Basics Handover 1
Basics Handover 1
in
Mobile systems
Agenda
• Introduction
• Handover theory
• GSM Handover
• UMTS Handover
• Inter RAT Handover
• Handover and performance
Introduction
What is Handover (Handoff)?
• Changing the point of connection while communicating
• In another words:
When a mobile user travels from one area of
coverage or cell to another cell within a call’s duration
the call should be transferred to the new cell’s base
station
Why handover is needed?
• Mobility
• User preferences
Introduction – Use Case 1
BSC
1.
2.
4. Connectout
Moving to BS1
3. Conversation BS1’s
and start
ofended
BS2’s – stillconversation
coveragewithin
– connect BS2
BS3’s coverage
to BS3
Handover in GSM
MSC
Four types of handover
Intra BTS handover BSC
MSC
Intra-BSC handover
BSC BSC
Inter-BSC handover
Inter-MSC handover
2- Blind handover: This form of handover occurs when the base station
hands off the UE by passing it the details of the new cell to the UE
without linking to it and setting the timing, etc of the mobile for the
new cell. In this mode, the network selects what it believes to be the
optimum GSM based station. The UE first locates the broadcast
channel of the new cell, gains timing synchronisation and then carries
out non-synchronised intercell handover.
GSM to UMTS
• Handover from GSM to UMTS : This form of handover is supported
within GSM and a "neighbour list" was established to enable this occur
easily. As the GSM / 2G network is normally more extensive than the 3G
network, this type of handover does not normally occur when the UE leaves
a coverage area and must quickly find a new base station to maintain contact.
The handover from GSM to UMTS occurs to provide an improvement in
performance and can normally take place only when the conditions are right.
The neighbour list will inform the UE when this may happen.
Handoff and performance
• Handoffs are expensive to execute, so unnecessary handoffs should
be avoided.
• If the handoff criteria are not chosen appropriately, then in the
overlapping region between the two BS coverage area boundaries,
the call might be handed back and forth several times between them.
• If the criteria are too conservative, then the call may be lost before
the handoff can take place.
• The handoff decision-making criteria become even more critical
with the evolution to smaller cell sizes, which is happening to
increase the capacity of systems and to reduce power requirements of
MSs.
• Unreliable and inefficient handoff procedures will reduce the quality
and reliability of the system.
Handoff Failures
• The reason of handoff failures
• No channel is available on selected BS.
• Handoff is denied by the network for reasons such as
lack of resources. For example, no bridge or no
suitable channel card; the MS has exceeded some limit
on the number of handoffs that may be attempted in
some period of time.
• It takes the network too long to set up the handoff after
it has been initiated.
• The target link fails in some way during the execution
of handoff.
Q&A
Thank You