UMTS - Link Budget and Coverage Analysis
UMTS - Link Budget and Coverage Analysis
4 Corner reflector
Monopole:
Monopole: Monopole
antennas consist of a single Rubber Ducky antenna
Quarter-wave
conductor such as a metal rod, whip antenna on UHF 446 MHz walkie
mounted over the ground or an talkie with rubber cover
removed.
artificial conducting surface (a so-
called ground plane).
1. Whip –
2. Rubber Ducky –
3. Ground plane –
4. Mast radiator
VHF ground plane
antenna
Mast radiator antenna
5 of medium wave AM radio
station,
Array
7
ANTENNA CHARACTERISTICS:
• Antenna
radiation Polarization
patterns
8
ELEMENTS OF RADIATION PATTERN
9
UMTS Planning Process
Why Plan a Network?
The need to have a good network plan is imperative in order to address issues relating
to the coverage and capacity requirements
It must allow for a sufficient and flexible network expansion without major changes to
the existing site. Recall UMTS network deployment!
When planning a UMTS network the coverage and the capacity go hand in hand i.e.
they have to be planned with the appropriate guidelines
In any wireless system there is a common goal i.e. to maximize coverage and capacity
and still maintain a balance with the key performance indicators (KPI)
DIMENSIONNING
OPTIMIZATION AND
TRAFFIC DETAILED PLANNING
MONITORING
AREA SITE CONFIGURATION
TRAFIC COVERAGE
COVERAGE THRESHOLD COVERAGE THRESHOLD
VERIFICATION
Environmental factors:
i. the area topography;
ii. rural, suburban and urban factors e.g. indoor
and outdoor differences caused by buildings;
iii. frequency range;
iv. the location of cities, roads
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COVERAGE PLANNING AND DIMENSION
13
Sunday, January 14, 2018
RF Analysis: Coverage
19
Link Budget Calculations
The radio link budget aims to calculate the cell coverage area.
One of the required parameters is radio wave propagation to estimate the propagation
loss between the transmitter and the receiver.
The other required parameters are the transmission power, antenna gain, cable losses,
receiver sensitivity and margins, as shown in Figure
Basic rule:
Add all gains separately
Add all losses separately
In UL direction
i. MS is the transmitter and BTS is the receiver
ii. Use TX power of the MS and receiver sensitivity (BTS RS) of the BTS
iii. Add all gains (including the diversity gain) to the TX power
iv. Subtract all losses (excluding the combiner) from (iii)
v. Subtract the BTS RS to get the maximum path loss in (dB) from (iv)
In DL direction
i. BTS is the transmitter and MS is the receiver
ii. Use TX power of the BTS and receiver sensitivity (MS RS) of the MS
iii. Add all gains (excluding the diversity gain) to the TX power
iv. Subtract all losses (including the combiner) from (iii)
v. Subtract the MS RS to get the maximum path loss in (dB) (iv)
Note: The Max Path loss in most cases is the same in UL/DL direction
22 but NOT necessary
UMTS LINK BUDGET PARAMETERS
UE Parameters Value Node B Parameters Value
Mobile Tx Power 21 dBm Thermal Noise -174 dBm/Hz
Antenna Gain 0 dBi Antenna Gain 19.5 dBi, 18.9 dBi
Body Loss 3 dB Interference Margin 3 dB
In car loss 8 dB Base station Noise figure 7 dB
Soft handover gain 3 dB Fast Fading Margin 3 dB
E.I.R.P 13 dBm
Slow Fading Margin 4.3 dB
GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS Noise rise Limit 3 dB
Model number HBX-3319DS-VTM Cable loss 2 dB
DualPol antenna 1710-2180MHz Required Eb/No 5.0 dB
Receiver Noise power -108.2 dBm
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Building
Direct Signal
hb Reflected Signal
Diffracted
Signal hm
d
Transmitter Receiver
28
Free-space Propagation
hb
hm
Transmitter Distance d
Receiver
29
Small scale fading (Rayleigh)
Small-scale (fading) models characterize the rapid fluctuations of the received signal strength
over very short travel distance or short time duration
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Log normal fading: Path Loss
170
160
150
140
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Distance (Km)
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