1 Cellular Wireless Networks
1 Cellular Wireless Networks
Principles
Operation
Capacity
Interference
Acknowledgements to: 1G to 4G systems
1.Dr. Lawrie Brown (UNSW@ADFA) for the
Lecture slides on “Data and Computer
Communications”, 8/e, by William Stallings,
Chapter 14 “Cellular Wireless Networks”.
2.Lecture Slides on Chapter 4,” Communication Maria Leonora Guico
Networks “ by Leon Garcia and Widjaja
Tcom 126 2nd Sem Lecture 1
Cellular Wireless Networks
key technology for mobiles, wireless nets etc
developed to increase mobile phone capacity
based on multiple low power transmitters
area divided into cells
in a tiling pattern to provide full coverage
each with own antenna
each with own range of frequencies
served by base station
adjacent cells use different frequencies to avoid crosstalk
Cellular Geometries
Cell Site vs Cell
•The cell site is a location or a point, the cell is a wide geographical area.
• Most cells have been split into sectors or individual areas to make them
more efficient.
• Antennas transmit inward to each cell and cover a portion or a sector of
each cell, not the whole thing. Antennas from other cell sites cover the
other portions.
•The cell site equipment provides each sector with its own set of channels.
•In this example, the cell site transmits and receives on three different sets
of channels, one for each part or sector of the three cells it covers.
Cell site vs Cell (2)
•Most people see the cell as the blue hexagon, being defined by
the tower in the center, with the antennae pointing in the directions
indicated by the arrows.
• In reality, the cell is the red hexagon, with the towers at the
corners.
• The confusion comes from not realizing that a cell is a geographic
area, not a point. We use the terms 'cell' (the coverage area) and
'cell site' (the base station location) interchangeably, but they are
not the same thing."
Basic Concepts
Frequency Reuse
A region is partitioned into cells
Each cell is covered by base station
Power transmission levels controlled to minimize inter-cell interference
Spectrum can be reused in other cells
Handoff
Procedures to ensure continuity of call as user moves from cell to another
Involves setting up call in new cell and tearing down old one
Frequency Reuse
must manage reuse of frequencies
power of base transceiver controlled
allow communications within cell on given frequency
limit escaping power to adjacent cells
allow re-use of frequencies in nearby cells
typically 10 – 50 frequencies per cell
example for Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS)
N cells all using same number of frequencies
K total number of frequencies used in systems
each cell has K/N frequencies
K=395, N=7 giving 57 frequencies per cell on average
Frequency Reuse
Adjacent cells may not use
2 same band of frequencies
Frequency Reuse Pattern
7 3 specifies how frequencies are
1
reused
Figure shows 7-cell reuse:
6 4 frequencies divided into 7
groups & reused as shown
5 2
Also 4-cell & 12-cell reuse
2 7 3 possible
Note: CDMA allows
7 3 1
adjacent cells to use same
1 6 4 frequencies
6 4 5
5
Frequency
Reuse
Patterns
Frequency Reuse Factor
No. of subscribers who can use the same set of frequencies (channels) in
non-adjacent cells at the same time in a small area (city) is dependent on
the total number of cells in the area
Number of simultaneous users is called the frequency reuse factor (FRF)
FRF = N
C
where: FRF = frequency reuse factor (unitless)
N = total number of full-duplex channels in an area
C = total number of full-duplex channels in a cell
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 a unique band of frequencies.
With a hexagonal cell pattern, the following values of N possible
N = I2 + J2 + (I x J), I, J = 0, 1, 2, 3, …
Possible values of N are 1, 3, 4, 7, 9, 12, 13, 16, 19, 21, etc
Reuse Distance
Reuse Distance (2)
N (reuse pattern
D
or cluster size)
3.46R 4
4.6R 7
6R 12
7.55R 19
Cluster size and First Tier
Geometry of a hexagon is such that the number of cells
per cluster can only have values that satisfy the equation
N = i2 +ij + j2
where N = number of cells per cluster
i and j = nonnegative integer values
Process of finding tier with nearest co-channel cells (first
tier) is:
1. Move i cells through the center of successive cells.
2. Turn 60o in a counterclockwise direction.
3. Move j cells forward through the center of successive cells.
First Tier Co-channel Cells
(Sample figure for 19-cell cluster)
Increasing Capacity (1)
Add new channels
not all channels used to start with
Frequency borrowing
taken from adjacent cells by congested cells
or assign frequencies dynamically
Cell splitting
non-uniform topography and traffic distribution
use smaller cells in high use areas
Increasing Capacity (2)
cell sectoring
cell divided into wedge shaped sectors (3–6 per cell)
each with own channel set
directional antennas
microcells
move antennas from tops of hills and large buildings to tops of
small buildings and sides of large buildings
use reduced power to cover a much smaller area
good for city streets, roads, inside large buildings
Cell Splitting
Cell Sectoring
In basic form, antennas are omnidirectional
Replacing a single omni-directional antenna
at base station with several directional
antennas, each radiating within a specified
sector.
Cell Sectoring (2)
Achieves capacity improvement by essentially rescaling the
system.
By using sectorized antennas (120 degrees, 60 degrees) co-
channel interference is reduce.
Less co-channel interference, number of cells in a cluster can be
reduced which leads to more channels per cell.
Larger frequency reuse factor, larger capacity
Micro Cell Zone Concept
Large control base station is replaced by
several lower powered transmitters on the
edge of the cell.
The mobile retains the same channel and
the base station simply switches the
channel to a different zone site and the
mobile moves from zone to zone.
Since a given channel is active only in a
particular zone in which mobile is traveling,
base station radiation is localized and
interference is reduced.
Typical Parameters of Traditional Cells
Macrocell Microcell
m(W / N )
n=
B
where:
W = total bandwidth
N = frequency reuse factor
B = channel bandwidth
m = number of cells required to cover an area
Interference in Cellular Systems
Two major kinds:
Co-channel interference
Adjacent-channel interference
Co-channel Interference
• Interference between two cells using the
same set of frequencies
• Certain minimum distance must separate
co-channels to reduce co-channel
interference
Co-channel Interference
b. For reuse N = 7:
2. Now assume 1 MHz of the 33 MHz is allocated to control channels.
Each channel is still 50 kHz.
Again, we take N=4 and N=7. What is the number of channels per cell:
For N = 4?
For N = 7?
A total of 33 MHz are allocated to a system which uses 2x25 kHz for
full duplex (i.e., each channel is 50 kHz).
Number of channels per system
33,000kHz
= 660 channels
2 × 25kHz
Number of channels per cell:
a. For reuse N = 4: 660
= 165 channels / cell
4
1G 2G 2.5G 3G 4G
Analog Digital
Circuit-switching Packet-switching
1G Systems
Goal: To develop a working system that could provide basic
voice service
Time frame: 1970-1990
Technology: FDMA/FDD
Example Systems:
Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS-USA)
Total Access Communication System (TACS-UK)
Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT-Europe)
Incompatible analog systems
First Generation Analog
original cellular telephone networks
analog traffic channels
early 1980s in North America
Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS)
also common in South America, Australia, and
China
replaced by later generation systems
2G Systems
Goal: Digital voice service with improved quality
and also provide better data services
Time Frame: 1990- 2000
Technology: TDMA/TDD, CDMA
Example Systems:
Global System for Mobile (GSM-Europe)
IS-136(TDMA)
IS-95 (CDMA)
Second Generation CDMA
provide higher quality signals, higher data rates,
support digital services, with overall greater capacity
key differences include
digital traffic channels
encryption
error detection and correction
channel access
time division multiple access (TDMA)
code division multiple access (CDMA)
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
have a number of 2nd gen systems
for example IS-95 using CDMA
each cell allocated frequency bandwidth
is split in two
half for reverse, half for forward
uses direct-sequence spread spectrum (DSSS)
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
Advantages
frequency diversity
noise bursts & fading have less effect
multipath resistance
chipping codes have low cross & auto correlation
privacy
inherent in use of spread-spectrum
graceful degradation
more users means more noise
leads to slow signal degradation until unacceptable
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
Disadvantages
self-jamming
some cross correlation between users if not
perfectly synchronized
near-far problem
signals closer to receiver are received with less
attenuation than signals farther away
Transmissions from remote units more difficult to
recover
IS-95
second generation CDMA scheme
primarily deployed in North America
transmission structures different on forward and
reverse links
2.5G Systems
Goal: To provide better data rates and wider range
of data services and also act as a transition to 3G
Time frame: 2000-2002
Systems:
IS-95B
High Speed Circuit Switched Data (HSCSD)
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE)
3G Systems
Goal: High speed wireless data access and unified
universal standard
Time frame: 2002-
Two competing standards
One based on GSM, IS-136 and PDC known as 3GPP
Other based on IS-95 named 3GPP2
Completely move from circuit switching to packet
switching
Enhanced data rates of 2-20Mbps
Third Generation Systems
high-speed wireless communications to support multimedia, data, and
video in addition to voice
3G capabilities:
voice quality comparable to PSTN
144 kbps available to users over large areas
384 kbps available to pedestrians over small areas
support for 2.048 Mbps for office use
symmetrical and asymmetrical data rates
packet-switched and circuit-switched services
adaptive interface to Internet
more efficient use of available spectrum
support for variety of mobile equipment
allow introduction of new services and technologies
4G Systems
Future systems
Goal:
High mobility, High data rate, IP based network
Hybrid network that can interoperate with other
networks
Driving Forces
trend toward universal personal telecommunications
universal communications access – capability of using
one’s terminal in a wide variety of environments to
connect to info serices
GSM cellular telephony with subscriber identity module,
is step towards goals
personal communications services (PCSs) and personal
communication networks (PCNs) also form objectives
for third-generation wireless
technology is digital using time division multiple access
or code-division multiple access for spectrum efficiency
and high capacity
PCS handsets low power, small and light
CDMA Design Considerations –
Bandwidth and Chip Rate
dominant technology for 3G systems is CDMA
3 CDMA schemes, share some design issues
bandwidth (limit channel to 5 MHz)
5 MHz reasonable upper limit on what can be allocated
for 3G
5 MHz is enough for data rates of 144 and 384 kHz
chip rate
given bandwidth, chip rate depends on desired data rate,
need for error control, and bandwidth limitations
chip rate of 3 Mbps or more reasonable
CDMA Design Considerations –
Multirate