Cellular Network Planning and Optimization Part1
Cellular Network Planning and Optimization Part1
and Optimization
Part I: Introduction
Jyri Hämäläinen,
Communications and Networking Department,
TKK, 17.1.2007
Outline
Preliminaries
Selection of technology examples
Spectrum
Way forward
2
Preliminaries
3
Cellular radio system
4
Objectives of radio network planning
5
Network planning from operator perspective
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Viewpoints
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Services
Services
Voice is still dominating
Data services gaining momentum due to introduction of
3G networks, breakthrough ongoing
Most of the existing networks have been build
for voice service
Coverage and network costs have been drivers in
network planning
Usually minimum configuration used in network roll-
outs
Capacity (= voice capacity) increased afterwards on
need basis
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ARPU development
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Future aspects
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Selection of technology examples
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Role of technology
There are some issues that are common in network
planning independently from the applied technology
Environment and fading phenomena
Basic types of interference (co-channel, adjacent channel)
Traffic and service demands … but if technology can’t
support certain service then its demand is ignored
Yet, the role of technology specific issues is increasing
In ‘voice only’ networks radio resources were more or less
fixed and resource reuse ratio were low
The increasing demand data service, efficiency and higher
user rates is driving towards networks where same radio
resources are used in all (or almost all) cells.
While conventional planning is still important, the
optimization of the networks is also vital.
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Selection of focus technologies
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First step: IMT-2000 Technologies
In GSM technology is dominating in 2G; it is clear
choice for a 2G representative in our course
3G cellular/broadband wireless technologies are
included into IMT-2000 family
International Mobile Telecommunications-2000 (IMT-
2000) is the global standard for third generation (3G)
wireless communications as defined by the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU). In 1999 ITU approved five
radio interfaces for IMT-2000 as a part of the ITU-R M.1457
Recommendation and additionally approved a new standard
in 2007 as the sixth IMT-2000 radio interface.
IMT-2000 ‘label’ is important for a wireless mobile
technology because then it has an access to global IMT-
2000 spectrum. The lack of this label may be a crucial
obstacle for commercial use of the technology.
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IMT-2000 Technologies
IMT-DS Direct-Sequence
also known as WCDMA or UTRA-FDD, used in UMTS
IMT-MC Multi-Carrier
also known as CDMA2000, the successor to 2G CDMA (IS-95)
IMT-TD Time-Division
This comprises: TD-CDMA (Time Division - Code Division Multiple
Access) and TD-SCDMA (Time Division - Synchronous Code Division
Multiple Access). Both are standardized by 3GPP in UMTS like UTRA
TDD-HCR (3.84 Mcps, 5 MHz bandwidth, TD-CDMA air interface) and
UTRA TDD-LCR (1.28 Mcps, 1.6 MHz bandwidth, TD-SCDMA air
interface).
IMT-SC Single Carrier
also known as EDGE
IMT-FT Frequency Time
also known as DECT
IMT-OFDMA TDD WMAN
better known as WiMAX
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Mobile network evolution paths
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Disclaimer: Technology shares as well as forecasts vary from source to source
Focus technologies: 2G
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Focus technologies: 3G/3G+
3G WCDMA and its evolution towards HSPA
3G WCDMA provides a very good example of challenges in CDMA
network planning.
Optimization of WCDMA network parameters important task also in
future
HSPA important enhancement to WCDMA, data coverage challenges
3G LTE and mobile WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e)
Future OFDMA technologies, network planning and optimization
aspects still widely unknown. First mobile WiMAX roll-outs ongoing,
first LTE networks 2009-10
In this course we
Put a lot of emphasis on WCDMA and HSPA
Scratch the future challenges related to 3G LTE and WiMAX
If we have time then we also discuss on
Relay technologies
Other new network extensions
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GSM/GPRS/EDGE
GSM was originally designed for voice services
Macro-cell deployment was a baseline assumption
SMS was the first ‘killer application’ on data services due
which the commercial potential of data applications were
realized
Still today most of the voice capacity is build using GSM
GPRS was created to extend GSM for packet data
Drawback was the lack of multimedia support and low bit
rates in physical layer
The changes in core network due the GPRS are actually
revolutionary
SGSN and GGSN provide packet switched connection to
IP networks also in 3G
Latest GSM evolution is called EDGE
In data rates EDGE is competitive even with WCDMA
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WCDMA
3G/WCDMA
Designed for multimedia communications from the
beginning
Provides more efficient means for image and video transfer
Variable bit rates up to 2 Mbps (Rel’99)
Multiplexing of services with different quality requirements
into single connection
Quality requirements from 10% FER down to 10(-6) bit error
rate
Support for asymmetric uplink and downlink traffic
Good spectral efficiency
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Differences between WCDMA and GSM
WCDMA GSM
Carrier spacing 5MHz 200kHz
Frequency reuse 1/1 1/1-18
Power control 1.5kHz (‘fast’) 2Hz (‘slow’)
Quality control RRM based Mostly due frequency
planning
Frequency Multi-path Frequency hopping
diversity diversity
Multi-antenna Beam-forming and Simple non-standardized
transmission transmit diversity methods can be applied
supported in standard
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HSPA (High Speed Packet Access)
HSPA refers to two existing standards (HSDPA and
HSUPA)
High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) allows
networks based on UMTS/WCDMA to have higher data
transfer speeds and capacity. Special characters:
Hybrid automatic repeat-request (HARQ)
Fast packet scheduling
Adaptive modulation and coding
As of May 2007, 102 HSDPA networks have commercially
launched mobile broadband services in 55 countries
High-Speed Uplink Packet Access (HSUPA) is an uplink
enhancement for UMTS/WCDMA
HSUPA contains similar enhancements as HSDPA: HARQ
and packet scheduler.
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Mobile WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e)
The IEEE 802.16 working group is focusing on
broadband wireless access BWA) standards.
WiMAX refers to "Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave
Access" by an industry group called the WiMAX Forum.
IEEE 802.16e (also called as mobile WiMAX) is specifying a
mobile BWA system. Characters
Scalable OFDMA that support channel bandwidths
between 1.25 MHz and 20 MHz.
Hybrid automatic repeat-request (HARQ)
Fast packet scheduling
Adaptive modulation and coding
Packet switched network
First mobile WiMAX network roll-outs ongoing (USA/Sprint)
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3G LTE (UMTS evolution)
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Spectrum
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Background
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IMT-2000 Spectrum
Notes:
IMT-2000 spectrum is in use in Europe, Asia, Africa, but in
some regions (e.g. North America) spectrum allocation is
different from the above figure.
Spectrum is scarce and in some countries also expensive
There are GSM spectrum on 900MHz and 1800MHz
UMTS is operating on 1900-2200MHz spectrum
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New IMT Spectrum
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Way forward
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Next steps
Next lectures
Planning aspects that are common to all cellular
networks
GSM/GPRS/EDGE network planning: A brief
introduction
WCDMA/HSPA network planning and optimization.
This topic form the core of this course.
LTE and WiMAX planning aspects
Future trends
If we have time
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