Abstract

Power line communication (PLC) channels are prone to multipath propagation due to impedance mismatch, and impulsive noise whose characteristics are still not well established in the literature. Moreover, measurements show that this impulsive noise appear in bursts, non-Gaussian and cyclostationary and as such cannot be modeled as the convenient additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN). Transceivers optimized for AWGN may not necessarily perform well for the PLC noise. Therefore, investigating the characteristics of PLC noise is very important for accurate modeling of the same. This study presents multifractal analysis of bursty impulsive noise measured from power line networks from three different environments. We employ multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis, which is a well-developed multifractal analysis technique for non-stationary time series data and easy to implement to analyze measured noise data. Results show that power line noise exhibits both long-range dependence (LRD) and multifractal scaling behavior with different strengths depending on the environments where they were captured. The multiscaling behavior is due to long-range correlation inherent in the power line noise. The source of this local multiscaling behavior is determined by analysis a shuffled series of the original data captured from the power network. Multifractal analysis is able to show clearly both the strengths and frequency of occurrence of bursts occurring in PLC noise which can then be applied in accurate modeling of the noise. The significance of these results is that new power line noise models should be developed that captures both LRD and multifractal scaling for more accurate performance evaluation of power line communication systems. The existing noise models though able to replicate temporal dependence of PLC noise, are not able to capture this local scaling behavior which results show is inherent in PLC noise.

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