Mobility Solutions: 3GPP2/3GPP Standards & Status
Mobility Solutions: 3GPP2/3GPP Standards & Status
Mobility Solutions: 3GPP2/3GPP Standards & Status
Outline
3GPP2 Standards Status and Evolution 3GPP Standards Status and Evolution
December, 2004
Slide 2
2004
CDMA2000 1xEV-DO Rev A 3.1 Mbps FL 1.8 Mbps RL
2006
3GPP2
3GIS-95-B
CDMA2000 1X
CDMA2000 1xEV-DO Rev B 3.1 Mbps FL 3.1 Mbps RL MIMO Multi-Carrier CDMA2000 1xEV-DV Rev E 3.1 Mbps FL 3.1 Mbps RL MIMO Multi-Carrier
3GPP
2004*
W-CDMA HSDPA R5 10-14 Mbps DL
2005
W-CDMA E-DCH R6
2006?
W-CDMA Release 7
GSM
GSM GPRS
UMTS/W-CDMA R99 114 kbps Packet RF Backward Comp. High Capacity Voice 384+ kbps Packet New RF
Legend
December, 2004
Slide 3
QoS
Inter-User Intra-User Enhanced Multi-flow applications with differing QoS:TIA-1054 To be published in 1/05
VoIP
Shorter frames Multi-user packets
BCMCS
Slide 4
Slide 5
Multi-user frames (for FL) HARQ Inter-user & Intra-user QoS Data Source Control (DSC) for seamless cell selection
The function of the DSC channel is to indicate the desired FL serving cell ahead of the DRC sector information. With DSC, once an AT wants to switch cells, it first sends the DSC information that contains the new cell information so that the switching process can start while the AT is still receiving data from the old cell. Once the DSC message takes effect, the AT would then point its DRC to the one of the sectors in the new cell and receive service instantly.
Slide 6
Shorter RL Frames
The average minimum packet transmission time in Revision 0 is 40 msec (26.67ms frame size plus 13.33ms average framing delay)
Framing delay due to the fact that transmissions packet transmissions can only happen at 26.67ms boundary
The shorter frames in Revision A (6.67ms) provides average minimum packet transmission time of only 10ms (6.67ms frame size plus 3.33ms average framing delay) if the transmission succeeds on first Hybrid ARQ attempt
The total packet transmission time depends upon the number of hybrid ARQ retransmission attempts
Shorter frames help to improve system VoIP and gaming traffic capacity by reducing delay and allowing packet aggregation of voice frames
Reduced transmission delay can be traded off for packet aggregation delay
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Multi-User Packets
For Rev 0 only one packet from one user can be transmitted to the mobile in any given time slot Rev-A allows multiplexing of Traffic for Different ATs into a Single Physical Layer Packet
For Rev A packets from one to eight users could be transmitted to mobiles in any given time slot Better resource utilization for applications with shorter packets (e.g. VoIP)
Slide 8
Multiple flows with different QoS treatments (e.g., Gaming, VoIP): TIA1054
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VoIP
1xEV-DO Rev 0 is optimized for large downloads, and may be inefficient with smaller speech packets Issues for implementation of VoIP DO on rev 0 include:
FL handoff time may yield unacceptable silence gap Packet delivery is best effort Delays may not be acceptable Overhead protocols required for IP may impair spectral efficiency
Slide 10
Service Interruption
Qtransfer To BS2
1xEV-DO Revision 0
AT changes DRC cover to indicate serving sector/cell change From Cell. To Cell has to detect the change. BSC performs Queue transfer Outage: AT cannot be served a new packet once BSC starts Q-transfer t2
1xEV-DO Revision A
DSC (Data Source Control) Channel provides early indication of cell switching instant to minimize (or eliminate) service outage. Since serving cell change instant is precisely known, From Cell knows exactly when to stop transmission and To Cell knows exactly when to start transmission.
Slide 11
Using following controls below, operator can generate a wide spectrum of services for their customer base:
Which IP Flows Are Delivered To Which Parts Of The Network & When Billing The User/Content Provider Encryption Of The IP Flows
Channel 1.News Clips..Music Videos... Channel 2...Movie Clips.TV Shows.. Channel n.Internet Radio...Weather Channel..
~100 kbps low quality video ~28 kbps stereo audio Dual Rev. 0 with soft combining 268.4 kbps Dual Rev. 0 with no SC 153.6 kbps Source: QCOM
Slide 12
BCMCS Services
Integrated Unicast with Broadcast (for all revisions) 1 2 4 8 12 16
Broadcast Unicast
P r( PE
BCMCS
PDR
R< 0.1 %)
Channel Model
A: 4 path, 3kmph B: 6 path, 10 kmph C: 6 path, 30kmph D:4 path, 120 kmph
100%
100%
100%
* 2.0 km ICD
HRPD Rev. 0/A Supports Both Unicast and Broadcast on the Same Carrier
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 13
Broadcast Unicast
P r( PE
BCMCS
PDR
R< 0.1 %)
Channel Model
A: 4 path, 3kmph B: 6 path, 10 kmph C: 6 path, 30kmph D:4 path, 120 kmph
409Kb(rev.A)
<=95%
<=95% 100%
97% 100%
99% 100% *
2.0 km ICD
HRPD Rev. 0/A Supports Both Unicast and Broadcast on the Same Carrier
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 14
Channel Model
A: 4 path, 3kmph B: 6 path, 10 kmph C: 6 path, 30kmph D:4 path, 120 kmph
PDR EBCMCS
1.2Mb (2048) 614 Kb (2048) 409 Kb (2048)
BCMCS
409Kb(rev.A)
<=95%
<=95% 100%
97% 100%
99% 100% *
2.0 km ICD
Slide 15
Burst Mode
Defines slot-synchronized slot-orthogonal RL transmissions. Very high Rise-over-Thermal (RoT) allowed during RL burst Tx (by limited set of mobiles) BTS controlled fast scheduling, H-ARQ and adaptive modulation/coding (AMC) in the RL
Multi-Carrier
Performance benefits
N times the peak data rate where N is the number of carriers in multi-carrier mode
Further
Enhancements to VoIP Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) Further improves spectral efficiency Further improves data throughputs
* 200 kbps FCC definition
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Outline
3GPP2 Standards Status and Evolution 3GPP Standards Status and Evolution
December, 2004
Slide 17
QoS VoIP on UMTS Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service (MBMS) UMTS continues to evolve to meet market needs
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 18
Evolution
UMTS R7
MIMO, E-MBMS, FCS ?
UMTS R6
EUDCH Meets Uplink needs (Gaming, Interactive Video) MBMS
UMTS R5
HSDPA 14.4Mbps More Users (Increase Spectrum Efficiency)
UMTS R99
384kbps, 2Mbps
UMTS offers a smooth migration path to higher rates UMTS offers a smooth migration path to higher rates
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 19
HSDPA Details
High Peak Data Rates
10.8Mbps with 16 QAM Rate 3/4 13.8Mbps with 16 QAM Rate 0.96
HSDPA-Performance Enhancements
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 20
Slide 21
HSDPA Improvements
Technology introduces a Step-change over R99, as it improves:
Spectral Efficiency DL Bandwidth Cost Efficiency - Increased user data speeds - Reduced cost per bit for operators
Allows Operators to attack new services/markets and compete with EVDO Rev. 0
Comparison
Throughput Typical
R99
~550 Kbps
HSDPA
~2.2 Mbps
Typical
<2
~6
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Slide 23
Benefits
In the application side, supports the diversity of both RT (audio/video streaming & conferencing) and NRT (email, web browsing, FTP) services. In the user differentiation side, provides differentiated services (gold, silver & bronze) to different customers to drive the revenue.
Slide 24
VoIP in R5
General Objectives:
Capacity/Quality Circuit Switched Voice+ Tolerable Endto-End Delay Bandwidth requirement is very high compared to CS voice (app. 3x higher for AMR 12.2kbps) Capacity is low compared to CS VoIP supported on DCH
VoIP over dedicated channels (channels is set up at 42 Kbps, consumes SF code 16)
VoIP in R5 is possible but not optimized Robust Header compression (ROHC) is only mandated for Rel 6 UEs.
Slide 25
Release 6 Features
Spectral Efficiency Improvements
Enhanced UL DCH Beamforming Enhancement (UE assisted- Phase shifted dual transmission coherently combined at the UE- Closed Loop Transmit Diversity CLTD) HSDPA Enhancements Optimization of DL Code Utilization ( redesign channels) UE Receive Diversity (Min. perf. requires standards assistance)
Enhanced Services
IMS Support VoIP on DCH VoIP on HSDPA Multicast Broadcast Multimedia System
Network Optimization
Remote Antenna Tilting, Network sharing ahead of cdma behind cdma N/A
December, 2004
3GPP is Ahead of 3GPP2 in Areas Except for E-DCH and VoIP on HSDPA Slide 26
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Data Rates
Rel99 data rates + other rates up to 4Mbps (2ms TTI) and 2Mbps (10ms TTI)
Some CRs will be presented for approval in Dec. 2004. Other CRs will be approved in March 2005
E-DCH dynamically adjust system and link parameters to account for traffic and link quality variation E-DCH Critical for VoIP on HSDPA
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 27
VoIP
VoIP on dedicated channels (DCH)
Robust Header Compression is made mandatory in R6
Slide 28
Suitable for Streaming services (typical bit rate of 64kbps). Downlink data stream only
No feedback/acknowledgements from terminals
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MBMS Performance
Achievable aggregate bits/s/Hz between 0.02 to 0.2 bits/Hz depending on conditions because :
MBMS service is designed for worst case scenario (edge of cell coverage) Solution for better power utilization Long TTI (40, 80ms) Transmit Diversity
New functionalities
Simulcast : signals combined from multiple cells with delay spread (Selective combining or Soft combining)
Radio Resources Utilization for Streaming Services is more efficient using HSDPA dependent on Radio Conditions
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 30
MBMS Performance
Achievable aggregate bit rate for 90% and 95% coverage for MBMS channel (PA3)
Performance with Selection Combining
Coverage @ 1% BLER
SC (2RL) 256 Kbps 256 Kbps 320 Kbps 192 Kbps 192 Kbps 256 Kbps
SC (3 RL) 384 Kbps 384 Kbps 512 Kbps 320 Kbps 320 Kbps 384 Kbps
90%
95%
40ms 80ms
Note: Above Results do NOT Include Soft Combining and Mobile Rx Diversity. It is Expected that the Addition of these Features would put MBMS on Par with BCMCS
December, 2004
Lucent Technologies PROPRIETARY Use pursuant to Company instructions
Slide 31
Release 7 Features
Spectral Efficiency Improvements
Multiple Input Multiple Output
Further improves spectral efficiency Further improves data throughputs
Network Optimization
UTRAN Architecture Evolution
Enhanced Services
Voice Over IP Enhancements Fast Cell Selection MBMS Enhancements and performance Requirements
ahead of cdma behind cdma N/A
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Summary
Revision 0 (2000)
2.4 Mbps FL 153 Kbps RL H-ARQ FL QoS BCMCS VoIP AMC
Revision A (3/04)
3.1 Mbps FL 1.8 Mbps RL Enh. VoIP Enablers -Shorter RL frames -FCS/DSC Multi-user Packets FL H-ARQ in RL Multi-flow QoS ROHC Enh. BCMCS
Revision B (6/06)
3.1 Mbps RL Multi-carrier (packet centric architecture) Bandwidth on demand Enh. VoIP MIMO
1xEV-DO
Release 5 (4/04*)
14.4 Mbps FL 153 Kbps RL H-ARQ FL QoS BCMCS VoIP AMC
* CRs still active December, 2004
Release 6 (6/05)
Release 7 (?/06)
4 Mbps RL Multi-carrier Enh. VoIP Enablers -Shorter RL frames -FCS/DSC H-ARQ in RL Enh. BCMCS MIMO
14.4 Mbps FL 2/4 Mbps RL (10msec/2mses) VoIP Short RL frames H-ARQ in RL ROHC
UMTS
(Circuit centric architecture)
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