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Florida Institute of technologies ECE 5221 Personal Communication Systems Prepared by: Dr. Ivica Kostanic Lecture 12: Frequency allocation and channelization Spring 2011
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Florida Institute of technologies Page 2 Duplexing Spectrum allocation in the US Frequency division multiple access (FDMA) Time division multiple access (TDMA) Examples Outline Important note: Slides present summary of the results. Detailed derivations are given in notes.
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Florida Institute of technologies Duplexing schemes in cellular networks Cellular communications is full duplex oCommunication from MS to BS -> uplink oCommunications from BS to MS -> downlink Two ways for full duplex oFrequency Division Duplexing (FDD) oTime Division Duplexing (TDD) Page 3 Frequency Division Duplexing (FDD) o More common o Uses paired spectrum allocation o One part (usually lower in frequency) – uplink o Second pert (usually higher in frequency) – downlink o Lower frequencies used for UL due to slightly better propagation Note: frequency separation between UL and DL is referred to as the duplexing separation / duplexing space
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Florida Institute of technologies Case study 1. US cellular frequency band Spectrum is around 850 MHz Two licenses A and B (25MHz each) Initial licenses awarded in 1983 oA – newcomer oB – existing landline carrier Additional spectrum allocated in 1989 License A oDownlink: 869-870MHz (A’’) 870-880MHz (A) 890-891.5 (A’) oUplink: 824-825MHz (A’’) 825-835MHz (A) 845-846.5MHz (A’) License B oDownlink: 880-890MHz (B) 891.5-894MHz (B’) oUplink 835-845 MHz (B) 846.5-849MHz (B’) Page 4 Spectral plan for US cellular band
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Florida Institute of technologies Case study 2: US PCS frequency band Six licenses (A-F) Large licenses (2 times 15 MHz): A,B,C Small licenses (2 times 5MHz) D, E, F Auctioned in 1995 Duplexing space 80MHz LicenseDL [MHz]UL [MHz]Amount of spectrum [MHz] A1930-19451850-18652 x 15 D1945-19501865-18702 x 5 B1950-19651870-18852 x 15 E1965-19701885-18902 x 5 C1970-19851890-18952 x 15 F1975-19901895-19102 x 5 Page 5 Note: Original rules prevented operators from owning spectrum in both 850 and 1900MHz. This has changed in 2003. PCS spectrum allocation
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Florida Institute of technologies Time division duplexing Uses same spectrum for UL and DL Spectrum access is divided in time between UL and DL Allocation of time slots may be managed in a dynamic manner – accommodates shift in traffic patterns Page 6 Time Division Duplexing (TDD) Original spectrum allocation for 3G. Note both paired and unpaired spectrum bands http://www.worldtimezone.com/gsm.html World wide spectrum allocations:
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Florida Institute of technologies Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) Allocated spectrum separated in smaller frequency bands A pair of segments is referred to as the channel (one frequency for UL and one for DL) Number of available channels depend on the total amount of spectrum and channel bandwidth of the cellular technology Users that are geographically close operate on different channels Page 7 Spectrum channelization Note: The mobiles are co time, but do not interfere due to frequency separation
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Florida Institute of technologies FDMA Example Consider deployment of GSM in A block of PCS band. Calculate the number of channels that can be accommodated. GSM channel is 200KHz wide. Page 8 Number of channels Guard band – prevents interference with adjacent bands
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Florida Institute of technologies GSM – Frequency ARFCN calculations Page 9 ARFCN – Absolute Radio Frequency Channel Number Example – US PCS allocation 22
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Florida Institute of technologies Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) Multiple users share the same frequency channel The sharing is done in time domain Only one user access the channel in a given time Portions of time allocated to the user are called time slots The number of users sharing the channel is technology dependent (3-16) Page 10 Note that: Rc = N x Ru
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Florida Institute of technologies Example. TDMA in GSM Channel is shared between eight users User does not transmit and receive at the same time Transmission occurs in “accumulate and burst” fashion oHas to be digital oChanel bandwidth larger than the single user rate Page 11 Note: for good portion of time phone does not transmit or receive
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Florida Institute of technologies Near-far problem in TDMA systems In TDMA synchronization between users – vital Delay of the burst for the further mobiles is larger Due to different delays – burst may collide Te remedy the problem, mobiles advance their transmission The amount of time advancement is determined by base station and communicated to the mobiles Page 12
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