DATA Communication and Optical Fibre Module 2
DATA Communication and Optical Fibre Module 2
MODULE 2
MULTIPLEXING
• Process of transmitting multiple signals simultaneously through a single path by combining them.
• Path refers to the physical link between devices.
• A path can have many channels which is a portion of path that carry transmission between a pair
of devices.
• A multiplexer(MUX) combines multiple data streams into a single stream(many to one). A
demultiplexer(DEMUX) splits the combines stream into different signals or streams(one to many).
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Synchronous TDM
• Multiplexer allocates same time slot to each device at all times even when a device doesn9t have
anything to transmit
• If the device does not have anything to transmit, then the slot will be empty
• For n input lines, each frame has at least n slots
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• DSU for this service is cheaper because it does not need a dial pad.
Digital Signal (DS) Service
• DS is a hierarchy of digital signals as shown in the figure.
• A DS-0 service resembles DDS. It is a single digital channel of 64 Kbps.
• DS-l is a 1.544-Mbps service; 1.544 Mbps is 24 times 64 Kbps plus 8 Kbps of overhead. It can be
used as a single service for 1 .544-Mbps transmissions, or it can be used to multiplex 24 DS-0
channels or to carry any other combination desired by the user that can fit within its 1 .544-Mbps
capacity.
T Lines : T lines (T-l to T-4) are the implementation of DS services. A T-l line consists of
24 voice channels. T-l is used to implement DS-1, T-2 is used to implement DS-2. and so on.
Fractional T line service allows several subscribers to share one line by multiplexing their signals. To
do so, they direct their transmissions through a device called a digital service unit/channel service unit
(DSU/CSU). This device lets them divide the capacity of the line into four interleaved channels.
T lines are used in North America. The European standard defines a variation called E lines.
CELLULAR SYSTEM
• In a cellular system, a base station covers a certain area called a cell.
• Cell radii can vary from tens of meters in buildings, and hundreds of meters in cities, up to tens of
kilometers in the countryside. The shape of cells depend on the environment, weather conditions
and system load.
• Mobile telecommunication systems use cellular system where a mobile station in cell around a
base station communicates with this base station and vice versa.
• Mobile communication using cellular system implement Space Division Multiplexing(SDM). SDM
implies a separate sender for each communication channel with a wide enough distance between
senders. Many radio stations around the world can use the same frequency without interference
using FDM.
Advantages
• Higher capacity: Frequency can be reused when one transmitter is far away from another or
outside the interference range.
• Less transmission power: A receiver or mobile handheld devices far away from a base station
needs more power than the current few Watts. Hence the small cell transmission reduces this
need.
• Local interference only: With small cells, mobile stations and base stations have to deal with
8local9 interference only unlike long distance interference.
• Robustness: Cellular systems are decentralized, hence, if one antenna fails, this only influences
communication within a small area.
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Disadvantages:
• Infrastructure needed: Need many antennas, switches , location registers.
• Handover needed: Handover to another cell or base station is needed when changing from one
cell to another.
• Frequency planning: To avoid interference frequencies have to be distributed carefully.
To avoid interference, transmitters within each other9s interference
range use FDM. If FDM is combined with TDM, the same frequency is not used at the same time within
the interference range.
Cells are combined in clusters. All cells within a cluster use disjointed sets of frequencies. It allows
repetition of the same frequency sets. The transmission power of a sender must be limited to avoid
interference with the next cell using the same frequencies. Sectorized antennas are used instead of omni-
directional antennas to reduce interference to a larger extend.
• In case of heavy load in one cell and a light load in a neighboring cell frequencies can be borrowed
• Cells with more traffic are dynamically allotted more frequencies. This is known as borrowing channel
allocation (BCA)
• Fixed allocation of frequencies to cluster without allowing borrow is called fixed channel allocation
(FCA).
• FCA is used in the GSM system as it simple, but it requires careful traffic analysis before installation.
• A dynamic channel allocation (DCA) scheme has been implemented in DECT. Here, frequencies can
only be borrowed, but it is also possible to freely assign frequencies to cells.
• With dynamic assignment of frequencies to cells, chances of interference with cells using the same
frequency is increased. For this, the 8borrowed9 frequency can be blocked in the surrounding cells.
• Cellular systems using CDM(Code Division Multiplexing) instead of FDM do not need large overhead of
channel allocation and frequency planning. Here, users are separated through the code they use, not
through the frequency. Here, cell planning faces another problem, that is, the cell size depends on the
current load. Hence, CDM cells are commonly said to 8breathe9 because while a cell can cover a larger
area under a light load, it shrinks if the load increases. This is because of the growing noise level if
more users are in a cell. The higher the noise, the higher the path loss and the higher the transmission
errors. Finally, mobile stations further away from the base station drop out of the cell and the cell
shrinks.
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Bearer services
Bearer services allow transparent and non-transparent, synchronous or asynchronous data transmission.
Transparent bearer services only use the functions of the physical layer (layer 1) to transmit data. The
delay and performance is constant if there is no error in transmission. Transmission quality can be
achieved through forward error correction (FEC), which detects and corrects error in received data
through extra bits(redundant bits).Transparent bearer services do not try to recover lost data.
Non-transparent bearer services use protocols of layers two and three to implement error correction and
flow control. These services use the transparent bearer services along with radio link protocol (RLP). This
protocol includes special mechanisms to retransmit error prone data.
Using transparent and non-transparent services, GSM specifies several bearer services for interworking
with PSTN, ISDN, and packet switched public data networks (PSPDN)
Tele services
• GSM mainly focuses on voice-oriented tele services that include encrypted voice transmission.
• GSM provides the service of emergency number.
• Another service is the short message service (SMS), which allows messages of size 160 characters.
Enhanced message service (EMS), offers a larger message size (760 characters), supported
animated pictures, small images and ring tones. Multimedia message service (MMS) supported
larger pictures (GIF, JPG), short video clips etc.
• Another non-voice tele service is group 3 fax, where fax data is transmitted as digital data over
analog telephone network.
Supplementary services
These services offer various enhancements for the standard telephony service, and may vary from
provider to provider.
Typical services are user identification, call redirection, or forwarding of ongoing calls. Standard ISDN
features such as closed user groups and multiparty communication may be available. Closed user groups
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are of special interest to companies because they allow company-specific GSM sub-network to which only
members of the group have access.
System architecture
A GSM system consists of three subsystems, the radio sub system (RSS), the network and switching
subsystem (NSS), and the operation subsystem (OSS).
Base station subsystem (BSS): A GSM network has many BSSs, each controlled by a base station
controller (BSC). BSS contains several BTSs. The BSS functions include coding/decoding of voice and data
rate adaptation to/from the wireless network etc.
Base transceiver station (BTS): Contains radio equipment such as antennas, amplifiers etc. A BTS can
form a radio cell and is connected to MS.
Base station controller (BSC): The BSC controls BTSs. It reserves radio frequencies and handles the
handover of device from one BTS to another within the BSS.
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Mobile station (MS): The MS comprises all user equipment and software needed for communication with
a GSM network. An MS consists of user independent hard- and software and of the subscriber identity
module (SIM), which stores all user-specific data that is relevant to GSM. MS is identified through
international mobile equipment identity (IMEI) and is used for theft protection.
• SIM card contains many identifiers and tables, such as card-type, serial number, a list of
subscribed services, a personal identity number (PIN), a PIN unblocking key (PUK), an
authentication key Ki, and the international mobile subscriber identity (IMSI).
• The MS stores dynamic information while logged onto the GSM system, such as location
information.
• Typical MSs like mobile phones include cameras, fingerprint sensors, calendars, address books,
games, and Internet browsers.
Operation subsystem(OSS)
• Contains the necessary functions for network operation and maintenance.
Operation and maintenance center (OMC): The OMC monitors and controls all other network entities
which includes traffic monitoring, subscriber and security management, accounting and billing.
Authentication centre (AuC): Protects user identity and data transmission. The AuC contains the
algorithms for authentication and keys for encryption. It generates the values needed for user
authentication in the HLR.
Equipment identity register (EIR): The EIR is a database for all IMEIs. The EIR has a blacklist of stolen (or
locked) devices. It also contains a list of valid IMEIs (white list), and a list of malfunctioning devices (gray
list).
Radio interface
• Radio interface is the common boundary between a mobile station and the radio equipment in
the network.
• The most interesting interface in a GSM system is Um, the radio interface.
• GSM implements SDMA(Space Division Multiple Access) using cells with BTS and assigns an MS to
a BTS.
GSM 900 is a system where 890–915 MHz are used for uplinks and 935–960 MHz for downlinks. In GSM
900, 124 channels, each 200 kHz wide, are used for FDMA. Due to technical reasons, channels 1 and 124
are not used for transmission. 32 channels are reserved for organizational data and 90 are used for
customers. Each BTS then manages a single channel for organizational data and, e.g., up to 10 channels
for user data.
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• Each of the 248 channels is additionally separated in time via a GSM TDMA frame, i.e., each
200 kHz carrier is subdivided into frames that are repeated continuously
• A frame is again subdivided into 8 GSM time slots, where each slot represents a physical TDM
channel
• Data is transmitted in small portions, called bursts
• Guard space are used to avoid overlapping with other bursts
• The first and last three bits of a normal burst (tail) are all set to 0 and can be used to enhance
the receiver performance
• Training sequence is used to adapt parameters of receiver to that of frame path propagation
• A flag S indicates whether the data field contains user or network control data
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