SWRA670A April   2020  – October 2022 CC1350 , CC1352P , CC1352R , CC2400 , CC2420 , CC2430 , CC2500 , CC2520 , CC2530 , CC2538 , CC2540 , CC2541 , CC2543 , CC2544 , CC2545 , CC2564 , CC2590 , CC2591 , CC2592 , CC2620 , CC2630 , CC2640 , CC2650 , CC2652P , CC2652R , CC2652R7 , CC2652RSIP , CC3100 , CC3120 , CC3135 , CC3135MOD , CC3200 , CC3200MOD , CC3220MOD , CC3220MODA , CC3220R , CC3220S , CC3220SF , CC3230S , CC3230SF , CC3235MODAS , CC3235MODASF , CC3235MODS , CC3235MODSF , CC3235S , CC3235SF , WL1801MOD , WL1805MOD , WL1807MOD , WL1831

 

  1.   CE Regulations for SRDs Operating in License-Free 2.4 GHz/5 GHz Bands
  2.   Trademarks
  3. Introduction
  4. Regulation Overview
    1. 2.1 CEPT ERC Recommendation 70-03
  5. Radio Equipment Directive (RED)
    1. 3.1 Essential Requirements
    2. 3.2 Obligations of Manufacturers
    3. 3.3 Conformity of Radio Equipment
      1. 3.3.1 Presumption of Conformity of Radio Equipment
      2. 3.3.2 Conformity Assessment Procedure
      3. 3.3.3 EU Declaration of Conformity
      4. 3.3.4 Rules and Conditions for Affixing the CE Marking
      5. 3.3.5 Technical Documentation
    4. 3.4 Restrictions on Putting into Service
  6. ETSI EN 300 440
    1. 4.1 Technical Requirements
      1. 4.1.1 Environmental Profile
    2. 4.2 Transmitter Requirements
      1. 4.2.1 Transmitter Maximum Radiated Power (e.i.r.p.)
      2. 4.2.2 Permitted Range of Operating Frequencies
      3. 4.2.3 Unwanted Emissions in the Spurious Domain
      4. 4.2.4 Duty Cycle
      5. 4.2.5 Additional Requirements for FHSS Equipment
    3. 4.3 Receiver Requirements
      1. 4.3.1 Receiver Categories
      2. 4.3.2 Receiver Performance Criteria
      3. 4.3.3 Adjacent Channel Selectivity
      4. 4.3.4 Blocking or Desensitization
      5. 4.3.5 Spurious Radiations - Receiver
    4. 4.4 Spectrum Access Techniques
      1. 4.4.1 Listen Before Talk
        1. 4.4.1.1 LBT Timing Paramters
        2. 4.4.1.2 Receiver LBT Threshold and Transmitter Max On-Time
      2. 4.4.2 Detect And Avoid Technique (DAA)
  7. ETSI EN 300 328
    1. 5.1 Technical Requirements
      1. 5.1.1 Environmental Profile
    2. 5.2 Equipment Types
      1. 5.2.1 Wideband Data Transmission Equipment Types
      2. 5.2.2 Adaptive and Non-Adaptive Equipment
      3. 5.2.3 Receiver Categories
      4. 5.2.4 Antenna Types
    3. 5.3 Conformance Requirements
      1. 5.3.1 Conformance Requirements for Frequency Hopping Equipment
        1. 5.3.1.1  RF Output Power
        2. 5.3.1.2  Duty Cycle
        3. 5.3.1.3  Accumulated Transit Time, Frequency Occupation and Hopping Sequence
        4. 5.3.1.4  Hopping Frequency Separation
        5. 5.3.1.5  Medium Utilization (MU) Factor
        6. 5.3.1.6  Adaptivity (Adaptive FHSS)
          1. 5.3.1.6.1 Adaptive FHSS Using LBT
          2. 5.3.1.6.2 Adaptive FHSS Using DAA
          3. 5.3.1.6.3 Adaptive FHSSS - Short Control Signaling Transmissions
        7. 5.3.1.7  Occupied Channel Bandwidth
        8. 5.3.1.8  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions in the Out-of-Band Domain
        9. 5.3.1.9  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions in the Spurious Domain
        10. 5.3.1.10 Receiver Spurious Emissions
        11. 5.3.1.11 Receiver Blocking
        12. 5.3.1.12 Geo-Location Capability
      2. 5.3.2 Conformance Requirements for Wideband Data Transmission Equipment (Non-FHSS)
        1. 5.3.2.1  RF Output Power
        2. 5.3.2.2  Power Spectral Density
        3. 5.3.2.3  Duty Cycle, Tx-sequence and Tx-gap
        4. 5.3.2.4  Medium Utilization Factor
        5. 5.3.2.5  Adaptivity (Non-FHSS)
          1. 5.3.2.5.1 Adaptive Non-FHSS using LBT
            1. 5.3.2.5.1.1 Frame Based Equipment
            2. 5.3.2.5.1.2 Load Based Equipment
          2. 5.3.2.5.2 Adaptive Non-FHSS Using DAA
          3. 5.3.2.5.3 Adaptive Non-FHSS - Short Control Signaling Transmissions
        6. 5.3.2.6  Occupied Channel Bandwidth
        7. 5.3.2.7  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions in the Out-of-Band Domain
        8. 5.3.2.8  74
        9. 5.3.2.9  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions in the Spurious Domain
        10. 5.3.2.10 Receiver Spurious Emissions
        11. 5.3.2.11 Receiving Blocking
        12. 5.3.2.12 Geo-Location Capability
  8. ETSI EN 301 893
    1. 6.1 Technical Requirements
      1. 6.1.1 Environmental Profile
    2. 6.2 Conformance Requirements
      1. 6.2.1  Nominal Center Frequencies
      2. 6.2.2  Nominal Channel Bandwidth and Occupied Channel Bandwidth
      3. 6.2.3  RF Output Power, Transmit Power Control (TPC) and Power Density
      4. 6.2.4  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions - Outside the 5 GHz RLAN Bands
      5. 6.2.5  Transmitter Unwanted Emissions - Within 5 GHz RLAN Bands
      6. 6.2.6  Receiver Spurious Emissions
      7. 6.2.7  Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS)
      8. 6.2.8  Adaptivity (Channel Access Mechanism)
        1. 6.2.8.1 Frame Based Equipment (FBE)
          1. 6.2.8.1.1 Initiating Device Channel Access Mechanism
          2. 6.2.8.1.2 Responding Device Channel Access Mechanism
        2. 6.2.8.2 Load Based Equipment (LBE)
          1. 6.2.8.2.1 Device Types - Load Based Equipment
          2. 6.2.8.2.2 Multi-Channel Operation - Load Based Equipment
          3. 6.2.8.2.3 Priority Classes - Load Based Equipment
          4. 6.2.8.2.4 ED Threshold Level - Load Based Equipment
          5. 6.2.8.2.5 Initiating Device Channel Access Mechanism - Load Based Equipment
          6. 6.2.8.2.6 Responding Device Channel Access Mechanism - Load Based Equipment
        3. 6.2.8.3 Short Control Signalling Transmissions (FBE and LBE)
      9. 6.2.9  Receiver Blocking
      10. 6.2.10 User Access Restrictions
      11. 6.2.11 Geo-Location Capability
  9. ETSI EN 301 489
    1. 7.1 Technical Requirements
    2. 7.2 Environment Classification
    3. 7.3 Test Conditions
    4. 7.4 RF Exclusion Bands
    5. 7.5 Performance Assessment
      1. 7.5.1 Equipment Classification
    6. 7.6 Performance Criteria
      1. 7.6.1 Minimum Performance Level
    7. 7.7 Emission Requirements
      1. 7.7.1 Radiated Emissions - Enclosure Port
      2. 7.7.2 Conducted Emissions - DC Power Input/Output Ports
      3. 7.7.3 Conducted Emissions - AC Mains Power Input/Output Ports
      4. 7.7.4 Harmonic Current Emissions - AC Mains Power Input Port
      5. 7.7.5 Voltage Fluctuations and Flicker - AC Mains Power Input Port
      6. 7.7.6 Conducted Emissions - Wired Network Ports
    8. 7.8 Immunity Requirements
      1. 7.8.1 RF Electromagnetic Field (80 MHz to 6000 MHz) - Enclosure Port
      2. 7.8.2 Electrostatic Discharge - Enclosure
      3. 7.8.3 Fast Transients - Common Mode
      4. 7.8.4 RF - Common Mode
      5. 7.8.5 Transients and Surges in the Vehicular Environment
      6. 7.8.6 Voltage Dips and Interruptions
      7. 7.8.7 Surges
  10. IEC 62368-1
    1. 8.1 Safety Requirements
  11. EN 62311
    1. 9.1 Requirements and Limits of EN 62311
  12. 10References
  13. 11Revision History
Adaptive FHSS Using LBT

Adaptive FHSS using LBT is a mechanism by which a given hopping frequency is made 'unavailable' because an interfering signal was detected before any transmission on that frequency.

Adaptive FHSS equipment using LBT should comply with the following minimum set of requirements.

  1. At the start of every dwell time, before transmission on a hopping frequency, the equipment should perform a Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) check using energy detect. The CCA observation time should not be less than 0.2% of the Channel Occupancy Time with a minimum of 18 μs. If the equipment finds the hopping frequency to be clear, it may transmit immediately.
  2. If it is determined that a signal is present with a level above the detection threshold defined in step 5, the hopping frequency should be marked as 'unavailable'. Then the equipment may jump to the next frequency in the hopping scheme (even before the end of the dwell time), but in that case the 'unavailable' channel cannot be considered as being 'occupied' and should be disregarded with respect to the requirement of the minimum number of hopping frequencies. Alternatively, the equipment can remain on the frequency during the remainder of the dwell time. However, if the equipment remains on the frequency with the intention to transmit, it should perform an Extended CCA check in which the (unavailable) channel is observed for a random duration between the value defined for the CCA observation time in step 1 and 5% of the Channel Occupancy Time defined in step 3. If the Extended CCA check has determined the frequency to be no longer occupied, the hopping frequency becomes available again. If the Extended CCA time has determined the channel still to be occupied, it should perform new Extended CCA checks until the channel is no longer occupied.
  3. The total time during which an equipment has transmissions on a given hopping frequency without reevaluating the availability of that frequency is defined as the Channel Occupancy Time. The Channel Occupancy Time for a given hopping frequency, which starts immediately after a successful CCA, should be less than 60 ms followed by an Idle Period of at least 5% minimum of the Channel Occupancy Time with a minimum of 100 μs. After the Idle Period has expired, the procedure as in step 1 should be repeated before having new transmissions on this hopping frequency during the same dwell time.

    EXAMPLE: Equipment with a dwell time of 400 ms can have 6 transmission sequences of 60 ms each, separated with an Idle Period of 3 ms. Each transmission sequence was preceded with a successful CCA check of 120 μs.

    For LBT based adaptive FHSS equipment with a dwell time < 60 ms, the maximum Channel Occupancy Time is limited by the dwell time.
  4. 'Unavailable' channels may be removed from or may remain in the Hopping Sequence, but in any case:
    • Apart from Short Control Signalling Transmissions, there should be no transmissions on 'unavailable' channels;
    • A minimum of N hopping frequencies should always be maintained.
  5. The detection threshold should be proportional to the transmit power of the transmitter: for a 20 dBm e.i.r.p. transmitter the detection threshold level (TL) should be equal to or less than -70 dBm/MHz at the input to the receiver assuming a 0 dBi (receive) antenna assembly. This threshold level (TL) may be corrected for the (receive) antenna assembly gain (G); however, beamforming gain (Y) should not be taken into account. For power levels less than 20 dBm e.i.r.p., the detection threshold level may be relaxed to:
    Equation 2. TL = -70 dBm/MHz + 10 × log10 (100 mW / Pout)
    Pout in mW e.i.r.p.
  6. The equipment should comply with the requirements defined in step 1 to step 4 of the present clause in the presence of an unwanted CW signal as defined in Table 5-9.
Table 5-9 Limits on FHSS LBT Equipment - Unwanted Signal parameters
Wanted signal mean power from companion device Unwanted CW signal frequency (MHz) Unwanted CW signal power (dBm)
sufficient to maintain the link (2) 2395 or 2488.5 (1) -35 (3)
The highest frequency should be used for testing operating channels within the range 2400 MHz to 2442 MHz, while the lowest frequency should be used for testing operating channels within the range 2442 MHz to 2483.5 MHz.
A typical conducted value which can be used in most cases is -50 dBm/MHz.
The level specified is the level at the UUT receiver input assuming a 0 dBi antenna assembly gain. In case of conducted measurements, this level has to be corrected for the (in-band) antenna assembly gain (G). In case of radiated measurements, this level is equivalent to a power flux density (PFD) in front of the UUT antenna.