MS Thesis: George Eichinger Title: CRUSH: Cognitive Radio Universal Software Hardware When: Tuesday April 10, 2012 9:30 am to 10:30 am, 206 Egan Abstract: The FPGA is an integral component of a software defined radio (SDR) that provides the needed reconfigurability for dynamically adapting its transceiver and data processing functions. Because of the desire to process data faster and with less latency, researchers are looking at FPGA-based SDR. Our architecture, called CRUSH (Cognitive Radio Universal Software Hardware), is composed of a Xilinx ML605 connected to an Ettus USRP through a custom interface board, allowing flexible data transfer between them. In addition, we provide a framework that supports ease of use, independent programming on both devices, and integration with software running on the host. To demonstrate our platform we implemented spectrum sensing, a key step in determining channel availability before transmission in dynamic spectrum access networks. Spectrum sensing is implemented on CRUSH using FFTs for a 100x speedup; the complete sensing cycles is 10x faster than the same design without CRUSH. By reducing the load on the host and allowing a powerful FPGA extension for off-the-shelf devices, CRUSH enables advances in both protocol design and reconfigurable hardware targeting radio applications. This work is sponsored by the Department of the Air Force under Air Force Contract FA8721-05-C-0002. The opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the United States Government.