IEEE 802.
11 Wireless Local Area
Networks (RF-LANs)
Wireless Networks
Wireless communication is one of the fastest-growing
technologies.
The demand for connecting devices without the use of
cable is increasing everywhere.
Wireless LANs can be found in on college campuses, Bus
stations, Railway Stations, Airport, in office buildings, and
in many public areas.
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IEEE 802.11
IEEE has defined the specifications for a wireless LAN, called
IEEE 802.11, which covers physical and data link layers.
Architetcure:
The standard defines two kind of services: BSS and ESS.
Basic Service Set(BSS):
IEEE 802.11 defines a BSS as the building blocks of
wireless LANs.
A BSS is made of stationary or mobile wireless stations
and an optional central base station called, Access
Point.
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The BSS without an AP is a stand-alone network and cannot
send the data to other BSSs. It is called an ad-hoc
architecture.
In this architecture, stations can form a network without the
need of an AP, they can locate one another and agree to be
part of a BSS.
A BSS with an AP is sometimes referred to as an
infrastructure network.
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Externded Service Set
An Extended Service Set is made up of two or more BSSs with
APs.
In this case, the BSSs are connected through a distributed
system, which is usually a wireless LAN.
The distributed system connects the APs in the BSSs.
The ESS uses two types of stations: mobile and stationary.
The mobile stations are normal stations inside a BSS.
The stationary stations are AP stations that are part of a wired
LAN.
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Types of Wireless LANs
Infrastructure (BSS and ESS)
Ad-hoc (BSS)
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IEEE 802.11 Architecture
IEEE 802.11 defines the physical (PHY), logical link (LLC) and
media access control (MAC) layers for a wireless local area network
802.11 networks can work as Network
basic service set (BSS)
802.11
LLC
extended service set (ESS) MAC
BSS can also be used in ad-hoc FHSS DSSS IR PHY
networking
DS,
ESS
LLC: Logical Link Control Layer
MAC: Medium Access Control Layer
PHY: Physical Layer
FHSS: Frequency hopping SS
DSSS: Direct sequence SS
SS: Spread spectrum
IR: Infrared light
BSS: Basic Service Set
ESS: Extended Service Set ad-hoc network
AP: Access Point
DS: Distribution System 7
Hidden and Exposed Terminal Problems
Hidden Terminal Problem
• Station B has a
transmission range shown
by the left oval and every
station in this range can
hear any signal transmitted
by station B.
• Station C has a • Station C is outside the
transmission range shown transmission range of B;
by the right oval and every similarly, station B is outside
station in this range can the transmission range of C.
hear any signal transmitted • Station A can hear both the
by station C. transmission of B and C. 8
Hidden Station Problem
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Hidden Station Problem
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Exposed Terminal Problem
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Exposed Terminal Problem
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Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision
Avoidance
1. Before sending a frame, the
source station senses the
medium by checking the
energy level at the carrier
frequency.
a) The channel uses a
persistence strategy with
back-off until the
channel is idle.
b) After the station is found
to be idle, station waits
for a period of time
called the distributed
inteeframe space (DCF),
then station sends a
control frame called the 13
request to send (RTS).
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Figure CSMA/CA and NAV 15
WLAN benefits
Mobility
increases working efficiency and productivity
extends the On-line period
Installation on difficult-to-wire areas
inside buildings
road crossings
Increased reliability
Note: Pay attention to security!
Reduced installation time
cabling time and convenient to users and difficult-to-
wire cases
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WLAN benefits (cont.)
Broadband
11 Mbps for 802.11b
54 Mbps for 802.11a/g (GSM:9.6Kbps,
HCSCD:~40Kbps, GPRS:~160Kbps, WCDMA:up to
2Mbps)
Long-term cost savings
O & M cheaper that for wired nets
Comes from easy maintenance, cabling cost, working
efficiency and accuracy
Network can be established in a new location just by
moving the PCs!
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WLAN technology problems
Date Speed
IEEE 802.11b support up to 11 MBps, sometimes this is not
enough - far lower than 100 Mbps fast Ethernet
Interference
Works in ISM band, share same frequency with microwave
oven, Bluetooth, and others
Security
Current WEP algorithm is weak - usually not ON!
Roaming
No industry standard is available and propriety solution are
not interoperable - especially with GSM
Inter-operability
Only few basic functionality are interoperable, other vendor’s
features can’t be used in a mixed network
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WLAN implementation problems
Lack of wireless networking experience for most IT
engineer
No well-recognized operation process on network
implementation
Selecting access points with ‘Best Guess’ method
Unaware of interference from/to other networks
Weak security policy
As a result, your WLAN may have
Poor performance (coverage, throughput, capacity,
security)
Unstable service
Customer dissatisfaction
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