Link Budget Tutorial
Link Budget Tutorial
____________________________________________________________________________________
date:
April 1, 2000
from:
S. Vasudevan
JW45C6000
Room 4c-239
67, Whippany Road
Whippany, NJ 07981
Ph:973-581-6862
[email protected]
____________________________________________________________________________________
Objective
The objective of this document is to provide a road map for populating a CDMA link budget for specified
design objectives, using Lucent equipment.
Additionally, explanations are provided for the entries in the CDMA reverse link budget.
Introduction
The objective of a link budget is to catalog all the losses and gains between the two ends of a
communication link, thus yielding the maximum loss in signal strength that can be tolerated between
transmitter and receiver. This maximum allowable loss in signal strength is also known as available path
loss. It is specified in logarithmic units (decibels) and can in turn be translated into the greatest spatial
distance between transmitter and receiver at which reliable communication of the desired quality can still
take place. In the context of wireless mobile communication systems, link budgets are a pre-requisite to
determining the locations of, as well as spacing between, cell sites in order to ensure reliable and
uninterrupted communication as mobiles move through an area of intended radio coverage.
Since communication here between the mobiles and base stations is bi-directional, the quality of the link
from mobile to base station (uplink or reverse link) as well as from the base station to the mobile (downlink
or forward link) must be considered in system design.
This document however, focuses mainly on the CDMA reverse link budget and a discussion of the forward
link budget is restricted to the checks that need to be made on forward link parameters after obtaining the
reverse link available path loss.
Definitions of Link Budget Entries
The following set of definitions is to be read in conjunction with the appended reverse link budget
spreadsheet.
Mobile EIRP
This refers to the effective isotropically radiated power from the mobile at the antenna connector. For the
PCS CDMA mobile, this value is 21 dBm while it is 23 dBm at cellular frequencies. These values are taken
from minimum performance standards for a 200 milliwatt mobile.
Antenna Gain
This is the gain of the mobile antenna. At both cellular and PCS frequencies, this is a dipole whose gain can
be taken to be 2 dB.
For new applications such as the proposed CDMA system in the NMT band at 450 MHz, a dipole is not
feasible and the antenna gain is expected to be much lower (of the order of -1.5 dB for the helical antenna).
Head/Body Loss
This refers to the attenuation of the radio signal during both transmission and reception as the mobile
antenna is held to the ear of the user. At PCS and cellular frequencies, this attenuation is mainly due to the
head of the user while at lower frequencies (and larger wavelengths) the entire human body could distort the
radiation pattern of the mobile antenna.
Typical head/body loss values range from 2 to 5 dB. Values to be used in the link budget are typically
provided by the wireless network operator based on field measurements or prior experience. It is important
to obtain these values from the operator since any design loss raises design cell count.
The field measurement technique consists of first setting up a CW transmitter at a typical cell site location.
Next the signal strength seen at a mobile antenna held to the ear of a user who walks a test route is logged.
The difference between this signal strength and that seen by an isolated reference antenna held at the same
height is logged and averaged. The result is an estimate of the head loss to be used in the link budget.
Receiver Antenna Gain
This refers to the gain of the Rx antenna at the base station. While the actual antennas used in the network
may vary from site to site, a nominal, representative value is provided in the link budget based on the
frequency of operation and sectorization.
The following table provides nominal antenna gain values for PCS and cellular frequencies. The gain units
are dBi or gain with respect to an isotropic radiator.
PCS
Cellular
Omni
13
10
Three sector
17.5
14
In selecting an antenna of higher (or lower gain) for a specific application, the horizontal and vertical
beamwidths should not be compromised. Typical values for vertical and horizontal beamwidths are 60
degrees and 6 degrees. This ensures adequate overlap between cells for soft handoff and also ensures that
there is minimal gain variation across the cell.
For highway coverage, narrower horizontal beamwidth antennas of 30 degrees may be used.
More guidance on antenna selection can be found in the presentation Antenna Usage: Recommendations
and Restrictions available in the RF Engineering Library on the AMPS Systems Engineering web site.
Series II
MiniCell
Enhanced MiniCell
Modular Cell
Microcell
Micro-mini
Cellular
5
5
N/A
4
4.5
4
PCS
N/A
5
4
4
4
4
Composite Noise Figure calculation with Tower-top Low Noise Amplifier (TTLNA)
Use the formula for a cascade (in series) of two ports. In this case, the devices are the TTLNA followed by
the cable, and modified base station receiver.
NFc = NFLNA +
Lc 1 NFRc 1
+
1
GLNA
( )G LNA
Lc
where all the quantities are expressed in linear units. Lc is the cable loss (equal to the noise figure of the
cable) and the gain and noise figures of the TTLNA and the modified base station receiver are indicated by
the subscripts 'LNA' and 'Rc'. The expression can be further simplified to
NFc = NFLNA +
L.NFRc 1
.
GLNA
For the PCS minicell and a cable loss of 3 dB, the composite receiver noise figure is 5.6 dB.
For the Enhanced PCS minicell and a cable loss of 3 dB, the composite receiver noise figure is 5.1 dB
Currently, the modular cell, the microcell, and micro-mini do not support the use of TTLNA
Receiver Noise Density
This simply refers to the thermal noise floor at 290 K which is -174 dBm/Hz.
Interference Margin
Since all the mobiles in a CDMA system transmit over the same frequency carrier, the signals of these
mobiles appear as mutual interference at the base station receiver. The extra margin required at the base
station in order to ensure adequate performance for a mobile at cell edge is termed the interference margin
in the reverse link budget. This margin can be shown to correspond to the rise in the noise floor that is seen
at the serving cell site as a result of the operation of mobiles in its vicinity.
The interference margin can be simply calculated from the fractional loading of the system (typically 55%):
IM = 1 0 * lo g 10 (
1
)
1 f
13 kbit vocoder
8 kbit vocoder (EVRC)
8 kbit vocoder with Orange 1.1 ASIC
Omni
27
40
50
Three Sector
24
35
44
Assumptions:
Note that voice activity is assumed to be 0.4. If the customer changes the voice activity factor, pole
capacity, loading, and interference margin may all have to be changed.
The Eb/No requirement is chosen to be 7 dB for the Orange 1.0 ASIC and 6 dB for the Orange 1.1 ASIC.
This is the appropriate value for achieving a field FER target of 2% (note the power control target should be
run at 1%).
Given the required number of channels per sector, one obtains the fractional loading of pole using the table
above and hence the interference margin. At 55% loading, the number of usable channels is:
13 kbit vocoder
8 kbit vocoder (EVRC)
Omni
15
22
Three Sector
13
20
27
24
Raising system loading above 55% is generally not recommended. More aggressive loadings may be
possible in specialized configurations (e.g., EVRC fixed wireless with fixed, directional antennas) that
allow significantly higher pole points.
Erlang Capacity
If the required Erlang capacity per sector is specified as the design objective, the first step is to convert this
number into a required number of voice channels from the Erlang B tables at 2% blocking. (Note that we
recommend operation of the system at 2% blocking.) Next, the fractional loading of pole can be determined
with the aid of the table above and hence the required interference margin in the link budget.
The Erlangs corresponding to the previous table of voice channels are:
13 kbit vocoder
8 kbit vocoder (EVRC)
8 kbit vocoder with Orange 1.1 ASIC
Omni
9
14.85
19.25
Three Sector
7.4
13.2
16.6
Primary Erlangs
It should be noted that the above numbers are primary Erlangs, i.e. the traffic due to users in soft handoff is
accretive to these numbers.
Total Effective Noise plus Interference Density
This number may be seen as measuring the rise in the noise floor as a result of the noise contributions due to
interference from other users and the noise generated in the base station receiver.
Information rate
This refers to the maximum rate at which data is sent over the channel, which is either 14.4 kb/s or 9.6 kb/s.
Required Eb/No
The Energy per bit/noise spectral density ratio is an alternative means of referring to the required Signal-tonoise ratio or SNR. In the next section, we will relate Eb/No to SNR and explain the sequence of
calculations leading up to the determination of receiver sensitivity.
Receiver Sensitivity
This is the minimum acceptable signal level at the base station receiver (before allowances are made for
fading, penetration losses and soft handoff gains) for the desired Frame error rate (FER) performance.
Soft Handoff gain
The reverse link budget specifies how far out a mobile can go from a cell site and yet achieve the desired
Signal-to-noise ratio. In the case of CDMA a mobile at cell edge is in simultaneous communication with
two or more cell sites resulting in overall link performance that is better than in the case when only a single
cell site is available for communication. This implies that the edge of each cell that abuts other cells can be
moved further out than if the cell were isolated. This improvement in coverage is captured by the soft
handoff gain entry in the reverse link budget.
The soft handoff gain can essentially be viewed as a credit against the single-link fade margin. The credit
can be applied because of the presence of two links that are unlikely to fade simultaneously.
The actual value of the soft handoff gain depends on the edge coverage probability. This is because the
improvement due to the fact that the mobile has two links to communicate on, depends on the likelihood of
the signal quality on at least one of the two being acceptable. When a system is being designed for a lower
edge coverage probability, the improvement due to soft handoff is smaller since the likelihood of
unacceptable signal quality on both links is increased.
For the typical edge coverage probability targets of 90% and 75% and a fading standard deviation of 8 dB,
the soft handoff gain values are 4 dB and 3 dB respectively.
deviation of 8 dB is assumed for the random building penetration loss. A composite fade margin based on a
combination of outdoor and indoor loss distributions is then used for the fade margin.
For example, the composite indoor plus outdoor fading distribution, when each has a standard deviation of
8 dB, has a standard deviation of
required fade margin is then 14.6 dB.
Design Objectives
A typical design objective would be specified as a combination of coverage and capacity objectives.
Coverage Objective
Coverage objective is typically specified as a target coverage probability at cell edge. Typical numbers are
90% and 75% edge coverage. Achieving 90% edge coverage implies that at 90% of the locations at edge, a
call can be initiated and kept up. In order to achieve this probability of coverage at cell edge it is necessary
to build in a margin into the reverse link budget. This number is specified as the log-normal fade margin
and is 10.3 dB for 90% edge coverage and 5.6 dB for 75% edge coverage.
Due to difficulties associated with measuring coverage at cell edge (since the boundary is not clearly
defined), the coverage objective is often specified as an area coverage requirement. Using path loss models,
one can relate area coverage to edge coverage and hence to fade margin requirement. We currently map
95% area coverage to 90% edge coverage and 90% area coverage to 75% edge coverage. These mappings
differ somewhat from those found in the literature. These values presume a completely noise-limited
receiver, whereas in CDMA cochannel interference at the receiver cannot be ignored.
Capacity Objective
The capacity objective may be specified as a required number of Erlangs or channels per sector, or as an
Erlang density for each morphology. Keeping the constraints on loading per carrier in mind, appropriate
equipment choices can be made, interference margin in the reverse link budget can be calculated, and
carrier requirements at each site can be determined.
Trading capacity for coverage
By using the correct interference margin in the reverse link budget based on capacity inputs, any extra dBs
available for coverage are automatically indicated in the available path loss.
Reverse Link Performance Objective
The Eb/No requirements are predicated on a 1% FER design target. Experience has indicated that the
Erlangs associated with the 1% target can be achieved while maintaining an average (across coverage area)
measured FER of 2%. RIGHT HERE
Overall Reverse Link Budget Calculations
In this section, we work out the calculation of receiver sensitivity and make the correspondence between
this and the computations in the reverse link budget.
The required Signal to noise ratio at the base station receiver may be related to the required Eb/No (or
Energy per bit to Noise power spectral density) as follows:
SNR =
Eb R
N 0W
where R and W are the system information rate and carrier bandwidth respectively. The noise in the SNR
consists of the thermal noise, interference from other users as well as noise injected by the base station
amplifier. The above expression may be simplified and rewritten as a minimum signal requirement:
S req =
Eb
+ R + N 0 + NFRc + IM
N0
where all terms are expressed in logarithmic units and the dependence on W, the carrier bandwidth, has
disappeared. This equation is represented by the computations leading up the calculation of receiver
sensitivity in the reverse link budget.
Series II
MiniCell
Compact MiniCell
Enhanced MiniCell
Modular Cell
Microcell
Micro-mini
Cellular
9 W 33 W
4.5 W
20 W
N/A
20 W
10 w
16 w
PCS
N/A
8/16 w
N/A
8/16 w
16 w
8w
16 w
For full mobility systems using the 8 kb vocoder, the Eb/No requirements are 6.8 dB at PCS and 7.3 dB at
cellular frequencies.
Reverse Link Amplifier Backoff
In cases where the forward Eb/No requirement is not met, the available reverse link path loss may be
reduced until this requirement is met. The approach is simply to decrement the available path in the reverse
link until the Eb/No target is met in the forward link spreadsheet. If too large a reduction in path loss is
necessitated, it may be preferable to take a capacity penalty and reduce the number of users on both forward
and reverse links since forward Eb/No-s are much more sensitive to capacity changes than to reductions in
path loss. This penalty, if applied, is sometimes referred to as the design tradeoff adjustment factor, since
it essentially entails adjustments that trade off capacity against coverage.
Units
dBm
Value
23
Value
23
Value
23
Value
23
dB
dBi
dBm
21
21
21
21
dBi
dB
17.5
3
17.5
3
17.5
3
17.5
3
dB
dBm/Hz
dB
5
-174
3.01
5
-174
3.01
5.6
-174
3.01
5.6
-174
3.01
dBm/Hz
-165.99
-165.99
-165.4
-165.4
dB
39.8
39.8
39.8
39.8
dB
dBm
dB
dB
-119.17
4
0
-119.17
4
0
-118.53
3
0
-118.53
3
0
Comments
dB
13.9
13.9
7.9
7.9
dB
dB
22
122.8
18
126.8
14.0
138.1
10.0
142.1
dB
144.8
144.8
152.1
152.1