Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments

Vehicular repeater systems improve the mobile coverage inside railroad cars by amplifying the signals received by a pick-up antenna on the roof and distributing the amplified signals inside the car. Uplink signals are received accordingly in the cars, amplified and transmitted via the roof antenna....

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Main Authors: Martin Lerch, Philipp Svoboda, Josef Resch, Markus Rupp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2025-01-01
Series:IEEE Open Journal of Vehicular Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10848174/
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author Martin Lerch
Philipp Svoboda
Josef Resch
Markus Rupp
author_facet Martin Lerch
Philipp Svoboda
Josef Resch
Markus Rupp
author_sort Martin Lerch
collection DOAJ
description Vehicular repeater systems improve the mobile coverage inside railroad cars by amplifying the signals received by a pick-up antenna on the roof and distributing the amplified signals inside the car. Uplink signals are received accordingly in the cars, amplified and transmitted via the roof antenna. At the same time, amplified noise is also transmitted. In uplink direction, this can lead to impairments of mobile communication in the entire cell. However, in vehicular repeater systems there are other sources of uplink interference that could be mistakenly be interpreted as additive noise. In addition to the influence of additive noise, in this paper we investigate the influence of inter-symbol interference due to direct propagation through the windows, interference due to passive intermodulation that can occur in the indoor antenna, and interference due to limited isolation between the indoor and outdoor antenna. We introduce a pathloss model for a vehicle repeater system. Based on this model, we investigate the influence of these different sources of interference on the uplink experimentally. Depending on the kind of interference, we conduct our investigations over different system parameters, such as the penetration loss of the windows, isolation between the indoor and outdoor antenna, and the gain settings of the repeater. The findings presented in this study provide valuable insights for network operators and researchers, facilitating the design of robust and efficient vehicular repeater systems that enhance connectivity and user experience in cellular wireless networks.
format Article
id doaj-art-07fda2cb1db248e088bc219cd93c5316
institution Kabale University
issn 2644-1330
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher IEEE
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series IEEE Open Journal of Vehicular Technology
spelling doaj-art-07fda2cb1db248e088bc219cd93c53162025-02-11T00:01:51ZengIEEEIEEE Open Journal of Vehicular Technology2644-13302025-01-01648750110.1109/OJVT.2025.353191610848174Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater DeploymentsMartin Lerch0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1157-4160Philipp Svoboda1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2277-0378Josef Resch2Markus Rupp3https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9003-7779Institute of Telecommunications, TU Wien, AustriaInstitute of Telecommunications, TU Wien, AustriaÖBB Train Tech, AustriaInstitute of Telecommunications, TU Wien, AustriaVehicular repeater systems improve the mobile coverage inside railroad cars by amplifying the signals received by a pick-up antenna on the roof and distributing the amplified signals inside the car. Uplink signals are received accordingly in the cars, amplified and transmitted via the roof antenna. At the same time, amplified noise is also transmitted. In uplink direction, this can lead to impairments of mobile communication in the entire cell. However, in vehicular repeater systems there are other sources of uplink interference that could be mistakenly be interpreted as additive noise. In addition to the influence of additive noise, in this paper we investigate the influence of inter-symbol interference due to direct propagation through the windows, interference due to passive intermodulation that can occur in the indoor antenna, and interference due to limited isolation between the indoor and outdoor antenna. We introduce a pathloss model for a vehicle repeater system. Based on this model, we investigate the influence of these different sources of interference on the uplink experimentally. Depending on the kind of interference, we conduct our investigations over different system parameters, such as the penetration loss of the windows, isolation between the indoor and outdoor antenna, and the gain settings of the repeater. The findings presented in this study provide valuable insights for network operators and researchers, facilitating the design of robust and efficient vehicular repeater systems that enhance connectivity and user experience in cellular wireless networks.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10848174/Vehicular repeater systemsmobile coveragerailroad communicationsignal amplificationuplink interferenceadditive noise
spellingShingle Martin Lerch
Philipp Svoboda
Josef Resch
Markus Rupp
Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
IEEE Open Journal of Vehicular Technology
Vehicular repeater systems
mobile coverage
railroad communication
signal amplification
uplink interference
additive noise
title Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
title_full Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
title_fullStr Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
title_full_unstemmed Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
title_short Cellular Uplink Impairments in Vehicular Repeater Deployments
title_sort cellular uplink impairments in vehicular repeater deployments
topic Vehicular repeater systems
mobile coverage
railroad communication
signal amplification
uplink interference
additive noise
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10848174/
work_keys_str_mv AT martinlerch cellularuplinkimpairmentsinvehicularrepeaterdeployments
AT philippsvoboda cellularuplinkimpairmentsinvehicularrepeaterdeployments
AT josefresch cellularuplinkimpairmentsinvehicularrepeaterdeployments
AT markusrupp cellularuplinkimpairmentsinvehicularrepeaterdeployments