SPAIAug 4, 2025

Extracting Range-Doppler Information of Moving Targets from Wi-Fi Channel State Information

arXiv:2508.02799v13 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This enables high-precision sensing for moving objects using standard Wi-Fi hardware, addressing a domain-specific challenge in wireless sensing.

This paper tackled the problem of extracting range and Doppler information from Wi-Fi Channel State Information using a monostatic setup, achieving cm-level accuracy in estimation for moving targets with a commercial Intel Wi-Fi AX211 NIC.

This paper presents, for the first time, a method to extract both range and Doppler information from commercial Wi-Fi Channel State Information (CSI) using a monostatic (single transceiver) setup. Utilizing the CSI phase in Wi-Fi sensing from a Network Interface Card (NIC) not designed for full-duplex operation is challenging due to (1) Hardware asynchronization, which introduces significant phase errors, and (2) Proximity of transmit (Tx) and receive (Rx) antennas, which creates strong coupling that overwhelms the motion signal of interest. We propose a new signal processing approach that addresses both challenges via three key innovations: Time offset cancellation, Phase alignment correction, and Tx/Rx coupling mitigation. Our method achieves cm-level accuracy in range and Doppler estimation for moving targets, validated using a commercial Intel Wi-Fi AX211 NIC. Our results show successful detection and tracking of moving objects in realistic environments, establishing the feasibility of high-precision sensing using standard Wi-Fi packet communications and off-the-shelf hardware without requiring any modification or specialized full-duplex capabilities.

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