I. Basic - Telephony PDF
I. Basic - Telephony PDF
I. Basic Telephony
1. Definition and Concept
If no more than 6 people want to talk simultaneously between the two towns
a number as low as 6 can be selected.
Economics has mandated that we install the minimum number of connecting
telephone lines from the 1st town to the 2nd to serve the calling needs
between two towns.
The telephone lines connecting one telephone switch or exchange with
another are called trunks (in North America) and junctions (in Europe).
The telephone lines connecting a subscriber to the switch or exchange that
serves the subscriber are called lines, subscriber lines, or loops.
1. Calling rate: the number of times a route or traffic path is used per unit of
time, or more properly defined, the call intensity per traffic path during the
busy hour.
2. Holding time: the duration of occupancy of a traffic path by a call, or
sometimes the average duration of occupancy of one or more paths by calls.
A traffic path is a channel, time slot, frequency band, line , trunk, switch or
circuit over which individual communications pass in sequence.
Carried traffic is the volume of traffic actually carried by a switch.
Offered traffic is the volume of traffic offered to a switch.
Figure 1.1 Bar chart of the traffic intensity over a typical working day
(United States, mixed business and residence)
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A CxT
Where C denotes the number of calls originated during a period of 1 h and
T is the average holding time, usually given in hours.
A is dimensionless unit because we are multiplying calls/hour by hour/call.
Example: Suppose that the average holding time is 2.5 minutes and the
calling rate in the BH for a particular day is 237.
The traffic flow (A) would then be 237 x 2.5 = 592.5 call-minutes (Cm) or
2592.5/60, or about 9.87 call-hours (Ch).
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I TU = 1 E (Erlang) (numerically)
The equated busy hour call (EBHC) is a European unit of traffic intensity.
One EBHC is the average intensity in one or more traffic paths occupied in the
BH by one 2-min call or an aggregate duration of 2 min.
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Traffic measurements used for long-term network planning are usually based on
the traffic in the busy hour (BH), which is usually determined based on
observations and studies.
The traditional traffic measurements on trunks during a measurement interval
are:
Peg count - calls offered
Usage traffiic (CCS or Erlangs) carried
Overflow call encountering all trunks busy
From these measurements, the blocking probability and mean traffic load
carried by the trunk group can be calculated.
Traffic measurements for short-term management purpose are usually
concerned with detecting network congestion.
Calls offered, peg count and overflow count can be used to calculate attempts
per circuit per hour (ACH) and connections per circuit per hour (CCH), with
these measurements being calculated over very short time periods (e.g., 10-min
intervals).
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A typical grade of service is p=0.01 (an average of 1 call in 100 will be blocked
or lost during the BH).
Grade of Service, a term in the Erlang formula, is more accurately defined as the
probability of blockage.
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Example: If we know that there are 354 seizures (lines connected for service)
and 6 blocked calls (lost calls) during the BH, what is Grade of Service?
Grade of Service
354 6 360
Or
p 0.017
The average Grade of service for a network may be obtained by adding the
grade of service contributed by each constituent switch, switching network, or
trunk group.
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The Reference Data for Radio Engineers states that the Grade of Service
provided by a particular group of trunks or circuits of specified size and carrying
a specified traffic intensity is the probability that a call offered to the group will
find available trunks already occupied on first attempt.
That probability depends on a number of factors, the most important of which
are:
1. The distribution in time and duration of offered traffic (e.g., random or
periodic arrival and constant or exponentially distributed holding time).
2. The number of traffic sources [limited or high (infinite)]
3. The availability of trunks in a group to traffic sources (full or restricted
availability)
4. The manner in which lost calls are handled.
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Probability-Distribution Curves
Telephone call originations in any particular are random in nature.
The arrival of calls is found fit the Poisson distribution.
Most of common probability-distribution curves are two parameters curves:
mean and variance.
The standard deviation s of a sample n observations x1 , x2 ,, xn is
1 n
2
s
(
x
x
)
i
n 1 i 1
Where x is the mean value of x1 , x2 ,, xn
Figure 1.2 A normal
distribution curves showing
the mean and the standard
deviation
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Rough: when >1, Rough traffic tends to have higher peak than random or
smooth traffic.
For a given grade of service, more circuits are required for rough traffic
because of the greater spread of the distribution curve (greater dispersion).
Smooth: when <1, Smooth traffic behaves like random traffic that has been
filtered.
The filter is the local exchange, assume that the local exchange has not
been over-dimensioned.
The local exchange looking out at its subscribers sees call arrivals as
random traffic.
The smooth traffic is the traffic on the local exchange outlets.
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n x
B( x) p (1 p) n x
x
x k 1 x
q (1 q) k
R( x, k , q)
k 1
Where R is the probability of finding x calls in progress for the parameters k and
q.
Rough traffic is used in dimensioning toll trunks with alternative routing.
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m x m
P( x)
e ; x 0, 1, 2,...
x!
For most of our discussion, we consider call-holding times to have a negative
exponential distribution in the form
P e t h
Where t/h is the average holding time and P is the probability of a call lasting
longer than t, some arbitrary time interval.
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Figure 1.3 Traffic probability distributions: smooth, random and rough traffic.
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An n!
EB
1 A A2 2! An n!
Where n is the number of trunks or servicing channels,
A is the mean of the offered traffic,
EB is the grade of service using the Erlang B formula.
This formula assumes the following:
Traffic originates from an infinite number of sources.
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X m
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Ax
Pe
x n x!
A
An n!
n
x
A
x!
x 0
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An n
P n 1 nx ! n n A
A
A n
n! n A
x 0 x!
s A
P
s 1 s 1
s 1 A
x n x s A
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Example 4.1.1: How many users can be supported for a 0.5% blocking
probability for the following number of trunked channels (C) in a blocked calls
system?
(a)1, (b) 5, (c) 10, (d) 20, (e) 100.
By using the relation A UAu, where U is the number of users and Au is the
traffic per user, we can obtain the total number of users that can be supported
in the system.
(a) Given C=1, Au =0.1, GoS=0.005, from Fig.2.2.1(a), we obtain A=0.005.
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Solution: (cont.)
(b) Given C=5, Au =0.1, GoS=0.005, from Erlang Table, we obtain A=1.132.
Therefore, total number of users, U=A/Au = 1.132/0.1 = 11 users.
(c) Given C=10, Au =0.1, GoS=0.005, from Erlang Table, we obtain A=3.961.
(e) Given C=100, Au =0.1, GoS=0.005, from Erlang Table, we obtain A=80.91.
Therefore, total number of users, U=A/Au = 80.91/0.1 = 809 users.
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Solution:
System A
Given : Probability of blocking = 2% =0.02
Number of channels per cell used in the system, C=19
Traffic intensity per user, Au H 2 x(3 / 60) 0.1 Erlangs,
where is the average call rate and H is the average call duration.
For GoS =0.02, and C = 19, from the Erlang B chart,
the total carried traffic, A, is obtained as 12.33 Erlangs.
Therefore, the number of users that can be supported per cell is
U=A/Au =12.33/0.1 = 123.
Since there are 394 cells, the total number of subscribers that can be
supported by system A is equal to 123 x 394 = 48,462.
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Solution: (cont.)
System B
Given : Probability of blocking = 2% =0.02
Number of channels per cell used in the system, C=57
Traffic intensity per user, Au H 2 x(3 / 60) 0.1 Erlangs
For GoS =0.02, and C = 57, from the Erlang B chart,
the total carried traffic, A, is obtained as 46.82 Erlangs.
Therefore, the number of users that can be supported per cell is
U=A/Au =46.82/0.1 = 468.
Since there are 98 cells, the total number of subscribers that can be supported
by system B is equal to 468 x 98 = 45,864.
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Solution: (cont.)
System C
Given : Probability of blocking = 2% =0.02
Number of channels per cell used in the system, C=100
Traffic intensity per user, Au H 2 x(3 / 60) 0.1 Erlangs
For GoS =0.02, and C = 100, from the Erlang B chart,
the total carried traffic, A, is obtained as 87.97 Erlangs.
Therefore, the number of users that can be supported per cell is
U=A/Au =87.97/0.1 = 879.
Since there are 49 cells, the total number of subscribers that can be supported
by system C is equal to 879 x 49 = 43,071.
Therefore, total number of cellular subscribers that can be supported by these
three systems are 48,462+45,864+43,071 = 137,397 users.
Since there are 2 million residents in the given urban area,
System As market penetration = 48,462/2,000,000 = 2.42%
System Bs market penetration = 45,864/2,000,000 = 2.29%
System Cs market penetration = 43,071/2,000,000 = 2.15%
Total market penetration of the three systems = 6.87%
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Example 4.1.3: A Hexagonal cell within 4-cell system has a radius of 1.387 km.
A total of 60 channels are used within the entire system.
If the load per user is 0.029 Erlangs, and 1 call/hour,
compute the following for an Erlang C system that has a 5% probability of a
delayed call:
(a) How many users per square kilometer will this system support?
Given that the area covered per cell is 2.5981R 2 where R is the radius of a cell.
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Solution:
Given: Cell radius, R=1.387 km,
2
Area covered per cell is 2.5981x(1.387) 5 sq.km.
Number of cells per cluster = 4
Total number of channels = 60
Therefore, number of channels per cell = 60/4 = 15 channels.
From Erlang C chart, for 5% probability of delay with C= 15,
traffic intensity = 9.044 Erlangs.
Therefore, number of users = total traffic intensity/traffic per user
= 9.044/0.029 = 311 users
=311 users/5 sq.km = 62 users/sq.km
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Service requests that cannot be satisfied immediately are placed in a queue and
served on a first-in, first-out (FIFO) basis.
Server-pool traffic is directly related to offered traffic, server holding time and
call-attempt factor and is inversely related to call-holding time.
This is expressed as follows:
AS
Where
AT .TS .C
TC
Total traffic served refers to the total offered traffic that requires the services
of the specific server pool for some portion of the call.
For example, a dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) receiver pool is
dimensioned to serve only the DTMF tone-dialing portion of total switch traffic
generated by DTMF signaling resources.
The mean server-holding time is the arithmetic average of all server-holding
times for the specific server pool.
We can calculate mean server-holding time for calls with different holdingtime characteristics using the following equation:
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Of digits
Received
Or Sent
10
11
3.7
8.3
12.8
17.6
19.1
2.3
5.2
8.1
11.0
12.0
Incoming MF receiver
1.0
1.4
1.8
2.2
2.3
Outgoing MF sender
1.5
1.9
2.3
2.8
3.0
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Call-attempt factors are dimensionless numbers that adjust offered traffic intensity
to compensate for call attempts that do not result in complete calls.
Therefore, call-attempt factors are inversely proportional to the fraction of
completed calls as defined in the following equation:
C 1 k
Where C = call-attempt factor (dimensionless)
k = fraction of calls completed (decimal fraction)
Call-attempt Disposition
Percentage
70.7
12.7
10.1
2.6
1.9
1.6
0.4
1
1
1.414
k 0.707
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Here, the overflow traffic is the lost traffic in the Erlang B calculations.
Let M be the mean value of that overflow and A be the random traffic offered
to a group of n circuits (trunks). Then
A
V M 1 M
When the overflow traffic from several sources is combined and offered to a
single 2nd (or 3rd, 4th , etc.) choice of a group of circuits, both the mean and
the variance of the combined traffic are the arithmetic sums of the means and
variances of the contributors.
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A might house the point of presence (POP) in the U.S. network. B is a local exchange.
C may be a satellite exchange or a concentrator.
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8. Quality of Service
Quality of Service appears at the outset to be an intangible concept.
Quality of service also means how happy the telephone company (or other
common carrier) is keeping the customer.
Quality of Service in telephone system can be
Correctness of billing
Reasonable cost to customer of service
Responsiveness to servicing requests
Responsiveness and courtesy of operators
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