Cellular Wireless Networks.ppt
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1、Cellular Wireless Networks,Chapter 10,Cellular Network Organization,Use multiple low-power transmitters (100 W or less) Areas divided into cells Each served by its own antenna Served by base station consisting of transmitter, receiver, and control unit Band of frequencies allocated Cells set up such
2、 that antennas of all neighbors are equidistant (hexagonal pattern),Frequency Reuse,Adjacent cells assigned different frequencies to avoid interference or crosstalk Objective is to reuse frequency in nearby cells 10 to 50 frequencies assigned to each cell Transmission power controlled to limit power
3、 at that frequency escaping to adjacent cells The issue is to determine how many cells must intervene between two cells using the same frequency,Approaches to Cope with Increasing Capacity,Adding new channels Frequency borrowing frequencies are taken from adjacent cells by congested cells Cell split
4、ting cells in areas of high usage can be split into smaller cells Cell sectoring cells are divided into a number of wedge-shaped sectors, each with their own set of channels Microcells antennas move to buildings, hills, and lamp posts,Cellular System Overview,Cellular Systems Terms,Base Station (BS)
5、 includes an antenna, a controller, and a number of receivers Mobile telecommunications switching office (MTSO) connects calls between mobile units Two types of channels available between mobile unit and BS Control channels used to exchange information having to do with setting up and maintaining ca
6、lls Traffic channels carry voice or data connection between users,Steps in an MTSO Controlled Call between Mobile Users,Mobile unit initialization Mobile-originated call Paging Call accepted Ongoing call Handoff,Additional Functions in an MTSO Controlled Call,Call blocking Call termination Call drop
7、 Calls to/from fixed and remote mobile subscriber,Mobile Radio Propagation Effects,Signal strength Must be strong enough between base station and mobile unit to maintain signal quality at the receiver Must not be so strong as to create too much cochannel interference with channels in another cell us
8、ing the same frequency band Fading Signal propagation effects may disrupt the signal and cause errors,Handoff Performance Metrics,Cell blocking probability probability of a new call being blocked Call dropping probability probability that a call is terminated due to a handoff Call completion probabi
9、lity probability that an admitted call is not dropped before it terminates Probability of unsuccessful handoff probability that a handoff is executed while the reception conditions are inadequate,Handoff Performance Metrics,Handoff blocking probability probability that a handoff cannot be successful
10、ly completed Handoff probability probability that a handoff occurs before call termination Rate of handoff number of handoffs per unit time Interruption duration duration of time during a handoff in which a mobile is not connected to either base station Handoff delay distance the mobile moves from t
11、he point at which the handoff should occur to the point at which it does occur,Handoff Strategies Used to Determine Instant of Handoff,Relative signal strength Relative signal strength with threshold Relative signal strength with hysteresis Relative signal strength with hysteresis and threshold Pred
12、iction techniques,Power Control,Design issues making it desirable to include dynamic power control in a cellular system Received power must be sufficiently above the background noise for effective communication Desirable to minimize power in the transmitted signal from the mobile Reduce cochannel in
13、terference, alleviate health concerns, save battery power In SS systems using CDMA, its desirable to equalize the received power level from all mobile units at the BS,Types of Power Control,Open-loop power control Depends solely on mobile unit No feedback from BS Not as accurate as closed-loop, but
14、can react quicker to fluctuations in signal strength Closed-loop power control Adjusts signal strength in reverse channel based on metric of performance BS makes power adjustment decision and communicates to mobile on control channel,Traffic Engineering,Ideally, available channels would equal number
15、 of subscribers active at one time In practice, not feasible to have capacity handle all possible load For N simultaneous user capacity and L subscribers L N blocking system,Blocking System Performance Questions,Probability that call request is blocked? What capacity is needed to achieve a certain u
16、pper bound on probability of blocking? What is the average delay? What capacity is needed to achieve a certain average delay?,Traffic Intensity,Load presented to a system: = mean rate of calls attempted per unit time h = mean holding time per successful call A = average number of calls arriving duri
17、ng average holding period, for normalized ,Factors that Determine the Nature of the Traffic Model,Manner in which blocked calls are handled Lost calls delayed (LCD) blocked calls put in a queue awaiting a free channel Blocked calls rejected and dropped Lost calls cleared (LCC) user waits before anot
18、her attempt Lost calls held (LCH) user repeatedly attempts calling Number of traffic sources Whether number of users is assumed to be finite or infinite,First-Generation Analog,Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) In North America, two 25-MHz bands allocated to AMPS One for transmission from base to
19、 mobile unit One for transmission from mobile unit to base Each band split in two to encourage competition Frequency reuse exploited,AMPS Operation,Subscriber initiates call by keying in phone number and presses send key MTSO verifies number and authorizes user MTSO issues message to users cell phon
20、e indicating send and receive traffic channels MTSO sends ringing signal to called party Party answers; MTSO establishes circuit and initiates billing information Either party hangs up; MTSO releases circuit, frees channels, completes billing,Differences Between First and Second Generation Systems,D
21、igital traffic channels first-generation systems are almost purely analog; second-generation systems are digital Encryption all second generation systems provide encryption to prevent eavesdropping Error detection and correction second-generation digital traffic allows for detection and correction,
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