ECE Faculty Candidate Colloquium

 

Thursday                    **Special Time and Location**
February 26
11:00 - 11:50 AM 
Kelley 1007

 

Nicholas Kirsch 
Ph.D. Candidate
Drexel University

Resource Allocation Methods and Effects of Antenna Spacing in MIMO Ad
hoc networks 

With ever-increasing demand for wireless communications, spectral
efficiency and power management are of great importance. Nodes in a
wireless network are constrained by the power available, interference
power, and shared communications resources. Multiple-input
multiple-output (MIMO) communication systems were developed to take
advantage of the lack of correlation between antennas that are separated
in space to increase spectral efficiency. To study these communication
systems, a multi-node multiple antenna ad hoc network was developed.
With this system, the effects of power management and antenna spacing on
network capacity can be studied. 

Our work has shown that MIMO systems can have increased capacity through
improved resource allocation. Resource allocation can be accomplished by
assigning power to eigenmodes of the MIMO matrix channel that provide
the best capacity. In this talk, several resource allocation methods are
presented and analyzed through simulations and experimental results with
the multi-node multiple antenna testbed. Improved network capacity is
also demonstrated through changing of the physical spacing between the
antenna elements. The talk will include results from the multiple
antenna testbed, which characterize the wireless channel with respect to
the antenna array configuration. Because spatial separation and channel
response are closely related, we can use this insight to design more
efficient MIMO communication networks. 

Biography:

Nicholas J. Kirsch is a Ph.D. candidate at Drexel University in
Philadelphia, PA. He obtained his B.S. degree in electrical engineering
from the University of Wisconsin - Madison in 2003 and a M.S. degree in
electrical engineering and telecommunications from Drexel University in
2006. 

>From 2001 to 2002, Nicholas worked for W.L. Gore & Associates on fiber
optic link modules and long-wavelength lasers. In 2006, he was awarded
the Koerner Family Fellowship at Drexel University. His current research
interests include MIMO communications, ad hoc networking, adaptive radio
systems, and RFID antenna design.

 

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