mobile basics
mobile basics
mobile basics
Systems
Outline
• Introduction
– Mobile communication systems issues, system
structure, safety
• Wireless communication fundamentals
– Propagation, Modulation and Coding,
Frequency reuse.
• Intersystem Operation + Mobility Management
– Location tracking and Paging, Handoff, Trunking
theory.
• Second Generation Cellular (2G) :
– GSM
Outline
• 2.5G Cellular: Wireless Data Services
– GPRS (General Packet Radio Service)
– EDGE (Enhanced Data GSM Evolution)
• 3G Cellular:
– Structure, protocols and advanced
services
– UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecom.
Services)
– Cdma 2000 1x EV-DO (Evolved Data
Optimized)
• 4G LTE (long term evolution)
• Location Based Systems/Services
Mobile vs. Wireless
• Wireless Communication System:
– Any electrical communication system that uses
a naturally occurring communication channel, such as
air, water, earth.
2G Packet Data
1G Digital Voice
Analog Voice
GPRS W-CDMA
GSM
EDGE (UMTS)
115 Kbps
NMT 9.6 Kbps 384 Kbps Up to 2 Mbps
GSM/
TD-SCDMA
GPRS
TDMA
(Overlay)
TACS 2 Mbps?
115 Kbps
9.6 Kbps
iDEN iDEN
9.6 Kbps PDC (Overlay)
9.6 Kbps
AMPS CDMA 1xRTT cdma2000
CDMA 1X-EV-DV
PHS
14.4 Kbps (IP-Based) 144 Kbps Over 2.4 Mbps
/ 64 Kbps
64 Kbps
PHS 2003 - 2004+
2003+
2001+
1992 - 2000+ Source: U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray
1984 - 1996+
Future Generations
Other Tradeoffs:
Rate Rate vs. Coverage
4G Rate vs. Delay
802.11b WLAN Rate vs. Cost
3G Rate vs. Energy
2G
2G Cellular
Mobility
Fundamental Design Breakthroughs Needed
Spectrum Regulation
Chan D
Frequency
Chan C
Chan B
Chan A
Time
Differences Between First and
Second Generation Systems
• Digital traffic channels – first-generation systems are
almost purely analog; second-generation systems are
digital
• Encryption – all second generation systems provide
encryption to prevent eavesdropping
• Error detection and correction – second-generation
digital traffic allows for detection and correction,
giving clear voice reception
• Channel access – second-generation systems allow
channels to be dynamically shared by a number of
users
Time Division Multiple Access
• Definition - TDMA is an assigned frequency
band shared among a few users. However,
each user is allowed to transmit in
predetermined time slots. Hence,
channelization of users in the same band is
achieved through separation in time.
(Qualcomm, 1997)
TDMA
Chan B
Chan A
Time
Mobile Wireless TDMA Design
Considerations
• Number of logical channels (number of time slots in
TDMA frame): 8
• Maximum cell radius (R): 35 km
• Frequency: region around 900 MHz
• Maximum vehicle speed (Vm):250 km/hr
• Bandwidth: Not to exceed 200 kHz (25 kHz per
channel)
Paging & SMS
• Evolution of Paging
– Tone Boy, early 1960’s
– Tone-Voice, late 1960’s
• Digital Pagers, 1970s
– Numeric Paging Systems
– Alpha/Numeric Paging Systems
Paging
• Larger coverage area in each site
• Signal, Numeric, Alpha-numeric
• Marketed by coverage area.
– Features--Web messaging, modem
messaging
Paging
• Current Applications
– Fax Forwarding
– E-Mail Forwarding
– Voice Mail Notification
– Automated Problem Notification
– Two-way Paging
Wireless Local Loop
• Wired technologies responding to need for reliable,
high-speed access by residential, business, and
government subscribers
– ISDN, xDSL, cable modems
• Increasing interest shown in competing wireless
technologies for subscriber access
• Wireless local loop (WLL)
– Narrowband – offers a replacement for existing telephony
services
– Broadband – provides high-speed two-way voice and data
service
WLL Configuration
Advantages of WLL over Wired
Approach
• Cost – wireless systems are less expensive due to cost
of cable installation that’s avoided
• Installation time – WLL systems can be installed in a
small fraction of the time required for a new wired
system
• Selective installation – radio units installed for
subscribers who want service at a given time
– With a wired system, cable is laid out in anticipation of
serving every subscriber in a given area
Propagation Considerations for
WLL
• Most high-speed WLL schemes use millimeter wave
frequencies (10 GHz to about 300 GHz)
– There are wide unused frequency bands available above 25
GHz
– At these high frequencies, wide channel bandwidths can be
used, providing high data rates
– Small size transceivers and adaptive antenna arrays can be
used
Propagation Considerations for
WLL
• Millimeter wave systems have some
undesirable propagation characteristics
– Free space loss increases with the square of the
frequency; losses are much higher in millimeter
wave range
– Above 10 GHz, attenuation effects due to rainfall
and atmospheric or gaseous absorption are large
– Multipath losses can be quite high
Atmospheric Absorption
• Radio waves at frequencies above 10 GHz are
subject to molecular absorption
– Peak of water vapor absorption at 22 GHz
– Peak of oxygen absorption near 60 GHz
• Favorable windows for communication:
– From 28 GHz to 42 GHz
– From 75 GHz to 95 GHz
Effect of Rain
• Attenuation due to rain
– Presence of raindrops can severely degrade the reliability
and performance of communication links
– The effect of rain depends on drop shape, drop size, rain
rate, and frequency
• Estimated attenuation due to rain:
b
A aR
• A = attenuation (dB/km)
• R = rain rate (mm/hr)
• a and b depend on drop sizes and frequency
Effects of Vegetation
• Trees near subscriber sites can lead to multipath
fading
• Multipath effects from the tree canopy are diffraction
and scattering
• Multipath effects highly variable due to wind
Multipoint Distribution Service
(MDS)
• Multichannel multipoint distribution service
(MMDS)
– Also referred to as wireless cable
– Used mainly by residential subscribers and small
businesses
• Local multipoint distribution service (LMDS)
– Appeals to larger companies with greater bandwidth
demands
Advantages of MMDS
• MMDS signals have larger wavelengths and
can travel farther without losing significant
power
• Equipment at lower frequencies is less
expensive
• MMDS signals don't get blocked as easily by
objects and are less susceptible to rain
absorption
Advantages of LMDS
• Relatively high data rates
• Capable of providing video, telephony, and
data
• Relatively low cost in comparison with cable
alternatives
802.16 Standards Development
• Use wireless links with microwave or millimeter
wave radios
• Use licensed spectrum
• Are metropolitan in scale
• Provide public network service to fee-paying
customers
• Use point-to-multipoint architecture with stationary
rooftop or tower-mounted antennas
802.16 Standards Development
• Provide efficient transport of heterogeneous traffic
supporting quality of service (QoS)
• Use wireless links with microwave or millimeter
wave radios
• Are capable of broadband transmissions (>2 Mbps)
IEEE 802.16.1 Services
• Digital audio/video multicast
• Digital telephony
• ATM
• Internet protocol
• Bridged LAN
• Back-haul
• Frame relay
IEEE 802.16.3 Services
• Voice transport
• Data transport
• Bridged LAN
LAN Extension
• Wireless LAN linked into a wired LAN on
same premises
– Wired LAN
• Backbone
• Support servers and stationary workstations
– Wireless LAN
• Stations in large open areas
• Manufacturing plants, stock exchange trading floors,
and warehouses
Wireless LAN Applications
• LAN Extension
• Cross-building interconnect
• Nomadic Access
• Ad hoc networking
Ad Hoc Networking
• Temporary peer-to-peer network set up to
meet immediate need
• Example:
– Group of employees with laptops convene for a
meeting; employees link computers in a temporary
network for duration of meeting
Wireless LAN Requirements
• Throughput
• Number of nodes
• Connection to backbone LAN
• Service area
• Battery power consumption
• Transmission robustness and security
• Collocated network operation
• License-free operation
• Handoff/roaming
• Dynamic configuration
Sensor Networks
• Specialized wireless networks to gather data from a specific system,
usually no mobility of sensor nodes
– APPLICATIONS:
Military, Environmental, Health, Home, Space Exploration,
Chemical Processing
– SENSOR TYPES:
Seismic, Low Sampling Rate Magnetic, Thermal, Visual,
Infrared, Acoustic, Radar…
– SENSOR TASKS:
Temperature, Humidity, Vehicular Movement, Lightning
Condition, Pressure, Soil Makeup, Noise Levels, Presence or
Absence of Certain Types of Objects, Mechanical Stress
Levels on Attached Objects, Current Characteristics (Speed,
Direction, Size) of an Object ….
Example Sensor Network
Wireless Personal Area Networks
• Origins in the BodyLAN project in the early 1990s
• Networking “personal” devices – sensors, cameras,
handheld computers, audio devices, etc. with a range of
around 5 feet around a soldier
• Today: Networking digital cameras to cell phones to
PDAs to laptops to printers to etc..,
• Most popular application – handsfree headset to
cellphone
• IEEE 802.15 standard (Bluetooth)
– Use band available globally for unlicensed users
– Low powered – medium data rate ~100s kbps
Applications of WPAN