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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 1 Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) – 1G Analog FM IS-136 (aka USDC, IS-54) – 2G Digital TDMA Global System for Mobile (GSM) – 2G Digital TDMA European IS-95 CDMA – 2G Digital CDMA U.S. / Qualcomm 2.5G Standards – TDMA/CDMA CDMA2000 – 3G U.S./Qualcomm W-CDMA – 3G Europe Cellular Standards
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 2 2.5G CDMA Standard Only one upgrade path for IS-95 CDMA (CDMAOne) 2.5G interim CMDA standard is IS-95B High-speed packet and circuit switched data access Original IS-95 data rate was 9.6 kbps »Data rate actually deployed by Sprint PCS and Verizon was 14.4 kbps (IS-95A) Multiple orthogonal PN spreading codes per user »Each user to take up to 8 different PN spreading codes in parallel »Maximum instantaneous data rate = 8 x 14.4 = 115.2 kbps »Practical data rate was only about 40-64 kbps Sprint PCS “Wireless Web” »Began use in 2000 using IS-95B
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 3 2.5G CDMA Standard IS-95/IS-95A Soft Handoff Mobile unit reports RSS back to MSC through current serving BS several hundred times per second MSC decides when to initiate soft handoff (multiple serving BSs on same radio channel) IS-95B Hard Handoff Mobile unit searches for different 1.25 MHz radio channels without approval from MSC Rapidly tune to new channel if better than serving channel Hard handoff available in addition to soft handoff Improves link quality in congested cells where multiple radio channels are being used
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 4 2.5G CDMA Standard IS-95B Upgrade No new hardware required (baseband or RF) Only software upgrade at BS New mobile unit handsets »Backwards compatible with IS-95A
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 5 2.5G Standards 2.5G Summary All designed to overlay on existing 2G networks No new frequency spectrum required Practical data rates: »IS-95B 40-64 kbps (packet or circuit switched) »HSCD 57.6 kbps (circuit switched single user) »GPRS 50 kbps (packet switched multi-user) »EDGE 100-120 kbps (packet switched multi-user) EDGE requires significant new RF hardware and software upgrades »Modulation technique upgraded to 8-PSK
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 6 2.5G Standards
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 7 3G Wireless 3G Vision Fully data-centric communication networks Multi-megabit per second data rates Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) packet-based voice Always on access Applications Live video and music Interactive multi-person web sessions Multi-party conferencing with simultaneous voice and data access
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 8 3G Wireless
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 9 3G Wireless
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 10 3G Wireless 3G History International Telecommunication Union (ITU) »Formulate truly global 3G standard for 2 GHz band International Mobile Telephone 2000 (IMT-2000) Plan »Active forum for proposal, development, and debate of global 3G communication standard (started in 1996) Worldwide user community split into two camps based on 2G outcome: CDMA (IS-95) and GSM (GPRS/EDGE) »Many standards initially proposed and debated but this was narrowed to two leading candidates (most manufacturing support) »3G GSM Wideband CDMA (W-CDMA) 3G Partnership Project (3GPP) »3G CDMA CDMA2000 3G Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2)
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 11 3G Evolution
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 12 3G Wireless 3G Deployment Countries everywhere allocated new/more spectrum specifically for 3G Some early 3G spectrum auctions »$35B (USD) in England in 2000 5 nationwide licenses »$46B (USD) in Germany in 2000 4 nationwide licenses Commercial grade 3G equipment was first deployed in U.S. in 2005 First 3G deployment was 2002 in Japan Sprint PCS rolled out first US 3G network »CDMA 2000 1xRTT
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 13 W-CDMA 3G W-CDMA (UMTS) Also know as Universal Mobile Telecommunication System (UMTS) UMTS first started development in 1996 by consortium of European service providers, manufacturers, and governments (ETSI) Other competing wideband CDMA standards merged with UMTS in 2000 Ensures backwards compatibility with GSM, GPRS, EDGE network structure and bit-level packaging »Completely new CDMA air interface »NOT backwards compatible with baseband and RF hardware in BS »Completely new base stations required
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 14 W-CDMA 3G W-CDMA Minimum of 5 MHz BW required for one RF channel »4 times larger than 1.25 MHz RF BW for IS-95 Multiple RF channels would be required to support large number of high speed users »Requires significant new spectrum Complete change out of base station RF & baseband hardware Supports data rates from 8 kbps to 2 Mbps (stationary users only) »Determined by available network capacity and user requirements 100-350 simultaneous voice calls »Depends on channel conditions, user velocity, etc Future W-CDMA versions (4G) support up to 8 Mbps
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 15 W-CDMA 3G W-CDMA 6 times increase in capacity relative to GSM on a system wide basis Example: 200 simultaneous voice calls in 5 MHz 25 kHz/user, GSM 8 users per 200 kHz channel 25 kHz/user, but 100% frequency reuse in W-CDMA vs. N = 4 for GSM Always on packet based wireless »Computers, PDAs, phones, etc. share network and continuously connected to internet FDD and TDD modes »Mobile cellular FDD (separate F/R channels) »Indoor portable/cordless TDD (1 channel shared in time for F/R)
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 16 W-CDMA 3G W-CDMA Support advanced high data rate services »Streaming audio/video »Videoconferencing »Video games »Broadcast TV! Public and private network features Slow and gradual deployment due to new BS hardware and new spectrum »Dual mode or tri-mode phones to support GSM, EDGE, and W- CDMA W-CDMA was fully installed by 2010
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 17 CDMA2000 3G CDMA 2000 Seamless evolutionary path for 2G IS-95 and 2.5G IS-95B »Must retain original 1.25 MHz IS-95 RF BW structure!! Left over from AMPS carriers not willing to risk more than 10% of their allocated 12.5 MHz spectrum!! Gradual deployment with existing IS-95 2G and 2.5G systems »Deploy on cell by cell basis »No wholesale hardware changeout »No new spectrum required »Significant advantages/distinctions relative to W-CDMA
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 18 CDMA2000 3G CDMA2000 US Telecommunication Industry Association (TIA) oversaw the standard development »Compared to ETSI (European Telecommunication Standards Institute) for W-CDMA »Qualcomm is major developer of CDMA2000 International collaborators as well First version of CDMA2000 was 1xRTT (1X) »Multi-carrier (multiple RF channels) but first deployment allowed only 1 channel!! »307 kbps maximum data rate and 144 kbps typical throughput IS-95B has only 40-50 kbps typical throughput
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 19 CDMA2000 3G CDMA2000 1xRTT (1X) »Multi-level keying (PSK) and multiple PN spreading sequences Both are rapidly adaptable based on network capacity, user need, and channel conditions Incremental redundancy like EDGE! »All changes are baseband signaling changes »No new RF hardware required »All changes done in baseband hardware/software Cell by cell basis if desired!! »Packet network hardware must also be installed @ MSC »Supports 2 x voice users as IS-95 and double the battery life
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 20 CDMA2000 3G CDMA2000 3xRTT (3X) »Multi-carrier CDMA »3 RF carriers 3 x 1.25 MHz = 3.75 MHz cumulative BW »3 adjacent RF carriers (option 1) Creates single 3.75 MHz channel & requires new RF hardware »3 non-adjacent RF carriers (option 2) No new RF hardware »Packet data throughput up to 2 Mbps (just like W-CDMA) Actual rate depends on network capacity, mobile velocity, channel conditions, etc.
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 21 3G Wireless CDMA2000 vs. W-CDMA US vs. Europe CDMA2000 had advantages of more seamless, gradual, and economically viable deployment »More rapid rollout of 3G than W-CDMA »Sprint PCS had nationwide 3xRTT in US W-CDMA had advantage of 4 to 1 GSM-based installed user population »Greater manufacturing support »Less rapid rollout due to RF hardware upgrades
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 22 WLAN and WiFi FCC first allocated unlicensed ISM “garbage” bands in mid 1980’s (also called UNII bands) Part 15 FCC rules call for low-power (< 1 W) spread spectrum (minimize inter-system interference) devices 902-928 MHz »Digital cordless phones, medical monitors, remote meter reading, baby monitors, bluetooth devices, etc. 2400-2483.5 MHz »Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN) No wires required to network computers together in office building significant time/labor/cost savings IEEE 802.11 WLAN working group founded in 1987
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 23 WLAN and WiFi Unlicensed ISM/UNII bands 5.725-5.825 MHz »Not used for much Too high frequency, poorer propagation than 2.4 MHz with same RF BW (100 MHz vs. 84 MHz) WLAN interest/use in 2.4 GHz band did not develop until mid-1990s »Widespread use of internet and portable laptop computers »802.11 finally approved in 1997 using DS-SSM 2 Mbps data rate (1 Mbps fallback in “noisy” conditions) Comparable data rate to 3G wireless!! International standard ensures interoperability / compatibility between various equipment manufactures WLAN market expands dramatically
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 24 802.11 WiFi FCC allocates 200 MHz of additional spectrum in 1997 in 5-6 GHz range 5.15-5.35 GHz (along with original 100 MHz from 5.725- 5.825 MHz) 300 MHz total spectrum in 5-6 GHz range High Data Rate 802.11b approved in 1999 Still for 2.4 GHz band 11 Mbps, 5.5 Mbps in addition to 2 and 1 Mbps from earlier version Commercial name of 802.11b is “Wi-Fi” for “Wireless Fidelity”
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 25 802.11 WiFi ABC’s of 802.11 Popularity of 802.11 has led to development of more versions for increased functionality 802.11a »Data rates from 6 to 54 Mbps throughput for 5 GHz band »Fastest data rates in 802.11 »OFDM modulation 802.11e QoS issues for real-time (video) applications 802.11f roaming between multiple WLAN access points 802.11i increased security and advanced encryption »802.11a and b were initially easily hacked into
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ECE 4730: Lecture #27 26 802.11 Future 802.11 Future Significant competition with 3G wireless »Higher data rates than 3G »Hardware much cheaper to purchase and install Wireless Internet Service Provider (WISP) »Nationwide infrastructure of WLAN access points Airports, coffee shops (e.g. Starbucks), hotels, etc. »Charge monthly subscription fee Provide wireless internet for last 100 meters into homes, businesses, etc. Convergence between 3G and WiFi »Dual mode 3G and WiFi enabled phones »Roaming agreements between 3G and WiFi providers
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