Session5 NB IoT Networks
Session5 NB IoT Networks
Sami Tabbane
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Objectives
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I. Introduction
II. LTE-M
III. NB-IoT
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I. Introduction
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LPWA could account 70% of Cellular IoT Connections in 2020
CCTV(Camera)
l >10Mbps 3G/4G
In-vehicle Entertainment…
0.2B
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C-IoT provides wide WAN coverage
Re-use existing
Cellular network
Carrier-grade
Reliability
Unlicensed IoT C-IoT Coverage
C-IoT
4G-Like
Security
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Future Oriented Cellular IoT Network: NB-IoT+eMTC+4G
Plan Refarming
2G Low Cost Cellular IoT Refarming STOP GPRS M2M Service Done
(900M)
Plan Refarming
3G Refarming Replace 3G M2M with 4G Done
Future Oriented
eMTC Cellular IoT ~1Mbps Cellular IoT
Technology
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NB-IoT Network Performance
1.4 3 5
MHz MHz MHz 10MHz 15MHz 20MHz 9~12 dB
Data Wake up
SingleRAN DL Data
(2G/3G/4G/NB-IoT)
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NB-IoT/eMTC Standard’s evolution path to 5G
NB-IoT Technology:
eMBB
eMTC Technology:
NB-IoT,
Rel-14 Rel-15
• Positioning:OTDOA
• SC-PTM
• Capacity improvement: Sub-
• VoLTE coverage improvement PRB eMTC (45KHz) • mMTC NR will not be considered until R17;
(5dB)
• 64QAM • NB-IoT will be used to cover 5G mMTC use case
• 5MHz/20MHz bandwidth
• Low UE output power
(UL 3Mbps/7Mbps;DL
before R17
4Mbps/27Mbps)
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R14: Positioning to simplify device requirement
TA
TA
TA
• Device cost: ~50USD • Device cost: ~40USD Monthly service fee: 5USD
• Accuracy: 10m • OTDOA: 30~50m
• Latency:30s • Latency:10s Kids tracking (Filip2 Tracker)
• Power consumption: • Power consumption:
0.3mAh/Report 0.2mAh/Report
NB-IoT Tracker
Monthly fee:
USD10 for voice and data
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Release-13 3GPP evolutions to address the IoT market
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II. LTE-M
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Technology
• Easy deployment
• Excellent coverage: up to 11 Km
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Roadmap
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LTE to LTE-M
3GPP Releases 8 (Cat.4) 8 (Cat. 1) 12 (Cat.0) LTE-M 13 (Cat. 1,4 MHz) LTE-M
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Architecture
Present LTE
Architecture
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Architecture
LTE Access
New
baseband
Customer IT
Software
for LTE-M
End Device
Remote
Monitoring
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Spectrum and access
• Licensed Spectrum
• Bandwidth: 700-900 MHz for LTE
• Some resource blocks allocated for IoT on LTE bands
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III. NB-IOT
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Current status
Evolution of LTE-M
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Comparison with LTE-M
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NB-IoT main features and advantages
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Main features
Objectives
• Lower cost than eMTC
• Extended coverage: 164 dB maximum coupling loss or link budget (at
least for standalone) to be compared to GPRS link budget of 144dB and
LTE of 142.7 dB
• Receiver sensitivity = -141 dBm
• Long battery life: 10 years with 5 Watt Hour battery (depending on traffic
and coverage needs)
• Support for massive number of devices: at least 50.000 per cell
Main simplification
• Reduced data rate/bandwidth, mobility support and further protocol
optimizations
3 modes of operation:
• Stand-alone: stand-alone carrier, e.g. spectrum currently used by
GERAN systems as a replacement of one or more GSM carriers
• Guard band: unused resource blocks within a LTE carrier’s guard-band
• In-band: resource blocks within a normal LTE carrier
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Main features
Main PHY features:
• Narrow band support of 180 kHz
• Supports two modes for uplink
Single tone with 15 kHz and/or 3.75 kHz tone spacing
Multiple tone transmissions with 15 kHz tone spacing
• No support of Turbo code for the downlink
• Single transmission mode of SFBC for PBCH, PDSCH, PDCCH
• New narrowband channels: NPSS, NSSS, NPBCH, NPDCCH,
NPDSCH, NPUSCH, NPRACH
Main radio protocol features:
• Single HARQ process
• Only RLC AM mode with simplified status reporting
• Two PDCP options:
SRB 0 and 1 only. No AS security (NAS security is used instead). PDCP
operating in TM.
SRB 0, 1, 2 and one DRB. AS security, which is cached upon RRC
connection release. RRC connection suspend/resume procedures to
maintain AS security context
• Reduced broadcast system information
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Frame and Slot Structure – NB-IoT – 7 symbols per slot
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Transmission bandwidth and delays
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NB-IoT Channels
Frame structure
Physical
Layer
Frame structure
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Physical downlink channels
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Packets transmission on the PUSCH
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Downlink Frame Structure
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NB-IoT Repetitions
Consists on repeating the same 15 kHz subcarrier
transmission several times: spacing.
Achieve extra coverage (up to A transport block test
20 dB compared to GPRS) word (TW) is transmitted
Each repetition is self- on two RUs
decodable
SC is changed for each Each RU is transmitted
transmission to help
over 3 subcarriers and 8
combination
slots
Repetitions are ACK-ed just
once
All channels can use
Repetitions to extend
coverage
DL up to 2048
repetitions
UL up to 128 repetitions
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Physical signals and channels and relationship with LTE
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Peak Data Rates
NDSCH peak data rate achieved with the largest TBS of 680
bits transmitted over 3 ms.
226.7 kb/s peak layer 1 data rate (multitone configuration).
NPUSCH peak data rate achieved with the largest TBS of 1000
bits transmitted over 4 ms.
250 kb/s peak layer 1 data rate (multitone configuration)
and 20 kb/s (single tone configuration).
Peak throughputs of both DL and UL are lower than these
figures when the time offsets between DCI, NPDSCH/NPUSCH,
and HARQ acknowledgment are taken into account.
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Coverage
Maximum coupling loss 20 dB higher than LTE Rel-12.
Coverage extension is achieved by trading off data rate
through increasing the number of repetitions.
Coverage enhancement is also ensured by introducing
single subcarrier NPUSCH transmission and p/2-BPSK
modulation to maintain close to 0 dB PAPR Reduces
the coverage potential issues due to power amplifier
backoff.
NPUSCH with 15 kHz single-tone gives a layer 1 data rate
of approximately 20 b/s when the highest repetition factor
(i.e., 128) and the most robust MCS are applied,
NPDSCH gives a layer 1 data rate of 35 b/s with a
repetition factor 512 and the most robust MCS.
These configurations support close to 170 dB coupling
loss (compared to Rel-12 LTE designed for up to
approximately 142 dB coupling loss).
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Link Budget 15kHz 3.75 kHz
(a) Transmit power (dBm) 23 23
(b) Thermal noise (dBm/Hz) -174 -174
(c) Receiver noise figure (dB) 3 3
(d) Occupied channel bandwidth (Hz) 15 000 3 750
(f) Effective noise power (b)+(c)+10log_10(d) (dBm)
(g) Required SINR (dB) -11.8 -5.7
(h) Receiver sensitivity (c)+(g) (dBm) -141 -141
(i) Maximum coupling loss (a)-(h) 164 164
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Data transmission options
2 possibilities for data transmission between NB-IoT devices and the AS:
1. IP: Depending on the capabilities of the radio module and the
operator, IPv4 and IPv6 are supported. UDP is the common and
recommended transport protocol. On the air interface, TCP is in
supported for NB-IoT (and specified in the 3GPP standard), but not
recommended due to the resulting higher data volume. HTTP and
HTTPS over the air interface cannot be implemented, because they
rely on TCP and require additional data volume for their overhead.
2. Non-IP: If possible, a non-IP based data transmission is recommended
for NB-IoT because it reduces the transmitted data volume. The is
forwarded by the network to the application via IP. Data can only be
sent to one target IP address (server).
Application protocols like MQTT, MQTT-SN, COAP and oneM2M can be
used.
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Data transmission options
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NB-IoT bands
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Capacity
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Enhanced DRX for NB-IOT and eMTC
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Architecture
LTE Access
New
baseband
Customer IT
Software
for NB-IoT
End Device
Remote
Monitoring
43
Spectrum and access
• Designed with a number of deployment options for GSM , WCDMA or LTE
spectrum to achieve spectrum efficiency.
• Use licensed spectrum. Stand-alone operation
Dedicated spectrum.
Ex.: By re-farming GSM channels
In-band operation
Using resource blocks within a normal
LTE carrier
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LTE-M to NB-IoT
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IV. State of Art
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A. Regulation
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Frequency bands of SRDs
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IoT Bands
2.4 GHz
5 GHz
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IOT regulations
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ISM 868MHz Band Plan
Duty cycle < 1% < 0.1% < 0.1% < 0.1% < 1% < 10% < 10% Up to 100%
250 kHz
600 kHz 500 kHz 500 mW
25 mW 25 mW 100 kHz 100 kHz 600 kHz
100 kHz
10 mW 10 mW 25 mW
5 mW 300 kHz, 5 mW
868 868.6 868.7 869.2 869.4 869.65 869.7 868.6 870
Non specific devices MHz
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B. Prices
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NB-IoT pricing in Deutsche Telekom
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SK Telecom (South Korea) LoRaWan prices
SK Telecom completed a nationwide LTE-M rollout in March 2017 but only LoRaWAN
services are available.
Price plans for LoRaWAN-based IoT services:
1. 350 won ($0.30) per month per device for a 100kb allocation
2. 2,000 won ($1.77) for a 100MB allocation.
Discounts available for multiple lines, ranging from 2% for those using 500 lines for 10%
for those using 10,000 lines. Excess data will be charged at 0.005 won per 0.5KB.
LoRa plans cost just a tenth of the price of its LTE-based IoT services.
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UnaBiz (Singapore) Sigfox prices
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AT&T LTE-M services pricing
Price/End-
Country Operator Technology Conditions (/end-device/month)
device/month
US$ 1.60 85 KB
Germany DT NB-IoT
US$ 2.40 “ + Cloud
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LoRaWAN end-devices prices
Interface UART
Stack / MAC LoRaWAN
Stack implementation Microchip proprietary
$14.27 @ single unit
Price
$10.90 @ 1000 units
Interface UART
Stack / MAC LoRaWAN
Stack implementation proprietary MultiTech
Form factor XBee compatible
Price ~$30.00 @ single unit
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NB-IoT end-devices prices
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LTE-M end-devices prices
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C. Forecasts
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Main technologies for LPWANs
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2017 Facts
Most of the commercial NB-IoT contracts were in China.
Several operators launched LTE-M in 2017, including AT&T,
Telstra and Verizon.
The LTE-M share: less than 1% but this will grow significantly
during the forecast period to reach 19% by 2026.
LTE-M is a substitute for some 2G telematics applications in the
automotive and fleet sectors, and has been adopted first by
many of those operators that have decommissioned their 2G
networks.
Analysys Mason: 3G and 4G will capture a 27% market share in
2026
5G will constitute just over 1% of the total connections in
2026, but this will be the average across all application groups.
For automotive and embedded SIMs specifically, 5G will have a
4% share of the total connections
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Sigfox
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Forecasts in 2026
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LoRa networks
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NB-IoT
China (June 2018): the government announced a policy with goals of
reaching 600 million NB-IoT nodes by 2020.
Will dominate IoT, but 3G and 4G cellular technologies, followed by
LTE-M
Analysys Mason: overall number of connections will reach 5.1 billion in
2026, of these, 1.6 billion will use 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G cellular
connections and 3.5 billion will use low-power wireless access (LPWA)
including NB-IoT and LTE-M.
No dominant LPWA technology
LTE-M connections, which are largely complementary to those using
NB-IoT, will grow at 131% a year to 9 million
Other LPWA connections that are more direct substitutes for NB-IoT
will grow in number to 617 million, driven by new network operators
such as Thinxtra as well as traditional players such as Orange
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Some issues with NB-IoT
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Technologies evolution 2015-2017
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Chipset Shipments Evolution
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Evolution of LPWA Modules Sales
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Devices prices (2017)
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2018 Connections Status
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Future of IoT connectivity by network type across the world
NB-IoT will be the dominant network for IoT in 2026 (Analysys Mason)
2017-2026 IoT standards evolution
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2025 forecasts
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Share of LPWAN Connections in 2026
NB-IoT will have 38% of total connections in 2026, backed by Chinese market
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Forecasts in 2026
China will dominate the market by 2026 with 1.1 billion connections
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Thank you!
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