Unit 1 - Mobile Communication - WWW - Rgpvnotes.in
Unit 1 - Mobile Communication - WWW - Rgpvnotes.in
Unit 1 - Mobile Communication - WWW - Rgpvnotes.in
Tech
Subject Name: Mobile Communication
Subject Code: EC-503
Semester: 5th
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Department of Electronics & Communication Engineering
Subject Name: Mobile Communication Subject Code: EC503(B)
Subject Notes
Content: Introduction to wireless communication systems, different generations of wireless networks. Cellular
system design fundamentals, frequency reuse, handoff strategies, Interference and system capacity, Trunking and
grade of service.
In 1897 Gugliemo Marconi was the first to demonstrate that it was possible to establish a continuous
communication stream with the ships that were sailing in the English Channel, by means of radio waves. Since then,
the wireless technologies that make “on-the-move” communication possible for us have evolved remarkably.
Today, facilitated by RF circuit fabrication and digital switching techniques, affordable high speed
telecommunication has been largely deployed across the world.
We know, communication means transfer of information from source to recipient. In traditional telephony, when
source and recipient were located in long distance, this transfer used to happen by connecting source and recipient
physically through conducting wires, which would carry information in the form of electrical signals.
Now, what is Wireless Communication?
Any transfer of information between points that do not have a physical connection, like wire or cable connection,
would be WIRELESS COMMUNICATION. Therefore, when you talk to your friend sitting beside you, technically
wouldn’t you be communicating wirelessly? But since we are Engineers, let us leave aside such naive cases and have
some qualitative examples of wireless communication systems.
Examples of wireless communication:
The source is the originating point of the information that is to be conveyed. This information could be voice, text,
picture, packet data etc. Usually, this message is encoded upon a carrier or a medium called the Baseband signal.
GSM (2G)
GPRS (2.5G)
UMTS (3G)
3GPP standards
Data rates starts from 384 kbps and runs into Mbps based on the technology
LTE (4G)
The design objective of early mobile radio systems was to achieve a large coverage area by using a single, high
powered transmitter with an antenna mounted on a tall tower. While this approach achieved very good coverage, it
also meant that it was impossible to reuse those same frequencies throughout the system, since any attempts to
achieve frequency reuse would result in interference. For example, the Bell mobile system in New York City in the
1970s could only support a maximum of twelve simultaneous calls over a thousand square miles [Cal88]. Faced with
the fact that government regulatory agencies could not make spectrum allocations in proportion to the increasing
demand for mobile services, it became imperative to restructure the radio telephone system to achieve high
capacity with limited radio spectrum while at the same time covering very large areas.
The cellular concept was a major breakthrough in solving the problem of spectral congestion and user capacity. It
offered very high capacity in a limited spectrum allocation without any major technological changes. The cellular
concept is a system-level idea which calls for replacing a single, high power transmitter (large cell) with many low
power transmitters (small cells), each providing coverage to only a small portion of the service area. Each base
station is allocated a portion of the total number of channels available to the entire system, and nearby base
stations is assigned different groups of channels so that all the available channels are assigned to a relatively small
number of neighboring base stations. Neighboring base stations are assigned different groups of channels so that
the interference between base stations (and the mobile users under their control) is minimized. By systematically
spacing base stations and their channel groups throughout a market, the available channels are distributed
throughout the geographic region and may be reused as many times as necessary so long as the interference
between co channel stations is kept below acceptable levels. As the demand for service increases (i.e., as more
channels are needed within a particular market), the number of base stations may be increased (along with a
corresponding decrease in transmitter power to avoid added interference), thereby providing additional radio
capacity with no additional increase in radio spectrum. This fundamental principle is the foundation for all modern
wireless communication systems, since it enables a fixed number of channels to serve an arbitrarily large number of
subscribers by reusing the channels throughout the coverage region. Furthermore, the cellular concept allows every
piece of subscriber equipment within a country or continent to be manufactured with the same set of channels so
that any mobile may be used anywhere within the region.
Frequency Reuse:
Cellular radio systems rely on an intelligent allocation and reuse of channels throughout a coverage region . Each
cellular base station is allocated a group of radio channels to be used within a small geographic area called a cell.
Base stations in adjacent cells are assigned channel groups which contain completely different channels than
neighboring cells. The base station antennas are designed to achieve the desired coverage within the particular cell.
By limiting the coverage area to within the boundaries of a cell, the same group of channels may be used to cover
Figure 1.1 Illustration of the cellular frequency reuse concept. Cells with the same letter use the same set of
frequencies. A cell cluster is outlined in bold and replicated over the coverage area. In this example, the cluster size,
N, is equal to seven, and the frequency reuse factor is 1/7 since each cell contains one-seventh of the total number
of available channels.
Figure1.1 illustrates the concept of cellular frequency reuse, where cells labeled with the same letter use the same
group of channels. The frequency reuse plan is overlaid upon a map to indicate where different frequency channels
are used. The hexagonal cell shape shown in Figure 1.1 is conceptual and is a simplistic model of the radio coverage
for each base station, but it has been universally adopted since the hexagon permits easy and manageable analysis
of a cellular system. The actual radio coverage of a cell is known as the footprint and is determined from field
measurements or propagation prediction models. Although the real footprint is amorphous in nature, a regular cell
shape is needed for systematic system design and adaptation for future growth. While it might seem natural to
choose a circle to represent the coverage area of a base station, adjacent circles cannot be overlaid upon a map
without leaving gaps or creating overlapping regions. Thus, when considering geometric shapes which cover an
entire region without overlap and with equal area, there are three sensible choices—a square, an equilateral
triangle, and a hexagon. A cell must be designed to serve the weakest mobiles within the footprint, and these are
typically located at the edge of the cell. For a given distance between the center of a polygon and its farthest
perimeter points, the hexagon has the largest area of the three. Thus, by using the hexagon geometry, the fewest
number of cells can cover a geographic region, and the hexagon closely approximates a circular radiation pattern
which would occur for an Omni-directional base station antenna and free space propagation. Of course, the actual
cellular footprint is determined by the contour in which a given transmitter serves the mobiles successfully. When
using hexagons to model coverage areas, base station transmitters are depicted as either being in the center of the
cell (center-excited cells) or on three of the six cell vertices (edge-excited cells). Normally, Omni-directional
antennas are used in center-excited cells and sectored directional antennas are used in corner-excited cells.
Practical considerations usually do not allow base stations to be placed exactly as they appear in the hexagonal
layout. Most system designs permit a base station to be positioned up to one-fourth the cell radius away from the
ideal location. To understand the frequency reuse concept, consider a cellular system which has a total of S duplex
channels available for use. If each cell is allocated a group of k channels (k < S), and if the S channels are divided
among N cells into unique and disjoint channel groups which each have the same number of channels, the total
number of available radio channels can be expressed as:
S=kxN …..1.1
As seen from Equation (1.2), the capacity of a cellular system is directly proportional to the number of times a
cluster is replicated in a fixed service area. The factor N is called the cluster size and is typically equal to 4, 7, or 12.
If the cluster size N is reduced while the cell size is kept constant, more clusters are required to cover a given area,
and hence more capacity (a larger value of C) is achieved. A large cluster size indicates that the ratio between the
cell radius and the distance between co-channel cells is small. Conversely, a small cluster size indicates that co-
channel cells are located much closer together. The value for N is a function of how much interference a mobile or
base station can tolerate while maintaining a sufficient quality of communications. From a design viewpoint, the
smallest possible value of N is desirable in order to maximize capacity over a given coverage area (i.e., to maximize
C in Equation (1.2)). The frequency reuse factor of a cellular system is given by 1/N, since each cell within a cluster is
only assigned 1/N of the total available channels in the system. Due to the fact that the hexagonal geometry of
Figure 3.1 has exactly six equidistant neighbors and that the lines joining the centers of any cell and each of its
neighbors are separated by multiples of 60 degrees, there are only certain cluster sizes and cell layouts which are
possible [Mac79]. In order to tessellate—to connect without gaps between adjacent cells—the geometry of
hexagons is such that the number of cells per cluster, N, can only have values which satisfy Equation (1.3).
N=𝑖 2 + 𝑖𝑗 + 𝑗 2 ……1.3
where i and j are non-negative integers. To find the nearest co-channel neighbors of a particular cell, one must do
the following: (1) move i cells along any chain of hexagons and then (2) turn 60 degrees counter-clockwise and
move j cells. This is illustrated in Figure 1.2 for i = 3 and j = 2 (example, N = 19).
Figure 1.2 Method of locating co-channel cells in a cellular system. In this example, N = 19 (i.e., i = 3, j = 2)
Example 1.1 If a total of 33 MHz of bandwidth is allocated to a particular FDD cellular telephone system which uses
two 25 kHz simplex channels to provide full duplex voice and control channels, compute the number of channels
available per cell if a system uses (a) four-cell reuse, (b) seven-cell reuse, and (c) 12-cell reuse. If 1 MHz of the
allocated spectrum is dedicated to control channels, determine an equitable distribution of control channels and
voice channels in each cell for each of the three systems.
Solution Given: Total bandwidth = 33 MHz Channel bandwidth = 25 kHz × 2 simplex channels = 50 kHz/duplex
channel Total available channels = 33,000/50 = 660 channels
(b) For N = 7, total number of channels available per cell = 660/7 ≈ 95 channels.
(b) (c) For N = 12, total number of channels available per cell = 660/12 ≈ 55 channels.
A 1 MHz spectrum for control channels implies that there are 1000/50 = 20 control channels out of the 660
channels available. To evenly distribute the control and voice channels, simply allocate the same number of voice
channels in each cell wherever possible. Here, the 660 channels must be evenly distributed to each cell within the
cluster. In practice, only the 640 voice channels would be allocated, since the control channels are allocated
separately as 1 per cell. (a) For N = 4, we can have five control channels and 160 voice channels per cell. In practice,
however, each cell only needs a single control channel (the control channels have a greater reuse distance than the
voice channels). Thus, one control channel and 160 voice channels would be assigned to each cell. (b) For N = 7, four
cells with three control channels and 92 voice channels, two cells with three control channels and 90 voice
channels, and one cell with two control channels and 92 voice channels could be allocated. In practice, however,
each cell would have one control channel, four cells would have 91 voice channels, and three cells would have 92
voice channels. (c) For N = 12, we can have eight cells with two control channels and 53 voice channels, and four
cells with one control channel and 54 voice channels each. In an actual system, each cell would have one control
channel, eight cells would have 53 voice channels, and four cells would have 54 voice channels.
Hand-off strategies:
In cellular communications, the handoff is the process of transferring an active call or data session from one cell in a
cellular network or from one channel to another. In satellite communications, it is the process of transferring
control from one earth station to another. Handoff is necessary for preventing loss of interruption of service to a
caller or a data session user. Handoff is also called handover.
If a subscriber who is in a call or a data session moves out of coverage of one cell and enters coverage area of
another cell, a handoff is triggered for a continuum of service. The tasks that were being performed by the first
cell are delineating to the latter cell.
Types of handoffs:
Hard Handoff − In a hard handoff, an actual break in the connection occurs while switching from one cell to
another. The radio links from the mobile station to the existing cell is broken before establishing a link with the
next cell. It is generally an inter-frequency handoff. It is a “break before make” policy.
Soft Handoff − In soft handoff, at least one of the links is kept when radio links are added and removed to the
mobile station. This ensures that during the handoff, no break occurs. This is generally adopted in co-located
sites. It is a “make before break” policy.
Mobile Assisted Handoff (MAHO) is a technique in which the mobile devices assist the Base Station Controller
(BSC) to transfer a call to another BSC. It is used in GSM cellular networks. In other systems, like AMPS, a
handoff is solely the job of the BSC and the Mobile Switching Centre (MSC), without any participation of the
mobile device. However, in GSM, when a mobile station is not using its time slots for communicating, it
measures signal quality to nearby BSC and sends this information to the BSC. The BSC performs handoff
according to this information.
The sectoring is done by replacing a single Omni-directional antenna with 3 directional antennas (120O sectoring) or
with 6 directional antennas (60O sectoring). In this scheme; each cell is divided into 3 or 6 sectors. Each sector uses a
directional antenna at the BS and is assigned a set of channels. The number of channels in each sector is the number
of channels in a cell divided by the number of sectors. The amount of co-channel interferer is also reduced by the
number of sectors.
Drawbacks: Increase the number of antennas at each BS. The number of handoffs increases when the mobile
moves from one sector to another.
Cell Splitting: Cell splitting is the process of splitting a mobile cell into several smaller cells. This is usually done to
make more voice channels available to accommodate traffic growth in the area covered by the original cell. If the
radius of a cell is reduced from R to R/2, the area of the cell is reduced from Area to Area/4. The number of
available channels is also increased. Cell splitting is usually done on demand; when in a certain cell there is too
much traffic which causes too much blocking of calls. The cell is split into smaller microcells.
Trunking is the concept that allows large number of users to use a smaller number of channels (or phone lines,
customer service representatives, parking spots, public bathrooms, as efficiently as possible. It is clear that Trunking
is based on statistics. The number of available channels in a trunked system is directly related to the probability of
call blocking during peak time .In some systems, because of high system demand, calls that cannot be initiated are o
Blocked (caller will have to make the call later with not priority at all). Such systems are sometimes called Blocked
Calls Cleared systems. oQueued (call is placed in a queue for several seconds until a free channel becomes
available). Such systems are sometimes called Blocked Calls Queued systems.
Trunking and Queuing theories were first studied by a mathematician called Erlang What is an Erlang One Erlang is
defined as the amount of traffic intensity carrier by a channel that is completely occupied Therefore, 1 Erlang = 1
call with a duration of 1 hour over a channel every hour = 2 calls with a duration of 0.5 hours over the channel
every hour = 30 calls with a duration of 4 minutes over the channel every 2 hours (120 minutes) A channel that
carries 2 calls of duration 5 minutes each per hour carries (2*5 min/60 min = 1/6 Erlangs) Grade of Service (GOS)
The grade of service (GOS) is related to the ability of a mobile phone to access the trunked mobile phone system
during the busiest hour. To meet a specific GOS, the maximum required capacity of the system must be estimated
and the proper number of channels must be allocated for the system. GOS is a measure of the congestion of the
system which is specified as the probability of a call being blocked (Erlang B system) or the probability of a call being
delayed beyond a certain amount of time (Erlang C system).
Grade of Service (GoS) is the measure of traffic congestion in telephone network. Congestion in the network results
in lost call scenario.
Hence Traffic carried = traffic offered - traffic lost .
For the lost call system, Grade of Service, say B is defined as follows. Grade of Service Equation is mentioned below.
B = Traffic lost/ Traffic offered,
Let us say for a telephone network Erlang is A and Grade of Service is B , then traffic lost is AB and traffic carried is
A(1-B).