Abstract
This study proposes the design and simulation of a low-power analog
jammer that selectively targets LTE downlink signals based on real
time uplink detection. The system architecture integrates a field
strength detection unit, a PLL-controlled frequency sweeper, and a
jamming signal generator using Zener-based noise injection and RF
mixing via SA612A ICs. Simulations conducted in Proteus and
MATLAB/Simulink validated the functional blocks, demonstrating
accurate uplink detection, stable frequency synthesis, and effective
jamming performance. Key results include spectral spreading between
21–33?dBJE, severe signal distortion, and bit-error rates exceeding
80% under interference conditions. While manual tuning and
regulatory limitations constrain immediate deployment, the proposed
solution offers a scalable foundation for controlled civilian use. The
findings support future development of digitally enhanced, multi-band
jamming systems tailored for educational or security-sensitive settings.
Authors
Wilson Tchounna Tsabgou, Djuma Sumbiri
University of Lay Adventists of Kigali, Rwanda
Keywords
LTE Jamming, RF Interference, Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)