Abstract

The research on Wi-Fi sensing has been thriving over the past decade but the process has not been smooth. Three barriers always hamper the research: 1) unknown baseband design and its influence; 2) inadequate hardware; and 3) the lack of versatile and flexible measurement software. This article tries to eliminate these barriers through the following work. <i>First</i>, we present an in-depth study of the baseband design of the Qualcomm Atheros AR9300 (QCA9300) NIC. We identify a missing item of the existing channel state information (CSI) model, namely, the CSI distortion, and identify the baseband filter as its origin. We also propose a distortion removal method. <i>Second</i>, we reintroduce both the QCA9300 and software-defined radio (SDR) as powerful hardware for research. For the QCA9300, we unlock the arbitrary tuning of both the carrier frequency and bandwidth. For SDR, we develop a high-performance software implementation of the 802.11a/g/n/ac/ax baseband, allowing users to fully control the baseband and access the complete physical-layer information. <i>Third</i>, we release the PicoScenes software, which supports concurrent CSI measurement from multiple QCA9300, Intel Wireless Link (IWL5300), and SDR hardware. PicoScenes features rich low-level controls, packet injection, and software baseband implementation. It also allows users to develop their own measurement plugins. <i>Finally</i>, we report state-of-the-art results in the extensive evaluations of the PicoScenes system, such as the &#x003E;2-GHz available spectrum on the QCA9300, concurrent CSI measurement, and up to 40 and 1 kHz CSI measurement rates achieved by the QCA9300 and SDR. PicoScenes is available at <uri>https://ps.zpj.io</uri>.

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