Abstract

In November/2004, we witnessed the formation of the first worldwide effort to define a novel wireless air interface (i.e., MAC and PHY) standard based on Cognitive Radios (CRs): the IEEE 802.22 Working Group (WG). The IEEE 802.22 WG is chartered with the development of a CR-based Wireless Regional Area Network (WRAN) Physical (PHY) and Medium Access Control (MAC) layers for use by license-exempt devices in the spectrum that is currently allocated to the Television (TV) service. Since 802.22 is required to reuse the fallow TV spectrum without causing any harmful interference to incumbents (i.e., the TV receivers), cognitive radio techniques are of primary importance in order to sense and measure the spectrum and detect the presence/absence of incumbent signals. On top of that, other advanced techniques that facilitate coexistence such as dynamic spectrum management and radio environment characterization could be designed. In this paper, we provide a detailed overview of the 802.22 draft specification, its architecture, requirements, applications, and coexistence considerations. These not only form the basis for the definition of this groundbreaking wireless air interface standard, but will also serve as foundation for future research in the promising area of CRs.

Keywords

Cognitive radioComputer scienceComputer networkWirelessWireless networkTelecommunications

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Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
article
Volume
1
Issue
1
Citations
650
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Carlos Cordeiro, K. Challapali, Dagnachew Birru et al. (2006). IEEE 802.22: An Introduction to the First Wireless Standard based on Cognitive Radios. Journal of Communications , 1 (1) . https://doi.org/10.4304/jcm.1.1.38-47

Identifiers

DOI
10.4304/jcm.1.1.38-47

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Data completeness: 77%