GSM Fundamentals & RF
GSM Fundamentals & RF
GSM Fundamentals & RF
GTL welcomes you to the Basic course on GSM Fundamentals & RF (GTL-GSM RF-001)
BASIC Telephony
Signaling Traffic
Off Hook Dial Tone Dialing Digits RBT Conversation
SWITCH / EXCHANGE
Wireless Communication
Alternative means of wireless communication Walkie - Talkie Pagers Trunked private radios
Mobile Phone - the magic technology that enables everyone to communicate anywhere with anybody.
Wireless Telephony
MSC
Mobile Subscriber...
1992
Service Industry
Service Provider is not a Equipment Manufacturer. The Service Provider has a license to operate in a geographical boundary (state/circle/ country). It buys equipment from OEM Suppliers (Vendors). Installs & commissions the equipment thus making its own Network. Provides the desired service to its subscribers.
Vendor
Vendor is a Equipment Manufacturer. It supplies Product, Consultancy and Trainings Service provider has the option of taking the Consultancy and Training
Cellular Communication
A cellular system links Mobile subscribers to Public Telephone System or to another Mobile subscribers. It removes the fixed wiring used in a traditional telephone installation. Mobile subscriber is able to move around, perhaps can travel in a vehicle or on foot & still make & receive call.
Base Station
The Cell
Cellular Radio involves dividing a large service area into regions called cells. Each cell has the equipment to switch, transmit and receive calls. Cells - Reduce the need of High powered transmission Cells - Conventionally regarded as being hexagonal, but in reality they are irregularly shaped. Cell shape is determined by the nature of the surrounding area e.g. Hills , tall building etc.
Cell Size
Large Cells 35 Km Remote Areas High Transmission Power Few subscribers Small Cells Near about 1 KM Urban Areas Low Transmission Power Many Subscribers
Frequency Spectrum
Designation Very Low Frequency Low Frequency Medium Frequency High Frequency Very High Frequency Ultra High Frequency Super High Frequency Extremely High Frequency
Frequencies 9 kHz - 30 kHz 30 kHz - 300 kHz 300 kHz - 3 MHz 3 MHz - 30 MHz 30 MHz - 300 MHz 300 MHz - 3 GHz 3 GHz - 30 GHz 30 GHz - 300 GHz
FDMA
Power Time
Frequency
CDMA
Frequency
TDMA
Frequency
TDMA
Power
CDMA
Power
FDMA: AMPS & NAMPS Each user occupies a private Frequency, protected from interference through physical separation from other users on the same frequency TDMA: IS-136, GSM Each user occupies a specific frequency but only during an assigned time slot. The frequency is used by other users during other time slots. CDMA Each user occupies a signal on a particular frequency simultaneously with many other users, but is uniquely distinguishable by correlation with a special code used only by this user
FREQUENCY RE - USE
Frequency Re-use
2 7 1 6 5 4 3
D Cell Dia = R
D=R (3N)
where N is Cluster size
Principal Of Sectorization
Omni Directional Cells 120 degree Sectors 60 Degree sectors Each Sector in a Site has its own allocation of Radio Carriers Advantage By frequent reuse of frequency more capacity can be achieved
Frequency Hopping
Multipath Fading results in variations in signal strength which is known as Rayleigh Fading. Rayleigh Fading phenomenon is dependent on path difference and hence frequency of reception. A fast moving mobile may not experience severe effect of this fading since the path difference is continuously changing. A slow moving mobile ( or a halted mobile ) may experience severe deterioration in quality. But, if the frequency of reception is changed when this problem occurs, could solve it. The fading phenomenon is fast and almost continuos, this means the frequency change should also be continuos. This process of continuously changing frequency is known as Frequency Hopping.
Frequency Hopping
Frequency Hopping is done in both Uplink and Downlink . Frequency is changed in every TDMA Frame Mobile can Hop on maximum 64 frequencies The sequence of Hopping can be Cyclic or Non-Cyclic There are 63 Non-Cyclic Hopping sequences possible Different Hopping sequence can be used in the same cell.
BCH Timeslot can never HOP, but the remaining Timeslots can very well hop.
Frequency Hopping
Reduction in Average Interference
With Frequency Hopping consistent interference will become bursty. So even though, both the co-channel cells will be using the same set of ARFCN's for Hopping, interference will not be continuos. This is because, GSM cells are not Frame synchronized, and change in frequency is related to Frame nos. If same HSN is used in two cells, then either the interference will be nil , or if a phase correlation exists then it will be continuos. So the two cells should preferably use different HSN's . Sectorial cells ( controlled by the same BTS) can use same HSN, since the sectors don't come up at the same time. Cells if they are synchronized, can use same HSN, if each cell has an offset of some TDMA frames. Offset of TDMA frames is also required to avoid SACCH occurring at the same time in all synchronized cells, as they kills away the objective of DTX.
Cell Sectorisation
b2 b1 a2
OMNI CELL
1 ANTENNA
b3 a3 a4
120O CELLS
3 ANTENNAS
a1 a6 a5
60O CELLS
6 ANTENNAS
Features of GSM
Compatibility Noise Robust Increased Capacity & Flexibility Use of Standard Open Interfaces Improved Security & Confidentiality Cleaner Handovers Subscriber Identification ISDN Compatibility Enhanced Range of Services
Handovers
Hard Handoff Analog, TDMA and GSM Soft Handoff CDMA
Handovers
197 199 113 200
187 198 214 215 20 175 22 216 7 41 11 218 75 132 221 213 220 219 8 32 28 120 80 19 182 69 13 73 16 17 222 44 12 71 173 181 25 171 70 225 18 201
Cleaner Handovers
The mobile measures up to 32 adjacent cells for Signal Strength (RxLevel) Signal Quality (RxQual) updated every 480 mS and sends to BTS Sophisticated Handover based on RxLevel Interference RxQual Timing Advance Power Budget
OMC OM
C
BTS BT S BTS BT S BTS BT S BTS BT S BTS BT S BTS BT S
VMSC VMS
HLR HL AUC C AU
A
BTS BT S BTS BT S TRAU
MSC MS
R VLR VL R
BC
C EIR EI R
SMSC SMS
MS
BSC PSTN
B C
98
XXX
12345
10 digits MSIN
404
XX
12345
TAC
FAC
SNR
ME (Classmark Information)
Revision Level Phase of the GSM specs ME comply with. RF Power Capability Max power ME is able to Transmit. Ciphering Algorithm Used Presently A5 Phase 2 specifies Algorithms A5/0 to A5/7. Frequency Capability SMS Capability
Mobile Equipment
Class
1 2 3 4 5
Power O/p
20 W 8W 5W 2W 0.8 W Typical Settings
SIM(IMSI)
IMSI(International Mobile Subscriber Identity)
Transmitted over Air Interface on initialization Permanently stored on SIM card 15 digit Decimal
SIM (TMSI)
Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identity Periodically changed by the System Management on instances like location update etc. Reason for use of TMSI To prevent a possible intruder from identifying GSM users, TMSI is used Management Assignment, Administration & Updating is performed by VLR.
Transcoder
Converts 64 Kbps PCM circuits from MSC to 16 Kbps BSS circuits. Each 30 channel 2 Mbps PCM link can carry 120 GSM specified voice channels.
XCDR
BSC
BTS
BSS Configuration
Collocated BTS Remote BTS Star Configuration Daisy Chain BTS
BSC BTS BTS BTS B T S
Loop Configuration
BTS All BTS on 1 E1 BSC BTS
BTS
PSTN DTE
Analogue Modem
Echo Canceller
Echo is apparent only in Mobile - Land conversation & is generated at the 2 wire to 4 wire interface. To avoid it, Echo Canceller (EC) is used.
Echo is irritating to MS Subscriber Total Round Trip delay of 180 ms in the GSM system EC is placed on the PSTN side of the Switch Cancellation up to 68 ms with EC
GSM Interfaces
Um Abis A B C D E F G H MS BTS BSC MSC MSC VLR MSC MSC VLR HLR - BTS - BSC - MSC - VLR - HLR - HLR - MSC - EIR - VLR - AUC
Basic Processes
AUTHENTICATION CIPHERING REGISTRATION CALL ESTABLISHMENT HANDOVER / HANDOFF ROAMING
AUTHENTICATION ALGORITHM
HLR
NSS
Ki
AUC
RAND
AUTH. ALGORITHMS A3
SRES
COMPARE
AIR INTERFACE
RAND SRES
SIM
Ki
MS
MS
AUTH. ALGORITHMS A3
Ciphering
Data protection is required on air interface. A specific key called Ciphering Key (Kc), is generated from RAND and A8 algorithm. A8 is on the SIM.
Ki
RAND
A8
Kc
Ciphering
Kc Ciphered
Data
Kc
A5
Data
A5
Data
Transmission Media
Access Network Microwave 15 /23 GHz Backbone Network Microwave 7 GHz Optical Fibers Leased Line( From Dot or any other service provider on any media)
Optical Fiber
y Different Possible Combinations y Mono Mode Step Index 10 / 125 Qm y Mono Mode Graded index y Multi Mode Step Index 100 / 300 Qm y Multi Mode Graded Index 75 / 130 Qm y Mono Mode Graded Index would have been the best but fabrication not possible 140 Mbps OLTE , Mono Mode Step Index in our case
LOGICAL CHANNELS
3
3 T
Normal Burst
57 encrypted 1 26 1 S training S 577QS 57 encrypted 3 T 8.25 GP
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
577QS x 8 = 4.615mS
TDMA Frame
26 Frame Multi-frame
GSM Channels
Traffic Channel
Traffic Channels TCH/F Full rate 22.8kbits/s TCH/H Half rate 11.4 kbits/s TCH carries payload data - speech, fax, data
Connection may be: - Circuit Switched - voice or data TCH may be: Full Rate (TCH/F) - one channel per user - 13 kb/s voice, 9.6 kb/s data Half Rate (TCH/H) - one channel shared between two users - 6.5 kb/s voice, 4.8 kb/s data or or - Packet Switched data
Control Channel
Control Channels BCH ( Broadcast channels ) Downlink only CCCH(Common Control Chan) Downlink & Uplink DCCH(Dedicated Channels) Downlink & Uplink
BCCH
Broadcast control channel
Synch. Channels
RACH
CBCH
SDCCH
Standalone dedicated control channel
ACCH
Associated Control Channels
FCCH
PCH/ AGCH
Paging/Access grant
FACCH
SACCH
Slow associated Control Channel
SCH
Synchronization channel
BURST
The Time Slots are arranged in a sequence , conventionally numbered 0 to 7. Each repetition of this sequence is called a TDMA Frame. The information content carried in one time slot is called a burst.
BURST
Information Main Area where the Speech, Data or Control info is held Guard Period To enable the burst to hit the time slot (0.031ms) Stealing Flags 2 bits are set when TCH is to stolen by a FACCH Training Sequence For estimation of transfer characteristics of physical media Tail Bits Used to indicate beginning and end of the burst.
GUARD PERIOD
GUARD PERIOD
Call Scenarios
Mobile to Mobile Intra-city Inter-city Mobile to Land Intra-city Inter-city Land to Mobile Intra-city Inter-city
BSS
MSC
VLR
HLR
PSTNEIR
CR
CC
EQUIPMENT ID REQUEST
Call Info
Call Contt.
8 9
COMPLELTE CALL CALL PROCEEDING ASSIGNMENT COMMAND SDCCH (channel) FAACH (TCH)
BSS MS SDCCH
MS C
(circuit)
ASSIGNMENT COMPLELTE INITIAL & FINAL ADDRESS (IFAM) ASSIGNMENT COMPLETE (ACM) ALTERING 10 MS HEARS RINGTONE FROM LAND PHONE ANSWER(ANS)
FACCH
Hello!
FACCH FACCH
11 CONNECT
BILLING STARTS
Supplementary Services
Calling Line Identification Present Absent Connect Line Identification Present Absent Closed User Group - CUG Only incoming Only outgoing Operator Controlled Barring
Data Services
Data
2.4 4.8
GPRS
Customer..Expectation
Good coverage where ever he goes Good quality No blocking Value added services
SMS Voice mail MMS Call forward/call waiting Data/internet at high data rates prepaid
Site Acquisition
Performance Monitoring
Site Build
Operational Network
System Optimisation
Implementation Optimization
Drive Testing Performance Analysis
Nominal Planning
It consists of planning a set of sites on planning tool so as to predict the coverage of the target area Tool needs to be made intelligent so as to predict the coverage as close as possible to actual coverage Coverage plots are based on customer intension of providing indoor and outdoor coverage
Malabar Hill
>=30dB:: 3-4 wall coverage 25-30dB : 3 Wall Coverage 23-25 dB : 2-3 Wall Coverage 18-23dB: 2-3 Wall Coverage 16-18 dB : 2 Wall Coverage 8-16dB : 1-2wall Coverage 08 dB : On Road-1 Wall Coverage
00 dB : On Road/No Coverage
Colaba
Clutter Types
Clutter types
Dense Urban Urban Sub Urban Rural Water Vegetation Industrial Forest
RF surveys
Each nominal has a search ring defined by the RF Planner Candidates needs to be identified as close as possible to the nominal within the search ring Height, orientations & antenna placement at site are the key RF parameter which are based upon the coverage requirement in the area Major obstructions and clutter type in various directions to be observed on RF survey
RF surveys
Equipment required for RF Survey
GPS Digital Camera Binoculars Magnetic Compass
There might be 3 or more candidates surveys for one site Each candidate would have an RF survey form and panoramic associated with it
Drive Testing
Drive testing is an important activity to get statistics & graphs on coverage, quality & capacity in the downlink direction Drive test setup DT tool, Engineering Handset, GPS, accessories Call in 2 modes Dedicated while the mobile is on call Idle while the mobile is idle Important parameters observed during drive testing Coverage Rx level (Full & Sub) Quality RxQual & SQI Handover, Dropped call, Neighbor list, TA
Optimization
Optimisation is an ongoing process of analysing network performance against Quality of Service targets:
Performance
Measurements of network performance cover: Traffic in erlangs TCH and SDCCH Grade of Service (Congestion) Call success rate Handover failure Coverage area Coverage quality Subscriber base and growth Key Performance Indicators (KPI) are measurable dynamic parameters that help to target areas of concern
KPIs
Appropriate KPIs to use depend on: The nature of the network Data sources available Measurement tools available Ability of engineering team Cost of network infrastructure Sources of data include: Surveyed data - from drive tests Network statistics - from OMC Field engineer reports
Antenna Tilts
Antenna Tilts
Benchmarking
Surveyed data from test-mobile measurements can be used to benchmark system performance against that of a competitor Problems that may be identified from surveyed data: Poor coverage Unexpected interference Missing handover definitions Installation problems at BTS Test-mobile measurements should include: continuous calls to test coverage repetitive short calls to test call-success
Overview
RF Planning Tool Drive Test Tool Optimization Tool MapInfo