Top Banner
WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks 1 中中中中 中中中 中中中中中
87

WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Jan 23, 2016

Download

Documents

alaula

WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks. 中山大學 電機系 許蒼嶺教授. 行動通信標準演進. 1x EVDO. HRPDA. CDMA 2000-1X. 1x EVDV Rel. C. 1x EVDV Rel. D. Evolution of Wireless Access Technologies. 4G Air Interfaces. Wide Area. Mobile. 3GPP2. MOBILE BROADBAND. LTE. UMTS. GPRS. EDGE. GSM. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

1

中山大學 電機系 許蒼嶺教授

Page 2: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 3: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

行動通信標準演進

3

Page 4: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Evolution of Wireless Access Technologies

4

802.11n(smart antennas)802.11Mesh extns.

Loca

l Are

aF

ixed

Wid

e A

rea

Mob

ile

Cov

erag

e/M

obili

ty

Met

ro A

rea

Nom

adic

802.16(Fixed LOS)

802.16a/d(Fixed NLOS)

802.11b/a/g

Mobile Industry

Fixed Wireless Industry

4G Air Interfaces

Data Rates (kbps)100,000 +

3GPP2CDMA

2000-1X

HRPDA1x

EVDO

1x EVDV Rel. C

1x EVDVRel. D

GSM UMTS HSPAGPRS EDGE LTE 3GPP

MOBILE BROADBAND

DSL ExperienceDial Up

Higher Data Rate / Lower Cost per Bit

802.16e(Mobile WIMAX)

Page 5: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

WiMAX vs 3GPP 發展時程

5

Page 6: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

3GPP Radio Access Milestones

Page 7: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 8: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Operator’s Service Stack

8

IMSLayer

Application services

Mobility, Policy and Administration Services

EPC

Core network

Access technologiesconnection gateways

Access Technologies

WiMAXLTEDSLAM WiFi

Devices

Page 9: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

WiMAX Market Position

9

Mobile(GSM / GPRS / 3G /HSPA /LTE)

Mobile(GSM / GPRS / 3G /HSPA /LTE)

xDSL / FTTx

xDSL / FTTx

Page 10: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

現有無線接取技術比較

10

Technical Winner

MarketWinner =

?

Page 11: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

11

WiMAX 市場現況

Page 12: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

12

Source : Ovum 2008/12

Population penetration of mobile, fixed and broadband across Asia-Pacific

Page 13: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

WiMAX Markets in Developed Country

13

Fix and Nomadic broadband access Broadband Penetration > 50%Broadband Infrastructure is Developed vs. xDSL / FTTx

No Significant Technical advantage except Nomadic

Incumbent Operator cost advantage High Initial CAPX needed

Niche Market Rural : Low ARPU Bundle Service

Triple play Killer Application ?

WiMAX is Still Looking for

Business Model

Page 14: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

WiMAX Markets in Emerging Country

14

Fix and Nomadic broadband access Broadband Penetration < 5%Broadband Infrastructure is Low vs. xDSL / FTTx

Significant CAPX advantage Significant Deploying time advantage

Demand Growing

WiMAX Opportunity ?

Page 15: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Markets in Emerging Country

15

越南,胡志明市具備 WiMAX市場機會但卻選擇3GPP 陣營

Page 16: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

台灣 WiMAX 產業鏈

16

Page 17: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

17

Source : 工研院 IEK 2010/3

Page 18: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

18

TOP5 WiMAX Vendors Strategy

Source: Ovum 2009/9

Page 19: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

An Industry War

19

Page 20: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

3GPP 是市場主流

20

Page 21: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

21

IEEE std 802.16

Page 22: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

22

Standard Roadmap IEEE 802.16 - 2001 IEEE 802.16a/b/c - 2003

Amendments to 802.16-2001 IEEE 802.16 - 2004

Compatibility issue with HIPERMAN of ETSI 802.16d project Replace previous standards Fixed site access

IEEE 802.16e, 16f - 2005 (amendment) Extend to mobility MIB

IEEE 802.16g-2007(amendment) Management Plane Procedures and Services

IEEE 802.16j – 2008

Page 23: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

23

Features Broad Bandwidth

Up to 134.4Mbit/s Transit over 50KM

Typical Architecture 1 BS + n SSs PMP or MESH

Spectrums From 2 to 66 GHz NLOS and LOS

Duplexing Techniques TDD or FDD

WiMAX Forum Conformance and Interoperability

Page 24: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

24

Scope of Standard

PHY SAP

MAC SAP

CS SAP

Service-SpecificConvergence Sublayer

( MAC CS )

Common Part Sublayer ( MAC CPS )

Security Sublayer( MAC SS )

Physical Layer(PHY)

MA

CP

HY

Scheduliing ServicesQoS ParametersBandwidth Allocation

Page 25: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

25

TDMA/OFDM/OFDMA

Page 26: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 27: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 28: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 29: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 30: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 31: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 32: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 33: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 34: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 35: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 36: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 37: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 38: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

38

IEEE 802.16j-2008

One MR-BS (Multi-hop Relay - Base Station) and many RS (Relay Station)

Transparent mode Only data are relayed via RS Remove obstruction

Non-Transparent mode Expand service coverage Both signaling and data are relayed via RS Increase utilization/throughput

Page 39: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

IEEE 802.16j WiMAX

39

Page 40: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

IEEE 802.16j Configuration

40

Page 41: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Transparent RS

41

Page 42: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Non-Transparent RS

42

Page 43: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

43

OFDMA Symbol and Transparent RS Frame

Page 44: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

44

OFDMA Symbol and Non-Transparent RS Frame

Page 45: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

IEEE 802.16j Multi-hopTopology

45

Page 46: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

46

IEEE 802.16j Independent Scheduling Zones

Page 47: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

47

Bandwidth Request: Store-and-Forward Mode

Page 48: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

48

Bandwidth Request: End-to-End Mode

Page 49: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Centralized vs Distributed Scheduling

Centralized Scheduling For small size of networks Only BS to do bandwidth allocations

Distributed Scheduling For networks with hops greater than 2 Both RS and BS do bandwidth allocations

49

Page 50: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

50

Centralized Scheduling

Page 51: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

51

Distributed Scheduling

Page 52: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

52

Modules for Distributed Scheduling in BS/RS

Page 53: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

53

Classification & Addressing

SSBSUplink

Downlink

SFIDSFID

SFIDSFID

SFID : Service Flow Identifier (32 bits)

CID : Connection Identifier (16 bits)

Page 54: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

54

Scheduling Services

Priority 802.16-2004

ServiceType

802.16e-2005

ServiceType

Typical Appcations

1st UGS UGS T1/E1 transport

VoIP without silence suppression

2nd ertPS ERT-VR VoIP with silence suppression

3rd rtPS RT-VR MPEG Video

4th nrtPS NRT-VR FTP with guaranteed minimum throughput

5th BE BE HTTP

Page 55: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

55

QoS ParamSetUGS :Maximum LatencyTolerated JitterUplink Grant Scheduling TypeRequest/Transmission Policy

ERT-VR :Maximum LatencyUplink Grant Scheduling TypeRequest/Transmission Policy

RT-VR :Maximum Sustained Traffic RateMinimum Reserved Traffic RateMaximum LatencyUplink Grant Scheduling TypeRequest/Transmission Policy

NRT-VR :Minimum Reserved Traffic RateUplink Grant Scheduling TypeRequest/Transmission Policy

BE :Lowest traffic PriorityRequest/Transmission Policy

QoSParamSet

Page 56: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

56

Bandwidth Allocation

Uplink Packet Scheduler(802.16 Frame Maker)

CIDs &QoS-ParamSets

INPUT OUTPUT

UL-MAP

UL-MAP :Uplink Map

Page 57: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

57

Summary of MACand the undefined part of IEEE 802.16

INPUT

OUTPUT

Page 58: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

58

Modulations & Channel Size

Access Range:QPSK > QAM16 > QAM 64

Data Rate:QAM64 > QAM16 > QPSK

US

European

Uplink Mandarory

Downlink Mandarory

Page 59: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

59

Frame Durationswith TDD Frame Structure

0.5/1/2 ms

Page 60: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

60

Number of PS in 16-QAM

Frame duration = 1 ms Signal (Baud) rate = 16 Mbauds/sec 4 bits in a signal (baud) using 16-QAM Ts=LT, Data rate, R = LS = 4 x16 = 64 Mbps Number of PS (Physical Slot) (64 Mbps x 1 ms) / 16 bits = 4000 Assume every PS = 16 bits

Page 61: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

4G: IEEE 802.16m and LTE-A

ITU-R’s IMT-Advanced (4G) requirements up to 1 Gbps in static or low mobility environment up to 100 Mbps in high-speed mobile environment

Multicarrier is the technology to utilize wider bandwidth for parallel data transmission across multiple RF carriers. IEEE 802.16m LTE-A

Carrier Aggregation (CA) Component Carrier (CC)

Page 62: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 63: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

LTE-A

Enhanced Multicast Broadcast Service (EMBS)

Page 64: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

LTE-A: E-MBS Deployment with Broadcast Only and Mixed Carrier

Page 65: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

LTE-A: Carrier Types From the perspective of an advanced MS

(AMS) Primary carriers

exchanges traffic and control signals with an advanced BS (ABS)

mobility, state, and context Secondary carriers

An ABS can additionally assign secondary carrier(s) to an AMS

Controlled by the ABS through the primary carrier

Page 66: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

LTE-A: Carrier Types From the perspective of an ABS

Fully configured carrier carrying all control channels synchronization, broadcast, multicast, and unicast

control channels both single-carrier and multicarrier AMSs can be

served Partially configured carrier

primarily to support downlink only transmission only for frequency-division duplex (FDD) deployment a dedicated EMBS carrier is one example

Page 67: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

IEEE Basic Frame Structure

Page 68: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Basic Frame Structure

1. Type-1 AAI subframe that consists of six OFDMA symbols.

2. Type-2 AAI subframe that consists of seven OFDMA symbols.

3. Type-3 AAI subframe that consists of five OFDMA symbols.

4. Type-4 AAI subframe that consists of nine OFDMA symbols. This type shall be applied only to an UL AAI subframe for the 8.75 MHz channel bandwidth when supporting the WirelessMANOFDMA frames.

Page 69: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 70: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

IEEE 802.16m OFDMA Parameters

70

Nominal Channel Bandwidth (MHz) 5 7 8.75 10 20

Over-sampling Factor 28/25 8/7 8/7 28/25 28/25

Sampling Frequency (MHz) 5.6 8 10 11.2 22.4

FFT Size 512 1024 1024 1024 2048

Sub-Carrier Spacing (kHz) 10.937500 7.812500 9.765625 10.937500 10.937500

Useful Symbol Time Tu (μs) 91.429 128 102.4 91.429 91.429

Cyclic Prefix (CP) Tg=1/8 Tu

Symbol Time Ts (μs)102.857

144 115.2 102.857 102.857

FDD

No. of OFDM symbols per Frame

48 34 43 48 48

Idle time (μs) 62.857 104 46.40 62.857 62.857

TDD

No. of OFDM symbols per Frame

47 33 42 47 47

TTG + RTG (μs) 165.714 248 161.6 165.714 165.714

Cyclic Prefix (CP) Tg=1/16 Tu

Symbol Time Ts(μs) 97.143 136 108.8 97.143 97.143

FDD

No. of OFDM symbols per Frame

51 36 45 51 51

Idle time (μs) 45.71 104 104 45.71 45.71

TDD

No. of OFDM symbols per Frame

50 35 44 50 50

TTG + RTG (μs) 142.853 240 212.8 142.853 142.853

Number of used subcarriers 433 865 865 865 1729

Page 71: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

802.16m Guard Bands

Page 72: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Baud Rate

B: baud rate, number of symbols in one secondS: number of symbols in an OFDMA Sub-frameT: OFDMA Sub-frame durationN: number of sub-carriers in an OFDMA frame B = (S/T)xN

Page 73: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Data Rate

R: data rate (bps)M: number of different signal elements in MCSB: baud rate, number of symbols in one second

R = B x

2(log )M

Page 74: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

802.16e V.S. 802.16m802.16e 802.16m

Bandwidth(MHz) 10 10

Sampling frequency(MHz) 11.2 11.2

FFT size 1024 1024

Sub-carrier frequency spacing(kHz) 10.94 10.94Frame duration(ms) 5 5

Useful symbol time(us) 91.4 91.4

Guard time(us) 11.4 11.4

OFDMA symbols 48 48

OFDMA symbol duration(us) 102.9 102.9

Number of used sub-carriers 841(840) 865

Number of guard sub-carriers 183(184) 159

Number of pilot sub-carriers 120 120

Number of data sub-carrier 720 745

Data rate for QPSK(Mbps) 13.82 14.30

Data rate for 16QAM(Mbps) 27.65 28.61

Data rate for 64QAM(Mbps) 41.47 42.91

Page 75: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Multicarrier Frame Structure An example of

multicarrier frame structure with legacy support.

Page 76: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Multicarrier Transceiver Architectures

Basic concept of subcarrier alignment.

Page 77: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

802.16m Multicarrier Operation with Usage of The Guard Bands

Page 78: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Multicarrier Transceiver Architectures

Different types of AMS transceiver architecture for multicarrier aggregation.

Page 79: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Network Entry

Network entry procedure for multicarrier support.

AAI: Advanced Air Interface

Page 80: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Activation and Deactivation ofAssigned Carriers

Multilevel carrier management scheme.

Page 81: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Handover

Page 82: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Relay Related Connections

Page 83: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Fractional Frequency Reuse

Page 84: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

CA Scenarios and Component Carrier (CC) Types

Example of carrier aggregation scenarios: a) contiguous aggregation of five component carriers with equal

bandwidth b) non-contiguous aggregation of component carriers with

different bandwidths

Page 85: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

Primary and Secondary CCs

UE served bPCell/SCell configuration for different y the same eNB

Page 86: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks
Page 87: WiMAX/LTE : 4G Wireless Broadband Networks

References1. I.-K. Fu et al., “Multicarrier Technology for 4G WiMax System,” IEEE

Communications Magazine, Vol. 48 , Issue 8, Page(s): 50–58, Aug. 2010.

2. S. Ahmadi, “An Overview of Mext-Generation Mobile WiMAX Technology,” IEEE Communications Magazine, Vol. 47 , Issue 6, Page(s): 84–98, Jun. 2009.

3. O. Oyman, J. Foerster, Y.-J. Tcha, and S.-C. Lee, “Toward enhanced mobile video services over WiMAX and LTE,” IEEE Communications Magazine, Vol. 48 , Issue 8, Page(s): 68-76, Aug. 2010.

4. K.I. Pedersen et al., “Carrier Aggregation for LTE-Advanced: Functionality and Performance Aspects,” IEEE Communications Magazine, Vol. 49 , Issue 6, Page(s): 89-95, Jun. 2011.

5. M. Iwamura et al., “Carrier Aggregation Framework in 3GPP LTE-Advanced,” IEEE Communications Magazine, Vol. 48 , Issue 8, Page(s): 60-67, Aug. 2010.