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Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of
connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through
wireless communication technologies and devices.
The evolution of wireless technology has brought much advancement with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a
television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio
communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the
internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
Other examples of applications of radio wireless technology include GPS units, garage
door openers, wireless computer mice, keyboards and headsets, headphones, radio
receivers, satellite television, broadcast television and cordless telephones.
The ability to communicate with people on the move has evolved remarkably since Guglielmo Marconi first
demonstrated radio’s ability to provide continuous contact with ships sailing the English Channel in 1897.
Since then new wireless communications methods and services have been enthusiastically adopted by people
throughout the world. Particularly during the past ten years, the mobile radio communications industry has
grown by orders of magnitude, fueled by digital and RF circuit fabrication improvements, new large-scale
circuit integration, and other miniaturization technologies which make portable radio equipment smaller,
cheaper, and more reliable. Digital switching techniques have facilitated the large scale deployment of
affordable, easy-to-use radio communication networks.
Evolution of Mobile Radio Communications
The ability to provide wireless communications to an entire population was not even conceived until Bell
Laboratories developed the cellular concept in the 1960s and 1970s. With the development of highly reliable,
miniature, solid-state radio frequency hardware in the 1970s, the wireless communications era was born.
The following market penetration data show how wireless communications in the consumer sector has
grown in popularity. Figure 1.1 illustrates how mobile telephony has penetrated our daily lives compared
with other popular inventions of the 20th century. Figure 1.1 shows that the first 35 years of mobile
telephony saw little market penetration due to high cost and the technological challenges involved, but
however, in the past decade, wireless communications has been accepted by consumers at rates comparable
to television and the video cassette recorder.
Figure 1.1. The growth of mobile telephony as compared with other popular inventions of the 20th
century.
By 1934, 194 municipal police radio systems and 58 state police stations had adopted amplitude
modulation (AM) mobile communication systems for public safety in the U.S.
In 1935, Edwin Armstrong demonstrated frequency modulation (FM) for the first time, and since the
late 1930s, FM has been the primary modulation technique used for mobile communication systems
throughout the world.
With the boom in CB radio and cordless appliances such as garage door openers and telephones, the
number of users of mobile and portable radio in 1995 was about 100 million, or 37% of the U.S.
population
The number of worldwide cellular telephone users grew from 25,000 in 1984 to about 25 million in
1993, and since then subscription-based wireless services have been experiencing customer growth
rates well in excess of 50% per year. At the beginning of the 21st century, over 1% of the worldwide
wireless subscriber population had already abandoned wired telephone service for home use, and
had begun to rely solely on their cellular service provider for telephone access.
Mobile Radiotelephony in the U.S.
In 1946, the first public mobile telephone service was introduced in twenty-five major American cities. Each
system used a single, high-powered transmitter and large tower in order to cover distances of over 50 km in a
particular market. During the 1950s and 1960s, AT&T Bell Laboratories and other telecommunications
companies throughout the world developed the theory and techniques of cellular radiotelephony—the
concept of breaking a coverage zone (market) into small cells, each of which reuse portions of the spectrum to
increase spectrum usage at the expense of greater system infrastructure. AT&T proposed the concept of a
cellular mobile system to the FCC in 1968, although technology was not available to implement cellular
telephony until the late 1970s. In 1983, the FCC finally allocated 666 duplex channels (40 MHz of spectrum in
the 800 MHz band, each channel having a one-way bandwidth of 30 kHz for a total spectrum occupancy of 60
kHz for each duplex channel) for the U.S. Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS).
Figure 1.2. Frequency spectrum allocation for the U.S. cellular radio service
In late 1991, the first US Digital Cellular (USDC) system hardware was installed in major U.S. cities. The USDC
standard (Electronic Industry Association Interim Standard IS-54 and later IS-136) allowed cellular operators
to replace gracefully some single-user analog channels with digital channels which support three users in the
same 30 kHz bandwidth. In this way, U.S. carriers gradually phased out AMPS as more users accepted digital
phones
A cellular system based on code division multiple access (CDMA) has been developed by Qualcomm, Inc. and
standardized by the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) as an Interim Standard (IS-95). This
system supports a variable number of users in 1.25 MHz wide channels using direct sequence spread
spectrum. CDMA systems can operate at much larger interference levels because of their inherent
interference resistance properties. The ability of CDMA to operate with a much smaller signal-to-noise ratio
(SNR) than conventional narrowband FM techniques allows CDMA systems to use the same set of frequencies
in every cell, which provides a large improvement in capacity.
Personal Communication Service (PCS) licenses in the 1800/1900 MHz band were auctioned by the U.S.
Government to wireless providers in early 1995, and these have spawned new wireless services that
complement, as well as compete with, cellular and SMR.
Mobile Radio Systems Around the World
Many mobile radio standards have been developed for wireless systems throughout the world, and more
standards are likely to emerge. Tables 1.1 through 1.3 list the most common paging, cordless, cellular, and
personal communications standards used in North America, Europe, and Japan.
The world’s first cellular system was implemented by the Nippon Telephone and Telegraph company (NTT)
in Japan. The system, deployed in 1979, uses 600 FM duplex channels (25 kHz for each one-way link) in the
800 MHz band. In Europe, the Nordic Mobile Telephone system (NMT 450) was developed in 1981 for the
450 MHz band and uses 25 kHz channels. The European Total Access Cellular System (ETACS) was deployed
in 1985 and is virtually identical to the U.S. AMPS system, except that the smaller bandwidth channels result
in a slight degradation of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and coverage range. In Germany, a cellular standard
called C-450 was introduced in 1985. The first generation European cellular systems are generally
incompatible with one another because of the different frequencies and communication protocols used. These
systems are now being replaced by the Pan European digital cellular standard GSM (Global System for
Mobile) which was first deployed in 1990 in a new 900 MHz band which all of Europe dedicated for cellular
telephone service. The GSM standard has gained worldwide acceptance as the first universal digital cellular
system with modern network features extended to each mobile user, and is the leading digital air interface for
PCS services above 1800 MHz throughout the world. In Japan, the Pacific Digital Cellular (PDC) standard
provides digital cellular coverage using a system similar to North America’s USDC.
Examples of Wireless Communication Systems
Most people are familiar with a number of mobile radio communication systems used in everyday life. Garage
door openers, remote controllers for home entertainment equipment, cordless telephones, hand-held walkie-
talkies, pagers (also called paging receivers or “beepers”), and cellular telephones are all examples of mobile
radio communication systems. However, the cost, complexity, performance, and types of services offered by
each of these mobile systems are vastly different.
Table 1.4 lists definitions of terms used to describe elements of wireless communication systems.
Mobile radio transmission systems may be classified as simplex, half-duplex or full-duplex. In simplex systems,
communication is possible in only one direction. Paging systems, in which messages are received but not
acknowledged, are simplex systems. Half-duplex radio systems allow two-way communication, but use the
same radio channel for both transmission and reception. This means that at any given time, a user can only
transmit or receive information. Constraints like “push-to-talk” and “release-to-listen” are fundamental
features of half-duplex systems. Full duplex systems, on the other hand, allow simultaneous radio
transmission and reception between a subscriber and a base station, by providing two simultaneous but
separate channels (frequency division duplex, or FDD) or adjacent time slots on a single radio channel (time
division duplex, or TDD) for communication to and from the user.
In FDD, a pair of simplex channels with a fixed and known frequency separation is used to define a specific
radio channel in the system. The channel used to convey traffic to the mobile user from a base station is called
the forward channel, while the channel used to carry traffic from the mobile user to a base station is called the
reverse channel. In the U.S. AMPS standard, the reverse channel has a frequency which is exactly 45 MHz
lower than that of the forward channel. Full duplex mobile radio systems provide many of the capabilities of
the standard telephone, with the added convenience of mobility. Full duplex and half-duplex systems use
transceivers for radio communication. FDD is used exclusively in analog mobile radio systems.
Time division duplexing (TDD) uses the fact that it is possible to share a single radio channel in time, so that a
portion of the time is used to transmit from the base station to the mobile, and the remaining time is used to
transmit from the mobile to the base station. If the data transmission rate in the channel is much greater than
the end-user’s data rate, it is possible to store information bursts and provide the appearance of full duplex
operation to a user, even though there are not two simultaneous radio transmissions at any instant. TDD is
only possible with digital transmission formats and digital modulation, and is very sensitive to timing. It is for
this reason that TDD has only recently been used, and only for indoor or small area wireless applications
where the physical coverage distances (and thus the radio propagation time delay) are much smaller than the
many kilometers used in conventional cellular telephone systems.
Paging Systems
Paging systems are communication systems that send brief messages to a subscriber. Depending on the type
of service, the message may be either a numeric message, an alphanumeric message, or a voice message.
Paging systems are typically used to notify a subscriber of the need to call a particular telephone number or
travel to a known location to receive further instructions. In modern paging systems, news headlines, stock
quotations, and faxes may be sent. A message is sent to a paging subscriber via the paging system access
number (usually a toll-free telephone number) with a telephone keypad or modem. The issued message is
called a page. The paging system then transmits the page throughout the service area using base stations
which broadcast the page on a radio carrier.
Paging systems vary widely in their complexity and coverage area. While simple paging systems may cover a
limited range of 2 to 5 km, or may even be confined to within individual buildings, wide area paging systems
can provide worldwide coverage. Though paging receivers are simple and inexpensive, the transmission
system required is quite sophisticated. Wide area paging systems consist of a network of telephone lines,
many base station transmitters, and large radio towers that simultaneously broadcast a page from each base
station (this is called simulcasting). Simulcast transmitters may be located within the same service area or in
different cities or countries. Paging systems are designed to provide reliable communication to subscribers
wherever they are; whether inside a building, driving on a highway, or flying in an airplane. This necessitates
large transmitter powers (on the order of kilowatts) and low data rates (a couple of thousand bits per
second) for maximum coverage from each base station. Figure 1.3 shows a diagram of a wide area paging
system.
Figure 1.3. A wide area paging system. The paging control center dispatches pages received from the
PSTN throughout several cities at the same time.
Paging systems are designed to provide ultra-reliable coverage, even inside buildings. Buildings can attenuate
radio signals by 20 or 30 dB, making the choice of base station locations difficult for the paging companies.
For this reason, paging transmitters are usually located on tall buildings in the center of a city, and
simulcasting is used in conjunction with additional base stations located on the perimeter of the city to flood
the entire area. Small RF bandwidths are used to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio at each paging receiver,
so low data rates (6400 bps or less) are used.
Second generation cordless telephones have recently been introduced which allow subscribers to use their
handsets at many outdoor locations within urban centers such as London or Hong Kong. Modern cordless
telephones are sometimes combined with paging receivers so that a subscriber may first be paged and then
respond to the page using the cordless telephone. Cordless telephone systems provide the user with limited
range and mobility, as it is usually not possible to maintain a call if the user travels outside the range of the
base station. Typical second generation base stations provide coverage ranges up to a few hundred meters.
Figure 1.4 illustrates a cordless telephone system.
Figure 1.5 shows a basic cellular system which consists of mobile stations, base stations and a mobile switching
center (MSC). The mobile switching center is sometimes called a mobile telephone switching office (MTSO),
since it is responsible for connecting all mobiles to the PSTN in a cellular system. Each mobile communicates
via radio with one of the base stations and may be handed-off to any number of base stations throughout the
duration of a call. The mobile station contains a transceiver, an antenna, and control circuitry, and may be
mounted in a vehicle or used as a portable hand-held unit. The base stations consist of several transmitters
and receivers which simultaneously handle full duplex communications and generally have towers which
support several transmitting and receiving antennas. The base station serves as a bridge between all mobile
users in the cell and connects the simultaneous mobile calls via telephone lines or microwave links to the
MSC. The MSC coordinates the activities of all of the base stations and connects the entire cellular system to
the PSTN. A typical MSC handles 100,000 cellular subscribers and 5,000 simultaneous conversations at a
time, and accommodates all billing and system maintenance functions, as well. In large cities, several MSCs
are used by a single carrier.
Figure 1.5. A cellular system. The towers represent base stations which provide radio access between
mobile users and the mobile switching center (MSC).
Communication between the base station and the mobiles is defined by a standard common air interface (CAI)
that specifies four different channels. The channels used for voice transmission from the base station to
mobiles are called forward voice channels (FVC), and the channels used for voice transmission from mobiles
to the base station are called reverse voice channels (RVC). The two channels responsible for initiating mobile
calls are the forward control channels (FCC) and reverse control channels (RCC). Control channels are often
called setup channels because they are only involved in setting up a call and moving it to an unused voice
channel. Control channels transmit and receive data messages that carry call initiation and service requests,
and are monitored by mobiles when they do not have a call in progress. Forward control channels also serve
as beacons which continually broadcast all of the traffic requests for all mobiles in the system.
Cellular systems rely on the frequency reuse concept, which requires that the forward control channels
(FCCs) in neighboring cells be different. By defining a relatively small number of FCCs as part of the common
air interface, cellular phones can be manufactured by many companies which can rapidly scan all of the
possible FCCs to determine the strongest channel at any time. Once finding the strongest signal, the cellular
phone receiver stays “camped” to the particular FCC. By broadcasting the same setup data on all FCCs at the
same time, the MSC is able to signal all subscribers within the cellular system and can be certain that any
mobile will be signaled when it receives a call via the PSTN.
Once a call is in progress, the MSC adjusts the transmitted power of the mobile and changes the channel of the
mobile unit and base stations in order to maintain call quality as the subscriber moves in and out of range of
each base station. This is called a handoff. Special control signaling is applied to the voice channels so that the
mobile unit may be controlled by the base station and the MSC while a call is in progress.
When a mobile originates a call, a call initiation request is sent on the reverse control channel. With this
request the mobile unit transmits its telephone number (MIN), electronic serial number (ESN), and the
telephone number of the called party. The mobile also transmits a station class mark (SCM) which indicates
what the maximum transmitter power level is for the particular user. The cell base station receives this data
and sends it to the MSC. The MSC validates the request, makes connection to the called party through the
PSTN, and instructs the base station and mobile user to move to an unused forward and reverse voice channel
pair to allow the conversation to begin. Figure 1.7 shows the sequence of events involved with connecting a
call which is initiated by a mobile user in a cellular system.
Figure 1.7. Timing diagram illustrating how a call initiated by a mobile is established.
All cellular systems provide a service called roaming. This allows subscribers to operate in service areas other
than the one from which service is subscribed. When a mobile enters a city or geographic area that is
different from its home service area, it is registered as a roamer in the new service area. If a particular roamer
has roaming authorization for billing purposes, the MSC registers the subscriber as a valid roamer. Once
registered, roaming mobiles are allowed to receive and place calls from that area, and billing is routed
automatically to the subscriber’s home service provider.
Notice that the expectations vary widely among the services, and the infrastructure costs are dependent upon
the required coverage area. For the case of low power, hand-held cellular phones, a large number of base
stations are required to insure that any phone is in close range to a base station within a city. If base stations
were not within close range, a great deal of transmitter power would be required of the phone, thus limiting
the battery life and rendering the service useless for hand-held users.
A worldwide standard, the Future Public Land Mobile Telephone System (FPLMTS)—renamed International
Mobile Telecommunication 2000 (IMT-2000) in mid-1995—has been formulated by the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) which is the standards body for the United Nations, with headquarters in
Geneva, Switzerland. FPLMTS (now IMT-2000) is a third generation universal, multi-function, globally
compatible digital mobile radio system that will integrate paging, cordless, and cellular systems, as well as
low earth orbit (LEO) satellites, into one universal mobile system.
In emerging nations, where existing telephone service is almost nonexistent, fixed cellular telephone systems
are being installed at a rapid rate. This is due to the fact that developing nations are finding it is quicker and
more affordable to install cellular telephone systems for fixed home use, rather than install wires in
neighborhoods which have not yet received telephone connections to the PSTN.
The most popular second generation standards include three TDMA standards and one CDMA standard: (a)
Global System Mobile (GSM), which supports eight time slotted users for each 200 kHz radio channel and has
been deployed widely by service providers in Europe, Asia, Australia, South America, and some parts of the
US (in the PCS spectrum band only); (b) Interim Standard 136 (IS-136), also known as North American Digital
Cellular (NADC), which supports three time slotted users for each 30 kHz radio channel and is a popular
choice for carriers in North America, South America, and Australia (in both the cellular and PCS bands); (c)
Pacific Digital Cellular (PDC), a Japanese TDMA standard that is similar to IS-136 with more than 50 million
users; and (d) the popular 2G CDMA standard Interim Standard 95 Code Division Multiple Access (IS-95), also
known as cdmaOne, which supports up to 64 users that are orthogonally coded and simultaneously
transmitted on each 1.25 MHz channel. CDMA is widely deployed by carriers in North America (in both
cellular and PCS bands), as well as in Korea, Japan, China, South America, and Australia.
In many countries, 2G wireless networks are designed and deployed for conventional mobile telephone
service, as a high capacity replacement for, or in competition with, existing older first generation cellular
telephone systems. Modern cellular systems are also being installed to provide fixed (non-mobile) telephone
service to residences and businesses in developing nations—this is particularly cost effective for providing
plain old telephone service (POTS) in countries that have poor telecommunications infrastructure and are
unable to afford the installation of copper wire to all homes.
In an effort to retrofit the 2G standards for compatibility with increased throughput data rates that are
required to support modern Internet applications, new data-centric standards have been developed that can
be overlaid upon existing 2G technologies. These new standards represent 2.5G technology and allow existing
2G equipment to be modified and supplemented with new base station add-ons and subscriber unit software
upgrades to support higher data rate transmissions for web browsing, e-mail traffic, mobile commerce (m-
commerce), and location-based mobile services. The 2.5G technologies also support a popular new web
browsing format language, called Wireless Applications Protocol (WAP), that allows standard web pages to
be viewed in a compressed format specifically designed for small, portable hand held wireless devices, a wide
range of 2.5G standards have been developed to allow each of the major 2G technologies (GSM, CDMA, and IS-
136) to be upgraded incrementally for faster Internet data rates. Figure 2.3 illustrates the various 2.5G and
3G upgrade paths for the major 2G technologies.
Table 2.2 describes the required changes to the network infrastructure (e.g., the base station and the switch)
and the subscriber terminals (e.g., the handset) for the various upgrade options for 2.5G and 3G. The technical
features of each 2.5G upgrade path are described below.
Table 2.2. Current and Emerging 2.5G and 3G Data Communication Standards
Requires
Wireless Data Channel New Requires New Handsets
Technologies BW DuplexInfrastructure change Spectrum
cdma2000 IxEV 1.25 FDD Requires software and digita cardNo Yes
upgrade on 1xRTT networks. New handsets will work on 1xEV at 2.4
(DO and DV) MHz
Mbps, 1xRTT at 144 Kbps IS-95B at 64
Kbps, IS-95A at 14.4
Kbps. Older handsets can work in 1xEV
but at lower speeds.
Table 2.3. Leading IMT-2000 Candidate Standards as of 1998 (adapted from [Lib99])
Air Interface Mode of Operation Duplexing Method Key Features
cdma2000 Multi-Carrier and Direc FDD and TDD Modes Backward compatibility withIS-95A
US TIA Spreading DS-CDMA a N and IS-95B. Downlinkcan be
TR45.5 = 1.2288 Mcps with N =1, implemented usingeither Multi-
3, 6, 9, 12 Carrier or DirecSpreading.
Uplink cansupport a
simultaneouscombination of
Multi-Carrie or Direct Spreading
Auxiliary carriers to help with
downlink channe estimation in
forward link beamforming.
UTRA DS_CDMA at Rates of N × FDD and TDD Modes Wideband DS_CDMA System.
(UMTS Terrestria 0.960 Mcps with N = 4, 8 Backward compatibility with
Radio Access) ETSSMG2 16 GSM/DCS-1900.
Up to 2.048 Mbps on
Downlink in FDD Mode.
W-CDMA/NA Minimum forward channebandwidth
(Wideband CDMA of 5 GHz.
North America) USA
T1P1-ATIS
The collection of proposedstandards
represented hereeach exhibit unique
featuresbut support a common set o
chip rates, 10 ms framestructure,
W-CDMA/Japan
with 16 slots pe frame.
Connection-dedicated pilo bits
(Wideband CDMA
assist in downlink
Japan ARIB beamforming.
CDMA II
South Korea TTA
WIMS/W-CDMA
USA TIA TR46.1
CDMA I DS-CDMA at N × 0.9216 FDD and TDD Modes Up to 512 kbps per spreadingcode,
South Korea TTA Mcps with N = 1, 4, 16 code aggregation up to
2.048 Mbps.
UWC-136 TDMA - Up to 722.2 kbp FDD Backward compatibility and upgrade
(Universal Wireless (Outdoor/Vehicular), Upto (Outdoor/Vehicular), path for both IS-136 and GSM.
Communications 5.2 Mbps (Indoo Office) TDD (Indoor Office) Fits into existing IS-136 and GSM.
Consortium) USA TIATR Explicit plans to suppor adaptive
45.3 antenna technology.
The 2.5G CDMA solution, IS-95B, supports medium data rate (MDR) service by allowing a dedicated user to
command up to eight different user Walsh codes simultaneously and in parallel for an instantaneous
throughput of 115.2 kbps per user (8 × 14.4 kbps). IS-95B also specifies hard handoff procedures that allow
subscriber units to search different radio channels in the network without instruction from the switch so that
subscriber units can rapidly tune to different base stations to maintain link quality.
3G W-CDMA (UMTS)
The Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) is a visionary air interface standard that has
evolved since late 1996 under the auspices of the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI).
European carriers, manufacturers, and government regulators collectively developed the early versions of
UMTS as a competitive open air-interface standard for third generation wireless telecommunications.
UMTS, or W-CDMA, assures backward compatibility with the second generation GSM, IS-136, and PDC TDMA
technologies, as well as all 2.5G TDMA technologies. The network structure and bit level packaging of GSM
data is retained by W-CDMA, with additional capacity and bandwidth provided by a new CDMA air interface.
The 3G W-CDMA air interface standard had been designed for “always-on” packet-based wireless service, so
that computers, entertainment devices, and telephones may all share the same wireless network and be
connected to the Internet, anytime, anywhere. W-CDMA requires a minimum spectrum allocation of 5 MHz,
which is an important distinction from the other G standards. With W-CDMA data rates from as low as 8 kbps
to as high as 2 Mbps will be carried simultaneously on a single W-CDMA 5 MHz radio channel, and each
channel will be able to support between 100 and 350 simultaneous voice calls at once, depending on antenna
sectoring, propagation conditions, user velocity, and antenna polarizations. W-CDMA employs
variable/selectable direct sequence spread spectrum chip rates that can exceed 16 Megachips per second per
user.
3G cdma2000
The cdma2000 vision provides a seamless and evolutionary high data rate upgrade path for current users of
2G and 2.5G CDMA technology, using a building block approach that centers on the original 2G CDMA channel
bandwidth of 1.25 MHz per radio channel.
The first 3G CDMA air interface, cdma2000 1xRTT, implies that a single 1.25 MHz radio channel is used (the
initials RTT stand for Radio Transmission Technology). The ultimate 3G solution for CDMA relies upon
multicarrier techniques that gang adjacent cdmaOne radio channels together for increased bandwidth. The
cdma2000 3xRTT standard uses three adjacent 1.25 MHz radio channels that are used together to provide
packet data throughput speeds in excess of 2 Mbps per user, depending upon cell loading, vehicle speed, and
propagation conditions.
3G TD-SCDMA
The China Academy of Telecommunications Technology (CATT) and Siemens Corporation jointly submitted
an IMT-2000 3G standard proposal in 1998, based on Time Division-Synchronous Code Division Multiple
Access (TD-SCDMA). This proposal was adopted by ITU as one of the 3G options in late 1999.
TD-SCDMA relies on the existing core GSM infrastructure and allows a 3G network to evolve through the
addition of high data rate equipment at each GSM base station. TD-SCDMA combines TDMA and TDD
techniques to provide a data-only overlay in an existing GSM network. By using TDD, different time slots
within a single frame on a single carrier frequency are used to provide both forward channel and reverse
channel transmissions. For the case of asynchronous traffic demand, such as when a user downloads a file,
the forward link will require more bandwidth than the reverse link, and thus more time slots will be
dedicated to providing forward link traffic than for providing reverse link traffic. TD-SCDMA proponents
claim that the TDD feature allows this 3G standard to be very easily and inexpensively added to existing GSM
systems.
Figure 2.4. Example of the emerging applications and markets for broadband services.
The local loop can be thought of as the “last mile” of the telecommunication network that resides between the
central office (CO) and the individual homes and businesses in close proximity to the CO.
Governments throughout the world have realized that WLL could greatly improve the efficiency of their
citizens while stimulating competition that could lead to improved telecommunications services. A vast array
of new services and applications have been proposed and are in the early stages of commercialization. These
services include the concept of Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS), which provides broadband
telecommunications access in the local exchange.
Governments throughout the world have realized that WLL could greatly improve the efficiency of their
citizens while stimulating competition that could lead to improved telecommunications services. A vast array
of new services and applications have been proposed and are in the early stages of commercialization. These
services include the concept of Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS), which provides broadband
telecommunications access in the local exchange.
In 1998, 1300 MHz of unused spectrum in the 27–31 GHz band was auctioned by the US government to
support LMDS. Similar auctions have been held in other countries around the world.
One of the most promising applications for LMDS is in a local exchange carrier (LEC) network. Figure 2.7
shows a typical network configuration, where the LEC owns a very wide bandwidth asynchronous transfer
mode (ATM) or Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) backbone switch, capable of connecting hundreds of
megabits per second of traffic with the Internet, the PSTN, or to its own private network. As long as a LOS
Cellular System
Cell Splitting.
Sectoring.
Coverage Zone Approach.
A) CELL SPLITTING:
It is process of subdividing a congested cell into smaller cells, each with its own base station and
a corresponding reduction in antenna height and transmitter power.
Cell splitting increases capacity of cellular system since it increases number of times that
channels are reused, it preserves frequency reuse plan.
It defines new cells which have smaller radius than original cells and by installing these smaller
cells called microcells between existing cells, that is radius will be half of the original cell.
Thus capacity increases due to additional number of channels per unit area, but does not disturb
the channel allocation scheme required to maintain the minimum co-channel reuse ratio Q
between co-channel cells.
B) SECTORING:
This is another method to increase cellular capacity and coverage by keeping cell radius
unchanged and decreasing D/R ratio.
In this approach, capacity improvement is achieved by reducing the number of cells in a cluster
and thus increasing the frequency reuse.
The co-channel interference in a cellular system may be decreased by replacing a single Omni-
directional antenna at the base station by several directional antennas, each radiating within a
specified sector.
The factor by which the co-channel interference is reduced depends on the amount of sectoring
used.
a) 1200 sectoring b) 600 sectoring
This approach was presented by Lee to solve the problem of an increased load on the switching
and control link elements of the mobile system due to sectoring.
It is based on a microcell concept for 7 cell reuse.
In this scheme, each of the three zone sites are connected to a single base station and share the
same radio equipment.
Multiple zones and a single base station make up a cell. As a mobile travels within the cell, it is
served by the zone with the strongest signal.
This approach is superior to sectoring since antennas are placed at the outer edges of the cell, and
any base station channel may be assigned to any zone by the base station.