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LTE RACH Description PDF
LTE RACH Description PDF
LTE:
Der Mobilfunk der Zukunft
Random Access
Almamy Touray
02. December, 2009
Abstract — An LTE User Equipment (UE) can only be scheduled for uplink trans-
mission if its uplink transmission timing is synchronized. The LTE Random Ac-
cess Channel (RACH), therefore, plays a key role as an interface between non-
synchronized UEs and the orthogonal transmission scheme of the LTE uplink radio
access.
1 Introduction
The growing demand for mobile Internet and wireless multimedia applications such as Internet
browsing, interactive gaming, mobile TV, video and audio streaming has motivated development
of broadband wireless access technologies in recent years. As a result, the 3rd Generation
Partnership Project (3GPP) initiated the work on the long-term evolution (LTE) in late 2004.
LTE will ensure 3GPPs competitive edge over other cellular technologies. The evolved UMTS
terrestrial radio access network (E-UTRAN) substantially improves end-user throughputs, sector
capacity and reduces user-plane and control-plane latencies, bringing significantly improved user
experience with full mobility. With the emergence of Internet Protocol (IP) as the protocol of
choice for carrying all types of traffic, LTE is expected to provide support for IP-based traffic
with end-to-end quality of service (QoS). Voice traffic will be supported mainly as voice over
IP (VoIP) enabling better integration with other multimedia services. Initial deployments of
LTE are expected by 2010 and commercial availability on a larger scale will likely happen a few
years later. Unlike its predecessors, which were developed within the framework of Release 99
UMTS architecture, 3GPP has specified the evolved packet core (EPC) architecture to support
the E-UTRAN through reduction in the number of network elements and simplification of
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functionality but most importantly allowing for connections and handover to other fixed and
wireless access technologies, providing the network operators the ability to deliver a seamless
mobility experience. 3GPP has set aggressive performance requirements for LTE that rely on
improved physical layer technologies such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)
and single-user and/or multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) techniques.
The Random Access Channel (RACH) is an uplink channel in mobile communication system
that is used to transfer control information from a mobile terminal to the network, e.g. for
initial access to set up a connection or for location area updates. The RACH channel may be
contention based channel where several users might access the same resource. There is usually
no knowledge about the required transmit power of the mobile terminal and thus an open loop
power control method is applied.
User Equipments (UEs) can only be scheduled for uplink transmission if its uplink transmission
timing is synchronized. The RACH, therefore, plays a key role as an interface between non-
synchronized UEs and the orthogonal transmission scheme of the uplink radio. In UMTS, RACH
is primarily used for initial network. Once uplink synchronization is achieved for a UE, the
eNodeB (Enhanced Node B or simply base station) can schedule orthogonal uplink transmission
resources for it.
In the system description of Random Access model, we have N UEs. Each UE’s signal arrives
at the eNodeB with different timing due to different propagation delays. When the eNodeB
receives a RA signal, it performs basic signal processing including CP removal, DFT, and
sub-carrier de-mapping.The Random Access detector consists of a number of correlators and
each correlator correlates the received signal to one of the available Random Access codes.
Each correlator further investigates the maximum correlation output and compared it to the
predefined threshold, and a final decision is determined (that is from which UE the detected
preamble was transmitted)
2. UE in RRC_CONNECTED state but not uplink- synchronized but needs to receive new
downlink data, and, therefore, to transmit corresponding ACK/NACK in the uplink,
3. UE in RRC_CONNECTED state handing over from its current serving cell to a target
cell
This is a situation where several UEs may access the same resource and, therefore, the possibility
of collision between them.The procedures here are as follows:
2. Random Access Response: The Random Access Response (RAR) is sent by the eNodeB on
the Physical Downlink Shared Channel (PDSCH), and addressed with an ID, the Random
Access Radio Network Temporary Identifier (RA-RNTI), identifying the time-frequency
slot in which the preamble was detected. If multiple UEs had collided by selecting the
same signature in the same preamble time-frequency resource, they would both receive
the same RAR.
3. Layer 2/Layer 3 (L2/L3) Message: This message is the first scheduled uplink transmission
on the PUSCH and makes use of Hybrid Automatic Repeat Request (HARQ), also conveys
UE identifier etc. It conveys the actual random access procedure message.
4. Contention resolution: The User Equipment’s (UE’s) behaviour upon reception of con-
tention resolution message has three possibilities: The UE correctly decodes the message
and detects its own identity: it sends back positive acknowledgment ACK. On the other
hand, if the UE correctly decodes the message and discovers that it contains another
UE identity (contention resolution), it sends nothing back (Discontinuous Transmission,
Random Access 5
DTX). Also, its possible that the UE cannot decode the message and here also, it sends
nothing back (DTX).
In the collison detection figure, we have two power delay profile: the one with small cell size and
the one with large cell size. In small cell size, collision detection is impossible and this is due to
the small relative propagation delay between the cells. For example if one UE in close to the
base station and the other closer to the cell border but because of the small cell size, the eNodeB
will end up decoding the two transmitted preambles by the two UEs as one preamble.On the
other hand, in the other power delay profile with large cell size, collision detection is possible.
In Contention free mode, the eNodeB assigns distinct preamble to each UE and hence the
concern for collision and other collision related issues are non-existant. Contention-free Random
Access can be used in areas where low latency is required, such as handover and resumption of
downlink traffic for UE. Here, dedicated signature is allocated to the UE on a per-need basis.
Contention-free may be used in Handover, which comprises of two types:
1. Intra-RAT, which is within one radio access technology (i.e. LTE -to-LTE from one
eNodeB to another)
2. Inter-RAT, between radio access technologies e.g.: between LTE and GSM or 3G WCDMA,
WIMAX or even wireless LAN.
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We have two preambles at the eNodeB received with different timings due t propagation delay.
We used the GT (Guard Time) to absorb the propagation delay. It’s then possible to copy a
section from the end of the symbol to the beginning, known as Cyclic Prefix, CP.
The receiver can then sample the waveform at the optimum time and avoid ISI caused by
reflection. The length of the CP is very important. If it is not long enough, then it will not
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counteract the multi-path reflection delay spread. On the other hand, if it is too long, then
it will reduce the data throughput capacity. The maximum cell radius is given by the CP
(Cyclic Prefix) length. Similarly to WCDMA, the LTE PRACH preamble consists of a complex
sequence. However, it differs from WCDMA preamble in that it is also an OFDM symbol, built
with a CP, thus allowing for an efficient frequency-domain receiver at the eNodeB. As shown in
the figure 7 or Bild 7 below, the end of the sequence is appended at the start of the preamble,
thus allowing a periodic correlation at the PRACH receiver.
The UE aligns the start of the random access preamble with the start of the corresponding
uplink sub-frame at the UE assuming a timing advance of zero and the preamble length is
shorter than the PRACH slot in order to provide room for a Guard Time (GT) to absorb the
propagation delay. In figure 7 or Bild 7, there exist shows two preambles at the eNodeB received
with different timings depending on the propagation delay.
Regarding detection performance, one would intuitively expect that the higher the bandwidth,
the better the detection, due to higher frequency diversity. Nevertheless, under certain conditions,
a smaller bandwidth will perform better than a large bandwidth in a single-path static AWGN
channel, given that no diversity improvement is to be expected from such a channel.
Coverage performance: In general, a longer sequence gives better coverage, but better coverage
requires a longer CP and GT in order to absorb the corresponding round-trip delay.
Random Access 9
Figure 8: Field durations and achievable cell radius of the PRACH preamble formats
7 PRACH Implementation
The PRACH preamble can be generated at the system sampling rate, by means of a large IDFT
as shown in figure 9. The DFT block is optional as the sequence can be mapped directly in the
frequency domain at the IDFT input. The cyclic shift can be implemented either in the time
domain after the IDFT, or in the frequency domain before the IDFT through a phase shift.
Disadvantage of the functional structure of the PRACH preamble transmitter:
It does not require any time-domain filtering at baseband, but leads to large IDFT sizes (up to
24, 576 for a 20 MHz spectrum allocation), which are cumbersome to implement in practice.
Solution to the problems of the functional structure of the PRACH preamble transmitter:
We can solve this problem by generating the preamble using a smaller IDFT, actually an IFFT
and Shifting the preamble to the received frequency location through time-domain up-sampling
and filtering. This results in hybrid frequency/time-domain generation.
of down-sampling and the anti-aliasing filter are for generating PRACH time samples suitable
for FFT computation at a sampling rate which is an integer fraction of the system sampling
rate.
Unlike the full-frequency-domain approach, the hybrid time/frequency-domain computation can
start as soon as the first samples have been received, which helps to reduce latency.
8 Summary
1. RA provides uplink synchronization necessary for scheduling of UEs
3. RACH in LTE fits into the orthogonal time-frequency structure of the uplink compared to
UMTS which uses WCDMA
5. Contention- free allows for handover and other scenarios which require low latency
9 References
References
[Pro05] J. G. Proakis: Digital Communications, New York McGraw-Hill, 1995.
[Pan] Panasonic: Random Acess Burst Design for E-UTRA, Panasonic and NTT
DoCoMo, www.3gpp.org 3GPP TSG RAN WGI, meeting 46, Tallinn, Estonia,
August 2006
[Fra,Zad,Hei] R. L. Frank, S. A. Zadoff, R. Heimiller: Phase Shift Pulse Coses with good
Periodic Correlation Properties, IRE IEEE Trans. on Information Theory, Vol.
7.
[Chu] D. C. Chu: Polyphase Codes with Good Periodic Correlation Properties, IEEE
Trans. on Information Theory, Vol. 18.
[Ets] ETSIEN 300 910: Radio Transmission and Reception (Release 1999),
www.etsi.org.