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Introduction to Cellular Networking

and Rethinking Mobile


Architectures
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
Basics: Structure

Multiple Access

Downlink
Handoff
Uplink

Mobile Station Base Station


Distributed transceivers Fixed transceiver
Cells
Different
Frequencies or
Codes
Basics: Multiple Access Methods
Frequency
TDMA: Time CMDA: Code
Division Multiple Division Multiple
Access Access

FDMA: Frequency
Division Multiple
Access

Codes

Time
Some More Basics
 Uplink & Downlink separated in
 Time: Time Division Duplex (TDD), or
 Frequency: Frequency Division Duplex (FDD)
 Information (voice, data) is digitized and bit
streams modulated onto carrier
 Modulation, data redundancy (coding),
transmission power, data retransmissions (ARQ)
adapted to varying wireless channel quality
 Spatial attenuation of signal
 Frequency or codes can be reused (frequency reuse)
Cellular Technology Evolution
 0G: Mobile radio telephones (e.g. MTS)
 1G: Analog
 2G/3G/4G .. - digital:
GSM/3GPP Family cdmaOne/CDMA2000 Family
GSM
cdmaOne/IS-95
2G GPRS

EDGE

UMTS, WCDMA CDMA2000 EV-DO


3G
HSPA
4G LTE
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G
and beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
Global System for Mobile
communications (GSM)
 900/1800 MHz band (US: 850/1900 MHz)
 For 900 MHz band
Uplink: 890-915
Downlink: 935-960
 25 MHz bandwidth - 124 carrier frequency
channels, spaced 200KHz apart
 Time Division Multiplexing for 8 full rate
speech channels per frequency channel.
 Handset transmission power limited to 2 W
in GSM850/900 and 1 W in GSM1800/1900.
Architecture
The Base Station Subsystem (BSS)
 Base Transceiver Station BTS - transceivers serve
different frequencies.
 Frequency hopping by handsets and transceivers
 Sectorization using directional antennas
 Base Station Controller (BSC) controls several
(tens to hundreds) of BTSs
 allocation of radio channels
 handovers between BTSs
 concentrator of traffic
 databases with information such as carrier frequencies,
frequency hopping lists, power reduction levels, etc.
for each cell site
Network Switching Subsystem (NSS)
 This GSM core network manages communication amongst
mobile devices & with PSTN
 Mobile Switching Center (MSC) : routing of calls and GSM
services for users, mobility management, handovers,
 Gateway MSC – interfaces with PSTN, determines the visited MSC
at which the subscriber being called is currently located
 Visited MSC - MSC where a customer is currently located. The
Visitor Location Register (VLR) associated with this MSC has
subscriber's data.
 Anchor MSC - MSC from which handover initiated.
 Target MSC - MSC toward which a handover should take place.
 Home Location Register (HLR): database with all mobile
phone subscriber details
GPRS core network
 Mobility management, session
management, and transport for IP services
 GPRS Tunneling Protocol, GTP allows end
users mobility with continued Internet
connectivity by transporting user’s data
between users’ current SGSN and GGSN
 GPRS support nodes (GSN)
GGSN - Gateway GPRS Support Node
SGSN - Serving GPRS Support Node
GSM Support for Data Services:
GPRS
 User gets pair of uplink and downlink frequencies.
 Multiple users share the same frequency channel
with time domain multiplexing.
 Packets have constant length corresponding to a
GSM time slot.
 Downlink uses FCFS packet scheduling
 Uplink
 Slotted ALOHA for reservation inquiries during
contention phase
 data transferred using dynamic TDMA with FCFS
scheduling.
 Upto 64 kbps (more for EDGE) downlink per user.
UMTS and 3G technologies
(WCDMA & HSPA)
 Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
(UMTS) – commonly uses WCDMA as the
underlying interface
 Theoretically supports up to 14 Mbps rates with
HSDPA
 WCDMA Frequency bands
 1885-2025 Mhz (uplink), 2110-2200 Mhz (downlink)
 US: 1710-1755 MHz and 2110-2155 MHz
 W-CDMA has 5 Mhz wide radio channels
(CDMA2000 transmits on one or several pairs of
1.25 Mhz radio channels).
 HSDPA allows networks based on UMTS to have
higher data rates on downlink(1.8. 3.6, 7.2, 14.0
Mbps via AMC, and HARQ, fast packet scheduling.
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
Next Generation Mobile Networks
 Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) Ltd. -
Consortium with partnership of major mobile
operators
 Recommendations without specific technology
prescriptions
 Target to establish performance targets,
recommendations and deployment scenarios for
future wide-area mobile broadband network
packet switched core
 The architecture intended to provide a smooth
migration of existing 2G/3G networks towards an
IP network that is cost competitive and has
broadband performance.
NGMN: Beyond 3G
 Video telephony and multimedia conferencing, IM, video
streaming – among high drivers for NGMN
 Essential System recommendations
 Seamless mobility across all bearers with service continuity
through a min of 120 km/h
 Peak uplink data rates 30-50 Mbps
 Peak > 100Mbps downlink
 Latency core < 10ms, RAN <10ms, <30ms e2e
 QoS based global roaming
 Broadcast, multicast, and unicast services to subscribers of all
environments
 Real time, conversational and streaming in PS across all required
bearers
 Cost per MB : as close to DSL as possible
NGMN Envisioned System
Architecture
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
Alternative fixed wireless and MAN
standards
 WiMAX, the Worldwide Interoperability for
Microwave Access based on IEEE 802.16
standard
 Last-mile broadband access, backhaul for
cellular networks, Internet Services
 802.16d Fixed WiMAX, 802.16e - Mobile
WiMAX.
 Licensed spectrum profiles: 2.3GHz,
2.5GHz and 3.5GHz. US mostly around 2.5
GHz, assigned primarily to Sprint Nextel,
Clearwire.
Convergence
 Heterogeneous access technologies
 Multi-mode access devices
 Dual mode phones (WiFi, 2.5/3G), UMA
 Heterogeneous Services
 Cellular Internet access and Internet based
voice/video access
 Challenges
 Time variant heterogeneous network characteristics
 Heterogeneous applications with different utilities
 System design and networking challenges
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample
scenario studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
Cellular Networks and Internet
Cellular Networks Internet

Incipient Data
Service Voice

Circuit Switched Analog


Packet
Technology Circuit Switched Digital Switched
C.S. Voice + P.S. Data

Evolution Controlled Semi-Organic

Operator initiated Third party/


New Services
or partnered independent (largely)
Mobility
Good Poor
Support
Cellular Networks and Internet
Cellular Networks Internet

QoS at edges Good Support Mostly absent


(voice vs. data)

Data rates for


supporting Insufficient as of Relatively high
broadband present
services

Cost per MB Lower


Higher
of data
Internet : Sample scenario –
Residential Broadband access

Internet

BRAS
DSLAM
Home WiFi Router

QoS: Wireless hop (802.11e?), PPPoE, IP QoS (Diffserv)


and translation mechanisms
Mobility Options: MIP - high-barrier, delay performance,
incremental patch rather than clean solution?
Cellular Scenario

Better QoS, scheduling


Better Mobility within the cellular network
Integrated voice/data Authentication
Downside is excessive edge network delays,
costs of network deployment.
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
The Economics
 3G spectrum licensing and migration cost
 Telecom equipment vendors – economics
of operation, meeting bids vs. system
upgrades for technical innovation
 Stiff competition for fixed and mobile
segments of operators, drive towards
services.
 Interesting and sometimes conflicting
dynamics for both fixed and mobile
operators.
Agenda
 Basics & Technology Evolution
 Architecture and Functionality (GSM, 3G and
beyond)
 Cellular future goals
 Emerging trends
 Alternative wireless access technologies
 Convergence
 Comparison with Internet and sample scenario
studies
 Economics of operation
 From a clean slate
From a Clean Slate
 Greater intelligence at edges of networks, eventually leading to just
network elements of different sizes and capabilities
 Functional homogeneity in network elements in terms of
storage/caching, processing, networking capability. Such network
element should likely
 be multi-homed connected with heterogeneous technologies (including
p2p, delay tolerant),
 have intelligence for resource allocation, QoS
 have interaction capability with other network elements (including user
devices),
 support mobility, handoffs
 have ability to recognize needs of existing and new applications (HDTV,
phone, streaming video)
 be plug and play
 Interfacing of applications/services (QoS specs) with underlying
serving networks for fast and easy deployment.
 Heterogeneity in access technologies amongst user carried devices
honored and accepted by the network elements.
Options for operators
 Sharing the spectrum/infrastructure costs?
 New service models to forestall cost of
upgrades
 Good opportunity for fixed and mobile
carriers to take initiative.

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