Abstract

We report on the use of broad-band chirp signals for spread-spectrum communications in indoor and industrial environments. The well-known pulse compression technique associated with chirp signals is exploited to achieve a highly robust communication system. For the generation and compression of the chirp signals, surface acoustic wave delay lines fabricated from an LiTaO/sub 3/-X112rotY substrate are used. Center frequency, bandwidth, chirp duration, and chirp rate are 348.8 MHz, 80 MHz, 500 ns, and /spl plusmn/40 MHz//spl mu/s, respectively. Different modulation schemes for chirp signals are introduced, the effects of nonlinearities, frequency drift, and temperature drift are addressed, and simulations and measurement results from a hardware demonstrator are presented for the use of /spl pi//4-differential quadrature phase-shift keying (DQPSK) modulation. A data rate of up to 40 Mb/s has been achieved experimentally and shows that the proposed system is highly robust against multipath effects.

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