Cellular Wireless Networks Chapter 10. Introduction (1) Cellular technology is the foundation of...

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Cellular Wireless Networks Chapter 10

Transcript of Cellular Wireless Networks Chapter 10. Introduction (1) Cellular technology is the foundation of...

Page 1: Cellular Wireless Networks Chapter 10. Introduction (1) Cellular technology is the foundation of mobile wireless communications supports users in locations.

Cellular Wireless Networks

Chapter 10

Page 2: Cellular Wireless Networks Chapter 10. Introduction (1) Cellular technology is the foundation of mobile wireless communications supports users in locations.

Introduction (1)

Cellular technology• is the foundation of mobile wireless

communications• supports users in locations that are not easily

served by wired networks.• is the underlying technology for

– mobile telephones, – personal communications systems, – wireless Internet and – Wireless Web applications.

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Introduction (2)

Cellular technologies and standards are conveniently grouped into three generations.

• The first generation is analog based and while still widely used is a passing from the scene.

• The dominating technology today is the digital second-generation systems.

• Third generation high speed digital systems have begun to emerge.

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Introduction (3)

Cellular radio is a technique • that was developed to increase the

capacity available for mobile radio telephone service.

The way to increase the capacity of the system is

• to use lower power systems with shorter radius and

• to use numerous transmitters/ receivers.

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Cellular Network Organization (1)

• Use multiple low-power transmitters (100 W or less)

• Areas divided into cells– Each served by its own antenna– A Band of frequencies allocated to each cell.– Each cell is served by a Base Station (BS), consisting

of transmitter, receiver and control unit.– Adjacent cells are assigned different frequencies to

avoid interference or crosstalk.– Cells sufficiently distant from each other can use the

same frequency band.

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Cellular Network Organization (2)

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Cellular Network Organization (3)

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Cell shape

Criteria/ recommendations• Antennas in all adjacent cells must be

equidistant (hexagonal pattern)• This simplifies the task of

– Determining when to switch the user to another antenna

– Choosing another antenna• Hexagonal pattern

– Provides for equidistant antennas– Radius of hexagon=length of side of hexagon= R– Distance b/w cells, d = (3/2)R + (3/2)R = 3R

NOTE: A precise hexagonal pattern is not used

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Cell

Each cellular base station is allocated a group of radio channels to be used within a small geographic area called a cell.

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Frequency Reuse OR Frequency Planning

Frequency Reuse:

The design process of selecting and allocating channel groups for all of the cellular base stations within a system is called frequency reuse.

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Frequency Reuse

• Adjacent cells assigned different frequencies to avoid interference or crosstalk

• It is not practical to attempt to use same frequency band in two adjacent cells except CDMA, (Code Division Multiple Access)

• Objective is to reuse frequency in nearby cells– 10 to 50 frequencies assigned to each cell– Transmission power controlled to limit power at that

frequency escaping to adjacent cells– The issue is to determine how many cells must

intervene between two cells using the same frequency So that the cells do not interfere.

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Possible Solution (1)

We define N.

• N is number of cells in a repetitious pattern.

• In a hexagonal cell pattern, only the following values of N are possible

• N = I2 + J2 + (I J), I,J = 0,1,2,3,…

• Possible values of N are 1,3,4,7,9,12,13,16,19,21, and so on

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The Cellular ConceptFrequency Reuse Pattern for N = 7

[Rappa P-59]

Frequency Reuse Factor = 1/7

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Possible Solution (2)

Example:

• For AMPS (American Advanced Mobile Phone System) – Total number of frequencies allotted to the

system = K = 395– N = 7– Each cell can have K/ N = 57 frequencies per

cell on average

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Possible Solution (3)

If• D = minimum distance between centers of cells that

use same frequency band (called co-channels)• R = radius of a cell• d = distance b/w cells = 3R

• Since d = 3R

NR

DQ 3 Ratio Reuse Channel-Co

Nd

D

[Rappa P-60]

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To Find Nearest Co-Channel

To find nearest co-channel neighbors of a particular cell, one must do the following

• Move i cells along any chain of hexagons and then

• Turn 60 degrees counter-clockwise and move j cells.

• This is illustrated in figure 3.2 for i = 3, and j = 2 (example, N = 19)

[Rappa P-60]

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19-cell reuse example (N=19)

Figure 3.2 Method of locating co-channel cells in a cellular system. In this example, N = 19 (i.e., I = 3, j = 2). (Adapted from [Oet83] © IEEE.)

[Rappa P-60]

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Cluster size and Capacity (1)

• Let a cellular system has a total of S duplex channels available for use.

• If each cell is allocated a group of k channels (k < S), and

• If the S channels are divided among N cells into unique and disjoint channel groups which each have the same number of channels,

Total number of available radio channels S = k N

[Rappa P-58-60]

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Cluster size and Capacity (2)

• CLUSTER: The N cells which collectively use the complete set of available frequencies is called a cluster.

• Measure of capacity: If a cluster is repeated M times within the system, the total number of duplex channels, C, can be used as a measure of capacity and is given by

C = M k N = M S • From above, “the capacity of a cellular system”,

is directly proportional to the number of times a cluster is replicated in a fixed service area.

[Rappa P-58-60]

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Cluster size and Capacity (3)

If the cluster size N is reduced while the cell size is kept constant,

• more clusters are required to cover a given area, and

• hence more capacity (a large value of C) is achieved.

• A larger cluster size causes the ratio b/w the cell radius and the distance b/w co-channel cells (R/D) to decrease, leading to weaker co-channel interference.

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Cluster size and Capacity (4)

• Conversely, a small cluster size indicates that co-channel cells are located much closer together.

• RESULT: Smaller N, gives max C but more interference.

• The value for N is a function of how much interference a mobile or base station can tolerate while maintaining a sufficient quality of communications.

• From a design point of view, the smallest possible value of N is desirable in order to maximize capacity over a given coverage area.

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Cluster size and Capacity (5)Problem

For an area of 1000 m2, total of 100 duplex channels are allocated. By keeping cell size constant equal to 20 m2, calculate capacity C for following cluster sizes.

• N = 4

• N = 8

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Cellular Systems Terms (1)

Frequency Reuse Factor: of a cellular system is given by 1/N, since each cell within a cluster is only assigned 1/N of the total available channels in the system.

Cluster Size: The factor N is called the cluster size.

Footprint: The actual radio coverage of a cell is known as the footprint and is determined from field measurements or propagation prediction models.

[Rappa P-58-60]

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Cellular Systems Terms (2)

• Base Station (BS) – includes an antenna, a controller, and a number of receivers

• Mobile telecommunications switching office (MTSO) – connects calls between mobile units

• Two types of channels available between mobile unit and BS– Control channels – used to exchange information

having to do with setting up and maintaining calls

– Traffic channels – carry voice or data connection between users

[Rappa P-58-60]

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Position of Base Station Transmitters

• When using hexagons to model coverage areas, BS transmitters are depicted as either being in the center of the cell (center-excited cells) or on three of the six cell vertices (edge-excited cells).

• Normally, omni-directional antennas are used in center-excited cells and sectored directional antennas are used in edge-excited cells.

• Practical considerations do not allow BS to be placed exactly as they appear in the hexagonal layout.

• Most system designs permit a BS to be positioned up to one-fourth the cell radius away from the ideal location.

[Rappa P-58-60]

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Example

If a total of 33 MHz of bandwidth is allocated to a particular FDD (Frequency Division Duplex, is the first variation of W-CDMA ) cellular telephone system which uses two 25 KHz simplex channels to provide full duplex voice and control channels, compute the number of channels available per cell if a system uses

a) four cell reuseb) seven cell reuse andc) Twelve cell reuse

If 1 MHz of the allocated spectrum is dedicated to control channels, determine an equitable distribution of control channels and voice channels in each cell for each of the three systems.

[Rappa P-61]

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Capacity Problem

• In time, as more customers use the system – traffic may build up

• so that there are not enough frequency bands (channels) assigned to a cell – to handle its calls.

• It is a Capacity Problem.

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Approaches to Cope with Increasing Capacity

Following approaches are used.

1. Adding new channels

2. Frequency borrowing

3. Cell splitting

4. Cell sectoring

5. Microcells

6. A Microcell Zone Concept

7. Femto Cell [Rappa P-

86]

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Adding new channels

Typically, when a system is set up in a region,

• Not all of the channels are used, and

• Growth and expansion can be managed in an orderly fashion

– by adding new channels.

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Frequency borrowing

1. Frequencies are taken from adjacent cells by congested cells

2. Dynamic assignment of frequencies to different cells

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Cell splitting (1)

• Process of subdividing a congested cell into smaller cells (Same concept as of micro-cells), – each with its own base station and– corresponding reduction in antenna height and

transmitter power.

• It increases the capacity of a cellular system since – it increases the number of times that channels are

reused.– The additional number of channels per unit area

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Cell splitting (2)

• The increased number of cells would increase the number of clusters over the coverage region, which in turn would increase the number of channels, and the capacity, in the coverage area.

• It allows a system to grow by – replacing large cells with smaller cells,– while not upsetting the channel allocation scheme

required to maintain the minimum co-channel reuse ratio Q between co-channel cells.

NR

DQ 3

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Cell splitting (3)

• A small value of Q means small N provides large capacity

• A large value of Q means large N improves the transmission quality due to a smaller level of co-channel interference.

A trade-off must be made b/w these two objectives in actual cellular design

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Cell splitting (4)

• Base stations are placed at the corners of the cells

• Assume that area served by BS A is saturated with traffic.

• New BSs are needed to increase the No. of channels in the area and to reduce the area served by single BS

• BS A has been surrounded by 6 new cells

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Cell splitting (5)

• Cells addition also preserves the frequency reuse plan.

• Micro cell G has been placed half way b/w two larger stations utilizing the same channel set G.

• This is also case of other microcells.

L

L/2

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Cell splitting (6)1. Distribution of traffic and

topographic features is not uniform

This presents opportunities of capacity increase

2. Original cell 6.5 to 13 km3. Cells in areas of high usage

can be split into smaller cells 1.5 Km minimum

recommendation Frequent handoff

A radius reduction by a factor of F reduces the coverage area and increases the required number of base stations by a factor of F2.

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Cell splitting (7)

Conclusion:

• By decreasing the cell radius R, and

• keeping the co-channel reuse ratio D/R unchanged, – cell splitting increases the number of channels

per unit area.

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Example• Consider Figure 3.9. Assume each base

station uses 60 channels, regardless of cell size. If each original cell has a radius of 1 Km and each microcell has a radius of 0.5 Km, find the number of channels contained in a 3 Km by 3 Km square centered around A under the following conditions:

a) without the use of microcells; b) when the lettered microcells as shown in

Figure 3.9 are used, also calculate increase in capacity; and

c) if all the original base stations are replaced by microcells. Assume cells on the edge of the square to be contained within the square.

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Solution• (a) 5x60 = 300 channels• (b) 5+6 = 11

11 x 60 = 660 channels• (c) 5 + 12 = 17 channels

17 x 60 = 1020 channels

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Cell sectoring

1. Cells are divided into a number of wedge-shaped sectors,

Typically three or six sectors per cell Each with their own set of channels Each sector is assigned a separate subset

of the cell’s channels Directional antennas are used at the base

station • to focus on each sector.

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Cell sectoring

• To increase the capacity is – to keep the cell radius unchanged and– seek methods to decrease the D/R ratio.

• Sectoring increases SIR (Signal to Interference Ratio) so that cluster may be reduced.

• In this approach:– First the SIR is improved using directional antennas, – Then capacity improvement is achieved by reducing the number

of cells in a cluster,– Thus increasing the frequency reuse.

• However, in order to do this successfully, it is necessary to reduce the relative interference without decreasing the transmit power.

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Cell sectoring

• The co-channel interference in a cellular system may be decreased – by replacing a single omni directional antenna at the

base station by several directional antennas,– each radiating within a specified sector.

• By using directional antennas, – a given cell will receive interference and – transmit with only a fraction of the available co-

channel cells.

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Cell sectoring

• The technique– for decreasing co-channel interference and – thus increasing system performance by using

directional antennas

is called sectoring.

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Sectoring improves S/I

A cell is normally partitioned into

• three 120 sectors or

• six 60

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Cell sectoring

• During sectoring– The channels used in a particular cell are

broken down into sectored groups and – are used only within a particular sector

• Assume– Seven cell reuse– 120 sectors

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Sectoring improves S/I

I

II

IIIIV

V

VI

Only two cells have sectors with antenna patterns which radiate into the center cell.

Compare it with situation of 6 omni directional antennas

S/I has been increased from 17dB to 24.2 dB.

S/I improvement allows the wireless engineer to

• then decrease the cluster size N

• in order to improve the frequency reuse

• and thus system capacity.

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Conclusion:• Initially co-channels were placed at a

distance D due to possible interference.• Now we have reduced interference and

increased SIR. • So we can decrease D and bring co-

channels near to each other• Thus we decrease N and increase channel

capacity.

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Cell sectoring

Further improvements in S/I:

• In practical systems, further improvement in S/I is achieved by – down tilting the sector antennas – such that the radiation pattern in the vertical

(elevation )plane has a notch at the nearest co-channel cell distance

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Microcells

1. Microcells are used in • city streets • congested areas, • along highways, and • inside large public buildings

2. As cells become smaller, 3. antennas move from the tops of tall buildings or hill

to the top of small buildings or the sides of large buildings, and finally to lamp posts, where they form microcells.

• Decrease in cell size• Decrease in radiated power by BS and mobile station

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Typical Parameters

• The average delay spread refers to multipath delay spread that is– Same signal follows different paths and– There is a time delay between the earliest and latest

arrival of the signal at the receiver.

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Example

• Assume a system of 32 cells with a cell radius of 1.6 Km, a total frequency bandwidth that supports 336 traffic channels, and N = 7.

• If there are 32 total cells, – what geographic area is covered? – how many channels are there per cell?, and

• Repeat for a cell radius of 0.8 Km and 128 cells.

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The area of hexagon 35.1 2RA hexagon of radius 1.6Km has an area 6.65 km2.Total area covered = 6.65 km2 per cell x 32 cells= 213 Km2.

No. of channels per cell = 336/7 = 48 channels per cell

Total channel capacity = 48 channels per cell x 32 cells = 1536 channelsFor second fig same 213 Km2 is covered but Channel Capacity = 6144 channels

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The Micro Cell Zone Concept

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Repeaters for Range Extension

• Often a wireless operator needs to provide dedicated coverage for hard-to-reach areas, such as within building, or in valleys or tunnels.

• Radio re-transmitters, known as repeaters are often used to provide such range extension capabilities.

• In practice, directional antennas or distributed antenna system (DAS) are connected to the inputs or outputs of repeaters for localized spot coverage, particularly in tunnels or buildings.

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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[Rappa P-10]

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Principal Elements of a Cellular systems

• Mobile Telecommunications Switching Office (MTSO)– The MSC (Mobile Switching Centre ) and

MTSO are one and the same

• Base Transceiver Station (BTS)

• Public Telecommunications Switching Network

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Base Station (BS/BTS)

In the center of each cell there is BS that includes

• An antenna,• A controller,

– Processes call b/w the mobile unit (MU) and the rest of the network

• Number of transceivers, – For communicating on the channels assigned

to that cell.

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Cellular System Overview

MTSO

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MTSO

• One MTSO serving multiple BSs• Typically the link b/w MTSO and BS is by wire

line, although a wireless link is also possible• It connects call b/w MUs• It connects public telephone or

telecommunication network• It assigns the voice channel to each call, • performs handoffs and • monitors the call for billing information.

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Operation of Cellular SystemsChannels Type

Two types of channels b/w BS and MU

1. Control channels• To exchange information having to do with

setting up and maintaining calls and with establishing a relationship b/w MU and nearest BS

2. Traffic channels• Carry a voice or data connection b/w users

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http://www.awsolutions.net/servicesimages/basestation.jpg

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A Nortel Networks base station deployed for the network.

http://www.mobilecomms-technology.com/projects/sk-telecom/sk-telecom3.html

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Steps in an MTSO Controlled Call between Mobile Users

• Mobile unit initialization

• Mobile-originated call

• Paging

• Call accepted

• Ongoing call

• Handoff

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Mobile unit initialization

1. MU scans/selects the strongest setup control channel.

2. MU selects the BS3. Handshake takes place b/w MU and the MTSO through BS

4. Handshake is used to identify the user and to register its location

5. Handshake is repeated periodically to care for handoff

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Mobile-originated call

A MU originates a call by sending the number of the called unit on the pre-selected setup channel.

MU checks forward channel (from the BS) transmit on corresponding reverse channel (to BS)

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Paging

The MTSO sends a paging message to certain BSs depending on the called mobile unit number.

Each BS transmits the paging signal on its own assigned setup channel

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Call accepted

The called MU recognizes its number on the setup channel being monitored and responds to that BS.

BS sends the response to MTSO and circuit is setup

The MTSO selects an available traffic channel and notifies.

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Ongoing call

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Handoff

While moving from one channel to another

The traffic channel has to change to one assigned to the BS in the new cell.

The system makes this change without either interrupting the call or alerting the user.

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Additional Functions in an MTSO Controlled Call

1. Call blocking If all the traffic channels assigned to the

nearest BS are busy MU makes a preconfigured number of

repeated attempts. After a certain number of failed tries a busy

tone is returned to the user.

2. Call termination When one of two users hangs up, the MTSO

is informed and … two BSs are released

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Additional Functions in an MTSO Controlled Call

3. Call drop b/c of interference, weak signals BS can not maintain minimum required SNR for a certain

period of time The traffic channel to the user is dropped and the MTSO is

informed

4. Calls to/from fixed and remote mobile subscriber The MTSO connects to the PSTN. MTSO can set up a connection b/w MU and fixed subscriber. MTSO can connect to a remote MTSO via the telephone

network or via dedicated line and set up a connection

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[Rappa P-12]

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[Rappa P-14]

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• CAI: Common Air Interface• FVC: Forward Voice Channels• RVC: Reverse Voice Channels• FCC: Forward Control Channels• RCC: Reverse Control Channels• MIN: Mobile identification number, which is the

subscriber’s telephone number• MSC: Mobile Switching Center. It is sometime called a

mobile telephone switching office (MTSO)• NOTE: Control Channels are also called as Setup

channels because they are only involved in setting up a call and moving it to an unused voice channel.

[Rappa P-13-15]

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Figure 1.6: Timing diagram illustrating how a call to a mobile user initiated by a landline subscriber is established. [Rappa P-

16]

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Figure 1.7 Timing diagram illustrating how a call initiated by a mobile is established.

[Rappa P-17]

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Signal strength (SS)– Must be strong enough between base station and

mobile unit to maintain signal quality at the receiver– Must not be so strong as to create too much co-

channel interference with channels in another cell using the same frequency band

• Fading– Signal propagation effects may disrupt the signal and

cause errors

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Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

In designing a cellular layout

1. The desired maximum transmit power level at the BS and the MU

2. The typical height of the MU antenna

3. The available height of the BS antenna

These factors determine the size of Cell

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Channel (Path Loss) Model

• Propagation effects are dynamic and difficult to predict

• Find a model based on empirical data

• One of the most famous widely used models was developed by Okumura et al.

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Channel (Path Loss) Model

• Okumura Model was subsequently refined by Hata.

• Hata’s Model Empirical formulation– Takes into account a variety of environments

and conditions.

Models are applied to a given environment to develop guidelines for Cell Size

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On Whiteboard

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Example

• For a carrier frequency of 900 MHz, ht = 40m, hr = 5m, and d = 10 Km. Estimate the path loss for a medium size city.

• A(hr) = 8.95 dB

• LdB = 150.14 dB

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Handoff/ Handover

• Both Handoff and Handover have same meaning.– The term Handoff is used in U.S cellular

standards document– ITU documents use the term Handover.

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HandoffWhat is?

• It is the procedure for – changing the assignment of a MU from

one BS to another as the MU.

• Handled in different ways in different systems.

• Involves a number of factors

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HandoffInitiation

1. May be Network Initiated Decision is made solely by the network

measurements of received signals from the MU.

2. Mobile Assisted Handoff (MAHO) MU provides feedback to the network

concerning signals received at the MU.

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Handoff Performance Metrics

1. Call blocking probability – Probability of a new call being blocked, due

to heavy load on the BS traffic capacity.– MU is handed off based not on signal

quality but on traffic capacity.

2. Call dropping probability– probability that a call is terminated due to a

handoff

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Handoff Performance Metrics

3. Call completion probability– Probability that an admitted call is not dropped

before it terminates

4. Probability of unsuccessful handoff – Probability that a handoff is executed while the

reception conditions are inadequate– Example: Time lapse

5. Handoff blocking probability– Probability that a handoff cannot be successfully

completed– Example: Other BS busy

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Handoff Performance Metrics6. Handoff probability

– Probability that a handoff occurs before call termination

7. Rate of handoff– Number of handoffs per unit time

8. Interruption duration– Duration of time during a handoff in which a mobile is

not connected to either base station

9. Handoff delay– Distance the mobile moves from the point at which the

handoff should occur to the point at which it does occur

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Handoff Decision

• Principal parameter is SS.

• SS is measured from the MU

• BS averages signal over a moving window of time to remove the rapid fluctuations due to multi-path effects.

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Handoff strategies

These strategies are used to Determine Instant of Handoff

1. Relative SS

2. Relative SS with threshold

3. Relative SS with hysteresis

4. Relative SS with hysteresis and threshold

5. Prediction techniques

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Handoff decision as a function of handoff scheme

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Relative SS

• The MU is handed off from BS A to BS B when the Signal Strength (SS) at B first exceeds that at A.

• At L1, SS is adequate but declining– there is hand off.

• b/c SS fluctuates due to multi-path effects, even with power averaging SS again may increase handoff back to A.

• Problem: This may result in ping-pong effect.

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Choosing Threshold

• If high threshold Th1 is used system performs like Relative SS scheme.

• If low threshold Th3 is used, quite low as compared to the crossover SS (at L1) before handoff.– MU will move far in into the new cell– This reduces the quality of the communication link– It may result in a dropped call.

• A threshold should not be used alone– b/c its effectiveness depends on prior knowledge of

the crossover SS b/w current and candidate BSs.

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Relative SS with hysteresis (1)

• Handoff occurs only if the new BS is sufficiently stronger by a margin of H.

• Look at graph,

• After crossover point

• PB > PA

• At L3, PB - PA = H

• Handoff occurs at L3.

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Relative SS with hysteresis (2)

• This scheme prevents the ping-pong effect• Handoff mechanism has two states

1. While the MU is assigned to BS A, the mechanism will generate a handoff when the relative SS reaches or exceeds the H.

2. Once the MU is assigned to B, it remains so until the relative SS strength falls below –H, at which point is handed back to A.

• Disadvantage: First handoff may still be unnecessary if BS A still has sufficient SS.

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Relative SS with hysteresis and Threshold

• Handoff occurs only if 1. The current signal level drops below a

threshold, and

2. The target BS is stronger than the current one by a hysteresis margin H.

• In our example, handoff occurs at L3. if the threshold is either Th1 or Th2 and at L4 if the threshold is at Th3.

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Prediction Technique

• The handoff decision is based on – the expected future value of the received SS.

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Handoff priority

• Many handoff strategies prioritize handoff requests over call initiation requests – when allocating unused channels in a cell

site.

• Handoff must be performed successfully and infrequently as possible.

• Handoff must be imperceptible to the users.

[Rappa P-62-67]

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Proper signal level (1)

Signal Level Specification for Handoff

• Once a particular signal level is specified as the minimum usable signal for acceptable voice quality at the BS receiver– Normally taken as b/w -90 dBm and -100 dBm– a slightly stronger level is used as a threshold

at which a handoff is made.

[Rappa P-62-67]

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Proper signal level (2)

• The margin, given by

= Pr handoff – P r minimum usable

can not be too large– b/c unnecessary handoffs which burden the

MTSO may occur can not be too small

– There may be insufficient time to complete a handoff before a call is lost due to weak signal conditions.

[Rappa P-62-67]

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Example

[Rappa P-62-67]

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Possible reasons of NO handoff

• When there is an excessive delay by the MSC (MTSO) in assigning a handoff or

• when the threshold is set too small for the handoff time in the system.

• Excessive delays may occur during high traffic conditions due to computational loading at the MSC or

• due to the fact that no channels are available on any of the nearby BSs

[Rappa P-62-67]

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Dwell time

• The time over which a call may be maintained within a cell, without handoff, is called the dwell time.

• The dwell time, of a particular user is governed by a number of factors, including– Propagation– Interference– Distance between the subscriber and the BS– Other time varying effects.

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Implementations

• In first generation cellular systems, SS measurement are made by the BSs and supervised by the MSC.

• In today’s second generation systems, handoff decisions are mobile assisted (MAHO)

[Rappa P-62-67]

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First Generation - Analog

• Each BS constantly monitors the SS of all of its reverse voice channels (RVC) to determine the relative location of each MU with respect to BS tower.

• Locator Receiver (LR): in addition to measuring the RSSI of calls in progress within the cell, a spare receiver in each BS, called LR is used to scan and determine SS of MUs which are in neighbouring cells.

• LR is controlled by MSC• Based on the LR SS info from BS, the MSC

decides handoff.

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Second Generation

• Each MU measures the received power from surrounding BS and – continually reports the results of these

measurements to the serving BS.

• A handoff is initiated when – the power received from the BS of a

neighboring cell begins to exceed the power received from the current base station by a certain level or for a certain period of time.

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MAHO

• The MAHO method enables the call to be handed over b/w BSs at a much faster rate than in first generation analog systems– Since the handoff measurements are made by each

MU and

• The MSC no longer constantly monitors SS• MAHO is particularly suited for microcellular

environments – where handoffs are more frequent.

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Intersystem handoff

• If a mobile moves from one cellular system to a different cellular system controlled by a different MSC Intersystem handoff becomes necessary

• Many issues– Local call may become a long distance call– Compatibility between two MSCs before

handoff

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Managing Handoff (1)

Different systems have different policies and methods for managing handoff requests

• Some systems handle handoff request in the same way they handle originating calls.– In such systems, the probability that a handoff request

will not be served by a new BS is equal to the blocking probability of incoming calls.

– However, from the users point of view, having a call abruptly terminated while in the middle of a conversation is more annoying than being blocked occasionally on a new call attempt.

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Managing Handoff (2)

To improve the QoS as perceived by the users, various methods have been devised to prioritize handoff requests over call initiation requests when allocating voice channels.

1. Prioritizing Handoffsi. Guard Channel Conceptsii. Queuing of handoff requests

2. Practical Handoff Considerationsi. Umbrella Cell Approach solution to a problemii. Cell Dragging is a problem

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Guard Channel Concepts

• Channel Reservation: – Fraction of total available channels in a cell is

reserved exclusively for handoff requests

• Disadvantage: – Reduces the total carried traffic (CT) – as fewer channels are allocated for originating calls.

• Possible Solution:– Use of dynamic channel assignment strategies – Minimize the No. of required guard channels by

efficient demand based allocation– Provides efficient spectrum utilization

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Queuing of handoff requests (1)

Criteria:

• There must be finite time interval b/w – the time the RSS drops below the handoff

threshold and – the time the call is terminated due to

insufficient signal level.

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Queuing of handoff requests (2)

• It is one of the methods to decrease the probability of forced termination (PFT) of a call due to lack of available channels.

• There is a tradeoff b/w CT & PFT• Queuing does not guarantee zero probability of

forced termination– Since large delays will cause the RSS to drop below

the minimum required level to maintain communication and

– hence lead to forced termination

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Practical Handoff Considerations

During a call• High speed vehicles need more handoff • Pedestrians may never need a handoffFor micro-cells • MSC become burdened if high speed users are

constantly being passed b/w very small cells.Problem• Handling of high speed and low speed traffic

simultaneously while minimizing the handoff intervention from MSC

Solution:• Umbrella Cell approach

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Umbrella Cell approach

“Large” and “Small” cells are • Provided

– by using different antenna heights (often on the same building and towers) and

– different power levels and

• Co-located at a single locationProvides• large area coverage to high speed users while• small area coverage to users traveling at low

speeds.

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Umbrella Cell Approach

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Umbrella Cell Approach

This approach ensures that

i. the number of handoffs is minimized for high speed users and

ii. provides additional micro-cell channels for pedestrian users.

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Umbrella Cell Approach

Scenario:

A driver in a high speed car is attending a call on mobile telephone, present in a large cell enters in a micro cell. Discuss the responsibility of BS/MSC

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Dr. Abid Ali Minhas -- Slide No. 129

Umbrella Cell Approach

The speed of each user may be estimated by the BS or MSC by

• Evaluating how rapidly the short-term average signal strength on the RVC changes over time, OR

• More sophisticated algorithms may be used o evaluate and partition users.

• If a high speed user in the large umbrella cell is approaching the BS and its velocity is rapidly decreasing,

• the BS may decide to hand the user into the co-located micro-cell, without MSC intervention.

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Cell Dragging (1)

Problem of Cell Dragging• It occurs in an urban environment when there is

a LOS radio path b/w the subscriber and the BS.• As the user travels away from the BS at very

slow speed, the average SS does not decay rapidly.

• Even when the user has traveled well beyond the designed range of the cell, the RSS at the BS may be above the handoff threshold,– Thus a handoff may not be made

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Cell Dragging (2)

• This creates a potential interference and traffic management problem– Since the user has meanwhile traveled deep

within a neighboring cell.

Solution:

• Handoff threshold and radio coverage parameters must be adjusted carefully.

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Handoff Time

1. First generation- Analog Cellular Systems• 10 Seconds

– Requires that the value of be on the order of 6 dB to 12 dB

2. GSM• MAHO• 1or 2 Seconds, after decision is made

is usually on the order of 0 dB to 6 dB• Advantage: Faster handoff greater range of

options for handling high speed and low speed users

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Recent Trends in handoff

Two types

1. Hard handoff Channelized wireless systems that assign

different radio channels during a handoff

2. Soft handoff It is the ability to select b/w the

instantaneous RSS from a variety of BS.

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Soft handoff

Spread Spectrum mobiles (Code Division Multiple Access, CDMA) share the same channel in every cell.

By simultaneously evaluating the RSS from a single subscriber at several neighboring BSs, The MSC may actually decide which version of the

user’s signal is the best at any moment in time.

This technique exploits macroscopic space diversity provided by the different physical locations of the BS.

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Power Control

• Design issues making it desirable to include dynamic power control in a cellular system– Received power must be sufficiently above the

background noise for effective communication– Desirable to minimize power in the transmitted signal

from the mobile• Reduce co-channel interference, alleviate health concerns,

save battery power

– In Spread Spectrum systems using CDMA, it’s desirable to equalize the received power level from all mobile units at the BS

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Types of Power Control (1)

1. Closed-loop power control• Adjusts signal strength in reverse channel (MU

to BS) based on some metric of performance in that reverse channel, such as– Received signal power level– Received signal-to-noise ratio, or– Received bit error rate

• BS makes power adjustment decision and communicates to MU on control channel

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Types of Power Control (2)

• Closed loop power control is also used to adjust power in the forward channel.

• In this case MU provides information about received signal quality to the BS, which then adjusts transmitted power.

• GSM standard a TDMA standard defines, according to power output– Eight classes of BS channels and– Five classes of MU

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GSM Transmitter Classes

Adjustments in both directions are made using closed loop power control

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Types of Power Control (3)

2. Open-loop power control• Depends solely on mobile unit with no

feedback from BS used in some spread spectrum systems (SSS).

• In SSS, the BS continuously transmits an unmodulated signal known as a pilot.

• The pilot allows MU to acquire the timing of the forward (BS to mobile) CDMA channel.

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Types of Power Control (4)

• It can also be used for power control.

• The MU monitors the RSS of the pilot and sets the transmitted power in the reverse (mobile to BS) channel inversely proportional to it.

• Assumption: Forward and Reverse link RSS are correlated.

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Types of Power Control (5)

• Not as accurate as closed-loop, – but can react quicker to fluctuations in signal

strength– E.g when MU emerges from behind a large

building.

• This fast action is required in the reverse link of a CDMA systems where the sudden increase in RSS at the BS may suppress all other signals.

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Trunking Theory (1)

http://www.signalharbor.com/ttt/00jan/index.html

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Trunking Theory (2)

Trunked Radio Systems • share a small pool of frequencies among a large

number of users • The benefit of this technology to the agencies is

that – many more channels are available for specialized

traffic than there are frequencies. – Example, the Fort Worth trunked system has only 20

frequencies, but services over 400 channels.

http://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/Trunking

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Trunking Theory (3)

• Trunking is the aggregation of multiple user circuits into a single channel.

• The aggregation is achieved using some form of multiplexing.

• Trunking theory was developed by Agner Krarup Erlang, – Erlang based his studies of the statistical nature of the arrival

and the length of calls.

• The Erlang B formula allows for the calculation of the number of circuits required in a trunk based on – the Grade of Service (GoS) and – the amount of traffic in Erlangs the trunk needs cater for.

http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Trunking

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Key Definitions for Trunked Radio

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Principles of Cellular Networks

• Cellular Network Organization– Frequency Reuse– Increasing Capacity

• Operation of Cellular Systems

• Mobile Radio Propagation Effects

• Handoff

• Power Control

• Traffic Engineering

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Traffic Engineering

• The Danish mathematician Agner Krarup Erlang is the founder of teletraffic engineering.

• Ideally, available channels would equal number of subscribers active at one time

• In practice, not feasible to have capacity handle all possible load

• For N simultaneous user capacity and L subscribers– L < N – nonblocking system– L > N – blocking system

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Blocking System Performance Questions

• Probability that call request is blocked? OR– What capacity is needed to achieve a certain

upper bound on probability of blocking?

• If blocked calls are queued, what is the average delay? OR– What capacity is needed to achieve a certain

average delay?

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Traffic Intensity (1)

• The basic measure of traffic intensity is A.

• It is measured in a dimensionless unit, the erlang

= mean rate of calls attempted per unit time• h = mean holding time per successful call• A = average number of calls arriving during

average holding period, for normalized

hA

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Traffic Intensity (2)

Cell as a Multiserver Queuing System:• No. of servers equal to channel capacity, N.• The average service time at a server is h.• A basic relationship in a multiserver queue is

h = N• Where is server utilization, or the fraction of

time that a server is busy.• Note: A = N, is considered as a measure of the

average number of channels required.

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Traffic Intensity (3)

Example:

• What should be capacity of the cell to meet average demand, for average calling rate of 20 calls per minute and average holding time 3 minutes?

• To meet the fluctuations, what do you suggest about the capacity of the cell?

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Traffic Intensity (4)

Example:

• A cell having 10 channels is busy over a period of one hour as shown in the figure. Calculate mean number of channels busy for this time.

faisal
Lambda = 97/60, h = 294/97, A=4.9 ErlangsSo 4.9 Channels are engaged
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Traffic Modeling (1)

• Upper limit of traffic intensity?

• ITU-T “mean busy hour traffic”– Average of the busy-hour-traffic on the 30

busiest day

• A is measure of busy-hour-traffic

• A is input to traffic model

• Traffic model answers the questions posed.

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Traffic Modeling (2)

• Two key factors/elements that determines the nature of traffic model

i. The manner in which blocked calls are handled

ii. Then number of traffic sources.

See detail on next slide

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Traffic Modeling (3)

i. Manner in which blocked calls are handled– Lost calls delayed (LCD) – blocked calls put in a

queue awaiting a free channel– Blocked calls rejected and dropped

• Lost calls cleared (LCC) – user waits before another attempt

• Lost calls held (LCH) – user repeatedly attempts calling

For Cellular systems, the LCC model is generally used most accurate

ii. Number of traffic sources– Whether number of users is assumed to be finite or

infinite

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Traffic Modeling (4)Erlang B

• Infinite Source, LCC Model:• The key parameter is the probability of loss, or grade of Service (GoS).

• GoS = 0.01 means that, during a busy hour, the probability that an attempted call is blocked is 0.01

• Values in the range 0.01 to 0.001 are generally considered quite good.

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Traffic Modeling (5)Erlang B

• Following equation is known as Erlang B.

• P = Probability of blocking (grade of service)• A = Offered traffic, erlangs• N = Number of servers

N

x

x

N

x

AN

A

P

0 !

!

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Traffic Modeling (6)

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Traffic Modeling (7)

Two important points can be deduced from the table:

1. A larger-capacity system is more efficient than a smaller-capacity one for a given grade of service.

2. A larger-capacity system is more susceptible (open) to an increase in traffic.

Illustrations of these points on next slides

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Traffic Modeling (8)

Illustrations:1. First point• Consider two cells,

– each with a capacity of 10 channels– Joint capacity of 20 channels– Look in column GoS=0.002– Traffic intensity for 10 channels = 3.43– Traffic intensity for 20 channels = 6.86

• For a single cell of 20 channels– Traffic intensity = 10.07

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Traffic Modeling (9)

2. Second point• Consider a single cell of 10 channels,

– Look in column GoS=0.002– Traffic intensity/ Load = 3.43 Erlangs– 30% increase in the traffic reduces the GoS to 0.01

• Consider a single cell of 70 channels,– Look in column GoS=0.002– Traffic intensity/ Load = 51.0 Erlangs– Only 10% increase in the traffic reduces the GoS

from 0.002 to 0.01

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Traffic Modeling (10)

Effect of Handoff

.