'Frequency-hopping spread spectrum' ('FHSS') is a method of transmitting radio signals by rapidly switching a
carrier among many frequency
channels, using a
pseudorandom sequence known to both
transmitter and
receiver.
A spread-spectrum transmission offers three main advantages over a fixed-frequency transmission:
# Spread-spectrum signals are highly resistant to narrowband
interference. The process of re-collecting a spread signal spreads out the interfering signal, causing it to recede into the background.
# Spread-spectrum signals are difficult to intercept. A frequency-hop spread-spectrum signal simply sounds like an increase in the background noise to a narrowband receiver.
# Spread-spectrum transmissions can share a frequency band with many types of conventional transmissions with minimal interference. The spread-spectrum signals add minimal noise to the narrow-frequency communications, and vice versa. As a result, bandwidth can be utilized more efficiently.
Military use
If the sequence of channel changes is not known to potential adversaries, spread-spectrum signals are highly resistant to deliberate
jamming.
Military radios use
cryptographic techniques to generate the channel sequence under the control of a secret
Transmission Security Key ('TRANSEC') that the sender and receiver share. By itself, frequency hopping provides only limited protection against eavesdropping, so military frequency hopping radios often employ separate encryption devices such as the
KY-57.
U.S. military radios that use frequency hopping include
HAVE QUICK and
SINCGARS.
Technical considerations
The overall bandwidth required for frequency hopping is much wider than that required to transmit the same
information using only one
carrier frequency. However, because transmission occurs only on a small portion of this bandwidth at any given time, the effective interference bandwidth is really the same. Whilst providing no extra protection against wideband
thermal noise, the frequency-hopping approach does reduce the degradation caused by narrowband interferers.
One of the challenges of frequency-hopping systems is to synchronize the transmitter and receiver. One approach is to have a guarantee that the transmitter will use all the channels in a fixed period of time. The receiver can then find the transmitter by picking a random channel and listening for valid data on that channel. The transmitter's data is identified by a special sequence of data that is unlikely to occur over the segment of data for this channel and the segment can have a
checksum for integrity and further identification. The transmitter and receiver can use fixed tables of channel sequences so that once synchronized they can maintain communication by following the table. On each channel segment, the transmitter can send its current location in the table.
In the US,
FCC part 15 on unlicensed system in the 900MHz and 2.4GHz bands permits more power than non-hopping systems. The limit is increased from 1 milliwatt to 1 watt or a thousand times increase. The
FCC prescribes a minimum number of channels and a maximum dwell time for each channel.
In a real multipoint radio system, space allows multiple transmissions on the same frequency to be possible using multiple radios in a geographic area. This creates the possibility of system data rates that are higher than the
Shannon limit for a single channel. This property is also seen in
MIMO and
DSSS systems.
Beam steering and directional antennas also facilitate increased system performance by providing isolation between remote radios.
Multiple Inventions
Perhaps the earliest mention of frequency hopping in the open literature is in radio pioneer
Johannes Zenneck's book ''Wireless Telegraphy'' (German, 1908, English translation McGraw Hill, 1915), although Zenneck himself states that
Telefunken had already tried it. A Polish army officer, Leonard Danielewicz, came up with the idea in 1929. Several other patents were taken out in the 1930s, including one by Willem Broertjes (Germany 1929, U.S. Patent No. 1,869,659 (issued Aug. 2, 1932)). During
WWII, the
US Army Signal Corp was inventing a communication system called
SIGSALY, which incorporated spread spectrum, but as it was top secret, its existence did not become known until the 1980s. The most celebrated invention of frequency hopping was that of actress
Hedy Lamarr and composer
George Antheil, who in 1942 received
patent number 2,292,387 for their "Secret Communications System." This early version of frequency hopping used a
piano-roll to change between 88 frequencies, and was intended to make radio-guided
torpedoes harder for enemies to detect or to jam. The patent was rediscovered in the 1950s during patent searches when private companies independently developed
Code Division Multiple Access, a civilian form of spread-spectrum.
Variations
''Adaptive Frequency-hopping spread spectrum (AFH)'' (as used in
Bluetooth) improves resistance to
radio frequency interference by avoiding using crowded frequencies in the hopping sequence. This sort of adaptive modulation is easier to implement with FHSS than with
DSSS.
Chirp modulation can be seen as a form of frequency-hopping that simply scans through the available frequencies in consecutive order.
See also
★
Direct-sequence spread spectrum
★
n-sequence
★
amateur radio
★ Like FHSS,
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing uses many different frequency channels. Like DSSS, OFDM transmits on all of them simultaneously (instead of using only one at a time like FHSS).
External links
★
More FHSS Information
★
Adapt4's XG1 cognitive radio uses a patent-pending form of frequency hopping that uses a smaller set of frequencies at any given instant and only uses frequencies that are not in use.
★
Bluetooth Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum
★
FCC Part 15 Rules that cover frequency hopping