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When you first turn on your phone or your phone loses signal, it doesn't know which
frequency to use to connect to a cell tower. This is because there are many different LTE
bands, and each band uses a different frequency range.
For example, LTE Band 5 operates in the 850 MHz frequency range, LTE Band 3 operates in
the 1800 MHz frequency range, and LTE Band 25 operates in the 1900 MHz frequency range.
your phone has to search for cells on all of the frequencies that it supports. This is called a
"blind search" because the phone doesn't know which frequency is the best one to use.
For example, let's assume that your device support LTE Band 5,3,25."
This means that your phone can connect to cells on LTE Bands 5, 3, and 25.
Initial Acquisition
When the UE is ON, UE starts to search for cells on all of the frequencies that it supports.
Let's say that you are in a city with three cell towers. One cell tower is on LTE Band 5,
another cell tower is on LTE Band 3, and the third cell tower is on LTE Band 25. When you
turn on your phone, it will start to search for cells on all three of these bands. If it finds a cell
on LTE Band 5, it will connect to that cell. If it finds a cell on LTE Band 3, it will connect to
that cell. And if it finds a cell on LTE Band 25, it will connect to that cell.
Let’s elaborate the above statement, the above process will go through multiple steps to
attach the UE.
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Let’s elaborate the above steps involve in Initial acquisition procedure:
➢ RSSI Measurement or Scan: The UE tunes to each and every channel that it supports
and measures the Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI). RSSI is a measure of the
power of the signal that the UE is receiving.
The UE tunes to each and every channel within LTE Bands 5, 3, and 25.
For each channel, it measures the RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indicator), which
represents the power of the signal received from that channel.
It creates a list of channel numbers and their corresponding RSSI values.
➢ Filter by RSSI Thresholding: The UE then goes through the list of RSSI measurements
from above step and identifies all the channels that have an RSSI value greater than a
certain threshold. This threshold is determined by the UE implementation and is not
specified by 3GPP.
The UE applies an RSSI threshold to the list generated in above step.
It selects only the channels with RSSI values greater than this threshold.
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This step eliminates channels with weak signals, focusing on those with stronger
indications of potential cells
➢ Synchronization and Physical Cell ID (PCID) Detection (PSS and SSS decoding): The
UE then performs synchronization with each of the channels selected in above and
decodes the reference signal to detect the Physical Cell ID (PCID). PCID is a unique
identifier for each cell within a given LTE band.
To decode the PCI ID the UE first decode the PSS and then SSS.
The first signal to be detected is PSS then SSS in Time domain and frequency
domain
➢ Cell Selection: The UE then selects the cell with the strongest RSSI and valid PCID
detection. This ensures that the UE connects to the strongest and most reliable cell
within the available bands.
➢ MIB Decoding: The UE then decodes the Master Information Block (MIB) to obtain
basic information about the system, such as the system frame number and system
bandwidth.
➢ SIB Decoding: The UE then decodes the System Information Block (SIB) to obtain
additional information about the cell, such as the available frequency bands,
supported services, and channel bandwidth, cell access related, RACH related
decoding.
➢ Storage List Search (SLS): This step is optional and is only performed if the UE has a
list of previously known cells stored in its memory. The UE will first search for these
cells before performing a blind scan of all available bands.
➢ Deviated Band Search (DBS): This step is also optional and is only performed if the
UE does not find any cells during the SLS or blind scan. In this case, the UE will search
for cells in all available bands, even if they are outside of its supported frequency
range.
Now let’s focus on to understand many points which are involved in above discussion:
➢ The first signal to be detected is PSS then SSS in Time domain and frequency domain.
➢ Minimum 6PRBs required to acquire PSS and SSS.
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➢ For UE camp on, basically as default its use 1.4MHZ where 6RB will utilize means
(6*12)72 subcarrier where 10 subcarrier will be reserved and will use for DTX/Guard
band purpose and remaining 62 subcarrier will be utilized for camp on process.
➢ In TDD achieve radio frame and slot synchronization but in FDD UE identify the
central of channel bandwidth.
➢ From PSS and SSS the PCI ID decoding will be done.
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In below grid PSS position is been marked
LTE Resource Grid for FDD
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Mapping of PSS
The Primary Synchronization Signal (PSS) is a sequence of 62 consecutive symbols that is
used to synchronize the receiver with the transmitter in an LTE (Long Term Evolution)
system. The PSS is mapped into the first 31 subcarriers either side of the DC subcarrier,
which means that it occupies six resource blocks with five reserved subcarriers each side.
This is shown in the figure below.
The PSS is a known sequence of symbols that is easy for the receiver to detect. By correlating
the received signal with the PSS, the receiver can determine the frequency offset and timing
of the transmitter. This allows the receiver to demodulate the data symbols and decode the
received data.
The use of the PSS is an important part of the LTE synchronization process. Without the PSS,
the receiver would not be able to synchronize with the transmitter and demodulate the
received data.
Generation of PSS:
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➢ These sequences have the useful property of having zero cyclic autocorrelation at all
nonzero lags.
➢ This means that when the sequence is correlated with itself, the correlation is zero at
all lags except for zero.
➢ This property makes Zadoff-Chu sequences ideal for use as synchronization signals, as
they can be easily detected even in the presence of noise.
➢ The PSS is a sequence of 62 consecutive symbols that is mapped into the first 31
subcarriers either side of the DC subcarrier.
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In FDD: SSS is broadcast using the central 62 subcarriers belonging to the second to last
symbol of time slots 0 and 10.
In TDD: SSS is broadcast using the central 62 subcarriers belonging to the last symbol of time
slots 1 and 12.
• Frame Boundary Info: Frame boundary information refers to the starting and ending
points of an LTE frame. This information is crucial for synchronizing the UE with
eNodeB.
• EARFCN: It is a unique identifier for a carrier frequency in LTE before calculating PCI.
• CP (Cyclic Prefix): Cyclic Prefix, is a portion of the LTE frame that is inserted at the
beginning of each symbol. It is used to mitigate the effects of inter-symbol
interference (ISI).
Generation of SSS:
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LTE Resource Grid for TDD
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Finally, the PCI will be decoded based on PSS and SSS decoding.
Formula for PCI in LTE
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