Abstract

We present an implementation of distributed transmit beamforming using software-defined radios. The transmit nodes synchronize in carrier frequency using a pilot signal sent by a master node, and employ feedback from the receiver to adjust their carrier phases so as to add up coherently at the receiver. Our implementation advances the state of the art for all-wireless distributed beamforming in two important ways. The first is the implementation of extended Kalman filters for frequency synchronization at the slave nodes, which is shown to be effective despite the high local oscillator (LO) offsets typical of software-defined radios, and the low duty cycle of the pilot transmitted by the master node. The second advance is the implementation of the well-known one bit feedback scheme for phase adjustment using digital feedback from the receiver. We present experimental results that show the efficacy of our implementation for frequency synchronization and beamforming.

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