp is large d ht hr displaystyle d gg h t h r nbsp nbsp Reflection co efficient tends to 1 for large d d l x x G 8 1 Glos Ggr G displaystyle begin aligned d amp approx l approx x x Gamma theta approx 1 G los approx G gr G end aligned nbsp and hence Pr Pt lG4pd 2 1 e jDϕ 2 displaystyle P r approx P t left frac lambda sqrt G 4 pi d right 2 times 1 e j Delta phi 2 nbsp Expanding e jDϕ displaystyle e j Delta phi nbsp using Taylor series ex n 0 xnn 1 x x22 x36 displaystyle e x sum n 0 infty frac x n n 1 x frac x 2 2 frac x 3 6 cdots nbsp and retaining only the first two terms e jDϕ 1 jDϕ 1 jDϕ displaystyle e j Delta phi approx 1 j Delta phi cdots 1 j Delta phi nbsp it follows that Pr Pt lG4pd 2 1 1 jDϕ 2 Pt lG4pd 2 Dϕ2 Pt lG4pd 2 4phthrld 2 PtGht2hr2d4 displaystyle begin aligned P r amp approx P t left frac lambda sqrt G 4 pi d right 2 times 1 1 j Delta phi 2 amp P t left frac lambda sqrt G 4 pi d right 2 times Delta phi 2 amp P t left frac lambda sqrt G 4 pi d right 2 times left frac 4 pi h t h r lambda d right 2 amp P t frac Gh t 2 h r 2 d 4 end aligned nbsp so that Pr PtGht2hr2d4 displaystyle P r approx P t frac Gh t 2 h r 2 d 4 nbsp and path loss is PL PtPr d4Ght2hr2 displaystyle PL frac P t P r frac d 4 Gh t 2 h r 2 nbsp which is accurate in the far field region i e when Dϕ 1 displaystyle Delta phi ll 1 nbsp angles are measured here in radians not degrees or equivalently d 4phthrl displaystyle d gg frac 4 pi h t h r lambda nbsp and where the combined antenna gain is the product of the transmit and receive antenna gains G GtGr displaystyle G G t G r nbsp This formula was first obtained by B A Vvedenskij 3 Note that the power decreases with as the inverse fourth power of the distance in the far field which is explained by the destructive combination of the direct and reflected paths which are roughly of the same in magnitude and are 180 degrees different in phase GtPt displaystyle G t P t nbsp is called effective isotropic radiated power EIRP which is the transmit power required to produce the same received power if the transmit antenna were isotropic In logarithmic units editIn logarithmic units PrdBm PtdBm 10log10 Ght2hr2 40log10 d displaystyle P r text dBm P t text dBm 10 log 10 Gh t 2 h r 2 40 log 10 d nbsp Path loss PL PtdBm PrdBm 40log10 d 10log10 Ght2hr2 displaystyle PL P t text dBm P r text dBm 40 log 10 d 10 log 10 Gh t 2 h r 2 nbsp Power vs distance characteristics editWhen the distance d displaystyle d nbsp between antennas is less than the transmitting antenna height two waves are added constructively to yield bigger power As distance increases these waves add up constructively and destructively giving regions of up fade and down fade As the distance increases beyond the critical distance dc displaystyle dc nbsp or first Fresnel zone the power drops proportionally to an inverse of fourth power of d displaystyle d nbsp An approximation to critical distance may be obtained by setting Df to p as the critical distance to a local maximum An extension to large antenna heights editThe above approximations are valid provided that d ht hr displaystyle d gg h t h r nbsp which may be not the case in many scenarios e g when antenna heights are not much smaller compared to the distance or when the ground cannot be modelled as an ideal plane In this case one cannot use G 1 displaystyle Gamma approx 1 nbsp and more refined analysis is required see e g 4 5 Propagation modeling for high altitude platforms UAVs drones etc editThe above large antenna height extension can be used for modeling a ground to the air propagation channel as in the case of an airborne communication node e g an UAV drone high altitude platform When the airborne node altitude is medium to high the relationship d ht hr displaystyle d gg h t h r nbsp does not hold anymore the clearance angle is not small and consequently G 1 displaystyle Gamma approx 1 nbsp does not hold either This has a profound impact on the propagation path loss and typical fading depth and the fading margin required for the reliable communication low outage probability 4 5 As a case of log distance path loss model editThe standard expression of Log distance path loss model in dB is PL PTdBm PRdBm PL0 10nlog10 dd0 Xg displaystyle PL P T dBm P R dBm PL 0 10 nu log 10 frac d d 0 X g nbsp where Xg displaystyle X g nbsp is the large scale log normal fading d0 displaystyle d 0 nbsp is a reference distance at which the path loss is PL0 displaystyle PL 0 nbsp n displaystyle nu nbsp is the path loss exponent typically n 2 4 displaystyle nu 2 4 nbsp 1 2 This model is particularly well suited for measurements whereby PL0 displaystyle PL 0 nbsp and n displaystyle nu nbsp are determined experimentally d0 displaystyle d 0 nbsp is selected for convenience of measurements and to have clear line of sight This model is also a leading candidate for 5G and 6G systems 6 7 and is also used for indoor communications see e g 8 and references therein The path loss dB of the 2 ray model is formally a special case with n 4 displaystyle nu 4 nbsp PL PtdBm PrdBm 40log10 d 10log10 Ght2hr2 displaystyle PL P t dBm P r dBm 40 log 10 d 10 log 10 Gh t 2 h r 2 nbsp where d0 1 displaystyle d 0 1 nbsp Xg 0 displaystyle X g 0 nbsp and PL0 10log10 Ght2hr2 displaystyle PL 0 10 log 10 Gh t 2 h r 2 nbsp which is valid the far field d gt dc 4phrht l displaystyle d gt d c 4 pi h r h t lambda nbsp the critical distance As a case of multi slope model editThe 2 ray ground reflected model may be thought as a case of multi slope model with break point at critical distance with slope 20 dB decade before critical distance and slope of 40 dB decade after the critical distance Using the free space and two ray model above the propagation path loss can be expressed asL max G Lmin LFS L2 ray displaystyle L max G L min L FS L 2 ray nbsp where LFS 4pd l 2 displaystyle L FS 4 pi d lambda 2 nbsp and L2 ray d4 hthr 2 displaystyle L 2 ray d 4 h t h r 2 nbsp are the free space and 2 ray path losses Lmin displaystyle L min nbsp is a minimum path loss at smallest distance usually in practice Lmin 20 displaystyle L min approx 20 nbsp dB or so Note that L G displaystyle L geq G nbsp and also L 1 displaystyle L geq 1 nbsp follow from the law of energy conservation since the Rx power cannot exceed the Tx power so that both LFS 4pd l 2 displaystyle L FS 4 pi d lambda 2 nbsp and L2 ray d4 hthr 2 displaystyle L 2 ray d 4 h t h r 2 nbsp break down when d displaystyle d nbsp is small enough This should be kept in mind when using these approximations at small distances ignoring this limitation sometimes produces absurd results See also editRadio propagation model Free space path loss Friis transmission equation ITU R P 525 Link budget Ray tracing physics Reflection physics Specular reflection Six rays model Ten rays modelReferences edit a b c Jakes W C 1974 Microwave Mobile Communications New York IEEE Press a b Rappaport Theodore S 2002 Wireless Communications Principles and Practice 2 ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall PTR ISBN 978 0130422323 Vvedenskij B A December 1928 On Radio Communications via Ultra Short Waves Theoretical and Experimental Electrical Engineering 12 447 451 a b Loyka Sergey Kouki Ammar October 2001 Using Two Ray Multipath Model for Microwave Link Budget Analysis IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine 43 5 31 36 Bibcode 2001IAPM 43 31L doi 10 1109 74 979365 a b Loyka Sergey Kouki Ammar Gagnon Francois Oct 2001 Fading Prediction on Microwave Links for Airborne Communications IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference Atlantic City USA Rappaport T S et al Dec 2017 Overview of millimeter wave communications for fifth generation 5G wireless networks with a focus on propagation models IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 65 12 6213 6230 arXiv 1708 02557 Bibcode 2017ITAP 65 6213R doi 10 1109 TAP 2017 2734243 S2CID 21557844 Rappaport T S et al June 2019 Wireless Communications and Applications Above 100 GHz Opportunities and Challenges for 6G and Beyond IEEE Access 7 78729 78757 Bibcode 2019IEEEA 778729R doi 10 1109 ACCESS 2019 2921522 S2CID 195740426 ITU model for indoor attenuation Wikipedia 2021 03 14 retrieved 2022 01 24 see also 1 Further reading editS Salous Radio Propagation Measurement and Channel Modelling Wiley 2013 J S Seybold Introduction to RF propagation Wiley 2005 K Siwiak Radiowave Propagation and Antennas for Personal Communications Artech House 1998 M P Doluhanov Radiowave Propagation Moscow Sviaz 1972 V V Nikolskij T I Nikolskaja Electrodynamics and Radiowave Propagation Moscow Nauka 1989 3GPP TR 38 901 Study on Channel Model for Frequencies from 0 5 to 100 GHz Release 16 Sophia Antipolis France 2019 2 Recommendation ITU R P 1238 8 Propagation data and prediction methods for the planning of indoor radiocommunication systems and radio local area networks in the frequency range 300 MHz to 100 GHz 3 S Loyka ELG4179 Wireless Communication Fundamentals Lecture Notes Lec 2 4 University of Ottawa Canada 2021 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Two ray ground reflection model amp oldid 1200234375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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