A real-time GPP software-defined radio testbed for the physical layer of wireless standards

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Abstract

We present our contribution to the general-purpose-processor-(GPP)-based radio. We describe a baseband software-defined radio testbed for the physical layer of wireless LAN standards. All physical layer functions have been successfully mapped on a Pentium 4 processor that performs these functions in real time. The testbed consists of a transmitter PC with a DAC board and a receiver PC with an ADC board. In our project, we have implemented two different types of standards on this testbed, a continuous-phase-modulation-based standard, Bluetooth, and an OFDM-based standard, HiperLAN/2. However, our testbed can easily be extended to other standards, because the only limitation in our testbed is the maximal channel bandwidth of 20 MHz and of course the processing capabilities of the used PC. The transmitter functions require at most 714 M cycles per second and the receiver functions need 1225 M cycles per second on a Pentium 4 processor. In addition, baseband experiments have been carried out successfully. © 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.

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APA

Schlphorst, R., Hoeksema, F. W., & Slump, C. H. (2005). A real-time GPP software-defined radio testbed for the physical layer of wireless standards. Eurasip Journal on Applied Signal Processing, 2005(16), 2664–2672. https://doi.org/10.1155/ASP.2005.2664

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