William Stallings Chapter 14 in Data and Computer Communications and Chapter 10 in Wireless Communications and Networks
William Stallings Chapter 14 in Data and Computer Communications and Chapter 10 in Wireless Communications and Networks
MTSO:
Channels
Two types of channels are available between
the mobile unit and the base station (BS):
Control channels
Setting up and maintaining calls
Establish relationship between mobile unit and
nearest BS
Traffic channels
Carry voice and data connection between the
users
Typical Call in
Single MTSO Area
Mobile unit initialization
Scan and select strongest set up control channel
Automatically select BS antenna of cell
Usually but not always nearest (propagation irregularity)
Paging
MTSO attempts to connect to mobile unit
Paging message sent to BSs depending on called mobile number
Paging signal transmitted on set up channel
Typical Call in
Single MTSO Area
Call accepted
Mobile unit recognizes number on set up channel
Responds to BS which sends response to MTSO
MTSO sets up circuit between calling and called BSs
MTSO selects available traffic channel within cells and
notifies BSs
BSs notify mobile unit of channel
Ongoing call
Voice/data exchanged through respective BSs and MTSO
Handof
Mobile unit moves out of range of cell into range of another
cell
Traffic channel changes to one assigned to new BS
Without interruption of service to user
Call Stages
Other Functions
Call blocking
Call termination
User hangs up
MTSO informed
Traffic channels at two BSs released
Call drop
Shape of Cells
Square
The first design decision to make is the shape
of cells to cover an area
A matrix of square cells would be simplest
layout to define
This geometry is not ideal.
Width of the square cell is d, then cell has four
neighbours at distance d and four at distance
2d
Better if all adjacent antennas equidistant
Simplifies choosing and switching to new antenna
Shape of Cells
Hexagon
Hexagonal pattern provides equidistant
antennas
Radius defined as radius of circum-circle
Distance from centre to vertex equals length of side
Cellular Geometries
Frequency Reuse
In a cellular system, each cell has a base
transceiver.
Transmission power is carefully controlled to
allow communication within the cell using a
given frequency while limiting the power that
escapes the cell into adjacent ones.
The objective is to use the same frequency in
other nearby cells thus,
Allowing the frequency to be used for multiple
simultaneous conversations
Generally 10 to 50 frequencies are assigned to
each cell depending upon the traffic expected
Frequency Reuse
The essential issue is to determine how many cells must
intervene between two cells using the same frequency
So that the two cells do not interfere with each other
Various patterns of frequency reuse are possible
The pattern consist of N Cells and each cell is
assigned the same number of frequencies. Each cell
can have K/N frequencies, where
K is the total number of frequencies used allotted to
the system
For Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) K=395,
N=7 giving 57 is the smallest pattern that can provide
sufficient isolation between two uses of same
frequency
It means at most 57 frequencies per cell on average
Characterizing Frequency
Reuse
In characterizing frequency reuse, the following parameters are
commonly used:
D = minimum distance between centers of cells that use the
same band of frequencies (called cochannels)
R = radius of a cell
d = distance between centers of adjacent cells
d 3R
N = number of cells in repetitious pattern
Reuse factor
Each cell in pattern uses unique band of frequencies
I, J = 0, 1, 2, 3,
Mobile Radio
Propagation Effects
Signal strength
Strength of signal between BS and mobile unit
should be strong enough to maintain signal
quality at the receiver, But strong enough can
create too much co-channel interference
Noise can effect signal ,and it varies
Fading
Even if signal strength is in effective range, signal
propagation effects may disrupt the signal
Example
Consider four different cellular systems with the cluster of cells N= 4,7,12
and 19 are duplicated 16 times. each cell has a radius of 1.6 Km.
Supposing an FDMA system with frequency bands being used are 825 to
845MHz for mobile unit transmission ,and 870 to 890 MHz for Base station
transmission ,A duplex circuit consists of one 30 KHz channel in each
direction Find for each system
1.
2.
3.
4.
Example
Consider four different cellular systems with the cluster of cells N= 4,7,12
and 19 are duplicated 16 times. each cell has a radius of 1.6 Km.
Supposing an FDMA system with frequency bands being used are 825 to
845MHz for mobile unit transmission ,and 870 to 890 MHz for Base station
transmission ,A duplex circuit consists of one 30 KHz channel in each
direction Find for each system
1.
2.
3.
4.
Increasing Capacity
As the number of customers increases in the system,
more traffic may build up that require enough
frequencies assigned to a cell at a time to handle all
calls.
A number of approaches have been used to cope with
this situation, including the following:
1.Adding new channels
When a system is setup in a region, not all of the
channels are used to start with. Growth and expansion
can be managed in an orderly fashion by adding new
channels
2.Frequency borrowing
Frequencies are taken from adjacent cells by
congested cells
The frequencies can also be assigned to cells
dynamically
Increasing Capacity
3. Cell splitting
The distribution of traffic and topographic features
is not uniform, and this presents opportunities for
capacity increases.
Cells in areas of high usage can be split into
smaller cells
The original cells are about 6.5 to 13 km in size
1.5 km limit in general
Cell Splitting
Increasing Capacity
4. Cell Sectoring
Cell divided into wedge shaped sectors
3 6 sectors per cell
Each with own channel set
Subsets of cells channels
Increasing Capacity
5. Microcells
As cell become smaller, move antennas from
tops of hills and large buildings to tops of small
buildings and sides of large buildings
Form microcells
Reduced power
Good for city streets, congested areas, along
roads and inside large buildings
MICRO
CELL
1 to 20 Km
0.1 to 1 Km
Transmission
power
1 to 10 Watt
0.1 to 1 Watt
Average delay
spread
(Multipath delay)
0.1 to 10
microsec
10 to 100 nsec
0.3Mbps
1Mbps
Cell radius
Design Factors
In design of a cellular layout, the communication
engineer must take account of these various
propagation effects
The factors that will determine the size of individual
cell
Maximum transmit power level at BS and MUs
Typical height of mobile unit antenna
Available height of the BS antenna
Design Factors
One of the most widely used models was
developed by Okumura et al and
subsequently refined by Hata
Detailed analysis of Tokyo area
Produced path loss information for an urban
environment
Hata's model is an empirical formulation
Takes into account variety of environments and
conditions
For an urban environment, predicted path loss is
(14.1)
Design Factors
Where
fc = carrier frequency in MHz from 150 to
1500MHz
ht = height of transmitting antenna (BS) in m,
from 30 to 300m
hr = height of receiving antenna (mobile
station) in m, from 1 to 10 m
d = propagation distance between antennas in
km, from 1 to 20 km
A(hr) = correction factor for mobile antenna
height
Design Factors
For a small or medium-sized city, the
correction factor is given by
Design Factors
To estimate the path loss in a suburban area, the
formula for urban path loss in equation above is
modified as
Fading
The most challenging technical problem
facing communication system engineers in a
mobile environment is Fading
Caused by changes in transmission path(s)
In a fixed environment, fading is affected by
changes in atmospheric conditions such as
rainfall
But in mobile environment movement of
(mobile unit) antenna
The relative location of various obstacles
changes over time, creating complex
transmission effects
Multipath Propagation
Reflection
Occurs when an electromagnetic signal encounter a
surface that is large relative to the wavelength of the
signal
May have phase shift from original
These reflected waves may interfere constructively or
destructively at the receiver
Difraction
Occurs at the edge of an impenetrable body that is large
compared to the wavelength of the radio wave
When a radio wave encounters such an edge, waves
propagate in different directions with the edge as the
source
Thus, the signals can be received even when there is no
unobstructed LOS from the transmitter
Multipath Propagation
Scattering
If the size of an obstacle is on the order of the
wavelength of the signal or less, scattering occurs
An incoming signal is scattered into several weaker
outgoing signals
Lamp posts and traffic signs that can cause
scattering
Reflection, Diffraction,
Scattering
Effects of Multipath
Propagation
Signals may cancel out due to phase differences
Intersymbol Interference (ISI)
Sending narrow pulse at given frequency between fixed
antenna and mobile unit
Channel may deliver multiple copies at different times
Delayed pulses act as noise making recovery of bit
information difficult
Timing changes as mobile unit moves
Harder to design signal processing to filter out multipath effects
Handoffs
Umbrella Cells
Power Control
Design issues making it desirable to include dynamic
power control in a cellular system
Received power must be sufficiently above the
background noise for effective communication
Desirable to minimize power in the transmitted signal from
the mobile
Reduce cochannel interference, alleviate health concerns, save
battery power
Mobile Station
Mobile station communicates across Um interface
(air interface) with base station transceiver in same
cell as mobile unit
Mobile equipment (ME) physical terminal, such as
a telephone or PCS
ME includes radio transceiver, digital signal processors
and subscriber identity module (SIM)
Reading Assignment :