SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Similarities and Differences between LTE, UMB & 
WiMax 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Presented By: Brandt Elster
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Outline 
•WiMax News 
•Definitions 
•Background & History 
•Motivations and Objectives 
•Deterrents 
•Services and QoS 
•Network Architecture 
•Physical Layer & MAC Protocols 
•Comparison of the Technologies 
•Future of the Technology 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 2 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
WiMax News Today 
• Today there was a large announcement regarding the future of mobile WiMax 
• Since Dan Hesse became the new Sprint CEO there were doubts he would continue 
Sprint’s future in their WiMax venture named XOHM. 
• Immediately upon becoming CEO he terminated an existing agreement to work along side 
Clearwire and collaborate on separate WiMax networks that were able to roam on each others to 
increase coverage 
• Today Sprint and Clearwire put out a joint press release stating they had formed a joint 
venture that would be named Clearwire to build one WiMax network. 
• This new company has received investments from the following companies: Google, Intel, 
Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House networks 
• These companies have combined together for a total investment of $3.2 billion 
• They will receive an estimated 22% ownership of the company 
• Sprint will maintain the largest share at 51% and Clearwire will control 27% 
• The deal is estimated to be worth a total of $14.5 billion 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 3 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Definitions - LTE 
• Long Term Evolution is more commonly referred to as LTE 
• LTE is the 4th generation network that was designed through the Third Generation Partnership 
Project (3GPP). 
• It is an all IP network 
• Its primary goals were to improve efficiency, lower infrastructure costs, create a higher QoS, 
all while making use of new spectrum opportunities, and better integrating with other open 
standards 
• Predominantly created by Ericsson, Nortel and Nokia-Siemens 
• Should result in release 8 of the UMTS standard 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 4 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Definitions - UMB 
• Ultra Mobile Broadband is commonly referred to as UMB 
• UMB is the 4th Generation wireless broadband access network developed through the CDMA 
Development Group (CDG) 
• It is an all IP network 
• It was designed from the ground up to provide the type of access required in the modern 
mobile world, with great flexibility and interoperability 
• Standardized by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2) 
• Proprietary technology developed by Qualcomm 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 5 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Definitions - WiMax 
• Mobile WiMax is short for Wireless Interoperability for Microwave Access 
• There is actually a difference between mobile WiMax and fixed WiMax 
• Today we are only going to talk about the mobile version of WiMax 
•WiMax is the 4th Generation wireless broadband access network developed by the IEEE 
• It is the 802.16e or upcoming 802.16m standards 
• It is an all IP network 
• Many hardware manufacturers are already supporting WiMax due to it’s open standards. 
Some of the larger ones include Samsung, Motorola and Intel. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 6 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History 
• Analogy for the differences between TDMA, FDMA, SDMA, CDMA 
• Take a large room with a decent number of people in it. There are multiple different 
conversations going on throughout the room. 
• TDMA – Everyone in the room would take turns speaking. Each group of people would be 
assigned a specific time slot. 
• FDMA – Each group in the room would speak at a different pitch (frequency) far enough apart that 
they can be differentiated. 
• SDMA – Each group’s speaker would talk in a specific direction, only people in front of them would 
be able to hear. If the room is big enough you could have multiple people speaking in the same 
direction as long as they were far enough apart. 
• CDMA – Each group would be assigned a specific language to communicate with. They would be 
able to easily discern their specific language and all others would be small and ignorable 
background noise. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 7 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History 
• OFDMA 
• Basically an enhanced version of FDMA 
• Allows for the elimination of guard bands by using orthogonal signals. 
• Signals are considered to be orthogonal if their dot products are equal to 0 
• Signals are able to overlap without causing interference to the other 
• Signals are modulated and demodulated using the Fast Fourier Transform 
• SC-OFDM 
• This is a single carrier equivalent of OFDMA 
• Each transmission is given only one carrier 
• This allows the peak-to-average power to be lower thus increasing the capable average power of 
the power amplifier 
• This is helpful because the user terminal is generally battery powered and this includes both battery 
life and range 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 8 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• Part of the 3GPP standard 
• Essentially it is HSPA rev 8 
• It was given the name Long Term Evolution by the 3GPP 
• The name follows their generally naming scheme. They try to make their name represent their 
monopoly over the wireless arena 
• GSM stands for Global Standard for Mobile & UMTS stands for Universal Mobile Telephone 
Standard 
• Originally started as GSM 
• Capable of virtually no data communications 
• Pioneered the first short messaging service (SMS) 
• Supports handoffs with all UMTS and GSM networks 
• There is discussion to build in the ability to support handoffs with CDMA networks 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 9 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• GSM was the 2G technology that both GPRS and EDGE are based on 
• GPRS was the first step 
• Stands for General Packet Radio Service 
• It is considered to be a 2.5G 
• Capable of speeds from 56 up to 114 kbit/s 
• Supports a very robust voice channel and low bandwidth data options. 
• Main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced size pictures and music 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 10 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• EDGE was the next step 
• Stands for Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution 
• It is considered to be a 2.75G 
• Capable of speeds from 1 Mbit/s 
• Reduced latency to 100 ms 
• However just like GPRS, the main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced 
size pictures and music 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 11 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• Following EDGE came UMTS 
• Stands for Universal Mobile Telephone Standard 
• UMTS was the first truly 3G technology to come from 3GPP 
• UMTS is a completely different technology than GSM. 
• It required a completely new network be built over the top of any existing networks 
• UMTS uses W-CDMA instead of the TMDA that powered GSM 
• The primary difference between W-CDMA and CDMA2000 is that W-CDMA uses 5 MHz blocks of 
spectrum and CDMA2000 uses only 1.25 MHz blocks, hence where the “wide” came from 
• The first revision of UMTS was capable of speeds up to 2 MB/s 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 12 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• HSPA was the final step for W-CDMA 
• HSPA stands for High Speed Packet Access 
• There are three different enhancements to HSPA, HSDPA, HSUPA and HSOPA 
• HSDPA stands for High Speed Downlink Packet Access 
• It predominantly increases the download speed of the network. 
• HSUPA stands for High Speed Uplink Packet Access 
• It predominantly increases the upload speed of the network 
• HSOPA stands for High Speed OFDM Packet Access 
• This technology replaces the entire infrastructure of UMTS and replaces it with a new OFDM 
infrastructure 
• It is a separate technology from LTE but is part of the overall picture. Most likely it will never be 
implemented but it’s technologies will be morphed into LTE 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 13 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - LTE 
• Table of different UMTS Technologies and their specifications: 
Technology Release Data Downlink Speed Uplink Speed 
UMTS 2000 384 kb.s 128 kb/s 
HSDPA 2000 7.2 Mb/s 384 kb/s 
HSUPA 2005 7.2 Mb/s 5.76 Mb/s 
HSOPA 2009 100 Mb/s 50 Mb/s 
LTE 2010 100 Mb/s 50 Mb/s 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 14 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• Part of the CDMA 2000 standard 
• First named EV-DO rev C 
• Renamed to Ultra Mobile Broadband by the CDMA Development Group (CDG) 
• Originally started as cdmaOne 
• A 2G Qualcomm technology 
• Capable of virtually no data communications 
•Will be capable of call handoffs with all legacy CDMA2000 networks 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 15 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• cdmaOne was the 2G technology that both 1xRTT, 1xEV-DO, and 1xEV-DV are based on 
• 1xRTT was the first step 
• It is considered to be a 2.5G 
• Capable of speeds up to 144 kbit/s 
• Also referred to as just 1x 
• Supports a very robust voice channel and low bandwidth data options. 
• Main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced size pictures and music 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 16 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• The next step was 1xEV-DO (Evolution Data Only) 
• Later renamed Evolution Data Optimized to remove the negative connotation 
• Most commonly referred to as just EVDO, or simply EV 
• First truly 3G technology and first real wireless broadband technology. 
• An alternative to EVDO was 1xEV-DV (Evolution Data & Voice) 
• The standard was not completed in time so it was ultimately passed up 
• Theoretical speeds of 3.1 Mbit/s downlink and 1.8 Mbit/s uplink. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 17 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• EVDO began as Rel 0. 
• Significant speed improvements over 1x 
• 2.4 Mbit/s downlink 
• 153 kbps uplink 
• Includes the following protocols and more 
• Hybrid ARQ 
• Incremental Redundancy Feedback in the 
Downlink 
• Downlink and Uplink Rate Controls 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
• Supports the following applications 
• broadband Internet 
• MP3 music downloads 
• 3D gaming 
• TV broadcasts 
• Video and audio downloads 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 18 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• The current and most up to date standard of the CDMA2000 protocol is EVDO Rev A 
• It is currently being deployed over Rel 0 
• Capable of producing speeds of 3.1 Mbit/s downlink and 1.8 Mbit/s uplink 
• Uses enhanced access channel MAC 
• Controls who sends and who receives and when 
• Advanced QoS support 
• Increased spectral efficiency 
• 1.2 times Rel 0 forward link sector capacity and 3.4 times reverse link sector capacity 
• Low latency, below 50 ms 
• Supports all the services of Rel 0 but adds higher quality video and faster loading times for 
streaming services 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 19 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - UMB 
• Rev B would be the next upgrade 
• It is likely to be skipped for Rev C in 2009 similar to how EVDV was bypassed 
• Speeds of up to 14.7 Mbit/s downlink 
• Utilizes statistical multiplexing 
• Hybrid frequency reuse 
• Supports OFDM 
• Adds multi carrier support 
• Rev A uses 1.25 MHz carriers, most likely 3 per user would be used for Rev B, or 3.75 MHz 
• This is unique from HSPA because the carriers do not need to be adjacent 
• This allows operators to combine spectrum from multiple blocks 
• Adds the ability to do High Definition video streaming, multiplayer online gaming, and 
replacement of home HSI and hotspots 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 20 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - WiMax 
• It evolved from the WiFi standards in an effort to create a technology that could cover a larger 
footprint. 
• Example, if WiMax is a cell phone, then WiFi would be a cordless phone. 
• Fixed WiMax was designed as a technology that could be used to blanket a city with mobile 
internet to replace building costly short range WiFi networks. 
• Mobile WiMax took the same technology and evolved it into version that could work with 
devices that are no longer stationary 
•WiMax comes from the IEEE 802 set of standards. 
• The IEE 802 standards are a family of standards that deal with Local Area Networks 
(LANs) and Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) 
•WiMax is the 802.16 standard. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 21 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - WiMax 
• History of the IEEE 802 standard 
• IEEE 802.3 is collection of IEEE standards that define the Media Access Control Layer, 
Physical Layer and Data Link Layer of the wired Ethernet standard 
• IEEE 802.11 is Wireless LAN & Mesh a.k.a. WiFi 
• It is a group of standards for wireless local area networks (WLAN) 
• These typically operate in unlicensed spectrum bands located near 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. 
• Maximum range of WiFi is roughly 70m indoors using the 802.11n standard and is capable of 
producing 74 Mbit/s 
• IEEE 802.15 is Wireless Person Area Networks (PAN) 
• This standard includes Bluetooth and ZigBee 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 22 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - WiMax 
• Brief Discussion of 802.11 Wifi 
•Wifi is predominantly used in the 2.4 GHz range due to range limitations with the 5GHz 
frequency band 
• It divides these frequency bands into channels that are 22 MHz wide with 5 MHz spacing in 
between. 
• WiFi networks consist of two main components. The Access Points (APs) and the clients. The AP 
continuously broadcasts it’s SSID or name every 100 ms at 1 Mb/s. Sending at 1 Mb/s ensures 
that all users are at least capable of sending at that speed. 
• WiFi is not capable of collision detection. It instead does collision avoidance using RTS/CTS. It 
also uses acknowledgements to make sure that the packet is received. 
• Generally WiFi networks connect back to a 802.3 Ethernet connection, but they can connect 2 
devices to one another (AdHoc Networks) or connect a computer directly to the internet. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 23 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Background & History - WiMax 
• Brief Discussion of 802.11 Wifi 
Protocol Release 
Date 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Freq Typical 
Thruput 
Max Data 
Rate 
Indoor 
Range 
Outdoor 
Range 
Legacy 
802.11 
1997 2.4 GHz .9 Mb/s 2 Mb/s 20 m 100 m 
802.11a 1999 5 GHz 23 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 35 m 120 m 
802.11b 1999 2.4 GHz 4.3 Mb/s 11 Mb/s 38 m 140 m 
802.11g 2003 2.4 GHz 19 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 38 m 140 m 
802.11n June 2009 2.4 GHz 
5 GHZ 
74 Mb/s 248 Mb/s 70 m 250 m 
802.11y June 2009 3.7 GHz 23 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 50 m 5 km 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 24 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Motivations - LTE 
• Chosen European standard likely to be used throughout the world 
• Large companies have committed to it 
• Vodaphone (part owner Verizon Wireless) 
• AT&T 
• High speed data throughputs 
• 100 Mbps Downlink 
• 50 Mbps Uplink 
• Cost effective compared to UMTS based technologies 
• Backwards compatible with all UMTS/GSM technologies 
• High QoS for a wide range of applications 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 25 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Motivations - LTE 
• Can be deployed within existing GSM & UMTS frequency bands along side existing networks 
• Can use only a portion of the frequency band in the beginning and then can take more 
existing spectrum as old networks are phased out. 
• Designed for high mobility 
• Optimized for 0 – 15 km/h 
• High performance still achievable for less than 150 km/h 
•Will still support anything up to 500 km/h 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 26 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Motivations - UMB 
•Motivations for EVDO Rev C (UMB) 
• Backwards compatible with all CDMA 2000 Networks 
• High speed data throughputs 
• 280 Mbps Downlink 
• 75 Mbps Uplink 
• Low latency connections 
• An average of 16 ms (32-byte, RTT) end-to-end network latency 
• High QoS for a wide range of applications 
• Seamless mobility 
• Efficient frequency re-use deployment 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 27 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Motivations - WiMax 
• Time to market: 
• Has already seen a small launch in the United States – Clearwire 
• Has seen similar deployments around the world. 
• Large companies have committed to it 
• Sprint-Nextel (XOHM) 
• SK Telecom (WiBro is a variant of WiMax and has been launched in South Korea) 
• There have been discussions to morph WiMax into the LTE Umbrella and make it a stepping 
stone to LTE 
• This may be a play simply to discredit WiMax and make it sound inferior 
• The newest revision of Mobile WiMax (802.16m) is expected from the IEEE sometime this 
year and should bring the theoretical speeds for a mobile application up to a level of those 
expected from LTE & UMB. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 28 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Deterrents 
•Long Term Evolution (LTE) 
• Time to market: 
• Not expected to have a widespread deployment until 2012 
• Components not available until late 2009 
• 4 years behind Mobile WiMax 
•Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) 
• Time to market: Components first available in late 2009 to 2010. 
• No corporate commitments throughout world 
• Even the majority of current CDMA carriers have chosen other platforms 
•Mobile WiMax 
• Speeds are not up to the level of UMB & LTE 
• Downlink capable of 46 Mb/s (without MIMO) 
• Less than half that of UMB & LTE 
• *note that 802.16m is expected to raise these figures to 100 Mb/s and should be out sometime this year and available around 
2010. Note this is still 2 years before LTE is expected to widely deployed. 
• Not officially classified as 4G by European standards due in part to insufficient speeds 
• Unproven, a lot is riding on the success of Sprint’s consumer launch (XOHM) 
• Success could lead to more build outs worldwide turning it into a global standard 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 29 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Deterrents 
•All three technologies face another crucial issue. Backhaul 
• As speed increase the need for more and more leased lines increases. Fiber alleviates some 
pressure but is limited in roll outs and is relatively expensive. 
• Alternative options include but are not limited to 
• Microwave 
• Fixed WiFi or WiMax 
• Dark Fiber 
• ADSL or SHDSL 
• PDH or SDH/SONET infrastructures 
• E1/T1, E3, T3, STM-1/OC-3 … 
• Cable Coaxial lines 
• None of these options is widely available in the U.S., Especially in the mass rural parts of the 
county. 
• Sprint is supposedly using Microwave to provide the backhaul to their WiMax towers where 
fiber is not yet available. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 30 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Spectrum Allocations 
•Long Term Evolution (LTE) 
• 1.25 MHz to 20 MHz chunks 
• Can operate in all 3GPP frequency bands in paired and unpaired spectrum allocations 
• Can sit in the same band as existing 3GPP networks. Allows for LTE to be phased in while 
older technologies are phased out. 
•Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) 
• 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz 
•Mobile WiMax 
• Any frequency below 66 GHz 
• Fixed channel sizes of 3.5 MHz, 5 MHz, 7 MHz, 10 MHz, and 20 MHz. 
• Mobile channel sizes of 5 MHz, 8.75 MHz and 10 MHz. 
• This does not phase Sprint or Clearwire as both have almost 120 MHz of spectrum in their areas, 
but smaller companies could face issues when only operating in 10 or 20 MHz blocks. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 31 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Services and QoS 
• Streaming of high quality video and audio 
• Video calling 
• VOIP for phone calls 
• Provide enhanced data speeds for both handheld devices and laptop connect cards 
• Could replace the traditional wired networks as they are much cheaper than fiber to the curb, 
and speeds look to be the same if not higher than those offered via wired today 
• This would be for the following services 
• HSI to replace DSL/Cable Modems 
• Digital Phone for the Home 
• IPTV or TV over IP to replace standard cable or satellite provider 
• This would give previously only mobile operators the ability to sell the very lucrative triple 
play that, up until now, only existing LEC and cable operators have been able to. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 32 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Services and QoS 
Category Current Environment 4G Possibilities 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: UMTS Forum, 
"Standardising the future 
of mobile 
communications with 
LTE (Long Term 
Evolution)." Towards 
Global Mobile 
Broadband (2008): ] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 33 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Services and QoS 
• Companies are also looking to build 4G chips into more electronic devices than just cell 
phones and laptops 
• Looking for every electronic device to have a 4G connection to the internet 
• Fridge could download recipes and auto update shopping list with what you need 
• Digital camera’s would be able to instantly upload photo’s to photo sharing and social 
networking sites, as well as having the ability to send them via email directly from the 
camera 
• MP3 players could download songs from anywhere, similar to the Apple iPod Touch but 
without the need for a WiFi connection 
• Cars would be able to auto diagnose issues and email the mechanic to notify them of 
issues 
• These are just a couple of the endless possibilities that 4th generation networks are trying 
to tap into 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 34 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G 
Evolution HSPA and LTE 
for Mobile Broadband. 
First. London: ELSEVIER, 
2007.] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 35 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - LTE 
• LTE combines the following network protocols into a single air interface, utilizing the 
individual advantages of each one 
• OFDMA 
• MIMO (2x2 or 2x4) 
• ARQ within the RLC sub layer and HARQ within the MAC sub layer 
• FDD & TDD 
• SC-FDMA 
• Up to 64 QAM DL and 16 QAM UL 
• Turbo Coding (rate – 1/3, 2 8 state constituent encoders and a contention-free internal 
interleaver) 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 36 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - LTE 
•The core network architecture of LTE has been given it’s own name. It is called System 
Architecture Evolution (SAE) 
•SAE is relatively similar to the GPRS Core Network that includes some basic modifications. 
•Most notably a simplified architecture 
•Spectrum allocations from 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz 
•Can support 200 simultaneous VOIP users across a cell consisting of 5 MHz 
•Provides interference reduction through power control and link adaptation techniques 
•A common node B. Acts as a common gateway for all of the access technologies that 
access the network 
•Can support handoffs between both 3GPP networks and non-3GPP networks 
•This should allow legacy CDMA2000 operators to interface their old networks with LTE 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 37 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - LTE 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007.] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 38 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - UMB 
• UMB is a proprietary technology to Qualcomm Inc. 
• There is only a limited amount of information available regarding the actual architecture and 
physical properties of the technology. 
• This a summary of the available information available from Qualcomm white papers. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 39 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - UMB 
• According to the CDG UMB combines the following network protocols into a single air 
interface, utilizing the individual advantages of each one 
• CDMA 
• OFDMA 
• MIMO 
• SDMA 
• FDD 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 40 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - UMB 
•Spectrum allocations from 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz 
• Can support 1000 simultaneous VOIP users across 20 MHz FDD 
•A flat network architecture 
• Simplifies core network design 
• Eliminates the need for centralized base station controllers (BSCs) 
•A converged-access network (CAN) design that enables seamless mobility 
•A multi-route feature that enables fast switching between base stations and provides requisite 
support for latency-sensitive applications 
•Layer 2 and layer 3 tunneling mechanisms to simplify the network interface 
•Adaptive interference management 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 41 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - UMB 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: "UMB Network 
Architecture." Qualcomm 
Inc Dec 2007 02 Apr 
2008 <7. 
http://www.qualcomm.co 
m/common/documents/w 
hite_papers/UMB_Netwo 
rk_Achitecture.pdf>. ] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 42 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - WiMax 
• Mobile WiMax combines the following network protocols into a single air interface, utilizing 
the individual advantages of each one 
• TDM access with variable frame sizes (2 - 20 ms) 
• OFDM 
• MIMO 
• Adaptive Antenna System (AAS) 
• QPSK, 16 QAM, 64 QAM 
• Convolutional Codes, Convolutional Turbo Codes, Block Turbo Codes, and Low-Density 
Parity Check (LDPC) Codes 
• Hybrid ARQ 
• TDD, FDD & H-FDD 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 43 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - WiMax 
•The following channel bandwidths are supported: 
• 5 MHz, 7 MHz, 8.75 MHz, 10 MHz and 20 MHz 
•These spectrum allocations can be anywhere within the following licensed spectrum bands 
• 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz, 3.3GHz, 3.5GHz 
•While WiMax can support both TDD and FDD, it is only truly supporting TDD at this point. The 
ability to do FDD should be built into a later revision. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 44 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Network Architecture - WiMax 
"Network Architecture." HiperMAX-micro. Airspan. 7 May 2008 <http://www.airspan.com/products_wimax_microcell_hipermax.aspx>. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 45
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE 
•The physical layer was defined with the bandwidth constraints of LTE in mind. 
• This is important in allowing it to easily adapt to various spectrum allocations 
• It is also important to get as much data throughput as possible through the connection 
•LTE uses up to 64 QAM for the downlink and up to 16 QAM for the uplink. In contrast, its 
broadcast only channel uses on BPSK. 
•LTE also uses turbo coding for all transport blocks 
• It uses a rate 1/3 code 
• It also has 2 8-state constituent encoders as well as a contention-free QPP internal 
interleaver 
• The turbo coding scheme uses a trellis termination technique. 
• Before the turbo coding, transport blocks are segmented into byte aligned segments with a 
maximum information block size of 6144 bits. 
• Error detection is supported by the use of 24 bit CRC. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 46 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE 
•Both the downlink and the uplink share the same frame structure. 
•Both can use either a FDD or TDD mode of operation. 
•LTE frames are defined as 10 ms 
•The frames are divided into 10 subframes 
•Each subframe is further divided into two slots 
•Each .5 ms slot can consist of either 6 or 7 ODFM symbols 
•This structure is shown below 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007.] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 47 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE 
•LTE has three access procedures 
• Cell Search 
• Cell search is the protocol for when the mobile handset (terminal) finds a cell tower (cell) 
that it potentially would like to communicate with 
• The mobile handset needs to identify the cell tower and needs to estimate the frame timing 
of that cell tower. 
• There are three main steps in performing a cell search 
1. To assist in these steps the cell tower broadcasts a primary and secondary synch bit in the downlink 
2. The mobile handset uses the primary synch bit to find the primary timing of the tower during a 5 ms 
slot 
3. The mobile handset needs to detect the cell-identity information and determine the frame timing. 
This can be done by checking the pairs of slots where the secondary synch but should be 
transmitted 
4. The cell tower now broadcasts the system information so that the mobile handset can determine the 
remaining parameters. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 48 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE 
•LTE has three access procedures 
• Random Access 
• This is when the terminal requests a 
connection setup 
• There are 4 steps to the random access 
procedure 
1.The terminal first sends a random-access preamble. 
This allows the eNodeB to estimate the transmission 
timing of the terminal 
2.The network then sends a timing advance command 
if the terminals transmission timing is off. This also 
assigns uplink resources to the terminal 
3.The mobile-terminal then sends it’s identity to the 
network. This is sent using the UL-Scheduling 
protocols specific to the network. 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
4. The network then sends a contention-resolution 
message to the terminal. This 
resolves and conflicts of multiple terminals 
attempting to access the same resources. 
[Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile 
Broadband. First. London: ELSEVIER, 2007.] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 49 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE 
•LTE has three access procedures 
• Paging 
•When the mobile device is not in use it is allowed to go to sleep 
• Paging sets the protocols for a network-initiated connection setup 
• When the mobile device goes to sleep it automatically wakes up at pre-defined intervals 
• These pre-defined intervals are set up to coincide exactly with the L1/L2 control signaling to 
prevent the need for a dedicated channel like what is used in UMTS 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
[Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G 
Evolution HSPA and LTE 
for Mobile Broadband. 
First. London: ELSEVIER, 
2007.] 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 50 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax 
•WiMax uses QPSK, 16 QAM and 64 QAM in the downlink and QPSK and 16 QAM in the uplink 
•WiMax also uses the following coding schemes: 
• Tail-Biting Convolutional Code 
• Convolutional Turbo Code 
• Block Turbo Code (optional) 
• Low-Densitiy Parity Check Code (LDPC) (optional) 
• Zero Tailed Convolutional Code (optional) 
•WiMax also uses a scheduling algorithm 
• Each mobile handset competes for a slot only once (for initial entry into the network). 
• Once it has won an access slot from the base station it cannot lose it unless it disconnects 
from the tower. 
• The tower can enlarge and contract the individual time slots, but no matter what, it remains 
assigned to the specific subscriber station 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 51 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax 
•The mobility versions of WiMax have three basic handover methods defined. They are: 
• Hard Handover (HHO): 
• The mobile handset scans the nearby base stations and gathers a list of all the possible 
base stations. 
• It uses this information to determine if a handoff is necessary. Both the base station and 
mobile handset can decide to start the handoff 
• Once this decision is made the handset immediately starts communicating with the new 
base station 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 52 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax 
•The mobility versions of WiMax have three basic handover methods defined. They are: 
• Fast Base-Station Switching (FBSS): 
• The mobile handset maintains a set of multiple suitable base stations 
• One base station is selected as the anchor and is where all the communications will take 
place. 
• The mobile handset will continuously choose which ever base station has the best 
connection from its list. 
• The mobile handset can change the anchor at any time without any handover signaling 
• Macro-Diversity Handover (MDHO): 
• Just like in FBSS the mobile handset keeps an anchor and a list of base stations 
• However this time the mobile handset communicates with all base stations 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 53 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Comparison of the Technologies 
Aspect LTE UMB WiMax 
Access 
OFDMA OFMDA, SDMA, 
Technology (DL) 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
CDMA* 
OFDMA 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 54 of 58 
Access 
Technology (UL) 
OFDMA OFDMS, SDMA, 
CDMA* 
OFDMA 
Capable Speeds 100 Mb/s DL 
50 Mb/s UL 
280 Mb/s DL 
75 Mb/s 
75 Mb/s 
25 Mb/s 
Channel BW 1.25 to 20 MHz 1.25 to 20 MHz 5, to 20 MHz 
Spectral Efficiency 5 bits/sec/Hz 4-6 bits/sec/Hz 3.25 bits/sec/Hz 
Time to market 2010 2009 2008 
Legacy GSM/UMTS CDMA2000 WiFi 
*UMB simply states the use of the technologies. There is no 
mention on specifics for DL or U 
**Includes latest release of 802.16M not currently available 
[Source: Scheim, Jacob. "A comparison of two fourth generation technologies: 
WiMax and 3GPP-LTE."Comsys. 2006.]
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Future of the Technology 
•Long Term Evolution (LTE) 
• Should see deployments throughout Europe, US and Asia 
• Vodaphone, China Mobile, Verizon Wireless, AT&T, T-Mobile (Europe & Australia), Orange, 
NTT DoCoMo 
• Estimates put 450 Million worldwide subscriber base by 2015 
•Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) 
• Looks to be a dead technology on arrival 
• Qualcomm is now supporting LTE 
•Mobile WiMax 
• Currently deployed in US under brand XOHM 
• On line in Chicago, Baltimore, Washington DC 
• Consumer launch 2H 2008 
• Deployed commercially in South Korea 
• SK Telecom under the name WiBro 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 55 of 58
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
References 
• Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile Broadband. First. London: 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 56 of 58 
ELSEVIER, 2007. 
• TIA, "cdma2000® High Rate Packet Data Air Interface Specification." TIA-856-A Apr 2004 
Apr 2 2004 <http://www.tiaonline.org/standards/technology/cdma2000/documents/TIA-856- 
A.pdf>. 
• Gozalvez, J. "1. Ultra Mobile Broadband [Mobile Radio]." Vehicular Technology Magazine, 
IEEE Mar 2007: 
• "3G - Ultra Mobile Broadband." CDG : Technology. 2008. CDG. 2 Apr 2008 
<http://www.cdg.org/technology/3g_umb.asp>. 
• ABI Research, " A Poor Market Outlook for Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) Says ABI 
Research, but Qualcomm’s Future Still Secure." Business Wire 28 Dec 2007: 
• "UMB Network Architecture." Qualcomm Inc Dec 2007 02 Apr 2008 <7. 
http://www.qualcomm.com/common/documents/white_papers/UMB_Network_Achitecture.pd 
f>. 
• " ULTRA MOBILE BROADBAND (UMB) SPECIFICATION IS PUBLISHED." CDG : Mews & 
Events. CDG. 2 Apr 2008 <http://www.cdg.org/news/press/2007/Sep24_07.asp>. 
• "CDMA Buzz-Words EV-DO Rev C as UMB." PhoneNews.com 05 Dec 2006 02 Apr 2008 
<http://www.phonenews.com/cdma-buzz-words-ev-do-rev-c-as-umb-1615/>.
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
References 
• "What Is cdma2000?." cdma2000 Technology Family: 1xRTT, EVDO, UMB, and EVDV 02 
Apr 2008 <http://eogogics.com/talkgogics/tutorials/cdma2000>. 
• UMTS Forum, "Standardising the future of mobile communications with LTE (Long Term 
Evolution)." Towards Global Mobile Broadband (2008): 
• Wikipedia. 2 Apr 2008 <http://wikipedia.org/>. 
• Scheim, Jacob. "A comparison of two fourth generation technologies: WiMax and 3GPP-LTE." 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 57 of 58 
Comsys. 2006. 
• Litwin, Louis. "The principles of OFDM."RF Signal Processing. 2001. 
• Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007. 
• Li, Bo. "A Survey on Mobile WiMAX."Wireless Broadband Access. 2007. 
• Scrase, Adriane. "Overview of the Current Status of 3GPP LTE."ETSI. 2008. 
• Collins, Gerry. "The Business Case for LTE."Nortel. 2007. 
• Laine, Michael Steve Stanley . "3GPP LTE (Long Term Evolution)."University of Kansas. 
2008.
University of Kansas | School of Engineering 
Questions? 
Department of Electrical Engineering 
and Computer Science 
09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 58 of 58

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Satellite Multiple Access Schemes
Satellite Multiple Access SchemesSatellite Multiple Access Schemes
Satellite Multiple Access Schemes
Dileep Kadavarath
 
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple accessChapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
vish0110
 
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Miles Kevin Galario
 

Tendances (20)

Fdma tdma-cdma-151223125532
Fdma tdma-cdma-151223125532Fdma tdma-cdma-151223125532
Fdma tdma-cdma-151223125532
 
B.I.T , MESRA [M.Tech] Assignment : MULTIPLE ACCESS TECHNIQUES FOR WIRELESS ...
B.I.T , MESRA [M.Tech] Assignment  : MULTIPLE ACCESS TECHNIQUES FOR WIRELESS ...B.I.T , MESRA [M.Tech] Assignment  : MULTIPLE ACCESS TECHNIQUES FOR WIRELESS ...
B.I.T , MESRA [M.Tech] Assignment : MULTIPLE ACCESS TECHNIQUES FOR WIRELESS ...
 
Multiple acces techniques
Multiple acces techniquesMultiple acces techniques
Multiple acces techniques
 
TDMA, FDMA, and CDMA
TDMA, FDMA, and CDMATDMA, FDMA, and CDMA
TDMA, FDMA, and CDMA
 
Ai Tdma
Ai TdmaAi Tdma
Ai Tdma
 
Multiple access communication
Multiple access communicationMultiple access communication
Multiple access communication
 
MULTIPLE ACCESS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
MULTIPLE ACCESS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONMULTIPLE ACCESS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
MULTIPLE ACCESS IN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
 
Satellite Multiple Access Schemes
Satellite Multiple Access SchemesSatellite Multiple Access Schemes
Satellite Multiple Access Schemes
 
Multiple access techniques for wireless communications
Multiple access techniques for wireless communicationsMultiple access techniques for wireless communications
Multiple access techniques for wireless communications
 
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple accessChapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
Chapter8,,,,,,,multiple access
 
Unit 2
Unit 2Unit 2
Unit 2
 
Multiple access techniques
Multiple access techniquesMultiple access techniques
Multiple access techniques
 
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
 
Multiple access techniques
Multiple access techniquesMultiple access techniques
Multiple access techniques
 
FDMA
FDMAFDMA
FDMA
 
SPACE DIVISION MULTIPLEXING (SDMA)
SPACE DIVISION MULTIPLEXING (SDMA)SPACE DIVISION MULTIPLEXING (SDMA)
SPACE DIVISION MULTIPLEXING (SDMA)
 
TDMA
TDMATDMA
TDMA
 
TDMA Technology
TDMA TechnologyTDMA Technology
TDMA Technology
 
Code Division Multiple Access- CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access- CDMA Code Division Multiple Access- CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access- CDMA
 
Multiplexing in mobile computing
Multiplexing in mobile computingMultiplexing in mobile computing
Multiplexing in mobile computing
 

Similaire à Lte umb wi_max presentation

Digital Cellular Network Technology
Digital Cellular Network TechnologyDigital Cellular Network Technology
Digital Cellular Network Technology
Dawood Aqlan
 
Mobile generation presentation
Mobile generation presentationMobile generation presentation
Mobile generation presentation
8neutron8
 

Similaire à Lte umb wi_max presentation (20)

10700119013_abir.pptx
10700119013_abir.pptx10700119013_abir.pptx
10700119013_abir.pptx
 
3G.ppt
3G.ppt3G.ppt
3G.ppt
 
3G.ppt
3G.ppt3G.ppt
3G.ppt
 
GSM CDMA & WI-MAX
GSM CDMA & WI-MAXGSM CDMA & WI-MAX
GSM CDMA & WI-MAX
 
Section-ACN.pdf
Section-ACN.pdfSection-ACN.pdf
Section-ACN.pdf
 
Digital Cellular Network Technology
Digital Cellular Network TechnologyDigital Cellular Network Technology
Digital Cellular Network Technology
 
The evolution of telecommunication
The evolution of telecommunicationThe evolution of telecommunication
The evolution of telecommunication
 
4G technology
4G technology4G technology
4G technology
 
4 G mobile technology
4 G mobile technology4 G mobile technology
4 G mobile technology
 
Seminar on Millimeter waves ppt
Seminar on Millimeter waves pptSeminar on Millimeter waves ppt
Seminar on Millimeter waves ppt
 
Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS)- Evolution from 2G to 3G
Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS)- Evolution from 2G to 3G Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS)- Evolution from 2G to 3G
Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS)- Evolution from 2G to 3G
 
GSM vs CDMA
GSM vs CDMAGSM vs CDMA
GSM vs CDMA
 
LTE Advanced Overview
LTE Advanced OverviewLTE Advanced Overview
LTE Advanced Overview
 
Cognitive Radio in 5G
Cognitive Radio in 5GCognitive Radio in 5G
Cognitive Radio in 5G
 
Communication and network concepts
Communication and network conceptsCommunication and network concepts
Communication and network concepts
 
Wi max
Wi maxWi max
Wi max
 
WiMAX vs LTE
WiMAX vs LTEWiMAX vs LTE
WiMAX vs LTE
 
Welcome to International Journal of Engineering Research and Development (IJERD)
Welcome to International Journal of Engineering Research and Development (IJERD)Welcome to International Journal of Engineering Research and Development (IJERD)
Welcome to International Journal of Engineering Research and Development (IJERD)
 
Mobile generation presentation
Mobile generation presentationMobile generation presentation
Mobile generation presentation
 
Building rugged and reliable networks with fiber automation.com
Building rugged and reliable networks with fiber   automation.comBuilding rugged and reliable networks with fiber   automation.com
Building rugged and reliable networks with fiber automation.com
 

Dernier

Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power PlayStandard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
Epec Engineered Technologies
 
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - NeometrixIntegrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
Neometrix_Engineering_Pvt_Ltd
 
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
HenryBriggs2
 
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakesDeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
MayuraD1
 
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
Health
 

Dernier (20)

Computer Networks Basics of Network Devices
Computer Networks  Basics of Network DevicesComputer Networks  Basics of Network Devices
Computer Networks Basics of Network Devices
 
Learn the concepts of Thermodynamics on Magic Marks
Learn the concepts of Thermodynamics on Magic MarksLearn the concepts of Thermodynamics on Magic Marks
Learn the concepts of Thermodynamics on Magic Marks
 
Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power PlayStandard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
Standard vs Custom Battery Packs - Decoding the Power Play
 
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - NeometrixIntegrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
Integrated Test Rig For HTFE-25 - Neometrix
 
Rums floating Omkareshwar FSPV IM_16112021.pdf
Rums floating Omkareshwar FSPV IM_16112021.pdfRums floating Omkareshwar FSPV IM_16112021.pdf
Rums floating Omkareshwar FSPV IM_16112021.pdf
 
A Study of Urban Area Plan for Pabna Municipality
A Study of Urban Area Plan for Pabna MunicipalityA Study of Urban Area Plan for Pabna Municipality
A Study of Urban Area Plan for Pabna Municipality
 
Online food ordering system project report.pdf
Online food ordering system project report.pdfOnline food ordering system project report.pdf
Online food ordering system project report.pdf
 
Design For Accessibility: Getting it right from the start
Design For Accessibility: Getting it right from the startDesign For Accessibility: Getting it right from the start
Design For Accessibility: Getting it right from the start
 
Computer Lecture 01.pptxIntroduction to Computers
Computer Lecture 01.pptxIntroduction to ComputersComputer Lecture 01.pptxIntroduction to Computers
Computer Lecture 01.pptxIntroduction to Computers
 
Tamil Call Girls Bhayandar WhatsApp +91-9930687706, Best Service
Tamil Call Girls Bhayandar WhatsApp +91-9930687706, Best ServiceTamil Call Girls Bhayandar WhatsApp +91-9930687706, Best Service
Tamil Call Girls Bhayandar WhatsApp +91-9930687706, Best Service
 
FEA Based Level 3 Assessment of Deformed Tanks with Fluid Induced Loads
FEA Based Level 3 Assessment of Deformed Tanks with Fluid Induced LoadsFEA Based Level 3 Assessment of Deformed Tanks with Fluid Induced Loads
FEA Based Level 3 Assessment of Deformed Tanks with Fluid Induced Loads
 
A CASE STUDY ON CERAMIC INDUSTRY OF BANGLADESH.pptx
A CASE STUDY ON CERAMIC INDUSTRY OF BANGLADESH.pptxA CASE STUDY ON CERAMIC INDUSTRY OF BANGLADESH.pptx
A CASE STUDY ON CERAMIC INDUSTRY OF BANGLADESH.pptx
 
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
scipt v1.pptxcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx...
 
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in South Ex (delhi) call me [🔝9953056974🔝] escort service 24X7
 
AIRCANVAS[1].pdf mini project for btech students
AIRCANVAS[1].pdf mini project for btech studentsAIRCANVAS[1].pdf mini project for btech students
AIRCANVAS[1].pdf mini project for btech students
 
S1S2 B.Arch MGU - HOA1&2 Module 3 -Temple Architecture of Kerala.pptx
S1S2 B.Arch MGU - HOA1&2 Module 3 -Temple Architecture of Kerala.pptxS1S2 B.Arch MGU - HOA1&2 Module 3 -Temple Architecture of Kerala.pptx
S1S2 B.Arch MGU - HOA1&2 Module 3 -Temple Architecture of Kerala.pptx
 
Air Compressor reciprocating single stage
Air Compressor reciprocating single stageAir Compressor reciprocating single stage
Air Compressor reciprocating single stage
 
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakesDeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
DeepFakes presentation : brief idea of DeepFakes
 
School management system project Report.pdf
School management system project Report.pdfSchool management system project Report.pdf
School management system project Report.pdf
 
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
+97470301568>> buy weed in qatar,buy thc oil qatar,buy weed and vape oil in d...
 

Lte umb wi_max presentation

  • 1. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Similarities and Differences between LTE, UMB & WiMax Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Presented By: Brandt Elster
  • 2. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Outline •WiMax News •Definitions •Background & History •Motivations and Objectives •Deterrents •Services and QoS •Network Architecture •Physical Layer & MAC Protocols •Comparison of the Technologies •Future of the Technology Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 2 of 58
  • 3. University of Kansas | School of Engineering WiMax News Today • Today there was a large announcement regarding the future of mobile WiMax • Since Dan Hesse became the new Sprint CEO there were doubts he would continue Sprint’s future in their WiMax venture named XOHM. • Immediately upon becoming CEO he terminated an existing agreement to work along side Clearwire and collaborate on separate WiMax networks that were able to roam on each others to increase coverage • Today Sprint and Clearwire put out a joint press release stating they had formed a joint venture that would be named Clearwire to build one WiMax network. • This new company has received investments from the following companies: Google, Intel, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House networks • These companies have combined together for a total investment of $3.2 billion • They will receive an estimated 22% ownership of the company • Sprint will maintain the largest share at 51% and Clearwire will control 27% • The deal is estimated to be worth a total of $14.5 billion Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 3 of 58
  • 4. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Definitions - LTE • Long Term Evolution is more commonly referred to as LTE • LTE is the 4th generation network that was designed through the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). • It is an all IP network • Its primary goals were to improve efficiency, lower infrastructure costs, create a higher QoS, all while making use of new spectrum opportunities, and better integrating with other open standards • Predominantly created by Ericsson, Nortel and Nokia-Siemens • Should result in release 8 of the UMTS standard Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 4 of 58
  • 5. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Definitions - UMB • Ultra Mobile Broadband is commonly referred to as UMB • UMB is the 4th Generation wireless broadband access network developed through the CDMA Development Group (CDG) • It is an all IP network • It was designed from the ground up to provide the type of access required in the modern mobile world, with great flexibility and interoperability • Standardized by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2) • Proprietary technology developed by Qualcomm Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 5 of 58
  • 6. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Definitions - WiMax • Mobile WiMax is short for Wireless Interoperability for Microwave Access • There is actually a difference between mobile WiMax and fixed WiMax • Today we are only going to talk about the mobile version of WiMax •WiMax is the 4th Generation wireless broadband access network developed by the IEEE • It is the 802.16e or upcoming 802.16m standards • It is an all IP network • Many hardware manufacturers are already supporting WiMax due to it’s open standards. Some of the larger ones include Samsung, Motorola and Intel. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 6 of 58
  • 7. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History • Analogy for the differences between TDMA, FDMA, SDMA, CDMA • Take a large room with a decent number of people in it. There are multiple different conversations going on throughout the room. • TDMA – Everyone in the room would take turns speaking. Each group of people would be assigned a specific time slot. • FDMA – Each group in the room would speak at a different pitch (frequency) far enough apart that they can be differentiated. • SDMA – Each group’s speaker would talk in a specific direction, only people in front of them would be able to hear. If the room is big enough you could have multiple people speaking in the same direction as long as they were far enough apart. • CDMA – Each group would be assigned a specific language to communicate with. They would be able to easily discern their specific language and all others would be small and ignorable background noise. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 7 of 58
  • 8. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History • OFDMA • Basically an enhanced version of FDMA • Allows for the elimination of guard bands by using orthogonal signals. • Signals are considered to be orthogonal if their dot products are equal to 0 • Signals are able to overlap without causing interference to the other • Signals are modulated and demodulated using the Fast Fourier Transform • SC-OFDM • This is a single carrier equivalent of OFDMA • Each transmission is given only one carrier • This allows the peak-to-average power to be lower thus increasing the capable average power of the power amplifier • This is helpful because the user terminal is generally battery powered and this includes both battery life and range Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 8 of 58
  • 9. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • Part of the 3GPP standard • Essentially it is HSPA rev 8 • It was given the name Long Term Evolution by the 3GPP • The name follows their generally naming scheme. They try to make their name represent their monopoly over the wireless arena • GSM stands for Global Standard for Mobile & UMTS stands for Universal Mobile Telephone Standard • Originally started as GSM • Capable of virtually no data communications • Pioneered the first short messaging service (SMS) • Supports handoffs with all UMTS and GSM networks • There is discussion to build in the ability to support handoffs with CDMA networks Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 9 of 58
  • 10. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • GSM was the 2G technology that both GPRS and EDGE are based on • GPRS was the first step • Stands for General Packet Radio Service • It is considered to be a 2.5G • Capable of speeds from 56 up to 114 kbit/s • Supports a very robust voice channel and low bandwidth data options. • Main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced size pictures and music Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 10 of 58
  • 11. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • EDGE was the next step • Stands for Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution • It is considered to be a 2.75G • Capable of speeds from 1 Mbit/s • Reduced latency to 100 ms • However just like GPRS, the main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced size pictures and music Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 11 of 58
  • 12. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • Following EDGE came UMTS • Stands for Universal Mobile Telephone Standard • UMTS was the first truly 3G technology to come from 3GPP • UMTS is a completely different technology than GSM. • It required a completely new network be built over the top of any existing networks • UMTS uses W-CDMA instead of the TMDA that powered GSM • The primary difference between W-CDMA and CDMA2000 is that W-CDMA uses 5 MHz blocks of spectrum and CDMA2000 uses only 1.25 MHz blocks, hence where the “wide” came from • The first revision of UMTS was capable of speeds up to 2 MB/s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 12 of 58
  • 13. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • HSPA was the final step for W-CDMA • HSPA stands for High Speed Packet Access • There are three different enhancements to HSPA, HSDPA, HSUPA and HSOPA • HSDPA stands for High Speed Downlink Packet Access • It predominantly increases the download speed of the network. • HSUPA stands for High Speed Uplink Packet Access • It predominantly increases the upload speed of the network • HSOPA stands for High Speed OFDM Packet Access • This technology replaces the entire infrastructure of UMTS and replaces it with a new OFDM infrastructure • It is a separate technology from LTE but is part of the overall picture. Most likely it will never be implemented but it’s technologies will be morphed into LTE Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 13 of 58
  • 14. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - LTE • Table of different UMTS Technologies and their specifications: Technology Release Data Downlink Speed Uplink Speed UMTS 2000 384 kb.s 128 kb/s HSDPA 2000 7.2 Mb/s 384 kb/s HSUPA 2005 7.2 Mb/s 5.76 Mb/s HSOPA 2009 100 Mb/s 50 Mb/s LTE 2010 100 Mb/s 50 Mb/s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 14 of 58
  • 15. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • Part of the CDMA 2000 standard • First named EV-DO rev C • Renamed to Ultra Mobile Broadband by the CDMA Development Group (CDG) • Originally started as cdmaOne • A 2G Qualcomm technology • Capable of virtually no data communications •Will be capable of call handoffs with all legacy CDMA2000 networks Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 15 of 58
  • 16. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • cdmaOne was the 2G technology that both 1xRTT, 1xEV-DO, and 1xEV-DV are based on • 1xRTT was the first step • It is considered to be a 2.5G • Capable of speeds up to 144 kbit/s • Also referred to as just 1x • Supports a very robust voice channel and low bandwidth data options. • Main data use was text internet & downloading of reduced size pictures and music Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 16 of 58
  • 17. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • The next step was 1xEV-DO (Evolution Data Only) • Later renamed Evolution Data Optimized to remove the negative connotation • Most commonly referred to as just EVDO, or simply EV • First truly 3G technology and first real wireless broadband technology. • An alternative to EVDO was 1xEV-DV (Evolution Data & Voice) • The standard was not completed in time so it was ultimately passed up • Theoretical speeds of 3.1 Mbit/s downlink and 1.8 Mbit/s uplink. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 17 of 58
  • 18. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • EVDO began as Rel 0. • Significant speed improvements over 1x • 2.4 Mbit/s downlink • 153 kbps uplink • Includes the following protocols and more • Hybrid ARQ • Incremental Redundancy Feedback in the Downlink • Downlink and Uplink Rate Controls Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science • Supports the following applications • broadband Internet • MP3 music downloads • 3D gaming • TV broadcasts • Video and audio downloads 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 18 of 58
  • 19. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • The current and most up to date standard of the CDMA2000 protocol is EVDO Rev A • It is currently being deployed over Rel 0 • Capable of producing speeds of 3.1 Mbit/s downlink and 1.8 Mbit/s uplink • Uses enhanced access channel MAC • Controls who sends and who receives and when • Advanced QoS support • Increased spectral efficiency • 1.2 times Rel 0 forward link sector capacity and 3.4 times reverse link sector capacity • Low latency, below 50 ms • Supports all the services of Rel 0 but adds higher quality video and faster loading times for streaming services Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 19 of 58
  • 20. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - UMB • Rev B would be the next upgrade • It is likely to be skipped for Rev C in 2009 similar to how EVDV was bypassed • Speeds of up to 14.7 Mbit/s downlink • Utilizes statistical multiplexing • Hybrid frequency reuse • Supports OFDM • Adds multi carrier support • Rev A uses 1.25 MHz carriers, most likely 3 per user would be used for Rev B, or 3.75 MHz • This is unique from HSPA because the carriers do not need to be adjacent • This allows operators to combine spectrum from multiple blocks • Adds the ability to do High Definition video streaming, multiplayer online gaming, and replacement of home HSI and hotspots Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 20 of 58
  • 21. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - WiMax • It evolved from the WiFi standards in an effort to create a technology that could cover a larger footprint. • Example, if WiMax is a cell phone, then WiFi would be a cordless phone. • Fixed WiMax was designed as a technology that could be used to blanket a city with mobile internet to replace building costly short range WiFi networks. • Mobile WiMax took the same technology and evolved it into version that could work with devices that are no longer stationary •WiMax comes from the IEEE 802 set of standards. • The IEE 802 standards are a family of standards that deal with Local Area Networks (LANs) and Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) •WiMax is the 802.16 standard. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 21 of 58
  • 22. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - WiMax • History of the IEEE 802 standard • IEEE 802.3 is collection of IEEE standards that define the Media Access Control Layer, Physical Layer and Data Link Layer of the wired Ethernet standard • IEEE 802.11 is Wireless LAN & Mesh a.k.a. WiFi • It is a group of standards for wireless local area networks (WLAN) • These typically operate in unlicensed spectrum bands located near 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. • Maximum range of WiFi is roughly 70m indoors using the 802.11n standard and is capable of producing 74 Mbit/s • IEEE 802.15 is Wireless Person Area Networks (PAN) • This standard includes Bluetooth and ZigBee Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 22 of 58
  • 23. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - WiMax • Brief Discussion of 802.11 Wifi •Wifi is predominantly used in the 2.4 GHz range due to range limitations with the 5GHz frequency band • It divides these frequency bands into channels that are 22 MHz wide with 5 MHz spacing in between. • WiFi networks consist of two main components. The Access Points (APs) and the clients. The AP continuously broadcasts it’s SSID or name every 100 ms at 1 Mb/s. Sending at 1 Mb/s ensures that all users are at least capable of sending at that speed. • WiFi is not capable of collision detection. It instead does collision avoidance using RTS/CTS. It also uses acknowledgements to make sure that the packet is received. • Generally WiFi networks connect back to a 802.3 Ethernet connection, but they can connect 2 devices to one another (AdHoc Networks) or connect a computer directly to the internet. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 23 of 58
  • 24. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Background & History - WiMax • Brief Discussion of 802.11 Wifi Protocol Release Date Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Freq Typical Thruput Max Data Rate Indoor Range Outdoor Range Legacy 802.11 1997 2.4 GHz .9 Mb/s 2 Mb/s 20 m 100 m 802.11a 1999 5 GHz 23 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 35 m 120 m 802.11b 1999 2.4 GHz 4.3 Mb/s 11 Mb/s 38 m 140 m 802.11g 2003 2.4 GHz 19 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 38 m 140 m 802.11n June 2009 2.4 GHz 5 GHZ 74 Mb/s 248 Mb/s 70 m 250 m 802.11y June 2009 3.7 GHz 23 Mb/s 54 Mb/s 50 m 5 km 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 24 of 58
  • 25. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Motivations - LTE • Chosen European standard likely to be used throughout the world • Large companies have committed to it • Vodaphone (part owner Verizon Wireless) • AT&T • High speed data throughputs • 100 Mbps Downlink • 50 Mbps Uplink • Cost effective compared to UMTS based technologies • Backwards compatible with all UMTS/GSM technologies • High QoS for a wide range of applications Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 25 of 58
  • 26. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Motivations - LTE • Can be deployed within existing GSM & UMTS frequency bands along side existing networks • Can use only a portion of the frequency band in the beginning and then can take more existing spectrum as old networks are phased out. • Designed for high mobility • Optimized for 0 – 15 km/h • High performance still achievable for less than 150 km/h •Will still support anything up to 500 km/h Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 26 of 58
  • 27. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Motivations - UMB •Motivations for EVDO Rev C (UMB) • Backwards compatible with all CDMA 2000 Networks • High speed data throughputs • 280 Mbps Downlink • 75 Mbps Uplink • Low latency connections • An average of 16 ms (32-byte, RTT) end-to-end network latency • High QoS for a wide range of applications • Seamless mobility • Efficient frequency re-use deployment Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 27 of 58
  • 28. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Motivations - WiMax • Time to market: • Has already seen a small launch in the United States – Clearwire • Has seen similar deployments around the world. • Large companies have committed to it • Sprint-Nextel (XOHM) • SK Telecom (WiBro is a variant of WiMax and has been launched in South Korea) • There have been discussions to morph WiMax into the LTE Umbrella and make it a stepping stone to LTE • This may be a play simply to discredit WiMax and make it sound inferior • The newest revision of Mobile WiMax (802.16m) is expected from the IEEE sometime this year and should bring the theoretical speeds for a mobile application up to a level of those expected from LTE & UMB. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 28 of 58
  • 29. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Deterrents •Long Term Evolution (LTE) • Time to market: • Not expected to have a widespread deployment until 2012 • Components not available until late 2009 • 4 years behind Mobile WiMax •Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) • Time to market: Components first available in late 2009 to 2010. • No corporate commitments throughout world • Even the majority of current CDMA carriers have chosen other platforms •Mobile WiMax • Speeds are not up to the level of UMB & LTE • Downlink capable of 46 Mb/s (without MIMO) • Less than half that of UMB & LTE • *note that 802.16m is expected to raise these figures to 100 Mb/s and should be out sometime this year and available around 2010. Note this is still 2 years before LTE is expected to widely deployed. • Not officially classified as 4G by European standards due in part to insufficient speeds • Unproven, a lot is riding on the success of Sprint’s consumer launch (XOHM) • Success could lead to more build outs worldwide turning it into a global standard Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 29 of 58
  • 30. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Deterrents •All three technologies face another crucial issue. Backhaul • As speed increase the need for more and more leased lines increases. Fiber alleviates some pressure but is limited in roll outs and is relatively expensive. • Alternative options include but are not limited to • Microwave • Fixed WiFi or WiMax • Dark Fiber • ADSL or SHDSL • PDH or SDH/SONET infrastructures • E1/T1, E3, T3, STM-1/OC-3 … • Cable Coaxial lines • None of these options is widely available in the U.S., Especially in the mass rural parts of the county. • Sprint is supposedly using Microwave to provide the backhaul to their WiMax towers where fiber is not yet available. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 30 of 58
  • 31. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Spectrum Allocations •Long Term Evolution (LTE) • 1.25 MHz to 20 MHz chunks • Can operate in all 3GPP frequency bands in paired and unpaired spectrum allocations • Can sit in the same band as existing 3GPP networks. Allows for LTE to be phased in while older technologies are phased out. •Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) • 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz •Mobile WiMax • Any frequency below 66 GHz • Fixed channel sizes of 3.5 MHz, 5 MHz, 7 MHz, 10 MHz, and 20 MHz. • Mobile channel sizes of 5 MHz, 8.75 MHz and 10 MHz. • This does not phase Sprint or Clearwire as both have almost 120 MHz of spectrum in their areas, but smaller companies could face issues when only operating in 10 or 20 MHz blocks. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 31 of 58
  • 32. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Services and QoS • Streaming of high quality video and audio • Video calling • VOIP for phone calls • Provide enhanced data speeds for both handheld devices and laptop connect cards • Could replace the traditional wired networks as they are much cheaper than fiber to the curb, and speeds look to be the same if not higher than those offered via wired today • This would be for the following services • HSI to replace DSL/Cable Modems • Digital Phone for the Home • IPTV or TV over IP to replace standard cable or satellite provider • This would give previously only mobile operators the ability to sell the very lucrative triple play that, up until now, only existing LEC and cable operators have been able to. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 32 of 58
  • 33. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Services and QoS Category Current Environment 4G Possibilities Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: UMTS Forum, "Standardising the future of mobile communications with LTE (Long Term Evolution)." Towards Global Mobile Broadband (2008): ] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 33 of 58
  • 34. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Services and QoS • Companies are also looking to build 4G chips into more electronic devices than just cell phones and laptops • Looking for every electronic device to have a 4G connection to the internet • Fridge could download recipes and auto update shopping list with what you need • Digital camera’s would be able to instantly upload photo’s to photo sharing and social networking sites, as well as having the ability to send them via email directly from the camera • MP3 players could download songs from anywhere, similar to the Apple iPod Touch but without the need for a WiFi connection • Cars would be able to auto diagnose issues and email the mechanic to notify them of issues • These are just a couple of the endless possibilities that 4th generation networks are trying to tap into Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 34 of 58
  • 35. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile Broadband. First. London: ELSEVIER, 2007.] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 35 of 58
  • 36. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - LTE • LTE combines the following network protocols into a single air interface, utilizing the individual advantages of each one • OFDMA • MIMO (2x2 or 2x4) • ARQ within the RLC sub layer and HARQ within the MAC sub layer • FDD & TDD • SC-FDMA • Up to 64 QAM DL and 16 QAM UL • Turbo Coding (rate – 1/3, 2 8 state constituent encoders and a contention-free internal interleaver) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 36 of 58
  • 37. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - LTE •The core network architecture of LTE has been given it’s own name. It is called System Architecture Evolution (SAE) •SAE is relatively similar to the GPRS Core Network that includes some basic modifications. •Most notably a simplified architecture •Spectrum allocations from 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz •Can support 200 simultaneous VOIP users across a cell consisting of 5 MHz •Provides interference reduction through power control and link adaptation techniques •A common node B. Acts as a common gateway for all of the access technologies that access the network •Can support handoffs between both 3GPP networks and non-3GPP networks •This should allow legacy CDMA2000 operators to interface their old networks with LTE Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 37 of 58
  • 38. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - LTE Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007.] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 38 of 58
  • 39. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - UMB • UMB is a proprietary technology to Qualcomm Inc. • There is only a limited amount of information available regarding the actual architecture and physical properties of the technology. • This a summary of the available information available from Qualcomm white papers. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 39 of 58
  • 40. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - UMB • According to the CDG UMB combines the following network protocols into a single air interface, utilizing the individual advantages of each one • CDMA • OFDMA • MIMO • SDMA • FDD Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 40 of 58
  • 41. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - UMB •Spectrum allocations from 1.25 MHz up to 20 MHz • Can support 1000 simultaneous VOIP users across 20 MHz FDD •A flat network architecture • Simplifies core network design • Eliminates the need for centralized base station controllers (BSCs) •A converged-access network (CAN) design that enables seamless mobility •A multi-route feature that enables fast switching between base stations and provides requisite support for latency-sensitive applications •Layer 2 and layer 3 tunneling mechanisms to simplify the network interface •Adaptive interference management Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 41 of 58
  • 42. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - UMB Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: "UMB Network Architecture." Qualcomm Inc Dec 2007 02 Apr 2008 <7. http://www.qualcomm.co m/common/documents/w hite_papers/UMB_Netwo rk_Achitecture.pdf>. ] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 42 of 58
  • 43. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - WiMax • Mobile WiMax combines the following network protocols into a single air interface, utilizing the individual advantages of each one • TDM access with variable frame sizes (2 - 20 ms) • OFDM • MIMO • Adaptive Antenna System (AAS) • QPSK, 16 QAM, 64 QAM • Convolutional Codes, Convolutional Turbo Codes, Block Turbo Codes, and Low-Density Parity Check (LDPC) Codes • Hybrid ARQ • TDD, FDD & H-FDD Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 43 of 58
  • 44. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - WiMax •The following channel bandwidths are supported: • 5 MHz, 7 MHz, 8.75 MHz, 10 MHz and 20 MHz •These spectrum allocations can be anywhere within the following licensed spectrum bands • 2.3 GHz, 2.5 GHz, 3.3GHz, 3.5GHz •While WiMax can support both TDD and FDD, it is only truly supporting TDD at this point. The ability to do FDD should be built into a later revision. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 44 of 58
  • 45. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Network Architecture - WiMax "Network Architecture." HiperMAX-micro. Airspan. 7 May 2008 <http://www.airspan.com/products_wimax_microcell_hipermax.aspx>. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Brandt Elster 09/24/14 Page 45
  • 46. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE •The physical layer was defined with the bandwidth constraints of LTE in mind. • This is important in allowing it to easily adapt to various spectrum allocations • It is also important to get as much data throughput as possible through the connection •LTE uses up to 64 QAM for the downlink and up to 16 QAM for the uplink. In contrast, its broadcast only channel uses on BPSK. •LTE also uses turbo coding for all transport blocks • It uses a rate 1/3 code • It also has 2 8-state constituent encoders as well as a contention-free QPP internal interleaver • The turbo coding scheme uses a trellis termination technique. • Before the turbo coding, transport blocks are segmented into byte aligned segments with a maximum information block size of 6144 bits. • Error detection is supported by the use of 24 bit CRC. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 46 of 58
  • 47. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE •Both the downlink and the uplink share the same frame structure. •Both can use either a FDD or TDD mode of operation. •LTE frames are defined as 10 ms •The frames are divided into 10 subframes •Each subframe is further divided into two slots •Each .5 ms slot can consist of either 6 or 7 ODFM symbols •This structure is shown below Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007.] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 47 of 58
  • 48. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE •LTE has three access procedures • Cell Search • Cell search is the protocol for when the mobile handset (terminal) finds a cell tower (cell) that it potentially would like to communicate with • The mobile handset needs to identify the cell tower and needs to estimate the frame timing of that cell tower. • There are three main steps in performing a cell search 1. To assist in these steps the cell tower broadcasts a primary and secondary synch bit in the downlink 2. The mobile handset uses the primary synch bit to find the primary timing of the tower during a 5 ms slot 3. The mobile handset needs to detect the cell-identity information and determine the frame timing. This can be done by checking the pairs of slots where the secondary synch but should be transmitted 4. The cell tower now broadcasts the system information so that the mobile handset can determine the remaining parameters. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 48 of 58
  • 49. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE •LTE has three access procedures • Random Access • This is when the terminal requests a connection setup • There are 4 steps to the random access procedure 1.The terminal first sends a random-access preamble. This allows the eNodeB to estimate the transmission timing of the terminal 2.The network then sends a timing advance command if the terminals transmission timing is off. This also assigns uplink resources to the terminal 3.The mobile-terminal then sends it’s identity to the network. This is sent using the UL-Scheduling protocols specific to the network. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 4. The network then sends a contention-resolution message to the terminal. This resolves and conflicts of multiple terminals attempting to access the same resources. [Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile Broadband. First. London: ELSEVIER, 2007.] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 49 of 58
  • 50. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - LTE •LTE has three access procedures • Paging •When the mobile device is not in use it is allowed to go to sleep • Paging sets the protocols for a network-initiated connection setup • When the mobile device goes to sleep it automatically wakes up at pre-defined intervals • These pre-defined intervals are set up to coincide exactly with the L1/L2 control signaling to prevent the need for a dedicated channel like what is used in UMTS Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science [Source: Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile Broadband. First. London: ELSEVIER, 2007.] 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 50 of 58
  • 51. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax •WiMax uses QPSK, 16 QAM and 64 QAM in the downlink and QPSK and 16 QAM in the uplink •WiMax also uses the following coding schemes: • Tail-Biting Convolutional Code • Convolutional Turbo Code • Block Turbo Code (optional) • Low-Densitiy Parity Check Code (LDPC) (optional) • Zero Tailed Convolutional Code (optional) •WiMax also uses a scheduling algorithm • Each mobile handset competes for a slot only once (for initial entry into the network). • Once it has won an access slot from the base station it cannot lose it unless it disconnects from the tower. • The tower can enlarge and contract the individual time slots, but no matter what, it remains assigned to the specific subscriber station Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 51 of 58
  • 52. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax •The mobility versions of WiMax have three basic handover methods defined. They are: • Hard Handover (HHO): • The mobile handset scans the nearby base stations and gathers a list of all the possible base stations. • It uses this information to determine if a handoff is necessary. Both the base station and mobile handset can decide to start the handoff • Once this decision is made the handset immediately starts communicating with the new base station Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 52 of 58
  • 53. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Physical Layer & MAC Protocols - WiMax •The mobility versions of WiMax have three basic handover methods defined. They are: • Fast Base-Station Switching (FBSS): • The mobile handset maintains a set of multiple suitable base stations • One base station is selected as the anchor and is where all the communications will take place. • The mobile handset will continuously choose which ever base station has the best connection from its list. • The mobile handset can change the anchor at any time without any handover signaling • Macro-Diversity Handover (MDHO): • Just like in FBSS the mobile handset keeps an anchor and a list of base stations • However this time the mobile handset communicates with all base stations Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 53 of 58
  • 54. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Comparison of the Technologies Aspect LTE UMB WiMax Access OFDMA OFMDA, SDMA, Technology (DL) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science CDMA* OFDMA 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 54 of 58 Access Technology (UL) OFDMA OFDMS, SDMA, CDMA* OFDMA Capable Speeds 100 Mb/s DL 50 Mb/s UL 280 Mb/s DL 75 Mb/s 75 Mb/s 25 Mb/s Channel BW 1.25 to 20 MHz 1.25 to 20 MHz 5, to 20 MHz Spectral Efficiency 5 bits/sec/Hz 4-6 bits/sec/Hz 3.25 bits/sec/Hz Time to market 2010 2009 2008 Legacy GSM/UMTS CDMA2000 WiFi *UMB simply states the use of the technologies. There is no mention on specifics for DL or U **Includes latest release of 802.16M not currently available [Source: Scheim, Jacob. "A comparison of two fourth generation technologies: WiMax and 3GPP-LTE."Comsys. 2006.]
  • 55. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Future of the Technology •Long Term Evolution (LTE) • Should see deployments throughout Europe, US and Asia • Vodaphone, China Mobile, Verizon Wireless, AT&T, T-Mobile (Europe & Australia), Orange, NTT DoCoMo • Estimates put 450 Million worldwide subscriber base by 2015 •Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) • Looks to be a dead technology on arrival • Qualcomm is now supporting LTE •Mobile WiMax • Currently deployed in US under brand XOHM • On line in Chicago, Baltimore, Washington DC • Consumer launch 2H 2008 • Deployed commercially in South Korea • SK Telecom under the name WiBro Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 55 of 58
  • 56. University of Kansas | School of Engineering References • Dahlman, Erik. 3G Evolution HSPA and LTE for Mobile Broadband. First. London: Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 56 of 58 ELSEVIER, 2007. • TIA, "cdma2000® High Rate Packet Data Air Interface Specification." TIA-856-A Apr 2004 Apr 2 2004 <http://www.tiaonline.org/standards/technology/cdma2000/documents/TIA-856- A.pdf>. • Gozalvez, J. "1. Ultra Mobile Broadband [Mobile Radio]." Vehicular Technology Magazine, IEEE Mar 2007: • "3G - Ultra Mobile Broadband." CDG : Technology. 2008. CDG. 2 Apr 2008 <http://www.cdg.org/technology/3g_umb.asp>. • ABI Research, " A Poor Market Outlook for Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) Says ABI Research, but Qualcomm’s Future Still Secure." Business Wire 28 Dec 2007: • "UMB Network Architecture." Qualcomm Inc Dec 2007 02 Apr 2008 <7. http://www.qualcomm.com/common/documents/white_papers/UMB_Network_Achitecture.pd f>. • " ULTRA MOBILE BROADBAND (UMB) SPECIFICATION IS PUBLISHED." CDG : Mews & Events. CDG. 2 Apr 2008 <http://www.cdg.org/news/press/2007/Sep24_07.asp>. • "CDMA Buzz-Words EV-DO Rev C as UMB." PhoneNews.com 05 Dec 2006 02 Apr 2008 <http://www.phonenews.com/cdma-buzz-words-ev-do-rev-c-as-umb-1615/>.
  • 57. University of Kansas | School of Engineering References • "What Is cdma2000?." cdma2000 Technology Family: 1xRTT, EVDO, UMB, and EVDV 02 Apr 2008 <http://eogogics.com/talkgogics/tutorials/cdma2000>. • UMTS Forum, "Standardising the future of mobile communications with LTE (Long Term Evolution)." Towards Global Mobile Broadband (2008): • Wikipedia. 2 Apr 2008 <http://wikipedia.org/>. • Scheim, Jacob. "A comparison of two fourth generation technologies: WiMax and 3GPP-LTE." Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 57 of 58 Comsys. 2006. • Litwin, Louis. "The principles of OFDM."RF Signal Processing. 2001. • Myung, Hyung G.. "Technical Overview of 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)."2007. • Li, Bo. "A Survey on Mobile WiMAX."Wireless Broadband Access. 2007. • Scrase, Adriane. "Overview of the Current Status of 3GPP LTE."ETSI. 2008. • Collins, Gerry. "The Business Case for LTE."Nortel. 2007. • Laine, Michael Steve Stanley . "3GPP LTE (Long Term Evolution)."University of Kansas. 2008.
  • 58. University of Kansas | School of Engineering Questions? Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 09/Brandt Elster 24/14 Page 58 of 58

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. This announcement is big news for the mobile WiMax industry as it confirms Sprint’s continued support for Mobile WiMax within the US. This is also big news for the cable operators as from this point forward they will for the first time be able to offer a true triple play to compete with existing telephone operators. They originally tried a MVNO type platform with Sprint called Pivot, they announced several months ago to terminate the agreement due to billing platform and customer confusion issues. This JV should allow them to require a built in billing platform that would interface with their existing cable billing platforms. This would allow them to actually sell the service as a fully integrated triple play instead of simply offering the discount and limited extra services that Pivot was able to produce. This also marks a huge step for Google. They were recently out bid by Verizon Wireless in the latest FCC spectrum auction. This would give them the ability to enter the wireless market. They recently created a new smartphone platform called Android and have been reportedly been working on an answer to the iPhone nicknamed the gPhone. This would give them the flexibility to implement more of what they want without the carrier control that has existed for so long in the US’s wireless market. The spectrum that Verizon won actually came with some open access provisions that Google was pivotal in getting implemented. They want to be able to create devices and services for devices without the carriers limiting either functionality or availability. It is also interesting that Sprint had put forth estimates that it would cost $5 billion to build a complete nation wide wireless network.