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1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D., P.E. SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION WAUKESHA, WISCONSIN and PRESIDENT HIERCOMM, INC. HARTLAND, WISCONSIN Supported by: SBIR PHASE II GRANT U.S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE COOPERATIVE STATE RESEARCH, EDUCATION AND EXTENSION SERVICE GRANT NUMBER: 2006-33610-16317 #131426

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Page 1: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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RURAL TELECON ’07

A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL

BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS

OCTOBER 15, 2007

KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D., P.E.SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION

WAUKESHA, WISCONSIN

and

PRESIDENTHIERCOMM, INC.

HARTLAND, WISCONSIN

Supported by:SBIR PHASE II GRANT

U.S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURECOOPERATIVE STATE RESEARCH, EDUCATION AND EXTENSION SERVICE

GRANT NUMBER: 2006-33610-16317

#131426

Page 2: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Agenda

• Sectoral Cellular Broadband Wireless– Fourth Generation (4G) Performance– Low Infrastructure Costs– High Gain Active Antennas

• Sectoral Cellular Weaknesses– Serves only fixed users– Lacks redundancy

– 99.9% reliability (?)– Enter adaptive mobile mesh network– A Hybrid Sectoral/Adaptive Mesh

Network

• Public Safety Communications and the 9/11 – Katrina Problem

– Consistent failure of communications networks in major public emergencies

– Ad Hoc Mesh Networks and the DOD– The Kenosha County 4.9/5.8 GHz

Public Safety Communications Project

• Wirlwind– An Ad Hoc Routing System– Architecture Technology Corp.– USDA SBIR Grant

• Kenosha County Project– Fusion of Sectoral/Cellular and

dynamic mobile mesh topologies– Long range, high performance

WiFi– Wirlwind Ad Hoc networking

• The Hybrid Solution– Basic Sectoral Cellular Network– Peer-to-Peer Connect– The User Routing Node– Redundant, Reliable High

Performance Network

• Current Status and Plans

Page 3: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Conceptual Sectoral Cellular Network

Source: SEWRPC.

Page 4: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Conceptual Mesh Network

Source: Tropos and SEWRPC.

Page 5: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Sectoral Cellular Network – Costand Performance

• Infrastructure Cost– Town of Wayne, Wisconsin– Land Area – 36 square miles– Access Point Infrastructure– Four (4) APs– AP Density = 0.1/square mile– Total Cost = $80,000 - $2,200/square mile– Including

– Internet gateway– Network management system– Engineering, installation and training

• Mesh Network Alternative Costs– 16 to 80 APs/square mile– Areal cost: $100,000 - $250,000/square mile

• Sectoral/Cellular Network Performance– 10 – 30 megabits per second range

• Mesh Network Alternative Performance– 1 – 3 megabits per second

Page 6: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Sectoral Cellular Network – Costand Performancecontinued

Basis of Technology

• Network Topology– Allows for use of higher gain directional antennas– Omnidirectional antenna

– 5 – 8 dBi– Directional antenna

– 14 – 17 dBi– 8 times the signal intensity

• Active Antenna– Antenna with high gain, low noise amplifier– Additional gain of 20 dBi and more– 100 times the signal intensity

Page 7: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Four Access Point Locations, Town of Wayne, Wisconsin

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Backhaul Network, Town of Wayne, Wisconsin

Page 9: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Sectoral Cellular SystemWeakness and Remedies

• Limited to Fixed Users– Directional antenna requires fixed location– Nomadic and mobile users require omnidirectional antennas– Limited distance from access point

• Lack of Redundancy– No alternative transmission paths– Reliability goal of 99.9%– Wireless networks now far below this target

• Solution: Users as Nodes– If each user could serve as a node to pass on signals to the sectoral AP, the

performance of the network for nomadic users would be greatly enhanced– Enter Peer-to-Peer wireless communications and dynamic, mobile Ad Hoc

mesh networks

• Solution: Higher Performance Laptop Computers– The Active Omnidirectional Antenna– As a laptop computer attachment– For 25 -30 dBi gain

Page 10: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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Public Safety Wireless Communications and the 9/11 – Katrina Problem

• Consistent Failure of Public Safety Communicationsin Major Public Emergencies

– Oklahoma City– 9/11– Katrina

• Causes of Failure– Power outages– Tower damage– Flooding– Network saturation

• Problem with Current Public SafetyCommunications Systems

– Very low data transfer rates– Networks do not survive a disaster event

• Solution– Networks that are independent of fixed infrastructure– Peer-to-Peer communications

Page 11: 1 RURAL TELECON ’07 A HYBRID SECTORAL/AD HOC MESH NETWORK ARCHITECTURE FOR RURAL BROADBAND WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS OCTOBER 15, 2007 KEN SCHLAGER, Ph.D.,

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SEWRPC/HierComm/Architecture Technology Corp.and Kenosha County, Wisconsin

• Objectives– To bring broadband to public safety wireless communications– To solve the network survivability problem– To provide a public/private business model for broadband wireless

communications– To extend the sectoral/cellular network model to nomadic and fixed users

• Task #1 – Long Range 4.9 GHz Wireless Communications– To demonstrate extended range, high gain throughput performance at 4.9

GHz– In mobile public safety vehicles

• Task #2 – Peer-to-Peer Communications– To demonstrate adaptive peer-to-peer wireless communications– With and without infrastructure– Selecting the optimal transmission path– Using Architecture Technology Corp. (ATC) Wirlwind

4.9/5.8 GHz Public/Private Wireless Communications Project

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Project WirlwindWireless Wide Area Incident Network

Technical Partnership

HierComm – RF hardwareArchitecture Technology – Network software

USDA SBIR Grant Recipients

HierComm – Rural Wireless Broadband CommunicationsArchitecture Technology – Wirlwind for US Forest Service

Wirlwind

• Ad Hoc Mobile Mesh Network Software Package• Connects user to strongest signal node• Dynamic mobile or fixed location nodes• Project 25 compliant communications• Send/receive voice or data• Geolocation-based communications

– Two technologies– Ad Hoc routing Real-time geographic tracking of nodes and geomessaging

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Wirlwind: Ad Hoc Routing

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Wirlwind: Ad Hoc Routing—continued

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Wirlwind

Ad Hoc Routing

• SARA – Source Initiated Adaptive Routing Algorithm

• Advantages/Features– Implemented working algorithm

– Not just research– Multi-platform = Windows, Linux– Symmetric and Asymmetric Links

• DOD/DARPA funded

Geolocation

• ATC’s GeoTIDES– Geographically Targeted Information Dissemination System– Communication often involves many different groups at various locations and requires

knowledge of location of people and resources

• Advantages/Features– Dynamically tracks all nodes with GPS– Allows transmission of data to geographic coordinates or regions– Geotracking– Geocasting, Geomessaging

The Technology

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Wirlwind Phase I Prototype

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Kenosha County

Task I – Network Planning

• Preliminary County-Wide Network– Radio propagation modeling– Clutter database

• Demonstration Area Network– Two base Stations– Mobile vehicular users

Task II – Equipment Planning

• Base Station Equipment– 4.9 GHz Transceivers (3)– 5.8 GHz Transceivers (3)– Amplifier Augmentations (6) – 3 inch each frequency band– 4.9 GHz Sectoral Antenna (1)– 5.8 GHz Sectoral Antenna (1)

• Mobile Vehicular user Equipment (4.9 GHz only)– 4.9 GHz omnidirectional antenna– 4.9 GHz high gain amplifier– 4.9 GHz transceiver

4.9/5.8 GHz Public Safety/CommercialWireless Network Demonstration Project

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Kenosha County4.9/5.8 GHz Public Safety/CommercialWireless Network Demonstration Project—continued

Task III – Field Demonstration – High Performance, Low Base Station Density Network

• Test truck testing

• Public safety vehicular installation

• Public safety vehicular testing County-wide network plan confirmation

Task IV – Field Demonstration – Peer-to-Peer Communications

• Training

• Test Truck testing

• Public safety vehicular testing

• Public emergency simulated testing

Task V – Full-scale Deployment Planning

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The Upgraded Sectoral/Cellular Boardband Wireless Network

• Enhanced Sectoral/Cellular Network– Augmented by user repeater nodes– For service to nomadic (laptop) and mobile (cell phone) users– A cost effective solution

• A More Robust Network– For public safety– For commercial WiFi

• A Mostly Software Augmentation– Unlike the hardware-oriented Sectoral/Cellular Network– Wirlwind software in all fixed, nomadic and mobile nodes– Minor hardware adjustments

The Hybrid Solution

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Current Status and Plans

• Wayne, Wisconsin Network– As a model high performance, broadband wireless, rural

communications system– Technological demonstration

– Performance– Reliability

– Business model demonstration– Return on investment (ROI)– CPE cost problem

• Search for a National Partner– Convincing a major telecommunications partner of the viability of the

technology and the business model– Otherwise, progress will be slow