LTE Frame Structure
LTE Frame Structure
LTE Frame Structure
A typical LTE frame is 10 ms (milliseconds) long. Each LTE frame has 10 sub-frames (1
ms each) while each sub-frame is further divided into 2 slots (0.5 ms each). The slots are
divided into symbols – each slot has either 6 or 7 symbols. The number of symbols per
slot depends on the size of the cyclic prefix. The LTE uses 2 CP sizes – Normal CP (4.67
µs) and Extended CP (16.67 µs). In general configuration and LTE deployments for
urban areas, the Normal CP is used so the number of symbols per slot would be 7. The
symbol time (Ts) for each LTE symbol is 66.67 us (much shorter than the symbol time for
10 MHz WiMAX symbol). Adding Cyclic Prefix to Ts makes it around 71.34 us. The
spacing between two carriers is constant and is equal to 15 kHz (in most of the cases).
Each symbol on a carrier is called a Resource Element, thus, we can say that LTE frame
is made up of Resource Elements. A group of 7 resource elements in time axis and 12
resource elements in frequency axis make up a Resource Block (RB) and each RB spans
over 180 kHz. Resources or bandwidth is allocated on the basis of RBs. The Scheduler
tells each UE (user or mobile) about the number of RBs allocated to it.
For control channels, another couple of groupings are made as the control channels
cannot span over a full RB. REG is made up of a group of 4 REs and is used for control
channels – PCFICH, PHICH, and PDCCH.
This is the Physical Control Format Indicator Channel and describes the format of the
PDCCH. PCFICH exists in the first OFDM symbol and spans over 16 REs which is
equivalent to 4 REGs (Resource Element Group – 1 REG = 4 REs). If CFI (Control
Format Indicator) is 1 then only the first OFDM symbol is used for PDCCH, if CFI is 2,
then first 2 OFDM symbols are used and if the CFI is 3 then the first 3 OFDM symbols
are used for PDCCH. A common misconception is that the PCFICH is placed in the first
OFDM symbol clustered together while actually, the each REG of the PCFICH is evenly
distributed across the whole BW. This permutation is defined by the PCI (Physical Cell
ID).
This is the Physical HARQ Indicator Channel which carries the HARQ ACKs and NACKs
for the UE’s Uplink data traffic – ACKs/NACKs for uplink data has to be sent in DL by this
channel. PHICH is placed in the first OFDM symbol of the sub-frame. Each PHICH
consists of 3 REGs (12 REs) and multiple PHICHs can use the same set of REGs known
as PHICH groups. This is made possible by using orthogonal sequences (much like
CDMA) and PHICH uses a total of 8 orthogonal sequences. The number of PHICHs
supported per sub-frame depends on the total number of orthogonal sequences and the
PHICH group multiplier (parameter Ng). Consider that the PHICH group multiplier (Ng) is
set to 1 which is equivalent to 7 PHICH groups (10 MHz – 50 RBs) then the number of
PHICHs supported would be 7 (PHICH Groups) x 8 (Number of Orthogonal Sequences) =
56 PHICHs. The total number of REs would be 7 PHICH groups x 3 REGs per PHICH
group x 4 REs per REG = 84 REs.
This is the Physical Downlink Control Channel and typically contains the following
information
UE C-RNTI: It is the Cell Radio Network Temporary Identity and it is required to
identify the UE. This ID is unique within a cell and PDCCH is scrambled using the PCI
and the C-RNTI.
DL Resource Allocation: It also contains the starting point of RBs and the number
of RBs allocated to the UE. The UE goes to the starting RB and reads the number of
RBs specified in PDCCH.
MCS: It also indicates the MCS used for downlink direction. UEs in good RF
conditions are granted better MCS (e.g 64QAM) than the ones in poor RF conditions.
UL Grants: It also contains information of UL grants and resource allocations.
Transmit Power Command: TPC is used to adjust UL power of the UE. The UEs
near the eNB need to transmit at lower powers so that they do not over-shadow the
UEs at the cell edge. Similarly, the UEs at cell edge may need to increase their power
in order to be decoded at the eNB but the power needs to be adjusted in order to
reduce the interference on the other eNBs. TPC is sent in PDCCH for all the PUCCH
(UL Control Channel) and PUSCH (UL Shared Channel).
PDCCH exists on either the 1 st symbol or the 1 st two symbols or the 1 st three symbols
depending on the information in PCFICH. There are 4 aggregation layers for the PDCCH
and the difference is in the number of CCEs.
The aggregation levels might be explained with help of an example. Consider a UE-A at
cell edge with poor RF conditions and a UE-B at good RF conditions near the eNB. The
UE-B does not need the PDCCH to be coded with extensive FEC (may use 2/3 or 3/4)
and repetitions as it is in good RF conditions but the UE-A would need extensive FEC
(1/6 or 1/12) and repetitions (rep 4 or rep 6). So, the UE-B PDCCH (FEC of 2/3 or 3/4
and lower repetitions) would use a lower aggregation level while the UE-A PDCCH (FEC
of 1/6 or 1/12 and higher repetitions) would use a higher aggregation level.
Similarly, the PDCCH for control message allocation may use higher aggregation level
while the PDCCH for some data message resource allocation may use a lower
aggregation level
Note: PDCCH may consist of 1 st four OFDM symbols for 1.4 MHz BW due to smaller
number of carriers, an addition might be required in the number of symbols to transmit
the whole control information successfully.
This is the Physical Broadcast Channel and contains the MIB for the LTE network. The
PBCH takes 72 subcarriers into 4 symbols around the DC sub-carrier in the second slot
of the first sub-frame. It re-occurs once every frame and the whole MIB is delivered in 4
consecutive transmissions in 4 consecutive frames. Since, each LTE frame is 10 ms long
so the PBCH takes 40 ms to complete it. It contains the DL BW, PHICH configuration and
the system frame number.
A common query is why the PBCH contains the PHICH configuration. PBCH is to be
decoded in the beginning so the UE would not be expecting any HARQ ACKs/NACKs so
why should PBCH transmit PHICH configuration. The UE needs to know the PDCCH
location in the 1st OFDM symbol and to de-interleave the 1 st OFDM symbol, it needs to
know the locations of PHICH, PCFICH and RS (Reference Signals). Now, the locations of
the RS and the PCFICH are calculated by using the PCI (Physical Cell ID – calculated
from the S-SS and P-SS which are decoded before the PBCH) and since the UE already
knows the PCI before it starts decoding the PBCH so it knows the locations of the RS
and the PCFICH. However, it still needs to know the locations of the PHICH groups so
that has to be transmitted in the PBCH. Once, the UE has the knowledge about the
PHICH, PCFICH and RS locations then it knows that the remaining REs belong to
PDCCH.
Note: It is a common misconception that the MIB has a parameter for the number of
transmit antennas which is not correct. The MIB has a CRC however, which is scrambled
with one of three sequences which maps to the number of antennas used in the cell. So,
when the UE calculates the CRC from the decoded MIB it compares against each of the
three descrambled CRCs looking for a match and hence discovers the number of
antennas.
The PSS is supposed to provide synchronization with symbol timing and knowledge
about carrier frequency while the SSS is supposed to provide frame timing
synchronization and knowledge about CP configuration. The PSS and SSS combine
together to form the PCI. SSS contains the Physical Channel ID Groups which ranges
from 0 to 167 while the PSS contains the Physical Layer ID which ranges from 0 to 2.
Together, they form 504 possible sequences known as the Physical Cell ID (PCI) which
is used to scramble the channels in the cell.
Note: There is a mismatch in different documents on the number of carriers assigned to
PSS and SSS. Some authors write that 72 sub-carriers are used while others say that 62
sub-carriers are used. Actually, 62 sub-carriers are assigned to the PSS and SSS while
there is a guard-band of 5 sub-carriers on both sides and thus the total number of sub-
carriers consumed is equal to 72. So, both the answers can be assumed correct.
This is the Physical Downlink Shared Channel which contains the Downlink traffic or data
for the UEs. Each downlink allocation on the PDCCH points to a resource on PDSCH. It
also carries SIB and Paging messages.
Reference signals or symbols are used for channel estimation. They serve the same
purpose that the Pilot signals do in other technologies. The location of the reference
symbols is fixed along the time axis as they exist on the 1 st and 5th symbol of every slot.
Each Reference symbol takes one RE and the total number of REs in either the 1 st or the
5th symbol depends on the bandwidth as there are 4 Reference Symbols per RB so it
means that within each RB, there would be 2 RS in the 1 st OFDM symbol and 2 RS in the
5th OFDM symbol. The position of the RS in the frequency domain varies on the basis of
the PCI. The distribution of the RS in time and frequency domains helps the UEs to
estimate the channel conditions in both time and frequency.