LTE Reference Sensitivity Calculation, How it depends on SNR, why throughput decrease at the Cell edge
LTE Reference Sensitivity Calculation, How it depends on SNR, why throughput decrease at the Cell edge
The LTE reference sensitivity power level is the minimum mean power received at the antenna
connector at which a throughput shall be ≥ 95% of the maximum throughput for a specified reference
measurement channel.
In layman’s terms, it means that the minimum power level of LTE signal that we apply at the antenna
connector of base station / UE, and till the throughput of that device is greater than or equal to 95%,
is known as reference sensitivity level.
Required SNR
Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) is the SNR is defined as the ratio of signal power to the noise power,
often expressed in decibels. Here the Required SNR means that minimum level of SNR required to
decode the type of LTE signal. LTE signal could be of different Code rate / Modulation etc. So for
each type of LTE signal, required SNR may vary.
As one can see in the below table, the SNR required for different type of LTE signal.
Thermal Noise
Johnson–Nyquist noise (sometimes thermal, Johnson or Nyquist noise) is unavoidable, and
generated by the random thermal motion of charge carriers (usually electrons), inside an electrical
conductor, which happens regardless of any applied voltage.
Thermal noise is approximately white, meaning that its power spectral density is nearly equal
throughout the frequency spectrum.
Noise Figure
Noise figure (NF) is a measure of degradation of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), caused by
components in a signal chain. It is a number by which the performance of an amplifier or a radio
receiver can be specified, with lower values indicating better performance.
NF is the ratio of input SNR to the output SNR of a device or receiver chain. It is expressed in dB.
Suppose, LTE signal is 5MHz of bandwidth, with QPSK modulation and Code rate of 1/3.
= -174 + 5 + 67 -1
= -103dBm
Now if you increase the modulation to be 16QAM with code rate of 2/3, the required SNR becomes
11.3dB (as per table in SNR section).
= -90.7dBm
As we see, with higher modulation, the sensitivity level decreases. So at the cell
edges, where already signal level is low, thus UEs are assigned lower
modulations to maintain the connectivity with the base station and thus with lower
modulation at the cell edges, the throughput of UE also decreases.
This is a very basic calculation of reference sensitivity. In actual system, there are many other
factors that will be affecting the reference sensitivity levels, which we will be discussing in coming
posts.