Femtocells Technology
Femtocells Technology
Femtocell Definition
A small cellular base station, designed for use in residential or enterprise. Connects to the service provider s network via broadband. Support 2 to 5 mobile. Allows service providers to extend service coverage indoors.
Femtocell Definition
Confidential Incorporates the functionality of a typical base station but extends it to allow a simpler, self contained deployment. The concept is applicable to all wireless standards, including UMTS, GSM, CDMA-2000, TD-SCDMA and WiMAX solutions.
Architectures
Home Node B (HNB/HeNB):
In 3GPP terms, LTE femto-cells are called Home Node B s for HSPA and Home eNode B s for LTE. H(e)NBs are typically associated with uncoordinated large scale deployments and therefore the connection to the operators core network needs to be realized efficiently.
Architectures
Collapsed stack:
The approach standardized by 3GPP in Release 8 is to collapse network functionality into the femtocell, so it includes not just the base station itself but also the controller that enables local radio resource control. This connects back to the mobile operator core at a higher point for central authentication and management. This addresses the scalability concerns above, as the resource is located locally.
Architectures
Historic approach/cellular base station:
One approach for a femtocell is to use the traditional base station architecture. In this case, the femtocell is a base station, connecting to the core network using a standard interface;. The slight difference from a typical base station deployment is that the backhaul would be carried over broadband ("Iub over IP") which may have quality & security concerns. A more significant drawback of this architecture is that standards-based base station controllers are designed to support only a limited number of high-capacity base stations, not large numbers of simple ones
Architectures
SIP or IMS:
The final, and most sophisticated structure is to move to a full IP-based architecture. In this case, even more functionality is included within the femtocell, and the integration to the core is done using an IP-based technology
Issues
Femtocells are a complicated technology and there have been a number of issues and concerns which need to be addressed. Interference
The placement of a femtocell has a critical effect on the performance of the wider network, and this is one of the key issues to be addressed for successful deployment. Because femtocells can use the same frequency bands as the conventional cellular network, there has been the worry that rather than improving the situation they could potentially cause problems. As more analysis has been done, and more operators have deployed it is clear that so long as femtocells incorporate appropriate interference mitigation techniques (detecting macrocells, adjusting power and scrambling codes accordingly) then this need not be a problem.
Issues
Equipment location
There are issues in this regard for access point base stations sold to consumers for home installation, for example. Further, a consumer might try to carry their base station with them to a country where it is not licensed. Other regulatory issues relate to the requirement in most countries for the operator of a network to be able to show exactly where each base-station is located, and for E911 requirements to provide the registered location of the equipment to the emergency services.
Issues
Quality of service
In shared-bandwidth approaches, which are the majority of designs currently being developed, the effect on Quality of Service may be an issue.
Issues
Controversy on consumer proposition
The impact of a femtocell is most often to improve cellular coverage, without the cellular carrier needing to improve their infrastructure (cell towers, etc.). This is net gain for the cellular carrier. However, the user must provide and pay for an internet connection to route the femtocell traffic, and then (usually) pay an additional one-off or monthly fee to the cellular carrier. Some have objected to the idea that consumers are being asked to pay to help relieve network shortcomings. On the other hand, residential femtocells normally provide a 'personal cell' which provides benefits only to the owner's family and friends.
Features of Femtocell
Operates in the licensed spectrum Uses fixed broadband connection for backhaul It is managed by the NAP The backhaul service provider may be different from NAP/NSP Principally intended for home and SOHO Lower cost than PicoBS Smaller coverage (low power) than PicoBS Smaller number of subscriber (ten or less) than PicoBS Higher density
Deployment
Irregular deployment will incur inevitable interference
Conclusions
Like FMC, Femtocells are on a road to nowhere Unsatisfactory coverage and the increasing number of high-data-rate application are two driving forces for femtocell development Femtocells have the potential to provide highquality network access to indoor users at low cost Improve coverage Provide huge capacity gain