MWC Chapter 2
MWC Chapter 2
Draw basic cellular system. State the advantages of cellular system and define frequency
reuse ratio.
• The cellular system divides a large geographic area into cells with diameters from
2 to 50 km, each of which is allocated a number of RF channels.
• Transmitter in each adjacent cell operate on different frequencies to avoid
interference.
• However, transmit power & antenna height in each cell are relatively low, cells
that are sufficiently far apart can reuse the same set of frequencies without causing
co-channel interference.
• As the demand for cellular mobile service grows, additional cells can
accommodate the traffic.
i) Base Station: –
A fixed station in a mobile radio system used for radio communication with mobile stations.
Base stations are located at the center or on the edge of a coverage region and consist of radio
channels and transmitter and receiver antennas mounted on a tower.
ii) Control Channel:
It is defined as the radio channel used for the transmission of beacons such as call set up, call
request, call initiation as well as the control information.
iii) Mobile Station:
It is defined as a station in the cellular radio service which is used when in motion at an
unspecified location. Mobile stations can be portable hand held personal units or they can be the
ones installed in vehicles.
iv) Mobile Switching center:
Also called a Mobile Telephone Switching Office (MTSO) is a switching center which
coordinates the routing of calls in a large service area. In a cellular radio system, the MSC
connects the cellular base stations and the mobiles to the PSTN (Public Switched
Telephone Network, PSTN, is a global telecommunications network which connects
conventional landline telephone switching centers, called central offices, with MSCs
throughout the world).
.
Cell splitting is the process of subdividing a congested cell into smaller cells, each with
its own base station and a corresponding reduction in antenna height and transmitter
power.
• Cell splitting increases the capacity of a cellular system since it increases the
number of times that channels are reused. By defining new cells which have a
smaller radius than the original cells and by installing these smaller cells
(called microcells) between the existing cells, capacity increases due to the
additional number of channels per unit area.
What is Cell and Cluster ? Describe the concept of frequency Reuse. Draw frequency
Reuse pattern with cluster size 7. 6M
Ans:
• Cell: Each cellular base station is allocated group of radio channels to be used within a
small geographic area called “cell”
• Cluster: The Number of cells which collectively use the complete set of available
frequency is called CLUSTER
• Base stations in adjacent cells are assigned channel group which contains completely
different channels than neighboring cell.
• By limiting coverage area to within the boundaries of cell, the same group of channels
may be used to cover different cells that are separated from one another by distance large
enough to keep interference level within tolerable limits.
• The design process of selecting and allocating channel groups for all the cellular base
station within a system is called frequency reuse or frequency planning.
• Frequency reuse is important as the spectrum allocated for cellular transmission is limited
and demand is increasing rapidly
State the types of interference in cellular system. Explain any one type in Detail. 4M
Ans
Types of Interference in cellular system:-
The common types of interference in cellular networks are:
1. Self-interference
2. Multiple access interference
3. Co-channel interference (CCI)
4. Adjacent channel interference (ACI).
5. Near-End-Far-End Interference
Explanation:-
Self-interference
Self-interference is due to interference induced among signals that are transmitted from a shared
transmitter. The amount of interference induced depends on the modulation type. Interference
between the uplink and downlink transmissions in a FD duplex system may be classified as self
interference, as it occurs among signals send on the same two-way connection.
OR
Multiple access interference
Multiple access interference refers to the interference induced among the transmission from
multiple radios using the same frequency resource to a single receiver.
OR
Adjacent-Channel Interference:
It occurs in a radio channel when unwanted energy from channels adjacent to it falls into its
desired bandwidth.
OR
Next-Channel Interference:
• Next-channel interference will arrive at the mobile unit from other cell sites if the system is not
properly.
• Mobile unit initiating a call on a control channel in a cell may cause interference with the next
control channel at another cell site.
• The filter with a sharp falloff slope can help to reduce all the adjacent-channel interference,
including the next-channel interference.
OR
Co-channel interference (CCI) –When interference occurs in the cells having same channel set
is called co-channel interference ,to reduce it the co-channels have to be separated by sufficient
amount of distance.
OR
Neighboring-channel Interference:
• The channels which are several channels away from the next channel will cause interference
with the desired signal.
• A fixed set of serving channels is assigned to each cell site.
• If all the channels are simultaneously transmitted at one cell site antenna, a sufficient amount
of band isolation between channels is required for a multi-channel combiner to reduce
intermodulation products,
OR
Near-End-Far-End Interference:
➢ In One Cell :
• The close-in mobile unit has a strong signal which causes adjacent-channel interference
• In this situation, near-end-far-end interference can occur only at the reception point in the cell
site as shown in fig (a)
➢ In Cells of Two Systems:
• The frequency channels of both cells of the two systems must be coordinated in the
neighborhood of the two- system frequency bands. The situation can be seen in fig: (b)
• Cell splitting is the process of subdividing a congested cell into smaller cells, each
with its own base station and a corresponding reduction in antenna height and
transmitter power.
• Cell splitting increases the capacity of a cellular system since it increases the number of
times that channels are reused.
• By defining new cells which have a smaller radius than the original cells and by installing
these smaller cells (called microcells) between the existing cells, capacity increases due
to the additional number of channels per unit area Imagine if every cell in Figure were
reduced in such a way that the radius of every cell was cut in half.
• In order to cover the entire service area with smaller cells, approximately four times as
many cells would be required.
• This can be easily shown by considering a circle with radius R.
• The area covered by such a circle is four times as large as the area covered by a circle
with radius R/2.
• The increased number of cells would increase the number of clusters over the coverage
region, which in turn would increase the number of channels, and thus capacity, in the
coverage area.
• Cell splitting allows a system to grow by replacing large cells with smaller cells,
Definition: 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 procedure is called handoff.
Explain two level handoff ( proper and improper handoff) with suitable diagram.
• Figure shows the case where a handoff is not made and the signal drops below the
minimum acceptable level to keep the channel active.
• This dropped call event can happen when there is an excessive delay by the MSC in
assigning a handoff or when the threshold Δ is set too small for the handoff time in the
system.
• Excessive delays may occur during high traffic conditions due to computational loading
at the MSC or due to the fact that no channels are available on any of the nearby base
stations (thus forcing the MSC to wait until a channel in a nearby cell becomes free).
• In deciding when to handoff, it is important to ensure that the drop in the measured signal
level is not due to momentary fading and that the mobile is actually moving away from
the serving base station.
• The time over which a call may be maintained within a cell, without handoff, is called
DWELL TIME. The dwell time of a particular user is governed by number of factors
including propagation, interference, distance between the subcarrier & the base station &
other time varying effects.
Define the term adjacent channel interference. State methods to reduce it. 4M
Ans: (Define = 2M, Methods to reduce interference = 2M)
Adjacent channel interference:
Interference resulting from signals which are close in frequency to the desired signal is called
adjacent channel interference. Adjacent channel interference results from imperfect receiver
filters which allow nearby frequencies to leak in to pass band.
It is serious problem can be a particularly serious if an adjacent channel user is transmitting
very close range to a subscribers receiver, while receiver attempts to receive a BS on the
desired channel this is referred to as near far effect
To reduce the interference:
The adjacent channel interference can be reduced by
1) Careful filtering
2) Careful channel assignment.
• There should be adequate frequency separation between the spectrums of the adjacent
channels in a cell
• If the frequency reuse factor is large or cluster size is small the adjacent channel at the
base station will be too close to each other in the frequency domain and this will
increase the interference.
State different techniques used in cellular system to improve coverage and capacity of
cellular system. Describe any one in detail with diagram. State how it increases system
capacity.
Cell sectoring increases SIR using directional antennas, then capacity improvement is
achieved by reducing the number of cells in a cluster, thus increasing frequency reuse.
Often wireless operator needs to provide dedicated coverage for hard-to-reach areas. Such as
within buildings, or in valleys or tunnels. Radio transmitters, known as ―repeaters are often
used to provide such range (coverage) extension capabilities.
Microcell-zone concept:
The problem associated with sectoring technique is the increase in number of handoffs.
This puts an additional load on the switching and control link elements of the mobile system.
A solution to this problem is microcell concept.
In this scheme, all the three or more zone sites represents as Tx/ Rx are connected to the
same base station and share the same radio equipment.
The transmission media used for connecting the zones to the base station are coaxial cable, fiber
optics cable or a microwave link.
So each cell consists of a base station and multiple zones.
A mobile travelling within a cell, is served by the zone that has the strongest signal of all.
The antennas in zones are placed at the outer edges of the cell and any base station channel
can be assigned to any zone by the base station.
As a mobile travels from one zone to the other within a cell, it uses the same channel . This
will avoid hand-off.
The base station will just switch the channel to the appropriate zone sit.
Thus a given channel is being used only in a particular zone in which the mobile is travelling.
So the base station radiation is localized.
This will reduce interference. The channels are distributed in time and space by all the zones
are also reused in the co- channels cells.
The microcell concept is very useful along highways or in the busy urban areas.
How cell sectoring improve capacity in cellularsystem? 4M
Ans:
Cell Sectoring
• The technique for decreasing the co- Channel interference and thus increasing
system performance by using directional antenna is called Sectoring.
• To increase capacity in cellular systems, the cell radius is unchanged and seek methods
• to decrease D/R ratio.
• This is done by Cell Sectoring.
• Sectoring increases SIR so that the cluster size may be reduced.
• First the SIR is improved using directional antennas, and then capacity improvement is
achieved by reducing the number of cells in a cluster, thus increasing frequency reuse.
• To achieve this, it is necessary to reduce the relative interference without decreasing the
transmit power.
• The co-channel interference in a cellular system may be decreased by replacing a single
omni-directional antenna at the base station by several directional antennas, each
radiating within a specified sector.
• The factor by which the co-channel interference is reduced depends on the amount of
sectoring used.
• A cell is normally partitioned into three 120° sectors or six 60° sectors as shown in
figure. In sectoring, the channels used in a particular cell are broken down into sectored
groups and are used only within a particular sector.
• Assuming seven-cell reuse, for the case of 120° sectors, the number of interferers in the
first tier is reduced from six to two.
• This is because only two of the six co-channel cells receive interference with a particular
sectored channel group.
What is meant by Hand-off? List different types of Hand-off. Explain any three in detail.
6M
Total BW = 20 MHz
Channel BW = 225KHz*2 simplex channels = 450 KHz /duplex channel
Total available channels =20000KHz/450KHz = 44.4 channels
For N=7 , Total no. of channels available per cell is 44.4/7= 6.34 channels
Define the term co-channel interference. State cause and effect of co-channel interference
on system capacity
Definition:
Frequency reuse implies that in a given coverage area there is several cells that
Use the same set of frequencies. These cells are called co-channel cells, and the
Interference. Between signals from these cells is called co-channel interference
Cause of co-channel interference:
• In Cellular mobile communication, frequency spectrum is divided into non-overlapping
spectrum bands which are assigned to different cells .
• In cellular communications, a cell refers to the hexagonal/circular area around the base
station antenna.
• However, after certain geographical distance, the frequency bands are re-used, i.e. the
same spectrum bands are reassigned to other distant cells. The co-channel interference
occurs due to Frequency reuse.
• Thus, besides the intended signal from within the cell, signals at the same frequencies
(cochannel signals) arrive at the receiver from the undesired transmitters located (far
away) in some other cells and lead to deterioration in receiver performance.
Effect of co-channel interference:
• Co channel Interference plays an important role in determining the quality of service.
• QOS is measured by coverage, call blocking, call dropping, Audio quality.
• Audio quality is mainly affected by co channel Interference.
• The capacity of the channel is affected significantly by co channel Interference.
• Co channel Interference also decides the frequency reuse plan and link performance