Packet detection and timing acquisition for IR-UWB networks such as 802.15.4a relies on the presence of an acquisition sequence (or preamble) at the beginning of each packet. A simple network design choice is to use a common acquisition sequence for the whole network. A second design choice is to use an acquisition sequence private to destinations. It potentially yields a larger network throughput, but requires additional complexity for sources to learn the acquisition sequence of their destination. In this paper, we evaluate the effect of a common or private acquisition sequence on the network throughput. Our analysis is based on analytical modeling and simulations. We show that a private acquisition sequence yields a substantial increase in throughput. The throughput difference grows with the number of concurrent transmitters and interferers. We also show the presence of a compounding effect similar to the exposed terminal issue in 802.11 networks.
Verónica del Carmen Estrada Galiñanes, Arman Babaei
Andreas Peter Burg, Alexios Konstantinos Balatsoukas Stimming, Andreas Toftegaard Kristensen, Yifei Shen, Yuqing Ren, Chuan Zhang