Lte Course
Lte Course
LTE stands for Long Term Evolution and it was started as a project in 2004 by telecommunication body
known as the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). SAE (System Architecture Evolution) is the
corresponding evolution of the GPRS/3G packet core network evolution. The term LTE is typically used
to represent both LTE and SAE.
LTE evolved from an earlier 3GPP system known as the Universal Mobile Telecommunication System
(UMTS), which in turn evolved from the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM). Even related
specifications were formally known as the evolved UMTS terrestrial radio access (E-UTRA) and evolved
UMTS terrestrial radio access network (E-UTRAN). First version of LTE was documented in Release 8 of
the 3GPP specifications.
A rapid increase of mobile data usage and emergence of new applications such as MMOG (Multimedia
Online Gaming), mobile TV, Web 2.0, streaming contents have motivated the 3rd Generation
Partnership Project (3GPP) to work on the Long-Term Evolution (LTE) on the way towards fourth-
generation mobile.
The main goal of LTE is to provide a high data rate, low latency and packet optimized radioaccess
technology supporting flexible bandwidth deployments. Same time its network architecture has been
designed with the goal to support packet-switched traffic with seamless mobility and great quality of
service.
LTE Evolution
Year Event
Advantages of LTE
High throughput: High data rates can be achieved in both downlink as well as uplink. This causes
high throughput.
Low latency: Time required to connect to the network is in range of a few hundred milliseconds
and power saving states can now be entered and exited very quickly.
FDD and TDD in the same platform: Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) and Time Division Duplex
(TDD), both schemes can be used on same platform.
Superior end-user experience: Optimized signaling for connection establishment and other air
interface and mobility management procedures have further improved the user experience.
Reduced latency (to 10 ms) for better user experience.
Seamless Connection: LTE will also support seamless connection to existing networks such as
GSM, CDMA and WCDMA.
Plug and play: The user does not have to manually install drivers for the device. Instead system
automatically recognizes the device, loads new drivers for the hardware if needed, and begins to
work with the newly connected device.
Simple architecture: Because of Simple architecture low operating expenditure (OPEX).
LTE – QoS
LTE architecture supports hard QoS, with end-to-end quality of service and guaranteed bit rate (GBR)
for radio bearers. Just as Ethernet and the internet have different types of QoS, for example, various
levels of QoS can be applied to LTE traffic for different applications. Because the LTE MAC is fully
scheduled, QoS is a natural fit.
Evolved Packet System (EPS) bearers provide one-to-one correspondence with RLC radio bearers and
provide support for Traffic Flow Templates (TFT). There are four types of EPS bearers:
Parameters Description
Transmission Bandwidth 6
Configuration NRB : (1 resource block 15
= 180kHz in 1ms TTI ) 25
50
75
100
MIMO UL: 1 x 2, 1 x 4
(Multiple Input Multiple Output) DL: 2 x 2, 4 x 2, 4 x 4
The high-level network architecture of LTE is comprised of following three main components:
The User Equipment (UE).
The Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (E-UTRAN).
The Evolved Packet Core (EPC).
The evolved packet core communicates with packet data networks in the outside world such as the
internet, private corporate networks or the IP multimedia subsystem. The interfaces between the
different parts of the system are denoted Uu, S1 and SGi as shown below:
A USIM stores user-specific data very similar to 3G SIM card. This keeps information about the user’s
phone number, home network identity and security keys etc.
LTE Mobile communicates with just one base station and one cell at a time and there are following two
main functions supported by eNB:
The eBN sends and receives radio transmissions to all the mobiles using the analogue and digital
signal processing functions of the LTE air interface.
The eNB controls the low-level operation of all its mobiles, by sending them signalling messages
such as handover commands.
Each eBN connects with the EPC by means of the S1 interface and it can also be connected to nearby
base stations by the X2 interface, which is mainly used for signalling and packet forwarding during
handover.
A home eNB (HeNB) is a base station that has been purchased by a user to provide femtocell coverage
within the home. A home eNB belongs to a closed subscriber group (CSG) and can only be accessed by
mobiles with a USIM that also belongs to the closed subscriber group.
Below is a brief description of each of the components shown in the above architecture:
The Home Subscriber Server (HSS) component has been carried forward from UMTS and GSM and is
a central database that contains information about all the network operator’s subscribers.
The Packet Data Network (PDN) Gateway (P-GW) communicates with the outside world ie. packet
data networks PDN, using SGi interface. Each packet data network is identified by an access point
name (APN). The PDN gateway has the same role as the GPRS support node (GGSN) and the serving
GPRS support node (SGSN) with UMTS and GSM.
The serving gateway (S-GW) acts as a router, and forwards data between the base station and the
PDN gateway.
The mobility management entity (MME) controls the high-level operation of the mobile by means of
signalling messages and Home Subscriber Server (HSS).
The Policy Control and Charging Rules Function (PCRF) is a component which is not shown in the
above diagram but it is responsible for policy control decision-making, as well as for controlling the
flow-based charging functionalities in the Policy Control Enforcement Function (PCEF), which resides
in the P-GW.
The interface between the serving and PDN gateways is known as S5/S8. This has two slightly different
implementations, namely S5 if the two devices are in the same network, and S8 if they are in different
networks.
2G/3G LTE
SGSN/PDSN-FA S-GW
GGSN/PDSN-HA PDN-GW
HLR/AAA HSS
VLR MME
SS7-MAP/ANSI-41/RADIUS Diameter
MIP PMIP
A network run by one operator in one country is known as a Public Land Mobile Network (PLMN) and
when a subscribed user uses his operator’s PLMN then it is said Home-PLMN but roaming allows users
to move outside their home network and using the resources from other operator’s network. This other
network is called Visited-PLMN.
A roaming user is connected to the E-UTRAN, MME and S-GW of the visited LTE network. However,
LTE/SAE allows the P-GW of either the visited or the home network to be used, as shown in below:
The home network’s P-GW allows the user to access the home operator’s services even while in a
visited network. A P-GW in the visited network allows a “local breakout” to the Internet in the visited
network.
The interface between the serving and PDN gateways is known as S5/S8. This has two slightly different
implementations, namely S5 if the two devices are in the same network, and S8 if they are in different
networks. For mobiles that are not roaming, the serving and PDN gateways can be integrated into a
single device, so that the S5/S8 interface vanishes altogether.
Prepaid Charging – The CAMEL standard, which enables prepaid services in 3G, is not supported in
LTE; therefore, prepaid customer information must be routed back to the home network as opposed
to being handled by the local visited network. As a result, operators must rely on new accounting
flows to access prepaid customer data, such as through their P-Gateways in both IMS and non-IMS
environments or via their CSCF in an IMS environment.
Postpaid Charging – Postpaid data-usage charging works the same in LTE as it does in 3G, using
versions TAP 3.11 or 3.12. With local breakout of IMS services, TAP 3.12 is required.
Operators do not have the same amount of visibility into subscriber activities as they do in home-
routing scenarios in case of local breakout scenarios because subscriber-data sessions are kept within
the visited network; therefore, in order for the home operator to capture real-time information on both
pre- and postpaid customers, it must establish a Diameter interface between charging systems and
the visited network’s P-Gateway.
In case of local breakout of ims services scenario, the visited network creates call detail records (CDRs)
from the S-Gateway(s), however, these CDRs do not contain all of the information required to create a
TAP 3.12 mobile session or messaging event record for the service usage. As a result, operators must
correlate the core data network CDRs with the IMS CDRs to create TAP records.
An LTE network area is divided into three different types of geographical areas explained below:
This is an area through which the mobile can move without a change of serving MME.
Every MME pool area is controlled by one or more MMEs on the network.
Thus an LTE network will comprise of many MME pool areas, many S-GW service areas and lots of
tracking areas.
The physical cell identity, which is a number from 0 to 503 and it distinguishes a cell from its
immediate neighbours.
The M temporary mobile subscriber identity (M-TMSI) identifies a mobile to its serving MME. Adding the
MME code in M-TMSI results in a S temporary mobile subscriber identity (S-TMSI), which identifies the
mobile within an MME pool area.
Finally adding the MME group identity and the PLMN identity with S-TMSI results in the Globally Unique
Temporary Identity (GUTI).
The radio protocol architecture for LTE can be separated into control plane architecture and user
plane architecture as shown below:
At user plane side, the application creates data packets that are processed by protocols such as TCP,
UDP and IP, while in the control plane, the radio resource control (RRC) protocol writes the signalling
messages that are exchanged between the base station and the mobile. In both cases, the information
is processed by the packet data convergence protocol (PDCP), the radio link control (RLC) protocol and
the medium access control (MAC) protocol, before being passed to the physical layer for transmission.
User Plane
The user plane protocol stack between the e-Node B and UE consists of the following sub-layers:
PDCP (Packet Data Convergence Protocol)
RLC (radio Link Control)
Medium Access Control (MAC)
On the user plane, packets in the core network (EPC) are encapsulated in a specific EPC protocol and
tunneled between the P-GW and the eNodeB. Different tunneling protocols are used depending on the
interface. GPRS Tunneling Protocol (GTP) is used on the S1 interface between the eNodeB and S-GW
and on the S5/S8 interface between the S-GW and P-GW.
Packets received by a layer are called Service Data Unit (SDU) while the packet output of a layer is
referred to by Protocol Data Unit (PDU) and IP packets at user plane flow from top to bottom layers.
Control Plane
The control plane includes additionally the Radio Resource Control layer (RRC) which is responsible for
configuring the lower layers.
The Control Plane handles radio-specific functionality which depends on the state of the user
equipment which includes two states: idle or connected.
Mode Description
Idle The user equipment camps on a cell after a cell selection or reselection
process where factors like radio link quality, cell status and radio access
technology are considered. The UE also monitors a paging channel to detect
incoming calls and acquire system information. In this mode, control plane
protocols include cell selection and reselection procedures.
Connected The UE supplies the E-UTRAN with downlink channel quality and neighbour
cell information to enable the E-UTRAN to select the most suitable cell for
the UE. In this case, control plane protocol includes the Radio Link Control
(RRC) protocol.
The protocol stack for the control plane between the UE and MME is shown below. The grey region of
the stack indicates the access stratum (AS) protocols. The lower layers perform the same functions as
for the user plane with the exception that there is no header compression function for the control
plane.
Let’s have a close look at all the layers available in E-UTRAN Protocol Stack which we have seen in
previous chapter. Below is a more ellaborated diagram of E-UTRAN Protocol Stack:
Physical Layer (Layer 1)
Physical Layer carries all information from the MAC transport channels over the air interface. Takes
care of the link adaptation (AMC), power control, cell search (for initial synchronization and handover
purposes) and other measurements (inside the LTE system and between systems) for the RRC layer.
RLC Layer is responsible for transfer of upper layer PDUs, error correction through ARQ (Only for AM
data transfer), Concatenation, segmentation and reassembly of RLC SDUs (Only for UM and AM data
transfer).
RLC is also responsible for re-segmentation of RLC data PDUs (Only for AM data transfer), reordering of
RLC data PDUs (Only for UM and AM data transfer), duplicate detection (Only for UM and AM data
transfer), RLC SDU discard (Only for UM and AM data transfer), RLC re-establishment, and protocol
error detection (Only for AM data transfer).
NAS protocols support the mobility of the UE and the session management procedures to establish and
maintain IP connectivity between the UE and a PDN GW.
LTE Layers Data Flow
Below is a logical digram of E-UTRAN Protocol layers with a depiction of data flow through various
layers:
Packets received by a layer are called Service Data Unit (SDU) while the packet output of a layer is
referred to by Protocol Data Unit (PDU). Let’s see the flow of data from top to bottom:
IP Layer submits PDCP SDUs (IP Packets) to the PDCP layer. PDCP layer does header compression
and adds PDCP header to these PDCP SDUs. PDCP Layer submits PDCP PDUs (RLC SDUs) to RLC
layer.PDCP Header Compression : PDCP removes IP header (Minimum 20 bytes) from PDU, and
adds Token of 1-4 bytes. Which provides a tremendous savings in the amount of header that would
otherwise have to go over the air.
RLC layer does segmentation of these SDUS to make the RLC PDUs. RLC adds header based on RLC
mode of operation. RLC submits these RLC PDUs (MAC SDUs) to the MAC layer.RLC
Segmentation : If an RLC SDU is large, or the available radio data rate is low (resulting in small
transport blocks), the RLC SDU may be split among several RLC PDUs. If the RLC SDU is small, or the
available radio data rate is high, several RLC SDUs may be packed into a single PDU.
MAC layer adds header and does padding to fit this MAC SDU in TTI. MAC layer submits MAC PDU to
physical layer for transmitting it onto physical channels.
Physical channel transmits this data into slots of sub frame.
The information flows between the different protocols are known as channels and signals. LTE uses
several different types of logical, transport and physical channel, which are distinguished by the kind
of information they carry and by the way in which the information is processed.
Logical Channels : Define whattype of information is transmitted over the air, e.g. traffic
channels, control channels, system broadcast, etc. Data and signalling messages are carried on
logical channels between the RLC and MAC protocols.
Transport Channels : Define howis something transmitted over the air, e.g. what are encoding,
interleaving options used to transmit data. Data and signalling messages are carried on transport
channels between the MAC and the physical layer.
Physical Channels : Define whereis something transmitted over the air, e.g. first N symbols in the
DL frame. Data and signalling messages are carried on physical channels between the different
levels of the physical layer.
Logical Channels
Logical channels define what type of data is transferred. These channels define the data-transfer
services offered by the MAC layer. Data and signalling messages are carried on logical channels
between the RLC and MAC protocols.
Logical channels can be divided into control channels and traffic channels. Control Channel can be
either common channel or dedicated channel. A common channel means common to all users in a cell
(Point to multipoint) while dedicated channels means channels can be used only by one user (Point to
Point).
Logical channels are distinguished by the information they carry and can be classified in two ways.
Firstly, logical traffic channels carry data in the user plane, while logical control channels carry
signalling messages in the control plane. Following table lists the logical channels that are used by
LTE:
Transport Channels
Transport channels define how and with what type of characteristics the data is transferred by the
physical layer. Data and signalling messages are carried on transport channels between the MAC and
the physical layer.
Transport Channels are distinguished by the ways in which the transport channel processor
manipulates them. Following table lists the transport channels that are used by LTE:
Physical Channels
Data and signalling messages are carried on physical channels between the different levels of the
physical layer and accordingly they are divided into two parts:
Physical data channels are distinguished by the ways in which the physical channel processor
manipulates them, and by the ways in which they are mapped onto the symbols and sub-carriers used
by Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDMA). Following table lists the physical data
channels that are used by LTE:
The transport channel processor composes several types of control information, to support the low-
level operation of the physical layer. These are listed in the below table:
The transport channel processor also creates control information that supports the low-level operation
of the physical layer and sends this information to the physical channel processor in the form of
physical control channels.
The information travels as far as the transport channel processor in the receiver, but is completely
invisible to higher layers. Similarly, the physical channel processor creates physical signals, which
support the lowest-level aspects of the system.
The base station also transmits two other physical signals, which help the mobile acquire the base
station after it first switches on. These are known as the primary synchronization signal (PSS) and the
secondary synchronization signal (SSS).
To overcome the effect of multi path fading problem available in UMTS, LTE uses Orthogonal
Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) for the downlink – that is, from the base station to the terminal
to transmit the data over many narrow band careers of 180 KHz each instead of spreading one signal
over the complete 5MHz career bandwidth ie. OFDM uses a large number of narrow sub-carriers for
multi-carrier transmission to carry data.
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM), is a frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) scheme
used as a digital multi-carrier modulation method.
OFDM meets the LTE requirement for spectrum flexibility and enables cost-efficient solutions for very
wide carriers with high peak rates. The basic LTE downlink physical resource can be seen as a time-
frequency grid, as illustrated in Figure below:
The OFDM symbols are grouped into resource blocks. The resource blocks have a total size of 180kHz
in the frequency domain and 0.5ms in the time domain. Each 1ms Transmission Time Interval (TTI)
consists of two slots (Tslot).
Each user is allocated a number of so-called resource blocks in the time.frequency grid. The more
resource blocks a user gets, and the higher the modulation used in the resource elements, the higher
the bit-rate. Which resource blocks and how many the user gets at a given point in time depend on
advanced scheduling mechanisms in the frequency and time dimensions.
The scheduling mechanisms in LTE are similar to those used in HSPA, and enable optimal performance
for different services in different radio environments.
Advantages of OFDM
The primary advantage of OFDM over single-carrier schemes is its ability to cope with severe
channel conditions (for example, attenuation of high frequencies in a long copper wire, narrowband
interference and frequency-selective fading due to multipath) without complex equalization filters.
Channel equalization is simplified because OFDM may be viewed as using many slowly-modulated
narrowband signals rather than one rapidly-modulated wideband signal.
The low symbol rate makes the use of a guard interval between symbols affordable, making it
possible to eliminate inter symbol interference (ISI).
This mechanism also facilitates the design of single frequency networks (SFNs), where several
adjacent transmitters send the same signal simultaneously at the same frequency, as the signals
from multiple distant transmitters may be combined constructively, rather than interfering as would
typically occur in a traditional single-carrier system.
Drawbacks of OFDM
High peak-to-average ratio
Sensitive to frequency offset, hence to Doppler-shift as well
SC-FDMA Technology
LTE uses a pre-coded version of OFDM called Single Carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access (SC-
FDMA) in the uplink. This is to compensate for a drawback with normal OFDM, which has a very high
Peak to Average Power Ratio (PAPR).
High PAPR requires expensive and inefficient power amplifiers with high requirements on linearity,
which increases the cost of the terminal and drains the battery faster.
SC-FDMA solves this problem by grouping together the resource blocks in such a way that reduces the
need for linearity, and so power consumption, in the power amplifier. A low PAPR also improves
coverage and the cell-edge performance.
LTE Glossary
Term Description
PS Packet Switched