Browsing by Author "Kraemer, Rolf"
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- ItemData link layer considerations for future 100 Gbps terahertz band transceivers(London : Hindawi, 2017) Lopacinski, Lukasz; Brzozowski, Marcin; Kraemer, RolfThis paper presents a hardware processor for 100Gbps wireless data link layer. A serial Reed-Solomon decoder requires a clock of 12.5GHz to fulfill timings constraints of the transmission. Receiving a single Ethernet frame on a 100 Gbps physical layer may be faster than accessing DDR3 memory. Processing so fast streams on a state-of-the-art FPGA (field programmable gate arrays) requires a dedicated approach. Thus, the paper presents lightweight RS FEC engine, frames fragmentation, aggregation, and a protocol with selective fragment retransmission. The implemented FPGA demonstrator achieves nearly 120 Gbps and accepts bit error rate (BER) up to 2e - 3. Moreover, redundancy added to the frames is adopted according to the channel BER by a dedicated link adaptation algorithm. At the end, ASIC synthesis results are presented including detailed statistics of consumed energy per bit.
- ItemHome media platform and networks - HOMEPLANE : Schlussbericht zum Teilprojekt: Hochratige und hochwertige drahtlose Kommunikation zur Anwendung in Heimnetzen(Hannover : Technische Informationsbibliothek (TIB), 2009) Kraemer, Rolf[no abstract available]
- ItemA survey on Bluetooth multi-hop networks(Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier Science, 2019) Todtenberg, Nicole; Kraemer, RolfBluetooth was firstly announced in 1998. Originally designed as cable replacement connecting devices in a point-to-point fashion its high penetration arouses interest in its ad-hoc networking potential. This ad-hoc networking potential of Bluetooth is advertised for years - but until recently no actual products were available and less than a handful of real Bluetooth multi-hop network deployments were reported. The turnaround was triggered by the release of the Bluetooth Low Energy Mesh Profile which is unquestionable a great achievement but not well suited for all use cases of multi-hop networks. This paper surveys the tremendous work done on Bluetooth multi-hop networks during the last 20 years. All aspects are discussed with demands for a real world Bluetooth multi-hop operation in mind. Relationships and side effects of different topics for a real world implementation are explained. This unique focus distinguishes this survey from existing ones. Furthermore, to the best of the authors’ knowledge this is the first survey consolidating the work on Bluetooth multi-hop networks for classic Bluetooth technology as well as for Bluetooth Low Energy. Another individual characteristic of this survey is a synopsis of real world Bluetooth multi-hop network deployment efforts. In fact, there are only four reports of a successful establishment of a Bluetooth multi-hop network with more than 30 nodes and only one of them was integrated in a real world application - namely a photovoltaic power plant. © 2019 The Authors