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Distributed Antenna System DAS
Distributed Antenna System DAS
Distributed Antenna System DAS
A Distributed Antenna System can be designed for use indoors or outdoors and can be used to
provide wireless coverage in hotels, subways, airports, hospitals, businesses, roadway tunnels
etc. The wireless services typically provided by a DAS include PCS, cellular, Wi-Fi, police, fire,
and emergency services.
A DAS has two basic components, a signal source, and a distribution system. The signal source
is the input to the DAS network. It can be an on-site BTS (Base Transceiver Station), a small cell
or an off-air system (via an antenna on the roof). The second part of a DAS network would be the
distribution system. Once the signal is received by the signal source, it must be distributed
throughout the building. There are four types of distribution systems: active (using fiber optic or
ethernet cable), passive, hybrid, and digital.
Passive DAS: A passive DAS uses passive RF components such as coaxial cable, splitters,
tapers and couplers to distribute signal inside a building. This system runs the wireless signals
through "leaky" feeder cables that act as antennas all over the building; the signal leakage
distributes the signals throughout a building.
Active DAS: An active DAS system converts the analog RF signal from the signal source to a
digital signal for distribution. A master unit performs this analog-to-digital conversion. After
conversion, this digital signal is transmitted through fiber optic or Ethernet cables to the antenna
systems, which convert the signal back to analog and transmit it throughout the building.
Hybrid DAS: A hybrid DAS system uses both fiber optic cables and coaxial cables to distribute
the signal throughout a building. In this system, the analog RF signal from the signal source is
converted into a digital signal for distribution. This digital signal is transmitted through fiber optic
or Ethernet cables to a Remote Radio Head (RRU) installed on each floor of a building. The RRU
then converts the digital signal to an analog RF signal. This analog RF signal is then connected
to multiple antennas on that floor with coaxial cables and other passive components.
Digital DAS: This system operates according to the Common Public Radio Interface (CPRI)
specification, which allows a base band unit (BBU, which is a kind of BTS) to communicate
directly with the DAS master unit and through to the remote units without any conversion to an
analog RF interface.