Zebra Technologies AP6 Access Point Radio Module 6 User Manual Manual
Zebra Technologies Corporation Access Point Radio Module 6 Manual
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Manual
CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY REVISIONS REV 1.0 2.0 DESCRIPTION DATE AUTHOR RFQ RFQ revised with high power option 01/28/10 02/01/10 Vinh Le Vinh Le Orthus Radio functional specification Orthus Radio Integration Guide Mid Power APN RF functional specifications DOC. NO: 00-J948B0-FS04 Page 1 of 24 Signature Approval of Document For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Required Approvals Program Manager xxx Date: Electrical, Mechanical & RF Engineering Platform Manager Morteza Zarrabian Date: Product Manager xxx Date: Optional Approvals System Engineering Vinh Le Date: RF Engineering Nhan Nguyen Date: For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY TABLE OF CONTENTS mG .......................................................................................................... 5 XUX vGG ............................................................................................... 5 XUY yGwoGzGG .............................................................. 5 Y l .............................................................................................................................. 7 YUX hG ............................................................................................................... 7 YUY {G ..................................................................................................... 7 YUZ yGG ..................................................................................................... 7 YUZUX hGG .......................................................................... 7 YU[ ymGG ................................................................................................ 7 YU\ jGGG GG ........................................... 7 YU\UX YU[Gno¡G ....................................................................................................... 7 YU\UY \UYGno¡G ....................................................................................................... 8 YU] {G ................................................................................................ 8 YU]UX zG.................................................................................................... 8 YU]UY zG ............................................................................................... 10 YU]UZ {GGGG .......................................................... 10 YU]U[ {GG G ........................................................ 10 YU]U\ yGz GG G ....................................................... 10 YU]U] tG GOl}tPSGkzzzG .................................................. 10 YU]U^ tG GOl}tPSGvmktG ................................................ 11 YU]U_ wG ........................................................................................................ 11 YU]U` }jvGGGG ..................................................................... 11 YU]UXW {G ......................................................................................... 12 YU]UXX sG ..................................................................................................... 13 YU]UXY jGG ............................................................................ 14 YU^ yG .................................................................................................... 15 YU^UX yGG ........................................................................... 15 YU^UY hGG ............................................................................ 18 YU^UZ uTGG .................................................................. 18 YU^U[ yGGGG ......................................................... 19 YU^U\ yGTG .......................................................... 19 YU^U] yGGGGOyjwpP ................................................. 19 YU^U^ kGGGG ................................................................. 20 For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY TABLE OF FIGURES mGXTwoGG ........................................................................................ 6 mGYTwG G ................................................................................ 7 mGZTyztGGGG ............................................................... 7 mG[TYU[Gno¡G ....................................................................................................... 8 mG\T\UYGno¡G GG................................................................... 8 mG]TYWto¡GG .......................................................................................... 9 mG^T[Wto¡GG .......................................................................................... 9 mG_Tz GG G ................................................................... 10 mG`TG{GG GOl}tPGGkzzzG ............................. 11 mGXWTl}tGGGvmktG_WYUXXGVG........................................ 11 mGXXT{GG GOl}tPGGo{G................................. 11 mGXYTwGG ................................................................................. 11 mGXZT}jvG G .................................................................................. 12 mGX[T{GG................................................................... 13 mGX\T{GGSGZUZ}G .................................................. 14 mGX]T{GGSG\UW}G .................................................. 15 mGX^T{ GG GGvGSGY[WWt¡G .............. 16 mGX_T{ GG GGvGSG\YWWt¡G .............. 17 mGX`ThGjGGTGGG . 18 mGYWTzGGGGYWto¡G ............................................... 21 mGYXTzGGGG[Wto¡G .................................................... 22 For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 1.1 Functional summary Overall radio summary The Orthus radio is a dual band radio which can be configured to work at 2.4GHz or at 5.2GHz. The Orthus radio is based on Atheros XB92 reference design that is a 2x2 MIMO supporting 1 and 2 spatial streams. There are only two antennas for the radio. The Orthus radio is based on XB92 base band chipset AR9280 from Atheros with the radio front end redesigned such that the radio will have better transmit power than the Atheros XB92 reference design. The radio has two operation modes: 3.3V and 5.0V. In the 5.0V mode, the radio is designed to transmit more power than the 3.3V in 2.4G band. More details are described later on in this document. The Orthus radio will be used in three different AP products: MCN, NCAP, and high power NCAP (HP-NCAP). The following section highlights a few modes of the radio: • Data rates supported in 802.11b modes are: 1Mbps, 2Mbps, 5.5Mbps, and 11Mbps. • Data rates supported in 802.11g modes are: 6Mbps, 9Mbps, 12Mbps, 18Mbps, 24Mbps, 36MBps, 48Mbps, and 54Mbps. • Data rates supported in 802.11n draft 2.0 modes: MCS0 through MCS15. • Channel bandwidth: 20 MHz or 40 MHz. • Frequency band: 2.4 GHz and 5.2 GHz. • Short guard support for HT40. • STBC support in single spatial stream mode. • Configurable transmit power mode: medium and high power (3.3V or 5.0V) • Typical RF transmit power per antenna, high power mode, 11Mbps: +28dBm, 2.4G. • Typical RF transmit power per antenna, normal power mode, 11Mbps: +22dBm, 2.4G. • Typical RF transmit power per antenna, normal power mode, 6Mbps: +21dBm, 5.2G. • Interface: PCI-E. 1.2 Radio PHY Supported feature highlights HT PHY Layer Features/Functions 20 MHz Channel Bandwidth 40 MHz Channel Bandwidth Short preamble Short/Long guard for HT20 Short/Long guard for HT40 Legacy Frame Format Mixed Mode (High Throughput) Frame Format Green Field Frame Format 40 MHz Mode Convolutional Coding Low Density Parity Check Coding (LDPC) Open Loop Spatial Division Multiplexing (SDM) Closed Loop Transmit Beam forming (TxBF) Space Time Blocking Code (STBC) 800ns Guard Interval 400ns Guard Interval 1 Spatial Stream 2 Spatial Stream 3 Spatial Stream 4 Spatial Stream Supported Not supported Long guard Short guard For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Number of transmitters Number of receivers Figure 1-PHY supported features For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.1 Electrical Antenna ports The radio will have two U.FL antenna connectors. The radio can transmit on one or two antennas depending on the operating modes. Furthermore, the radio can receive on one or two antennas as well. 2.2 Temperature range This radio will be characterized and will maintain RF electrical specifications as stated here when the radio is used in the MCN, NCAP or HP-NCAP. Please refer to the mechanical functional specification of the respective AP. 2.3 Radio power supply Description 5.0 V Supply voltage 3.3 V Supply voltage MIN 4.85 3.2 TYP 5.0 3.3 MAX 5.15 3.4 Unit Vdc Vdc Comments/Notes 5.0 V nominal, 3% variation 3.3V nominal, 3% variation Figure 2-Power supply specifications 2.3.1 Average power consumption The average power consumption is specified as below. In this configuration, the Orthus radio is set to transmit at maximum power at the given data rate. Item Radio mode 3.3V 5.0V Power consumption (RMS) max 2.5W 8W Figure 3-RSM current and power consumption 2.4 RF channel bandwidth The RF signal bandwidth shall be configurable to 20MHz, or 40MHz at 2.4 GHz band and 5.2 GHz band. 2.5 2.5.1 Channel allocation and frequency operating range 2.4 GHz band The 2.4 GHz operating frequency ranges from 2.312 GHz to 2.472 GHz. In addition to that, 2.484 GHz can also be selected. Normally, channel center frequencies are tunable in 5 MHz steps and are define as follows: Channel center frequency = 2407 + 5n (MHz) Where, n = 1,2,…11 Common operating channels are: For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Channel 10 11 12 13 14 Center frequency (MHz) 2412 2417 2422 2427 2432 2437 2442 2447 2452 2457 2462 2467 2472 2484 Figure 4-2.4 GHz channel 2.5.2 5.2 GHz band The 5.2 GHz operating frequency ranges are as below. This radio will NOT support 4.9GHz band. The supported frequency range is listed as follows: Band UNII-1 UNII-2 UNII-3 UNII-4 Europe Japan Frequency (GHz) 5.15-5.25 GHz 5.25-5.35 GHz 5.470-5.725 GHz 5.725-5.850 5.15-5.25 GHz 5.25-5.35 GHz 5.47-5.725 GHz 5.15-5.25 GHz 5.25-5.35 GHz 5.470-5.725 GHz Figure 5-5.2 GHz frequency operating range The exact center channel frequency for operation can be determined by using the following formula: Channel center frequency = 5000 + n*5 (MHz) Where n=0,1,…,200 2.6 2.6.1 Transmitter operation Spectrum mask For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY The Orthus radio shall be designed to meet IEEE recommendation for spectrum mask. For the 20MHz operation, the spectrum mask will conform the IEEE standard in 802.11n draft 2.0 as defined in 21.3.20.1. Please refer to the draft 2.0 for more details. Figure 6-20MHz spectrum mask When transmitting in a 20 MHz channel, the transmitted spectrum shall have a 0 dBr (dB relative to the maximum spectral density of the signal) bandwidth not exceeding 18 MHz, –20 dBr at 11 MHz frequency offset, –28 dBr at 20 MHz frequency offset and –45 dBr at 30 MHz frequency offset and above. The transmitted spectral density of the transmitted signal shall fall within the spectral mask, as shown in Figure n64 (Transmit spectral mask for 20 MHz transmission). The measurements shall be made using a 100 kHz resolution bandwidth and a 30 kHz video bandwidth. The mask for 40MHz RF signal is shown below: Figure 7-40MHz spectrum mask For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.6.2 Spectral flatness The transmit spectral flatness will conform the 802.11n draft as specified in section 20.3.20.2. In a 20 MHz channel and in corresponding 20 MHz transmission in a 40 MHz channel, the average energy of the constellations in each of the spectral lines –16 to –1 and +1 to +16 shall deviate no more than ± 2 dB from their average energy. The average energy of the constellations in each of the spectral lines –28 to –17 and +17 to +28 shall deviate no more than +2/–4 dB from the average energy of spectral lines –16 to –1 and +1 to +16. In a 40 MHz transmission (excluding HT duplicate format and non-HT duplicate format) the average energy of the constellations in each of the spectral lines –42 to –2 and +2 to +42 shall deviate no more than ± 2 dB from their average energy. The average energy of the constellations in each of the spectral lines –43 to –58 and +43 to +58 shall deviate no more than +2/–4 dB from the average energy of spectral lines –42 to –2 and +2 to +42. 2.6.3 Transmit power range and accuracy This radio will have an adjustable output power range from +4dBm to +28dBm in 0.5 dB step. Per Atheros radio calibration procedure as well as per base band chipset design, this radio shall be designed to maintain an average transmit power accuracy of +/-2dB per antenna. The method for determining the average transmitted power accuracy is calculated as follows: When the ideal transmitted power is set by software, the output RF power of the radio is measured simultaneously by the MIMO Litepoint Iqnxn test set (or equivalent) for a given data rate on all channels, all frequency bands. The actual measured output power is subtracted from the ideal settings to obtain the errors for each level. The errors at each level are then averaged over all channels in the given band. This calculation shall be performed for each transmit chain. 2.6.4 Transmit center frequency tolerance The transmitter center frequency tolerance shall be ±20 ppm maximum. 2.6.5 RX Symbol clock frequency tolerance This table below lists the minimum requirements for the radio by the IEEE standard. The actual radio shall be able to accommodate +/- 50ppm. Mode Of Operation 802.11a 802.11b 802.11g IEEE Stability Requirements +/-20ppm frequency stability vs. temperature and aging. +/-25ppm frequency stability vs. temperature and aging. +/-25ppm frequency stability vs. temperature and aging. Radio spec (min) +/- 40ppm +/-50ppm +/-50ppm Figure 8-Symbol clock frequency tolerance 2.6.6 Modulation accuracy (EVM), DSSS rates Modulation accuracy shall meet the minimum requirements by IEEE 802.11 draft 2.0. The following table lists the EVM requirements for direct sequence spread spectrum data rates which use 802.11b waveforms: Data rate (Mbps) EVM (minimum) 35% For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 10 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 5.5 11 35% 35% 35% Figure 9- Transmit modulation accuracy (EVM) for DSSS rates 2.6.7 Modulation accuracy (EVM), OFDM rates The following table lists the EVM requirements for OFDM data rates which use 802.11a, 802.11g, and 802.11n draft 2.0 waveforms: Data rate(Mbps) 12 18 24 36 48 54 Relative constellation error (dB) (minimum) -5 -8 -10 -13 -16 -19 -22 -25 Figure 10-EVM specifications for OFDM 802.11 a/g rates Modulation BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM Code rate ½ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 5/6 Relative constellation error (dB) (minimum) -5 -10 -13 -16 -19 -22 -25 -28 Figure 11-Transmit modulation accuracy (EVM) for HT rates 2.6.8 Phase noise Normally, the phase noise effect has already part of the transmit EVM specifications. However, the receiver local oscillator can still affect the receive signal quality. Item Integrated phase noise Max 1.5 Unit Degree rms Figure 12-Phase noise specification 2.6.9 VCO turn around settling time The VCO shape should be similar to the plot below or better for backward compatibility with older Motorola products. Specifically, during transient transition from transmit to receive, or from receive to transmit, the VCO frequency shall not change more than 20 KHz over 20us counting from the start of the turnaround packet. For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 11 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Figure 13-VCO frequency transient 2.6.10 Transmit emissions Item 206 207 Description Receive emissions Receive emissions MIN MAX -57 -47 Unit dBm dBm -30 301 Transmit signal spectrum dBc -50 302 Band-edge spurious signals -41 dBm 302a Band-edge Spurious signals -30 dBm 307 Key click/spectral re-growth 10 dBr Comments 30 MHz to 1 GHz 1 GHz to 12 GHz Relative to constant TX at Fc 11MHz For fc–22MHz f fc–11MHz and fc+11MHz f f c+22MHz. 1 MHz RBW, 1 KHz VBW, max hold, Transmitting 11 MB/sec packets at any channel 1 through 11: measure in 2300-2390 MHz, 2483.5-2500 MHz, 4/5-5.25 GHz, and 7.25-7.75 GHz. (FCC 15.205: restricted bands). Antenna to have 0 dBi gain. ETSI Measurements to be made using a 100 kHz resolution bandwidth and a 30 KHz video bandwidth. dBr means dB relative to the SINx/x peak. For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 12 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Figure 14-Transmit emission specifications 2.6.11 Load stability The transmitter will be unconditionally stable under infinite VSWR, and all phases. For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 13 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.6.12 Conducted transmit power Due to the EVM and side-lobe requirements, the maximum transmit power will vary with data rates. The figures below shows typical transmit power for each transmitted chain for both 2.4GHz and 5.2GHz operation. The transmit power listed here are characterized based on EVM purpose only. The final AP transmit power depends on the result of regulatory test for each country. As mentioned in beginning of the document, the radio has two modes: 3.3V and 5.0V mode. The transmit power for 5.2G is the same in both modes whereas the transmit power for the 2.4G band is boosted. The two tables below lists the difference. The conducted transmit power is specified as the power measured at the Orthus radio connector and not at the antenna chassis of the AP. Average transmit power is a number typically seen when measured on an arbitrary radio. The conducted transmitted power is subject to vary as defined by transmit power variation specification in section 2.6.3 Orthus Radio transmit power 3.3V mode Rates (Mbps) 5.5 11 12 18 24 36 48 54 Modulation Code Rate MCS MCS0/MCS8 MCS1/MCS9 MCS2/MCS10 MCS3/MCS11 MCS4/MCS12 MCS5/MCS13 MCS6/MCS14 MCS7/MCS15 BPSK QPSK BPSK QPSK BPSK BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM ½ ¾ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 2/3 ¾ ½ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 2/3 ¾ 5/6 Bandwidth 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 Average transmit power 2.4G band 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 21 20 19 22 22 22 22 21 20 19 18 Average transmit power 5.2G band NA NA NA NA 21 21 21 21 21 20 19 18 21 21 21 21 21 20 19 18 Figure 15-Transmit power specification, 3.3V mode For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 14 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Orthus Radio transmit power 5.0V mode Rates (Mbps) 5.5 11 12 18 24 36 48 54 Modulation Code Rate MCS BPSK QPSK BPSK QPSK BPSK BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM MCS0/MCS8 MCS1/MCS9 MCS2/MCS10 MCS3/MCS11 MCS4/MCS12 MCS5/MCS13 MCS6/MCS14 MCS7/MCS15 ½ ¾ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 2/3 ¾ ½ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 2/3 ¾ 5/6 Bandwidth 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz 20MHz HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 HT20/40 Average transmit power 2.4G band 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 27 26 25 24 28 27 27 26 26 25 24 23 Average transmit power 5.2G band NA NA NA NA 21 21 21 21 21 20 19 18 21 21 21 21 21 20 19 18 Figure 16-Transmit power specification, 5.0V mode 2.7 2.7.1 Receiver operation Receiver input sensitivities The receiver sensitivity is independent of 3.3V mode or 5.0V mode. The two tables below show the desired performance for the radio. The sensitivity is a number averaged over all channels in a given band. 2400 Mhz band Rates MCS indices Rate type LEGACY Typical radio receiver sensitivity (dBm) -94 -93 For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 15 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 5.5 11 12 18 24 36 48 54 MCS0 MCS1 MCS2 MCS3 MCS4 MCS5 MCS6 MCS7 MCS8 MCS9 MCS10 MCS11 MCS12 MCS13 MCS14 MCS15 MCS0 MCS1 MCS2 MCS3 MCS4 MCS5 MCS6 MCS7 MCS8 MCS9 MCS10 MCS11 MCS12 MCS13 MCS14 MCS15 HT20 HT40 -91 -90 -92 -92 -91 -89 -85 -83 -79 -77 -92 -89 -87 -84 -81 -77 -76 -74 -92 -88 -86 -83 -81 -76 -75 -73 -88 -86 -84 -82 -79 -74 -72 -71 -88 -85 -83 -81 -78 -73 -71 -70 Figure 17-Typical receiver sensitivity for Orthus radio, 2400Mhz band 5200 Mhz band Typical radio For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 16 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY receiver sensitivity (dBm) Rates 12 18 24 36 48 54 MCS indices Rate type LEGACY MCS0 MCS1 MCS2 MCS3 MCS4 MCS5 MCS6 MCS7 MCS8 MCS9 MCS10 MCS11 MCS12 MCS13 MCS14 MCS15 MCS0 MCS1 MCS2 MCS3 MCS4 MCS5 MCS6 MCS7 MCS8 MCS9 MCS10 MCS11 MCS12 MCS13 MCS14 MCS15 HT20 HT40 -94 -94 -93 -91 -87 -84 -80 -79 -94 -92 -90 -86 -83 -79 -77 -75 -91 -88 -85 -83 -80 -75 -74 -72 -91 -88 -86 -83 -80 -75 -74 -73 -88 -85 -83 -80 -76 -72 -70 -68 Figure 18-Typical receiver sensitivity for Orthus radio, 5200Mhz band For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 17 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.7.2 Adjacent channel rejection The adjacent channel rejection is measured by setting the desired signal's strength 3 dB above the rate-dependent sensitivity specified in the radio receiver minimum sensitivity, and raising the power of the interfering signal until 10% Packet Error Rate (PER) is caused for a PSDU length of 4096 bytes for 1000 packets. The power difference between the interfering and the desired channel is the corresponding adjacent channel rejection. The interfering signal in the adjacent channel shall be a conformant OFDM signal, unsynchronized with the signal in the channel under test. For more detail about the setup requirements, please read the 802.11n draft section 21.3.21.2 Waveform Data rate (Mbps) Modulation Coding rate Adjacent channel rejection (dB) per 802.11 a/b/g/n draft 2.0 standard Adjacent channel rejection (dB) per actual hardware Non-adjacent channel rejection (dB) per 802.11 a/b/g/n draft 2.0 standard Non-adjacent channel rejection (dB) per actual hardware DSSS 35 35 5.5 35 11 35 Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Not applicable Not applicable Not applicable Not applicable OFDM BPSK QPSK QPSK 16-QAM 16-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM 64-QAM ½ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ ½ ¾ 5/6 16 13 11 -1 -2 Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement 32 29 27 24 20 16 15 14 Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Meet standard requirement Figure 19-Adjacent Channel and non-adjacent channel rejection specification 2.7.3 Non-adjacent channel rejection The setup is similar to adjacent channel rejection specification. Please refer to Figure 19-Adjacent Channel and nonadjacent channel rejection specification For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 18 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.7.4 Receiver maximum input signal level The receiver shall provide a maximum PER of 10% at an PSDU length of 1000 bytes for a maximum input level of –10 dBm measured at the antenna for any baseband modulation. 2.7.5 Receive inter-modulation distortion IEEE does not specify this value. However, the radio interception point will be measured, and calculated. The receiver interception point should reflect an acceptable performance for normal usage of the Orthus AP. 2.7.6 Receiver channel power indicator (RCPI) The receive channel power indicator also known as RSSI definition is described as follows. The RCPI indicator is a measure of the received RF power in the selected channel. This parameter shall be a measure by the PHY sublayer of the received RF power in the channel measured over the entire received frame. The received power shall be the average over all receive chains. RCPI shall be a monotonically increasing, logarithmic function of the received power level defined in dBm. The allowed values for the Received Channel Power Indicator (RCPI) parameter shall be an 8 bit value in the range from 0 through 220, with indicated values rounded to the nearest 0.5 dB as follows: — 0: Power not > -110 dBm — 1: Power = -109.5 dBm — 2: Power = -109.0 dBm — and so on up to — 220: Power not < 0 dBm — 221-254: reserved — 255: Measurement not available where RCPI = int{(Power in dBm +110)*2} for 0 dbm > Power > -110 dBm (21-76) Accuracy for each measurement shall be +/- 5dB (95% confidence interval) within the specified dynamic range of the receiver. The measurement shall assume a receiver noise equivalent bandwidth equal to the channel bandwidth multiplied by 1.1. For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 19 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY 2.7.7 Data rates and modes supported Besides the legacy rates for 11 a/g, the following rates are supported. Specifically, MCS0 through MCS15 are supported with both types of guard intervals (800ns, and 400ns). In combinations of 20MHz and 40MHz channel bandwidth, there are multiple data rates possible. The figures below summarizes the modes in high throughput modes. For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 20 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Figure 20-Supported data rates for 20MHz bandwidth For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 21 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY Figure 21-Support data rates for 40MHz bandwidth For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 22 CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY For Internal Use Only - Do Not Duplicate Copyright (c) 2009 by Motorola 23 RF exposure 20 cm statement This device complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. In order to avoid the possibility of exceeding the FCC radio frequency exposure limits, human proximity to the antenna shall not be less than 20cm during normal operation. Antenna Installation information Reference antennas have been used during the approval process for the radio card. Specific details of the reference antenna used for testing is detailed in the table below. Important Note: Use of an antenna which is the same ‘type’ (eg. Dipole) and has a gain equal to or less that the reference antenna can be used without recertification. Note: The Adapter cable must be considered as it is part of the system gain. Use of an alternative antenna, different ‘type’ or same ‘type’ but higher gain will invalidate the country approvals. Under this instant the system integrator is responsible for re-evaluating the end product and obtaining separate approvals. Part 15.21 user warning Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate this equipment. Part 15.19 a 3 This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Part 15.105 B This device has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiated radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: -Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. -Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. -Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. -Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. The operating bands for the US are 2.4 GHz (2400 -2483.5 MHz) and 5 GHz (5150 - 5250 MHz) and (5725 -5850 MHz).
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