Multiple Access Techniques (CDMA, TDMA, FDMA) : Reported by
Multiple Access Techniques (CDMA, TDMA, FDMA) : Reported by
Multiple Access Techniques (CDMA, TDMA, FDMA) : Reported by
University of Technology
Department of Electrical Engineering
Mobile Communication
Reported by
Mohammed Jawad
Supervised by
Introduction:
As local, state, and federal governments plan and install radio networks supporting
communications requirements, the success of these networks may be driven by the availability of
the radio frequency spectrum. The radio frequency spectrum, a finite natural resource, has
greater demands placed on it every day. In an effort to make the most efficient use of this
resource, various technologies have been developed so that multiple, simultaneous users can be
supported in a finite amount of spectrum. This concept is called "multiple access." The three
most commonly used access methods are frequency division multiple access (FDMA), time
division multiple access (TDMA), and code division multiple access (CDMA).
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CDMA, being a “spread-spectrum” technology, spreads the information contained in a signal
over the entire available bandwidth and not simply through one frequency. Due to the wide
bandwidth of a spread-spectrum signal, it is very difficult to cause jamming, difficult to interfere
with, and difficult to identify. It appears as nothing more than a slight rise in the “noise floor” or
interference level, unlike other technologies where the power of the signal is concentrated in a
narrower band making it easier to detect. Therefore CDMA systems provide more privacy than
FDMA or TDMA systems. These are great advantages over technologies using a narrower
bandwidth. CDMA channels can handle an unspecified number of users. There is not a fixed
number. The capacity of the system depends on the quality of current calls. As more users are
added, noise is added to the wideband frequency and therefore decreases the quality of current
calls. Each user's transmission power increases the level of the frequency spectrum's "noise
floor" and therefore decreases the overall call quality for all users. To help eliminate the "noise
floor," CDMA mobile phones and base stations use the minimum amount of power required to
communicate with each other. They use precise power control to decrease users' transmission
power. By decreasing a user's transmission power, the mobile phone has added battery life,
increased talk time, and smaller batteries. Because CDMA is a spread spectrum technology, it
requires less frequency planning. The full original spectrum is not divided into separate
blocks/channels, like it is in FDMA and TDMA systems. Therefore, there is no need to plan for
multiple frequency guard bands. Because all users have access to the entire spectrum at all times,
frequency planning only needs to consider one frequency/channel. However, the channel
requires relatively wide contiguous bandwidth.
Advantages / Disadvantages
Advantages:
• Greatest spectrum efficiency: capacity increases of 8 to 10 times that of an analog system and 4
to 5 times that of other digital systems which makes it most useful in high traffic areas with a
large number of users and limited spectrum
• CDMA improves call quality by filtering out background noise, cross-talk, and interference
•”Soft handoffs”— Because of the multiple diversities in use, handoffs between cells are
undetected by the user
• Simplified frequency planning - all users on a CDMA system use the same radio frequency
spectrum.
− Engineering detailed frequency plans are not necessary.
− Frequency re-tunes for expansion are eliminated.
− Fewer cells are required for quality coverage
• Random Walsh codes enhance user privacy; a spread-spectrum advantage
• Precise power control increases talk time and battery size for mobile phones
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Disadvantages:
• Backwards compatibility techniques are costly
• Currently, base station equipment is expensive
• Difficult to optimize to maximize performance
• Low traffic areas lead to inefficient use of spectrum and equipment resources
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Advantage / Disadvantages
Advantages:
• Extended battery life and talk time
• More efficient use of spectrum, compared to FDMA
• Will accommodate more users in the same spectrum space than an FDMA system which
improves capacity in high traffic areas, such as large metropolitan areas
• Efficient utilization of hierarchical cell structures – Pico, micro, and macro cells
• Can handle video and audio data efficiently
Disadvantages:
• Network and spectrum planning are intensive
• Multipath interference affects call quality
• Dropped calls are possible when users switch in and out of different cells
• Frequency planning is time consuming
• Frequency guard bands add to spectrum inefficiency
• Too few users result in idle channels (rural versus urban environment)
• Higher costs due to greater equipment sophistication
Conclusion:
CDMA technology has many advantages and is the most recent multiple access technology
to be considered. However, CDMA technology has not become a major player because it is more
difficult and expensive to provide equipment that accommodates FDMA, TDMA, and CDMA
systems. It is more difficult to provide backward compatibility, if a CDMA system is
implemented. The research conducted for this report did not reveal any plans to develop CDMA
equipment for public safety radio equipment. However, the research did indicate that using a
combination of CDMA and TDMA technologies could improve the quality of service and user
capacity without loss of range in cellular telephone systems. As the demand for wireless services
increase and technology advances, it is highly probable these techniques will continue to evolve
within the public safety arena.
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References:
1. Tutorialspoint.com. 2020. Multiple Access Techniques - Tutorialspoint. [online]
Available at:
<https://www.tutorialspoint.com/satellite_communication/satellite_communication_multi
ple_access_techniques.htm> [Accessed 15 July 2020].
2. Fsu.digital.flvc.org. 2020. [online] Available at:
<https://fsu.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fsu:175931/datastream/PDF/view>
[Accessed 15 July 2020].
3. 2020. [online] Available at:
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/285368968_Multiple_Access_Techniques>
[Accessed 15 July 2020].