CHP2Part2Cellular Concept
CHP2Part2Cellular Concept
Handoff Strategies
When a mobile moves into a different cell while a conversation is in progress, the MSC
automatically transfers the call to a new channel belonging to the new base station. This
handoff operation not only involves identifying a new base station, but also requires that
the voice and control signals be allocated to channels associated with the new base
station. System Designers must specify an optimum signal level at which to initiate a
handoff. Once a particular signal level is specified as the minimum usable signal for
acceptable voice quality at the base station receiver (normally taken in between -90dBm
to -100dBm), a slightly stronger signal level is used as a threshold at which a handoff is
made. This margin, given by Δ cannot be too large or too small.
Δ = P r handoff – P r minimum usable
If Δ is too large unnecessary handoff occurs and if Δ is too small there maybe insufficient
time to complete a handoff before a call is lost due to weak signal.
Dwell Time
The time over which a call may be maintained within a cell, without handoff, is called the
dwell time.
Intersystem Handoff
During the course of a call, if a mobile moves from one cellular system to a different
cellular system controlled by a different MSC, an intersystem handoff becomes
necessary. An MSC engages in an intersystem handoff when a mobile signal becomes
weak in a given cell and the MSC cannot find another cell within its system to which it
can transfer the call in progress.
1. Several problems arise when attempting to design handoff for a wide range of mobile
velocities. High speed vehicles pass through the coverage region of a cell within a matter
of seconds, whereas pedestrian users may never need a handoff during a call.
2. In practice it is difficult for cellular service providers to obtain new physical cell site
locations in urban areas because of zoning laws, ordinances and other non technical
barriers.
3. Another practical handoff problem in micro cell systems is known as cell dragging.
Cell dragging results from pedestrian users that provide a very strong signal to the base
station. Such a situation occurs in an urban environment when there is a line-of-sight
(LOS) radio path between the subscriber and the base station. As the user travels away
from the base station at a very slow speed, the average signal strength does not decay
rapidly. Even when the user has traveled well beyond the designated range of the cell, the
received signal at the base station maybe above the handoff threshold, thus a handoff may
not be made. This creates a potential interference and traffic management problem, since
the user has traveled deep within a neighboring cell. To solve the cell dragging problem,
handoff thresholds and radio coverage parameters must be adjusted carefully.
In the first generation analog cellular systems, the typical time to make a handoff,
once the signal level is deemed to be below the handoff threshold, is about 10
seconds. This requires that the value for Δ be in the order of 6 dB to 12 dB.
In digital cellular systems such as GSM, the mobile assists with the handoff
procedure by determining the best handoff candidates, and the handoff, once the
decision is made, typically requires only 1 or 2 seconds. Consequently, Δ is
usually between 0 dB and 6 dB in modern cellular systems.
Types of Handoff
A hard handover is one in which the channel in the source cell is released and
only then the channel in the target cell is engaged. Thus the connection to the
source is broken before the connection to the target is made—for this reason such
handovers are also known as break-before-make. Hard handovers are intended to
be instantaneous in order to minimize the disruption to the call. A hard handover
is perceived by network engineers as an event during the call.
A soft handover is one in which the channel in the source cell is retained and
used for a while in parallel with the channel in the target cell. In this case the
connection to the target is established before the connection to the source is
broken, hence this handovers is called make-before-break. The interval, during
which the two connections are used in parallel, may be brief or substantial. For
this reason the soft handovers is perceived by network engineers as a state of the
call, rather than a brief event. Soft handovers may involve using connections to
more than two cells, e.g. connections to three, four or more cells can be
maintained by one phone at the same time. When a call is in a state of soft
handovers the signal of the best of all used channels can be utilized for the call at
a given moment or all the signals can be combined to produce a clearer copy of
the signal. The latter is more advantageous, and when such combining is
performed both in the downlink (forward link) and the uplink (reverse link) the
handover is termed as softer. Softer handovers are possible when the cells
involved in the handovers have a single cell site.
IS-95 CDMA
The IS-95 code division multiple access (CDMA) spread spectrum cellular system
provides a unique handoff capability that cannot be provided with other wireless systems.
Unlike channelized wireless systems that assign different radio channels during a handoff
(hard handoff), spread spectrum mobiles share the same channel in every cell.
Macro, Micro, Pico & Umbrella Cells
As GSM networks are "cellular," this means that mobile phones connect to it by
searching for cells in the immediate vicinity. GSM networks operate in four different
frequency ranges.
MACRO cells can be regarded as cells where the base station antenna is installed
on a mast or larger building structures that are taller than an average roof-top
level.
MICRO cells are cells whose antenna height below average rooftop level and are
typically used in urban areas.
PICO cells are small cells whose diameter is only few dozen meters; they are
used mainly in indoor applications. It can cover e.g. a floor of
a building or an entire building, or for example in shopping centers or airports,
which means that there is several radio antennae placed within one Pico cell.
UMBRELLA cells is a layer with micro cells is covered by at least one macro
cell, and a micro cell can in turn cover several Pico cells. A covering cell is called
an umbrella cell.
In Micro and Pico cells, the base station antennae are at the range below roof
level, and therefore is less affected and disturbed by the interference from
surrounding base stations .This means that the same frequency can be re-used more
often in a micro or Pico cell than in a macro cell.
The frequency bands can be differentially affected by disturbances from other base
stations .Especially in micro and Pico cells, the interference on the uplink frequencies
can vary rapidly and greatly since, for example, mobile stations can turn corners at
high speed. Another disadvantage is that the base station must turn off its own
transmitter during measurement since certain radio communication systems require
that the base station, during an ongoing conversation, send continuously on the carrier
wave where conversation is ongoing in some time slot.