Multiple Access Techniques
Multiple Access Techniques
pdf
(http://www.tgpcet.com/ECE-NOTES/8/MOBILE%20COMMUNICATION.pdf)
FDMA/FDD in AMPS
The first U.S. analog cellular system, AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone System) is based
on FDMA/FDD.
A single user occupies a single channel while the call is in progress, and the single
channel is actually two simplex channels which are frequency duplexed with a 45 MHz
split.
When a call is completed or when a handoff occurs the channel is vacated so that
another mobile subscriber may use it.
Multiple or simultaneous users are accommodated in AMPS by giving each user a
unique signal.
Voice signals are sent on the forward channel from the base station to the mobile unit,
and on the reverse channel from the mobile unit to the base station.
In AMPS, analog narrowband frequency modulation (NBFM) is used to modulate the
carrier.
FDMA/TDD in CT2
Using FDMA, CT2 system splits the available bandwidth into radio channels in the
assigned frequency domain.
In the initial call setup, the handset scans the available channels and locks on to an
unoccupied channel for the duration of the call.
Using TDD(Time Division Duplexing ), the call is split into time blocks that alternate
between transmitting and receiving.
FDMA and Near-Far Problem
The near-far problem is one of detecting or filtering out a weaker signal amongst
stronger signals.
The near-far problem is particularly difficult in CDMA systems where transmitters
share transmission frequencies and transmission time.
In contrast, FDMA and TDMA systems are less vulnerable. FDMA systems offer
different kinds of solutions to near-far challenge.
Here, the worst case to consider is recovery of a weak signal in a frequency slot next to
strong signal.
Since both signals are present simultaneously as a composite at the input of a gain stage,
the gain is set according to the level of the stronger signal; the weak signal could be lost
in the noise floor. Even if subsequent stages have a low enough noise floor to provide
TDMA/FDD in GSM
GSM is widely used in Europe and other parts of the world. GSM uses a variation of
TDMA along with FDD.
GSM digitizes and compresses data, then sends it down a channel with two other
streams of user data, each in its
In CDMA, self-interference arises from the presence of delayed replicas of signal due
to multipath.
The delays cause the spreading sequences of the different users to lose their
orthogonality, as by design they are orthogonal only at zero phase offset.
Hence in despreading a given user’s waveform, nonzero contributions to that user’s
signal arise from the transmissions of the other users in the network.
This is distinct from both TDMA and FDMA, wherein for reasonable time or frequency
guardbands, respectively, orthogonality of the received signals can be preserved.