Lecture 3: Cellular Systems
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Lecture 3: Cellular Systems
Frequency Assignments UK 890 MHz 915 935 US 825 845 870 960 890 Japan 870 885 925 940
Frequency usage in GSM at Europe f 960 MHz 124 Downlink 935.2 MHz 200 kHz 1 20 MHz 915 MHz 890.2 MHz 124 Uplink 1 t Bandwidth per channel is 200 kHz Each user is assigned channel for an uplink and a downlink So at most 124 simultaneous calls. Wow!
Goals Low power transmitter system Increase network capacity Frequency reuse Build robust scaleable system Architecture to deal with different user densities at different places
Idea! Partition the region into smaller regions called cells. Each cell gets at least one base station or tower Users within a cell talks to the tower How can we divide the region into cells?
“Cell”ular Structure
Properties of Cell structure Typical Cell sizes – some cites few hundred meters – country side few tens of kilometers Advantages of cell structures: – – – – more capacity due to frequency reusage less transmission power needed more robust, tolerate failures deals interference, transmission area locally Problems: – fixed network needed for the base stations – handover (changing from one cell to another) necessary – interference with other cells
Inside a cell Center-excited cell where the tower is placed somewhat near the center with a omni-directional antenna Edge-excited cell where the towers are placed on three of the six corners with sectored directional antennas.
Channels Reuse Cell structure can reuse frequency only when certain distance is maintained between cells that use the same channels. Fixed frequency assignment: – certain frequencies are assigned to a certain cell – problem: different traffic load in different cells Dynamic frequency assignment: – base station chooses frequencies depending on the frequencies already used in neighbor cells – more capacity in cells with more traffic – assignment can also be based on interference measurements
Interference Co-channel interference – Signals from cells that share a channel cause cochannel interference – Can’t remove it by increasing power. Adjacent channel interference – Signals from adjacent cells cause this. – Use filter to reduce it But, available channels decrease for incoming calls.
Frequency reuse factor Total available channels S N “adjacent” cells (called a cluster) share S channels System has M clusters Each cell gets k channels – S kN Capacity of the system is C MkN Frequency reuse factor is 1/ N
Geometry of Hexagonal Cell 30 degrees
Distance calculation (u1,v1) and (u2,v2) are centers of two cells Distance D D 2 [ (u2-u1) 2 (cos 30) 2 {(v2-v1) (u2-u1) sin 30} 2] [ (u2-u1) 2 (v2-v1) 2 (v2-v1)(u2-u1) ] [I 2 J 2 IJ] where (u1,v1) (0,0) and (u2,v2) (I,J) Radius is R for a cell. Distance between adjacent cells is 1.732 R
First Tier Interfering cells
Co-channel interference It is a function of q D/R where R is the cell radius and D is the co-channel separation distance. Notice D is a function of n and S/I where n is the number of interfering channels in the first tier and S/I is signal to interference ratio. In a fully equipped hexagonal-shaped system n is always 6.
More Calculations A(large)/A(small) D 2 / R 2 Because of the hexagonal shape the total number of cells included in first tier is N 6 (N/3) 3N Therefore – D 2/R 2 3N 3(I 2 J 2 IJ)
S/I ratio There are 6 interfering co-channels each gives i (D/R) (- ) where 2 5 and it is called propagation path-loss slope and depends upon the terrain. (choose 4!) S/I S/(6i) – Experiment with actual users show that we need S/I to be at least 18 dB (or 63.1) Substituting, we get q (6*63.1) 0.25 4.41 We then get N q 2/3 6.49 approximates to 7.
Cell reuse factor vs Mean S/I Cell q D/R Voice Calls per Mean S/I reuse Channels Cell per dB factor N per cell Hour 4 3.5 99 2610 14.0 7 4.6 56 1376 12 6.0 33 739 18.7 23.3
Standard 7 cells sharing system (N 7) f4 f3 f5 f1 f2 f3 f6 f7 f2 f4 f5 f1
Other Common Channel Sharing f3 f1 f2 f3 f2 f3 f1 f3 f1 f2 f3 f2 f3 f1 f3 f1 3 cell cluster f2 f3 f2 7 cell cluster f4 f3 f6 f2 f2 f2 f1 f1 f f 1 f3 f3 h h 3 h1 2 h1 2 g2 h3 g2 h3 g2 g1 g1 g1 g3 g3 g3 3 cell cluster with 3 sector antennas f5 f1 f2 f3 f6 f7 f5 f2 f4 f3 f7 f5 f1 f2
Handoff What happens when a user is mobile? - Especially when crossing a cell boundary while continuing the call. Handoff strategy is invoked. – Find a new base station – Process handoff – higher priority over new call invocation
Who and When Who initiates handoff – Network directed ( tower determines ) – Terminal assisted ( user helps the tower) – Terminal directed ( user determines ) When to initiate handoff – When the mean signal (over some predetermined time) is below some threshold
Types of Handoff Hard handoff – Mobile user is passed between disjoint towers that assign different frequency or adapt different air-interface technology Soft handoff – Mobile user communicates to two towers simultaneously and the signal is treated as a multipath signal
High priority for Handoff Fraction of available channels is kept for handoff purpose. These channels are called guard channel.
Other problems with handoff High speed vehicles can cross many “small” cells in a short time. – Umbrella cell. Large cell with a powerful tower to handle high speed vehicles Another problem is called cell dragging. – Happens when the user moves slowly away from the cell and the tower didn’t recognize it due to strong average signal.
Improving Capacity Sectoring Cell splitting – Process of subdividing a congested cell into smaller cells. – Each has its own base station – Smaller antenna and reduced transmission power – These smaller cells are called microcells
Generations 1G - First generation (Analog and FM) 2G - Second generation (Digital, TDMA, CDMA) 3G - Third generation (Multi-media) 4G - Fourth generation (?)
North American Systems Generation AMPS 1st 2nd NAMPS TDMA CDMA
AMPS Architecture Advanced Mobile Phone System Land Lines Mobile station Land station Mobile Telephone Switching Office Public Switched Telephone Network
Operation Frequency Original Spectrum ( 40 MHz) B A 1 A B 666 Expanded Spectrum (additional 10 MHz) A A B 832 Channels A B A A B A B
Channel Allocation Each channel gets 30KHz. So a call takes two channels – Forward channel (tower to mobile) – Reverse channel (mobile to tower) Spectrum is divided into two bands – A and B bands – Two cellular operating licenses – Each authorized to use 416 channels (expanded)
Control Channels 42 channels (21 in each band) are called control channels – Carry only system information – Receiver tunes to the control channel – Use this channel to establish contact with tower and determine what channel to use for conversation.
Power Control AMPS terminal can transmit at 6 or 8 different power levels – Increase in steps of 4dB – Message from Base Station control the power level of active terminal – Typically power remains the same during a converstion – DTX (Discontinuous Transmission) where the power varies depending upon speech activity
AMPS Identifiers Notation Name Size bits Description MIN Mobile Identifier 34 Assigned by company to subscriber ESN Electronic serial no. 32 Assigned by manufacturer SID System identifier 15 Assigned by regulators to a geographical service area SCM Station class mark 4 Capability of a mobile station SAT Supervisory audio tone * Assigned by operating company to each BST DCC Digital color code 2 Same as above
Frequency Assignments Europe 1710 MHz 1785 1805 US 1850 1885 1910 1930 1990 Japan 1895 1918