Page 1 IEEE 802 March 2011 workshop Version 1.0 EEE 802 IEEE 802.16 Working Group: Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks Roger B. Marks Chair, IEEE 802.16 Working Group [email protected] 2011-03-12 Presenter: Matthew J. Sherman Vice Chair, IEEE 802
Mar 27, 2015
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IEEE 802.16 Working Group: Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks
Roger B. MarksChair, IEEE 802.16 Working Group
2011-03-12
Presenter:
Matthew J. Sherman
Vice Chair, IEEE 802
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Disclaimer from IEEE Perspective
• “At lectures, symposia, seminars, or educational courses, an individual presenting information on IEEE standards shall make it clear that his or her views should be considered the personal views of that individual rather than the formal position, explanation, or interpretation of the IEEE.”– IEEE-SA Standards Board Operation Manual
(subclause 5.9.3)
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Outline
• IEEE 802.16
• IMT-Advanced status
• Performance characteristics of WirelessMAN-Advanced as evaluated by ITU-R
• Active projects in IEEE 802.16– P802.16n: GRIDMAN– P802.16p: Machine-to-Machine
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IEEE 802.16 is:
• A Working Group (WG):– The IEEE 802.16 Working Group on Broadband
Wireless Access
– Develops and maintain a set of standards
• The Working Group’s core standard– IEEE Std 802.16: Air Interface for Broadband Wireless
Access Systems
– The WirelessMAN® standard for Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks
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IEEE Standard 802.16
• “Air Interface for Broadband Wireless Access Systems”
• Developed since 1999 by IEEE 802.16 WG– Evolves by amendments and revision– Originally fixed-only– Fixed non-line-of-sight OFDMA introduced in 2002– Mobile-enabled OFDMA since 2005 (“802.16e”)– Continues to evolve
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Worldwide Participation
• Open process; everyone may participate• Current 802.16 WG Membership: 226 people• Actively seeks worldwide applicability
– Seeks worldwide participation. – Attendees from Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada,
China, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, USA, UK, etc.
• Major coordination with ITU-R
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IEEE 802.16 Interim Sessions(excluding IEEE 802 Plenary)
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IEEE 802.16 Evolution
IEEE Std 802.16-2001
(fixed access)
IEEE Std 802.16-2001
(fixed access)
+ 802.16aOFDM/OFDMA
2003
+ 802.16aOFDM/OFDMA
2003
IEEE Std 802.16-2004
IEEE Std 802.16-2004
+ 802.16eMobility
2005
+ 802.16eMobility
2005
IEEE Std 802.16-2009
IEEE Std 802.16-2009
+ 802.16jMultihop Relay
2009
+ 802.16jMultihop Relay
2009
+ 802.16hLicense-Exempt
2010
+ 802.16hLicense-Exempt
2010
+ 802.16m“IMT-Advanced”
2011
+ 802.16m“IMT-Advanced”
2011
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IEEE 802.16 and the WiMAX Forum
• IEEE 802.16 Working Group– Open standards for broadband wireless
access
• WiMAX Forum– Industry association– Certification of open standards
• Certifying conformance to IEEE 802.16
• Cooperative coordination in many areas– Including ITU
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WiMAX Forum and IEEE 802.16
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WiMAX to Cover 1 Billion Peopleby End of 2011
Source: WiMAX Forum; http://www.wimaxforum.org/resources/research-dashboard
621 Million at EOY 2009823 Million at EOY 2010
Region POPs Covered
Africa 87,347,832Asia-Pacific 322,666,970CALA 117,846,830Eastern Europe 102,503,669Middle East 33,509,544North America 127,000,000Western Europe 32,526,407Total 823,401,252
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Internationalization of IEEE 802.16
• International Telecommunication Union (ITU)– organized under United Nations
– membership by national governments
• Radiocommunication Sector (ITU-R)– private organizations hold memberships
• Including WiMAX Forum, IEEE, companies
• 802.16 WG seeks “Internationalization”– though it is, in many ways, “international” to begin with
– strategy since the beginning in 1999
– ITU-R Liaison Group
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IEEE 802.16, WiMAX Forum, and ITU
• IEEE: Member of ITU-R– “Regional and other International
Organizations”
• Relevant ITU-R Engagement:– fixed wireless access
• Rec. F.1763: IEEE 802.16 in the fixed service
– land mobile radio:• Rec. M.1801 IEEE 802.16 in mobile service
– IMT-2000
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IMT-2000: “International Mobile Telecommunications”
• Under ITU-R Study Group 5/Working Party 5D– known as Working Party 8F before 2008
• the international cellular standard since ~1998– significant impact on spectrum allocations
• Since 1998, 5 evolving terrestrial air interfaces– inc. 3GPP (W-CDMA) & 3GPP2 (cdma2000)
• M.1457-7 (Oct 2007) adds “OFDMA TDD WMAN”– Based on IEEE Std 802.16 (including 802.16e)– Implementation profile developed by WiMAX Forum
• M.1457-9 (2009) added FDD as well
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IMT-Advanced
• To develop “Beyond IMT-2000” recommendation• “to be developed around the year 2010, capable
of supporting high data rates with high mobility, which could be widely deployed around the year 2015 in some countries.”
• ITU-R Working Party 5D developed background materials– Announced in July 2008
• IEEE contributed to defining the process and requirements
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“IMT” Spectrum
• IMT-2000 Identifications– 800/900 MHz bands
– 1700/2100 MHz bands– 2500-2690 MHz
• World Radiocommunication Conference 2007– Identified additional spectrum
• 450-470 MHz globally• 2300-2400 MHz globally• 790-862 MHz in much of world • 3400-3600 MHz in much of world
– changed spectrum identification to “IMT”– includes “IMT-2000” and “IMT-Advanced”
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IEEE 802.16m Project
• amendment project, initiated December 2006• Scope:
– amend the IEEE 802.16 WirelessMAN-OFDMA specification to provide an advanced air interface for operation in licensed bands
– meet the cellular layer requirements of IMT-Advanced next generation mobile networks
– continuing support for legacy WirelessMAN-OFDMA equipment (i.e., backward compatibility)
– Provide performance improvements to support future advanced services and applications
• “WirelessMAN-Advanced” air interface
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Participation in IEEE 802.16m
• Since 802.16m project began, 802.16 WG participation includes: – Over 1200 professionals – From about 240 organizations – From 23 countries
• Contributed documents to 802.16m Task Group– 2007: >300 documents– 2008: >1500 documents– 2009: > 2700 documents– 2010: > 1400 documents
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IEEE 802.16m – Key Features
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WirelessMAN-Advanced Proposal for IMT-Advanced
• IEEE submitted detailed proposal on WirelessMAN-Advanced air interface in Oct 2009
• Two other entities submitted proposals of the same technology:– Administration of Japan– TTA (Korean SDO)
• All 3 included self-evaluation demonstrating that all IMT-Advanced requirements are met
• Nine worldwide experts groups conducted extensive technical studies that support results
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IMT-Advanced Requirements
• IEEE proposed a single RIT (inclusive of TDD and FDD) to meet or exceed all IMT-Advanced requirements in all test environments
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Performance: Cell Spectral EfficiencyDL cell spectral efficiency in bit/s/Hz/cell for TDD
DL cell spectral efficiency in bit/s/Hz/cell for FDD
UL cell spectral efficiency in bit/s/Hz/cell for TDD
UL cell spectral efficiency in bit/s/Hz/cell for FDD
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Performance: VoIP Capacity
VoIP capacity (users/sector/MHz) for TDD
VoIP capacity (users/sector/MHz) for FDD
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Mobility Requirements
Test environmentMedian SINR
(in dB)
Achieved spectral efficiency (in bit/s/Hz)
LOS
Achieved spectral efficiency (in bit/s/Hz)
NLoS
ITU-R Required spectral efficiency (in bit/s/Hz)
InH (10 km/h) 16.6 3.76 3.41 1.0UMi (30 km/h) 5.0 1.81 1.50 0.75
UMa (120 km/h) 4.3 1.72 1.30 0.55RMa (350 km/h) 5.6 1.70 1.23 0.25
Table 7-15: Mobility requirement data for TDD
Table 7-16: Mobility requirement data for FDD
Test environmentMedian SINR
(in dB)
Achieved spectral efficiency (in bit/s/Hz) LOS
Achieved spectral efficiency (in
bit/s/Hz) NLoS
ITU-R Required spectral efficiency (in
bit/s/Hz)InH (10 km/h) 16.6 3.86 3.56 1.0UMi (30 km/h) 5.0 1.72 1.51 0.75
UMa (120 km/h) 4.3 1.63 1.34 0.55RMa (350 km/h) 5.6 1.61 1.27 0.25
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Peak Spectral Efficiency
Peak Spectral Efficiency (bit/s/Hz)
RIT Required
FDD DL 17.79 15
UL 9.40 6.75
TDD DL 16.96 15
UL 9.22 6.75
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WirelessMAN-Advanced Accepted as IMT-Advanced
• ITU-R’s Working Party 5D, in its meeting of 13-20 October 2010, approved the “WirelessMAN-Advanced” technology of IEEE 802.16m as an IMT-Advanced technology.– “met all of the criteria established by ITU-R for the first release of
IMT-Advanced” and was “accorded the official designation of IMT-Advanced.”
• WP 5D accepted an offer from three parties (IEEE, ARIB, TTA) to have IEEE complete and submit the full detailed specification of the technology at the following WP 5D meeting in April 2011.
• WiMAX Forum’s Release 2 will take advantage of the WirelessMAN-Advanced air interface.
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WirelessMAN-Advanced Transpositions
• In the IMT-Advanced standard:– The WirelessMAN-Advanced air interface will be specified via
IEEE Std 802.16 and the 802.16m amendment.
• Three SDOs authorized to develop “transpositions” of WirelessMAN-Advanced standard
• ARIB (Japan), TTA (Korea), WiMAX Forum
• Adoptions of IEEE standards.
• Will be incorporated by reference into IMT-Advanced.
• IEEE 802.16 convening meeting of the “WirelessMAN-Advanced Transposing Organizations” (WATO) starting 15 March 2011.
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IEEE 802.16m Schedule
• Developed through refinement of multiple drafts• Draft 12 currently under review in ballot
– Final comment resolution
• Submitted Draft 12 for IEEE-SA approval• Anticipating approval by IEEE-SA on 31 March
2011• ITU-R Working Party 5D meeting starting 6 April
2011
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IMT-Advanced Schedule
• 2010-10: approved two technologies for IMT-Advanced
• 2011-04: Review of detailed specifications of two technologies
• 2011-09: Transpositions due• 2011-10: Final WP 5D agreement on IMT-
Advanced standard• 2011-11: Final Study Group 5 agreement• 2012-02: ITU-R approval at Radiocommunication
Assembly
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Is IMT-Advanced = 4G?
• No.• ITU-R acts through a formal process.• The development of IMT-Advanced was
authorized by resolutions of the Radiocommunication Assembly
• Resolutions ITU-R 56 and 57 (2007) specified the use of the unique name “IMT-Advanced” for systems beyond IMT-2000.– The term “4G” is not used.
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ITU Announcements on 4G
• On 21 Oct 2010, ITU announced that WirelessMAN-Advanced and LTE-Advanced were “accorded the official designation of IMT-Advanced,” suggesting also that “IMT-Advanced” is the “true 4G.”
• On 6 Dec 2010, ITU revised its position on 4G:– 4G is “undefined”.– “IMT-Advanced is considered as ‘4G’”.– “4G may also be applied to” forerunner technologies,
such as WiMAX
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IEEE Project 802.16n: GRIDMAN
• GRIDMAN: “Greater Reliability In Disrupted Metropolitan Area Networks”
• IEEE Project 802.16n (Amendment: Higher Reliability Networks) authorized 2010-06-17
• increased robustness and alternate radio path establishment in degraded network conditions
• direct communication between subscriber stations• mobile base stations and mobile relay stations• licensed, unlicensed and lightly licensed spectrum bands
below 6 GHz• System Requirements Document completed Jan 2011
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IEEE Project 802.16p: M2M
• IEEE Project 802.16p (Amendment: Enhancements to Support Machine-to-Machine Applications) authorized 2010-09-30
• lower power consumption at the device• significantly larger numbers of devices• efficient support for small burst transmissions• improved device authentication• System Requirements Document updated Jan
2011
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Tutorial
• Title: IEEE 802.16 in IMT-Advanced
• Date: 14 March 2011
• Time: 21:00-22:30
• Location: Marina Bay Sands, Singapore
• Registration fee: None
• http://ieee802.org/Tutorials.shtml
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Resources
• IEEE 802.16 web site– http://WirelessMAN.org