The Cellular Concept - System Design Fundamentals
The Cellular Concept - System Design Fundamentals
I. Introduction
Goals of a Cellular System
High capacity Large coverage area Efficient use of limited spectrum
Large coverage area - Bell system in New York City had early mobile radio
Single Tx, high power, and tall tower Low cost Large coverage area - Bell system in New York City had 12 simultaneous channels for 1000 square miles Small # users Poor spectrum utilization
What are possible ways we could increase the number of channels available in a cellular system?
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Cellular concept
Frequency reuse pattern
Cells labeled with the same letter use the same group of channels. Cell Cluster: group of N cells using complete set of available channels Many base stations, lower power, and shorter towers Small coverage areas called cells Each cell allocated a % of the total number of available channels Nearby (adjacent) cells assigned different channel groups
to prevent interference between neighboring base stations and mobile users
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As frequency reuse increases, no. of possible simultaneous users increases, no. of subscribers but system cost (more towers) To increase number of users without increasing radio frequency allocation, reduce cell sizes (more base stations) # possible simultaneous users The cellular concept allows all mobiles to be manufactured to use the same set of frequencies *** A fixed # of channels serves a large # of users by reusing channels in a coverage area ***
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Design process of selecting & allocating channel groups of cellular base stations Two competing/conflicting objectives:
1) maximize frequency reuse in specified area 2) minimize interference between cells
Cells
base station antennas designed to cover specific cell area hexagonal cell shape assumed for planning simple model for easy analysis circles leave gaps
actual cell footprint is amorphous (no specific shape)
where Tx successfully serves mobile unit
S : total # of duplex channels available for use in a given area; determined by:
amount of allocated spectrum channel BW modulation format and/or standard specs. (e.g. AMPS)
k : number of channels for each cell (k < S) N : cluster size # of cells forming cluster S=kN
M : # of times a cluster is replicated over a geographic coverage area System Capacity = Total # Duplex Channels = C C=MS=MkN
(assuming exactly MN cells will cover the area)
If cluster size (N) is reduced and the geographic area for each cell is kept constant:
The geographic area covered by each cluster is smaller, so M must to cover the entire coverage area (more clusters needed). S remains constant. So C The smallest possible value of N is desirable to maximize system capacity.
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N cells/cluster
connect without gaps specific values are required for hexagonal geometry
N = i2 + i j + j2 Typical N values 3, 4, 7, 12; (i, j) = (1,1), (2,0), (2,1), (2,2)
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To find the nearest co-channel neighbors of a particular cell (1) Move i cells along any chain of hexagons, then (2) turn 60 degrees and move j cells.
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Dynamic
channels NOT allocated permanently call request goes to serving base station goes to MSC MSC allocates channel on the fly
allocation strategy considers: likelihood of future call blocking in the cell reuse distance (interference potential with other cells that are using the same frequency) The frequency of use of candidate channel
Advantage: reduces call blocking (that is to say, it increases the trunking capacity), and increases voice quality Requires increased storage & computational load @ MSC
requires real-time data from entire network related to:
channel occupancy traffic distribution Radio Signal Strength Indications (RSSI's) from all channels
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Athough it increses the storage and computational load on the system but provides advantage of
Increased channel utilization Decreased probability of a blocked call
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V. Handoff Strategies
Handoff: when a mobile unit moves from one cell to another while a call is in progress, the MSC must transfer (handoff) the call to a new channel belonging to a new base station
new voice and control channel frequencies very important task often given higher priority than new call
It is worse to drop an in-progress call than to deny a new one
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Quick review: Decibels S = Signal power in Watts Power of a signal in decibels (dBW) is Psignal = 10 log10(S) Remember dB is used for ratios (like S/N) dBW is used for Watts dBm = dB for power in milliwatts = 10 log10(S x 103) dBm = 10 log10(S) + 10 log10(103) = dBW + 30 -90 dBm = 10 log10(S x 103) 10-9 = S x 103 S = 10-12 Watts = 10-9 milliwatts -90 dBm = -120 dBW Signal-to-noise ratio: N = Noise power in Watts S/N = 10 log10(S/N) dB (unitless raio)
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Handoff Margin
= Phandoff threshold - Pminimum usable signal dB carefully selected too large unnecessary handoff MSC loaded down too small not enough time to transfer call dropped!
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Handoff Decision
signal level decreases due to
signal fading dont handoff mobile moving away from base station handoff
must monitor received signal strength over a period of time moving average time allowed to complete handoff depends on mobile speed
If average received signal strength (RSS) slope is steep high speed quick handoff
statistics of the fading signal are important to making appropriate handoff decisions Chapters 4 and 5
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Locator Rx can see if signal to this base station is significantly better than to the host base station MSC monitors RSS from all base stations & decides on handoff
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Prioritizing Handoffs
Issue: Perceived Grade of Service (GOS) service quality as viewed by users
quality in terms of dropped or blocked calls (not voice quality) assign higher priority to handoff vs. new call request a dropped call is more aggravating than an occasional blocked call
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Guard Channels
% of total available cell channels exclusively set aside for handoff requests makes fewer channels available for new call requests a good strategy is dynamic channel allocation (not fixed)
adjust number of guard channels as needed by demand so channels are not wasted in cells with low traffic
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Small cell sizes and/or micro-cells larger # handoffs MSC load is heavy when high speed users are passed between very small cells
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Umbrella Cells
Fig. 3.4, pg. 67 use different antenna heights and Tx power levels to provide large and small cell coverage multiple antennas & Tx can be co-located at single location if necessary (saves on obtaining new tower licenses) large cell high speed traffic fewer handoffs small cell low speed traffic example areas: interstate highway passing thru urban center, office park, or nearby shopping mall
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Cell Dragging
low speed user w/ line of sight to base station (very strong signal) strong signal changing slowly user moves into the area of an adjacent cell without handoff causes interference with adjacent cells and other cells Remember: handoffs help all users, not just the one which is handed off. If this mobile is closer to a reused channel interference for the other user using the same frequency So this mobile needs to hand off anyway, so other users benefit because that mobile stays far away from them.
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benefits of small handoff time greater flexibility in handling high/low speed users queuing handoffs & prioritizing more time to rescue calls needing urgent handoff fewer dropped calls GOS increased can make decisions based on a wide range of metrics other than signal strength such as also measure interference levels can have a multidimensional algorithm for making decisions
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Many spread spectrum users share the same frequency in every cell
CDMA IS-95 Since a mobile uses the same frequency in every cell, it can also be assigned the same code for multiple cells when it is near the boundary of multiple cells. The MSC simultaneously monitors reverse link signal at several base stations
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MSC dynamically decides which signal is best and then listens to that one
Soft Handoff passes data from that base station on to the PSTN
This choice of best signal can keep changing. Mobile user does nothing for handoffs except just transmit, MSC does all the work Advantage unique to CDMA systems
As long as there are enough codes available.
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Interference is the limiting factor in performance of all cellular radio systems What are the sources of interference for a mobile receiver? Interference is in both
voice channels control channels
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Possible Solutions?
1) Increase base station Tx power to improve radio signal reception? __
this will also increase interference from co-channel cells by the same amount no net improvement
2) Separate co-channel cells by some minimum distance to provide sufficient isolation from propagation of radio signals?
if all cell sizes, transmit powers, and coverage patterns same co-channel interference is independent of Tx power
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S : desired signal power Ii : interference power from ith co-channel cell io : # of co-channel interfering cells
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Now if we consider only the first layer (or tier) of co-channel cells
assume only these provide significant interference
And assume interfering base stations are equidistant from the desired base station (all at distance D) then
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Most reasonable assumption is io : # of co-channel interfering cells = 6 N = 7 (very common choice for AMPS)
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N =7 and S / I 17 dB
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Eq. (3.5), (3.8), and (3.9) are (S / I) for forward link only, i.e. the cochannel base Tx interfering with desired base station transmission to mobile unit
so this considers interference @ the mobile unit