4.7 Article

Characteristics of Rain-Induced Attenuation over Signal Links at Frequency Ranges of 25 and 38 GHz Observed in Beijing

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13112156

Keywords

raindrop size distribution (DSD); microwave links; millimeter-wave link; 5G; radio propagation meteorological factors; rain-induced attenuation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41605122, 42027803, 41775032, 61701172, 61801170]
  2. LAGEO of Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences [LAGEO-2019-2, LAGEO-2018-1]
  3. Young Backbone Teachers in Henan Province [2018GGJS049]
  4. Henan Province Young Talent Lift Project [2020HYTP009]
  5. Program for Science & Technology Innovation Talents in the University of Henan Province [20HASTIT022]
  6. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2018M633351]

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Wireless communication has become a vital part of our daily lives, and meteorological factors can significantly impact communication quality, especially at high frequencies. This paper conducted field measurements at 25 GHz and 38 GHz to study the effects of atmospheric conditions on millimeter-wave transmissions. By deriving the relationship between rain-induced attenuation and rainfall rate using local rain drop size distribution information, the improved model showed better estimation accuracy compared to international standards.
Wireless communication has become a very important part of our lives, and it is well known that meteorological factors affect the quality of communication links, especially at higher frequencies because the physical dimensions of raindrops, hail stones, and snowflakes are on a similar wavelength to the propagating radio frequency. Millimeter-waves are an important technology for fifth-generation cellular networks which are currently being deployed all over the world. Since atmospheric effects are challenging in millimeter-wave transmissions, in this paper, we conducted line-of-sight field measurements at 25 GHz and 38 GHz. We monitored the received signal during rainfall events and compared the theoretical attenuation and the recorded rain-induced attenuation. We also derived the rain-induced attenuation (A) and rainfall rate (R) relation for stratiform and convective rain, respectively, using local rain drop size distribution (DSD) information at our measurement site collected during the period of two years. Furthermore, opportunistic sensing of atmospheric phenomena using microwave or millimeter-wave communication links in commercial cellular networks has recently attracted more attention in meteorological research worldwide. The accuracy of calculating rainfall rates from microwave links highly depends on the retrieval model and values of coefficients in the model, i.e., a and b of the A-R relation model. Here, the coefficients a and b are estimated based on local DSD measurement, and the performance of the improved A-R model is evaluated using propagated signal power based on measurement data. Compared to the (a, b) coefficients in the International Telecommunication Union Recommendation (ITU-R) P.838 document, the derived coefficients achieved an improved rainfall rate estimation.

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