Link Budget, Joules Budget and User Capacity IV: Receiver Sensitivities for Internet of Small Things (IoST)
There are many parameters or specifications defined for quantifying the performance of a receiver design and implementation. Among them, the most notable includes the reference sensitivity power level (REFSENS) and the Total Isotropic Sensitivity (TIS), which are widely used for specify how sensitivity a receiver is. More sensitive a receiver is, less power it requires for maintaining a reliable communication and better performance it is believed to have. In general, REFSENS measures the performance of the receiver module with considering its down-converting performance, demodulation/decoding capability and self-generated interference/noise. Per 3GPP definition, REFSENS specifically denotes the minimum mean power applied to each applicable receive antenna port at which the throughput shall meet or exceed the requirements, which is not less than 95% of the maximum throughput of the specified reference measurement channel. See §7.3, Annexes A.2.2 (for FDD), A.2.3 (for TDD) and