'Antenna diversity' is a transmission technique in which the information-carrying signal is transmitted along different propagation paths. This can be achieved by using multiple receiver antennas (
diversity reception) and/or by using multiple transmitting antennas (
transmit diversity).
Even if the antennas are not more than a quarter of the wavelength apart, much of the achievable antenna gain is realized. A
diversity combining circuit combines or selects the signals from the receiver antennas to constitute an improved quality signal.
A well-known practical application of diversity reception is in
wireless microphones, and in similar
electronic devices such as wireless
guitar systems. A wireless
microphone with a non-diversity receiver (a receiver having only one antenna) is prone to random drop-outs, fades, noise, or other
interference, especially if the
transmitter (the wireless microphone) is in motion. A wireless microphone or
sound system using diversity reception will switch to the other antenna within microseconds if one antenna experiences noise, providing an improved quality signal with fewer drop-outs and noise. Ideally, no drop-outs or noise will occur in the received signal.
Another common usage is in
Wi-Fi networking gear and cordless telephones to compensate for
multipath interference. The base station will switch reception to one of two
antennas depending on which is currently receiving a stronger signal. For best results, the antennas are usually placed one wavelength apart. For
microwave bands, where the wavelengths are under 100 cm, this can often be done with two antennas attached to the same hardware. For lower frequencies and longer wavelengths, the antennas must be multiple meters apart, making it much less reasonable.
Mobile phone towers also often take advantage of diversity -- each face of a tower will often have three antennas; one is transmitting, while the other two are performing
Diversity reception.
The use of multiple antennas at both transmit and receive results in a
multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system. The use of diversity techniques at both ends of the link is termed
space–time coding.
Antenna diversity for MIMO
Diversity Coding is the spatial coding techniques for a
MIMO system in wireless channels. Wireless channels severely suffer from fading phenomena, which causes unreliability in data decoding. Fundamentally, diversity coding sends multiple copies through multiple transmit antennas, so as to improve the reliability of the data reception. If one of the copies is failed to receive, other copies are used as a candidate for the data decoding.
References:
Federal Standard 1037C and
MIL-STD-188
See also
★
Diversity schemes
★
Space–time code
★
Rake receiver
★
Multiple-input multiple-output communications (MIMO)
★
Macro diversity
★
Diversity combining
★
Transmit diversity
★
Diversity gain
★
Cooperative diversity