Cdma Technology Seminar Report
Cdma Technology Seminar Report
Cdma Technology Seminar Report
SEMINAR REPORT
CHAPTER - 1 1. INTRODUCTION
We are moving into a new era of communications and information technology. Personal competitiveness in business in relies more and more on increase personal productivity and responsiveness. Today everybody is on the move and mobile is the only way to keep contact with that person. But now a days peoples want multimedia facilities from their mobile handset. But it requires high data rate, hi efficiency and many more technical things, which are available in third generation. (CDMA) so the CDMA TECHNOLOGY makes existing mobile handset more efficient and attractive. CDMA (3G) mobile devices and services will transform wireless communications into on-line, real-time connectivity. 3G wireless technology will allow an individual to have immediate access to location-specific services that offer information on demand. The first generation of mobile phones consisted of the analog models that emerged in the early 1980s. The second generation of digital mobile phones appeared about ten years later along with the first digital mobile networks. During the second generation, the mobile telecommunications industry experienced exponential growth both in terms of subscribers as well as new types of value-added services. Mobile phones are rapidly becoming the preferred means of personal communication, creating the world's largest consumer electronics industry. The rapid and efficient deployment of new wireless data and Internet services has emerged as a critical priority for communications equipment manufacturers. Network components that enable wireless data services are fundamental to the next-generation network infrastructure. Wireless data services are expected to see the same explosive growth in demand that Internet service and wireless voice services have seen in recent years.
This report presents an overview of current technology trends in the wireless technology market, a historical overview of the evolving wireless technologies and an examination of how the communications industry plans to implement 3G wireless technology standards to address the growing demand for wireless multimedia services.
benefits to carriers and consumers, including better voice quality, broader coverage and stronger security.
FDMA, Frequency Division Multiple Access TDMA, Time Division Multiple Access CDMA, Code Division Multiple Access
figure 1: multipale access technology All three are Multiple Access System technologies, so called because more than one person can access the system at a time. Within a communication system you have a fixed amount of resources. A fixed amount of spectrum, a fixed amount of equipment, and a fixed number of channels. You also have multiple subscriber units (people) who are trying to access the system at the same time.
The system has to manage resources appropriately in order to cover and support all the people that want to access the system.
3.1 FDMA
FDMA - Frequency Division Multiple Access. In Frequency Division Multiple Access, the available spectrum is divided into multiple frequency bands or channels. Each user is assigned a channel to make a call. As long as the user has the call established they are using their assigned frequency. No one else can use it. FDMA is an inefficient use of spectrum.
figure 2: freqency division multiple access Earlier, TDD and FDD were explained. Most systems use FDD - Frequency Division Duplexing. This means Users 1, 2 and 3 are assigned frequency bands 1, 2, and 3 for reverse link communication. A similar set of frequency bands are assigned for the forward link. Remember, these frequencies are assigned for the entire duration of the call. However, in a conversation, one person usually talks while another person listens. This means that one channel is being used and the other channel is not being used. Only half the
spectrum is being used. Unfortunately, the unused half is still assigned to the call and no one else can use it. One other problem is voice activity. When a user is talking, they are actually emitting a sound only about 45-50% of the time. This varies by language, but 45-50% is typical. The rest of the time consists of pauses between syllables, a breath at the end of a sentence, or when a user is thinking of the next thing to say. So now the channel that is in use is only being used about 50% of the time. So, there are two issues with regard to frequency and FDMA systems. First, only half the assigned spectrum is being used at any one time because only one person is talking at a time. Second, that half is further reduced by half again because of voice activity. Half of a half means the user makes use of only about 25% of the spectrum that could be used This growth forced engineers to think differently about the efficient use of spectrum. There was pressure on them to figure out how to resolve the frequency waste that was occurring. Many users were going to need to get on the system and the network was wasting resources. A more efficient system means more subscribers. To carriers such as Verizon, Sprint, and BellSouth SBC, more subscribers means more revenue.
3.2 TDMA
To improve capacity, carriers started looking at a technology called Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA). In TDMA, engineers take the frequency channel and instead of giving it to one person, they divide it up among many users by giving each user their own time slot. figure3: time division multiple access
The time slots are short, only 30 - 40 milliseconds, and cycle between users there by allowing each user to have access to a common frequency channel. At the receive end, the time slots are put back together and the information is passed to the receiving user. When the time slots are assembled into one voice stream the human ear can't tell the difference from a conversation that was not broken into time slots. In the United States, TDMA is known as IS-136. The standard began as IS-54, then 54B, and eventually evolved to IS-136. Standards are always evolving. The abbreviation IS stands for Interim Standard. Interim standards are assigned through the TIA/EIA Telecommunications Industries Association/Electronics Industries Association. The draw back however is that with the narrower band there is a greater likelihood of distortion and consequently more susceptibility to noise on the receiving end. So, capacity has increased but the voice isn't necessarily as clear.
3.3 CDMA
figure 4: code division multiple access CDMA was developed by QUALCOMM Incorporated, a company in San Diego, California. QUALCOMM engineers decided to do something different and applied spread spectrum techniques to a multiple access system, which ultimately became CDMA. In spread spectrum, instead of giving each person a channel, or each group of 3 or 8 people a time slot, CDMA puts everyone in the same channel at the same time. At first thought, it would seem to be an impossible task to make work, but it does work. The reason it works is explained in the first two words of CDMA, Code Division. Each user in the system is separated from every other user by a unique digital code. And, to make sure everyone could have one of these codes of their own, engineers designed 4.4 trillion of them into the system specification. The fact is, each user is provided their own code for the reverse link. On the forward link, a group of codes is available for users of the system. There is a little more digital processing going on here that will be explained in more detail later. For now, once CDMA processing is complete, the information is converted to an RF signal and sent out over the air link.
The goals of multiple access communications systems, meaning cellular and PCS, are:
Near-wireline quality voice service Near-universal geographical coverage Low equipment cost, both subscriber stations and fixed plant Mimimum number of fixed radio sites Regulatory agencies have allocated limited bandwidth to these services, so that the solutions must achieve high spectral efficiency, measured in Erlangs per unit service area, per MHz. Cellular operators have 25 MHz each, split between the two directions of communications. When a subscriber moves between cells, over-the-air messaging is used to transfer control from the old cell to the new cell. This transfer of control is termed handoff or handover. Several hundred channels are available within the spectrum allocation. One channel of one base station is used for each conversation. Upon handoff, the subscriber station is directed via messaging to discontinue use of the old channel and tune to the new one, on which it will find the new cell.
blocking probability: only a few thousand subscribers per system. By reusing channels in multiple cells the system can grow without geographical limits. Typical cellular reuse (pre-CDMA, that is!) is easily rationalized by considering an idealized system. The cell boundaries are at the equisignal points, then a planar service area is optimally covered by the classical hexagonal array of cells ...
Seven sets of channels are used, one set in each colored cell. This seven-cell unit is then replicated over the service area. No similarly colored cells are adjacent, and therefore there are no adjacent cells using the same channel. While real systems do not ever look like these idealized hexagonal tilings of a plane, the seven-way reuse is typical of that achieved in practice.
An idealized multiple access mobile radio system consists of a family of base stations, or "cells," geographically distributed over the service area, and mobile stations. We use the term "mobile" generically to mean any subscriber station, whether it moves or not. The majority of new cellular sales are now in fact hand held portable units, and the market outlook is for that trend to continue for the foreseeable future.
Communication between base stations and mobile stations is established by a negotiation upon call origination. Once communication is established between base and mobile, movement of the mobile is detected and the service is handed over from one base station to another. One cell at a time services each mobile in the narrowband services. The concept of handoff is extended to a multi-way simultaneous "soft" handoff in the CDMA standards.
An idealized system geometry shown in the figure. The same frequency obviously cannot be reused in any adjacent pair of cells because a user on the boundary between those cells would receive both signals with equal amplitude, leading to an unacceptably high interference level. A plane can be tiled with hexagonal cells, labeled in accordance with the seven-way pattern shown in the figure. Thus, if a unique set of channels is assigned to each of the seven cells, then the pattern can be repeated without violating the adjacency
requirement. Although this idealized pattern is not strictly applicable in all real systems, the seven-way reuse pattern is approximately correct. The capacity of systems built in this way is determined by the bandwidth per channel and the seven-way reuse pattern.
4.5 The "Magic" of CDMA CDMA offers an answer to the capacity problem. The key to its high capacity is the use of noise-like carrier waves, as was first suggested decades ago by Claude Shannon. Instead of partitioning either spectrum or time into disjoint "slots" each user is assigned a different instance of the noise carrier. While those waveforms are not rigorously orthogonal, they are nearly so. Practical application of this principle has always used digitally generated pseudonoise, rather than true thermal noise. The basic benefits are preserved, and the transmitters and receivers are simplified because large portions can be implemented using high density digital devices.
The major benefit of noise-like carriers is that the system sensitivity to interference is fundamentally altered. Traditional time or frequency slotted systems must be designed with a reuse ratio that satisfies the worst-case interference scenario, but only a small fraction of the users actually experience that worst-case. Use of noise-like carriers, with all users occupying the same spectrum, makes the effective noise the sum of all other-user signals. The receiver correlates its input with the desired noise carrier, enhancing the signal to noise ratio at the
detector. The enhancement overcomes the summed noise enough to provide an adequate SNR at the detector. Because the interference is summed, the system is no longer sensitive to worst-case interference, but rather to average interference. Frequency reuse is universal, that is, multiple users utilize each CDMA carrier frequency...
figure 7: frequency shared by many user The rainbow cells indicate that the entire 1.25 MHz passband is used by each user, and that same passband is reused in each cell.
CDMA2000 1XEV-DO
CDMA2000 1XEV-DV
2x increases in voice capacity Up to 307 kbps* packet data on a single (1.25 MHz) carrier First 3G system for technology worldwide
Optimized , very high-speed data (Phase 1) Up to 2.4Mbps* packet data on a single (1.25 MHz) carrier. Integrated voice and data (Phase 2); up to 3.09 Mbps
CDMA2000 is a family of technologies allowing seamless evolution from CDMA2000 1X to CDMA2000 1xEV-DO and CDMA2000 1xEV-DV. CDMA2000 requires only 1.25 MHz of spectrum per channel or carrier and is backward compatible with cdmaOne IS-95A/B systems. The Family of IS-95 CDMA Technologies
cdmaOne describes a complete wireless system based on the TIA/EIA IS-95 CDMA standard, including IS-95A and IS-95B revisions. It represents the end-to-end wireless system and all the necessary specifications that govern its operation. cdmaOne provides a family of related services including cellular, PCS and fixed wireless (wireless local loop).
95B was first deployed in September 1999 in Korea and has since been adopted by operators in Japan and Peru.
Even with dedicated channel operation, the terminal keeps searching for new cells as it moves across the network. In addition to the active set, neighbor set, and remaining set, the terminal also maintains a candidate set. When a terminal is traveling in a network, the pilot from a new BTS (P2) strength exceeds the minimum threshold TADD for addition in the active set. However, initially its relative contribution to the total received signal strength is not sufficient and the terminal moves P2 to the candidate set. The decision threshold for adding a new pilot to the active set is defined by a linear function of signal strength of the total active set. The network defines the slope and cross point of the function. When strength of P2 is detected to be above the dynamic threshold, the terminal signals this event to the network. The terminal then receives a hand-off direction message from the network requesting the addition of P2 in the active set. The terminal now operates in soft hand-off. The strength of serving BTS (P1) drops below the active set threshold, meaning P1 contribution to the total received signal strength does not justify the cost of transmitting P1. The terminal starts a hand-off drop timer. The timer expires and the terminal notifies the network that P1 dropped below the threshold. The terminal receives a hand-off message from the network moving P1 from the active set to the candidate set. Then P1 strength drops below TDROP and the terminal starts a hand-off drop timer, which expires after a set time. P1 is then moved from candidate set to neighbor set. This step-by-step procedure with multiple thresholds and timers ensures that the resource is only used when beneficial to the link and pilots are not constantly added and removed from the various lists, therefore limiting the associated signaling. In addition to intrasystem, intrafrequency monitoring, the network may direct the terminal to look for base stations on a different frequency or a different system. CDMA2000 provides a framework to the terminal in support of the inter- frequency handover measurements consisting of identity and system parameters to be measured. The terminal performs required measurements as allowed by its hardware capability. In case of a terminal with dual receiver structure, the measurement can be done in parallel. When a terminal has a single receiver, the channel reception will be interrupted when performing the measurement. In this instance, during the measurement, a certain portion of
a frame will be lost. To improve the chance of successful decoding, the terminal is allowed to bias the FL power control loop and boost the RL transmit power before performing the measurement. This method increases the energy per information bit and reduces the risk of losing the link in the interval. Based on measurement reports provided by the terminal, the network then decides whether or not to hand-off a given terminal to a different frequency system. It does not release the resource until it receives confirmation that hand-off was successful or the timer expires. This enables the terminal to come back in case it could not acquire the new frequency or the new system.
The traffic channel structure and frame format is very flexible. In order to limit the signaling load that would be associated with a full frame format parameter negotiation, CDMA2000 specifies a set of channel configurations. It defines a spreading rate and an associated set of frames for each configuration.
CONCLUSION
In view of the explosive growth of wireless communication over recent decades and the lead-time required for the introduction of new technologies, the time has come to develop a clear perspective of CDMA(3G) wireless systems and services. This CDMA(3G) vision should exploit to complementary approaches. One based on evolution though a network centric view and the other based on the recently introduced user centric view. The person to person communication concept needs to be enhanced to include person to machine and machine to machine networking for ubiquitous connectivity to Internet services. Interworking between access networks implementing enhanced versions of current technologies for broadcast cellular and short-range communications should provide a good first solution for CDMA(3G) services. This technology map can be extended to include access technologies for transmission at more than 50 Mbit/s for fast moving users as well as ultra wide band systems for wide area coverage. However several interesting technologies challenges ad regulatory issues need to be addressed before the CDMA(3G) vision becomes a reality.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Technologies used
REFERENCES : Web sites : http://www.palowireless.com Search Engines http//.www.google.com http//www.ask.com Magazines and Journals Telecommunications Electronics for you.