USRE45757E1 - Cellular wireless internet access system using spread spectrum and internet protocol - Google Patents
Cellular wireless internet access system using spread spectrum and internet protocol Download PDFInfo
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- USRE45757E1 USRE45757E1 US11/510,861 US51086106A USRE45757E US RE45757 E1 USRE45757 E1 US RE45757E1 US 51086106 A US51086106 A US 51086106A US RE45757 E USRE45757 E US RE45757E
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L63/00—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security
- H04L63/08—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security for authentication of entities
- H04L63/083—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security for authentication of entities using passwords
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L63/00—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security
- H04L63/08—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security for authentication of entities
- H04L63/0853—Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security for authentication of entities using an additional device, e.g. smartcard, SIM or a different communication terminal
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L67/00—Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
- H04L67/14—Session management
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L69/00—Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
- H04L69/30—Definitions, standards or architectural aspects of layered protocol stacks
- H04L69/32—Architecture of open systems interconnection [OSI] 7-layer type protocol stacks, e.g. the interfaces between the data link level and the physical level
- H04L69/322—Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions
- H04L69/329—Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions in the application layer [OSI layer 7]
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W12/00—Security arrangements; Authentication; Protecting privacy or anonymity
- H04W12/06—Authentication
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W8/00—Network data management
- H04W8/26—Network addressing or numbering for mobility support
- H04W8/265—Network addressing or numbering for mobility support for initial activation of new user
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W84/00—Network topologies
- H04W84/02—Hierarchically pre-organised networks, e.g. paging networks, cellular networks, WLAN [Wireless Local Area Network] or WLL [Wireless Local Loop]
- H04W84/04—Large scale networks; Deep hierarchical networks
- H04W84/042—Public Land Mobile systems, e.g. cellular systems
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10S—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10S370/00—Multiplex communications
- Y10S370/908—Local area network
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10S—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10S370/00—Multiplex communications
- Y10S370/912—Packet communications
- Y10S370/913—Wireless or radio
Definitions
- the present invention is directed to a Cellular Wireless Internet Access System using spread spectrum and Internet Protocol (IP) and more specifically to a system which typically operates in the 2.5 to 2.68 GigaHertz (GHz) frequency band in the U.S.A., but which is also capable of operating in other bands in the U.S.A. or other countries.
- IP Internet Protocol
- the object is to provide an improved Cellular Wireless Internet Access System that meets the above requirements. Specifically, the object is to provide the optimum combination of high data rate, cell size, ubiquitous in-building coverage, regulatory compliance, interference avoidance and management, and overall quality of service.
- a Cellular Wireless Internet Access System comprising a plurality of cellular base stations located at low ground level for transmitting and receiving in a predetermined frequency band.
- Such frequency band has interference sources and recipients in other license areas, the signals from or to low ground level base stations causing or suffering the interference are attenuated by foliage, building penetration, building clutter and terrain losses.
- a plurality of portable subscriber terminals each having a directly-attached antenna communicates in the frequency band with a nearby cellular base station.
- a substantial proportion of the plurality of portable subscriber terminals are located in buildings.
- the cellular base stations have low-to-ground level mounting for reduced environmental impact but a high enough system gain and a geographically frequent location in close proximity to any one of the portable subscriber terminals to overcome the above mentioned losses and both transmit and receive to and from subscriber terminals in the buildings.
- CDMA Code-Division-Multiple-Access
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of an overview of the Cellular Wireless Internet Access System of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a base station.
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a subscriber terminal or user equipment.
- FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a core portion of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 5 is an illustration of interference between a Cellular Wireless Internet Access System service area and an adjoining service area of another operator as specified by the Federal Communications Commission.
- FIG. 6 is an illustration of interference avoidance by the specific mounting of base stations and is based on FIG. 5 .
- FIG. 7 is a prior art cellular coverage pattern.
- FIG. 8 is a variation of FIG. 5 illustrating interference reduction a coverage pattern achieved using directional antennas.
- FIG. 9 is a frequency utilization diagram.
- FIG. 10 is a multiple bearer transmission diagram.
- FIG. 11 is a schematic illustrating backhaul transmission.
- FIG. 12 is a schematic illustrating backhaul transmission of another type.
- FIG. 13 is a diagram showing core network functions.
- FIG. 14 is a block diagram showing service tiering.
- FIG. 15 is a timing diagram and an illustration of Internet packets showing a time division duplex feature of the present invention.
- FIG. 16 is a flowchart of channel measurement used in transmission rate adaption.
- FIG. 17 is a diagram showing delay spread caused by multipath signals
- FIG. 18 is a diagram showing successive interference cancellation
- the wireless aspects of the cellular Wireless Internet Access System of the present invention is broadly based on a wideband code division multiple access (W-CDMA) system which is derived from European third-generation (3G) cellular wireless standards and also known by the acronyms UMTS for Universal Mobile Telephone Service and UTRAN for Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network but which has enhancements.
- W-CDMA wideband code division multiple access
- 3G European third-generation
- UMTS Universal Mobile Telephone Service
- UTRAN Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network
- the present cellular wireless Internet access system has been specifically designed to meet the special and particular requirements of the selected frequency band (especially for the United States) which has the large amount of available spectrum that is required for high speed mass market Internet access is at 2.5-2.68 GHz.
- This band is known as the “MMDS” (for Multi-channel Multi-point Distribution Service) and “ITFS” (for Instructional Television Fixed Service) bands (hereinafter referred to collectively as “MMDS”).
- MMDS Multi-channel Multi-point Distribution Service
- ITFS Instructional Television Fixed Service
- FCC Federal Communications Commission
- the present invention will operate in this MMDS frequency band using a technology optimized for packet data based on a modified version of the Time-Division-Duplex (TDD) version of the UMTS UTRAN air interface standard.
- TDD Time-Division-Duplex
- the present system is wireless telecommunications access technology providing low cost, high quality, and high speed Internet services to residential and small to medium business customers with net packet data rates up to 6 Mbps, the gross burst data rate being up to 30.72 Mbps of coded data.
- the system can operate on any discrete channel of between 6 MHz and 24 MHz (including necessary guard band) anywhere in the MMDS band in contrast to the prior art of Frequency-Division-Duplex that requires paired channels separated by a predetermined guard band.
- the system operates in a non-line-of-site multipath radio environment and provides indoor coverage.
- the subscriber equipment is user installable.
- the system supports user portability and roaming in its total coverage area.
- the system provides “tiering” of service that allow subscribers to receive different data rate throughput based on the type of service they have subscribed to. For example, the definition of the lowest tier of service may provide an equivalent throughput to a dedicated channel of 384 kbps per second whilst the highest tier of service may be a 1536 kbps per second equivalent.
- End-to-end connectivity is built on the TCP/IP protocol suite.
- User data is carried over the radio network using the PPP protocol and tunneled to an ISP (for Internet Service Provider) using the Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP).
- ISP Internet Service Provider
- L2TP Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol
- the system has the capacity to serve a large number of subscribers in urban and suburban areas, for example more than 1000 subscribers per square kilometer.
- a network of base stations 11 provides coverage of the target market.
- the base station is also referred to as “NODE B” which is nomenclature from the UMTS standard.
- Each low-mounted base station 11 with an omni directional antenna 13 provides a radius of coverage of approximately 0.5 miles.
- three base stations 11 may be configured in a sectored coverage pattern with directional antennas to serve a 1 to 1.5 mile radius. The radius of coverage may be further increased depending on the radio environment and the height of the base station antenna.
- Located within the base station coverage configuration are hundreds of subscriber terminals 17 also designated user equipment (UE in UMTS nomenclature).
- the subscriber terminal 17 has an attached omni directional antenna 12 (suitable for in-building use) which communicates via a code division multiple access (CDMA) radio link 18 to the antenna 13 of base station 11 .
- the subscriber terminal 17 typically connects to the user's personal computer via standard computer interfaces. It generally requires no external antenna and is user installable.
- Base stations 11 are assigned to a particular network controller 10 by three types of connections, using another technology such as point to point radio, direct landline etc. 21 , a CDMA radio link 22 , or a peer-to-peer routing link 23 using other NODE B type radio stations 11 . Peer-to-peer routing will be discussed below.
- the subscriber terminal may also provide a voice over IP service (VOIP), a digitized packetized voice service for provision of local telephone access service.
- VOIP voice over IP service
- network controller 10 controls user traffic to the Internet Service Providers (ISP) using the layer 2 tunneling protocol (L2TP) on top of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) and Internet Protocol (IP) and/or Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) over a high speed fiber or microwave link 25 .
- ISP Internet Service Providers
- L2TP layer 2 tunneling protocol
- UDP User Datagram Protocol
- IP Internet Protocol
- ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode
- This is aggregated and routed over a private ATM network via an Internet router 24 .
- the microwave radio or land-line link 26 is then connected to the Internet/intranet global communication network 27 .
- Network controller 10 as illustrated in FIG. 1 has three units designated RNC (Radio Network Controller) 14 , SGSN (Serving General Packet Radio Service Node) 15 and the Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol Access (LAC) 16 which tunnels traffic through the Internet to the Internet Service Provider (ISP) or other destination. All of these are illustrated in FIG. 4 in greater detail. Also, as illustrated in FIG. 4 , there are macro-diversity links supporting a diversity transmission scheme (not fully discussed) which allow a subscriber in the overlap area of two or more base stations using the same channel (who would otherwise suffer excessive interference) to receive simultaneously from the two base stations and likewise to transmit to two base stations simultaneously combating the detrimental effect of interference and radio path fading in both links.
- RNC Radio Network Controller
- SGSN Serving General Packet Radio Service Node
- LAC Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol Access
- FIG. 4 there are macro-diversity links supporting a diversity transmission scheme (not fully discussed) which allow a subscriber in the overlap area of two or more base stations using the same channel (who
- the RNC 14 controls and allocates the radio network resources and provides reliable delivery of user traffic between the base station and subscriber terminal, the SGSN 15 provides session control, and lastly, LAC 16 provides the gateway functionality to the Internet service provider and to the registration, location and authentication registers using a layer 2 tunneling protocol.
- In-building operation without an external antenna is achieved through the use of the base stations located typically within 1 to 1.5 miles of each subscriber terminal location to allow a signal margin for building penetration signal loss and other losses; in other words, the base stations have a high enough system gain, mounting at building roof top level (on utility poles) and a geographically frequent location in proximity to a selected portable subscriber terminal to provide a high enough power to overcome building penetration attenuation of the signal in both directions to and from subscriber terminals in the building.
- the implementation of spread spectrum wideband CDMA transmission technology in the present system mitigates the detrimental effect of multiple reflected signals or multipaths.
- Cellular base stations 11 are designed so that they can be mounted on utility poles or on buildings thus avoiding zoning/environmental approvals and leasing delays typically associated with traditional cellular telephone towers. Such mounting is enabled by the relatively low power of the base stations 11 which is made possible by the use of spread spectrum transmission which inherently allows low power operation but with a high data rate and low error rate, the cellular structure where the base stations are in close proximity to subscriber terminals, and the use of peer-to-peer routing through other cellular base stations to the network controller to facilitate the deployment and interconnection of base stations.
- the subscriber terminal 17 functions to provide a connection between the subscriber's computer(s) and also any voice-over-IP (VoIP) connection and the network controller, which then connects to the Internet or Intranets as desired.
- VoIP voice-over-IP
- each cellular base station 11 provides a radio connection to multiple subscriber terminals within its coverage area and the connection to the network controller 10 .
- a typical NODE B base station 11 is illustrated in FIG. 2 and conforms in part to UTRAN/UMTS standards.
- a transmit/receive switch 31 is connected both to a subscriber access antenna 18 , and also the backhaul directional antenna 22 as illustrated in FIG. 1 .
- the subscriber access diversity receive antenna 32 is a specialized antenna configuration to improve system performance.
- the antenna inputs are amplified in the RF stage 33 , demodulated at 34 or modulated as the case may be and converted from digital to analog, or vice versa.
- the processor units 37 and 38 are digitally processed by the processor units 37 and 38 and then connected to the network controller 10 and then to router 24 on line 25 as illustrated in FIG. 1 and eventually the Internet.
- the various interfaces illustrated at 39 use industry standard formats.
- FIG. 3 illustrates the subscriber terminal user equipment 17 where the antenna 12 communicates with a base station 11 and these communications are processed through transmit and receive radio frequency stages 41 , modulator, demodulator stages 42 , digital to analog and analog to digital converters 33 , digital processing unit 44 and finally the processor 46 which interfaces at 47 with various computer user interfaces.
- the user equipment comply with the standards discussed above.
- FIG. 5 illustrates United States Federal Communication's Commission's interference rules for an MMDS licensee who must comply with FCC co-channel and adjacent channel interference rules in order to protect other licensees on adjacent or nearby channels.
- the MMDS licensee is usually allocated individual channel frequencies on a per-city basis within a 35-mile radius service area around that city.
- large cells are used with a radius up to 35 miles with a base station mounted on a high tower or hilltop.
- the present system is designed to operate with smaller cells of particularly 0.5 to approximately 1.5 miles radius in a normal urban or suburban environment.
- FIG. 5 relates to interference between the cellular service areas designated by the circle 51 and an adjoining service area by another operator designated by the circle 52 which, as illustrated, has a 35 mile radius around the transmit site 53 .
- the 2.5-2.68 GHz frequency band at least in the United States already has interfering or other remote interference sources and/or recipients, for example, 53 .
- both subscriber terminals 17 and base stations 11 must have a low enough power so as not to interfere with the adjoining service area 52 .
- such possibly interfering transmissions must obey the following three rules:
- the invention complies with the above described and other FCC requirements.
- the techniques used by the invention to comply with these FCC regulations (and to combat interference) include the following.
- this illustrates the reduction of signal due to foliage penetration losses 61 , that is, trees, etc., building penetration losses 65 , building clutter losses 62 and terrain losses 63 .
- directional antennas are used at cellular base stations all pointing in directions away from the adjacent service area but with an overlapping pattern.
- FIG. 7 in the prior art the typical coverage pattern of a network of sectored cell sites was a repetitive “cloverleaf” pattern. If this pattern were to be applied to the situation in the MMDS bands (as per FIG. 5 ), some directional sector antennas would be pointing towards adjacent/nearby license areas and causing/suffering interference as a result.
- the present system provides coverage of the target market 51 using an overlapping pattern of “unidirectional teardrop” antenna patterns 81 of multiple base stations. The unidirectional teardrop patterns are oriented away from the source/recipient of interference in the adjacent license area 52 . This technique may also be used to reduce interference between adjacent/nearby cells operating on the same frequency.
- this facilitates compliance with the FCC regulations to thus avoid the requirement that exact location of users be recorded and notified, while still providing effective coverage allowing for building penetration, clutter, foliage and other attenuation of the signal. This also removes the need for professional installation of subscriber equipment and avoids the requirement that directional antennas be used.
- the present system is designed to operate with varying channel bandwidths which may vary for example from 6 MHz, to 12 MHz to 18 MHz and to 24 MHz Due to the proportionate increase in power permitted when using the broader bandwidth channels (2 times, 3 times and 4 times with respect to the 6 MHz bandwidth system) the invention complies with FCC regulations in all cases.
- a subscriber terminal 17 is illustrated as being contained within the building 64 .
- the base stations 11 are designed to be mounted on utility poles or buildings that are within the building and foliage clutter. Thus, they may be mounted in small, unobtrusive enclosures with integral omni-directional or directional antennas. Standard household power is obtained from the utility pole or building either on a metered or unmetered basis depending on utility requirements. This is facilitated by Node B low power consumption as a result of the use of spread spectrum transmission techniques.
- Inference avoidance is also provided, if necessary, by dynamic power control 50 .
- the transmit power levels of both base stations 11 and subscriber terminals 17 may be set to the minimum level required to maintain viable communication.
- the total amount of spectrum available to an operator of wireless Internet access services in the MMDS band may be limited to only a few 6 MHz channels (for example 4 channels).
- the technology must therefore be capable of providing high data and subscriber capacity in such a small amount of spectrum.
- an MMDS licensee does not necessarily have a large contiguous block of channels.
- MMDS channels are allocated to licensees as individual channels of 6 MHz bandwidth, or blocks of several non-contiguous channels, usually spaced two channels apart (every second channel).
- an MMDS licensee does not necessarily have “paired” blocks of frequency separated by a predetermined and fixed spacing, with one block for transmit (such as from a base station) and one block for receive. Therefore, an operator providing high-speed wireless Internet access services in the MMDS bands may need to operate in both a small total amount of spectrum, and with a small number of 6 MHz channels (contiguous or non-contiguous).
- the present technology is designed to allow such operation using the following techniques:
- coverage radius of a cell
- data rates usually have to be traded off against one another.
- the present system is required to provide data rates of “T1” speeds (1.5 Mbps) and up to 6 Mbps, and to provide coverage up to a maximum of 21 miles from a base station.
- a major factor in the tradeoff is the “delay spread” (see FIG. 17 ) which increases with the distance of the subscriber from the base station when operating in the multipath signal environment that is characteristic of a radio system that is designed for in-building coverage and simple user installability. If the delay spread time is approximately greater than a tenth of the time period of each symbol of transmitted information, then corruption of the transmission occurs.
- the present system solves this problem by:
- the present system is required to provide maximum cell coverage (up to 1.5 miles radius in a typical suburban environment) taking into account a non line-of-sight radio path and building penetration to a indoor subscriber terminal with a directly-attached omni-directional antenna, and moreover to meet these requirements with the same data transmission rates in both the downlink and uplink directions.
- the spreading codes that are transmitted in the downlink are orthogonal, that is, the pattern of each code is selected such that their interference relative to each other is zero. This is then degraded by multipath and implementation issues.
- the codes utilized in the uplink tend to be uncorrelated rather than orthogonal, that is they appear as interference or noise to other users. This results in reduced capacity on the uplink and reduction in uplink cell radius as the cell is loaded, and in therefore precludes equal uplink and downlink data transmission rates for the same cell radius.
- Successive Interference Cancellation is used in the Base Station receiver to improve the performance of the uplink such that the same data rates can be supported as in the downlink for the same cell radius and equivalent other factors.
- SIC reduces the effect of interference between non-orthogonal codes, due to independent time offsets, in the uplink and as such can be viewed as having the same effect as that of orthogonal codes in the downlink.
- the receiver 13 receives all the simultaneously transmitted user codes 1, 2 and 3 etc.
- the received codes are all ranked from highest to lowest with respect to Signal to Interference (SIR).
- SIR Signal to Interference
- the Rake processing unit 18 - 1 selects the code with the highest SIR and processes that code.
- rake processed Code 1 is regenerated in the regeneration unit 18 - 3 , the output is now equivalent to what was received in code 1 only, prior to rake processing.
- the incoming signal comprising all codes is also delayed in the delay unit 18 - 2 , and the regenerated code 1 is then subtracted from the delayed input at the adder 184 producing an output to code 2's rake processor that does not include code 1, therefore the interference from code 1 with respect to code 2 has been cancelled.
- This process is repeated for each code successively resulting in the full cancellation of own cell interference to the last code in the process. Because the codes were ranked with respect to SIR this process guarantees that the codes with the lowest SIR benefit the most from SIC.
- the present system provides in-building coverage and high capacity simultaneously by:
- Backhaul is a term in the wireless and cellular telephone art whereby voice or data that is transmitted from the base station to/from the central office switch or core network equipment, which is normally carried by a line-of-sight microwave radio or landline link. And then of course the core network equipment must in turn transmit this information to the public switched telephone network, or to the Internet or Intranets in the context of the present system.
- Such backhaul is a major component of system cost, especially as the volume of data is increased in a high speed Internet access system.
- FIGS. 11 and 12 illustrate two different techniques of backhaul transmission, both of which use a type of routing through adjacent base stations finally to one of the base stations locations which incorporates core network functions and provides access to the Internet. These techniques reduce the cost of backhaul and facilitate rapid deployment.
- FIG. 11 illustrates a system where each cell site designated A, B and C has both a base station radio 11 - 1 dedicated to a subscriber access network 11 - 2 (that is, communication with a user or subscriber terminal) and a separate backhaul radio 11 - 5 with a directional antenna with a path being indicated as 11 - 4 to a similar backhaul radio, for example from cell site A to cell site B.
- the backhaul radios 11 - 5 include the associated directional antennas, 11 - 6 .
- FIG. 11 illustrates a system where each cell site designated A, B and C has both a base station radio 11 - 1 dedicated to a subscriber access network 11 - 2 (that is, communication with a user or subscriber terminal) and a separate backhaul radio 11 - 5 with a directional antenna with a path being indicated as 11 - 4 to a similar backhaul radio, for example from cell site A to cell site B.
- the backhaul radios 11 - 5 include the associated directional antenna
- cell site A for its backhaul transmits and receives to cell site C via the intermediate station cell site B.
- Cell site C connects the core network functions and thence to the Internet. Line of sight is not required for the backhaul links.
- the backhaul transmission operates in the same 2.5-2.68 GHz band but on a different channel frequency 11 - 4 as compared to the subscriber access network. Thus, additional radio spectrum outside of the normal MMDS band is not required.
- the links 11 - 4 may be operated at a higher bearer data rate due to the superior radio channel conditions including reduced delay spread and greater signal strength created by the use of directional antennas which allows the use of a lower spreading factor or channel coding, resulting in, for example, twice the throughput bit rate compared to the subscriber access network.
- FIG. 12 illustrates peer-to-peer backhaul routing, for example, from cell site A to adjacent cell site B, to cell site C which connects to the core network functions and thence to the Internet, with the use of a common base station radio transmitter and receiver. That is the same radio resource at a base station is used for both subscriber access and peer-to-peer backhaul.
- the allocation of resources as shown by radio frame diagram 12 - 1 is by a time division method, which allocates radio frames in the time domain on the radio resource between the subscriber access using the omni directional antenna 83 and the backhaul using the directional antenna 84 .
- cell site A may transmit and receive traffic with its subscribers in the uplink and downlink radio frames T 1 and T 2 using the omnidirectional antenna and in radio frames T 3 and T 4 it switches to the directional antenna 84 aimed toward cell site B (and vice versa) to transmit and receive backhaul traffic with cell site B using the backhaul uplink and downlink radio frames.
- An identical process occurs between cell site B and cell site C.
- Cellular wireless systems normally consist of a number of base stations connected to a centralized “core network” typically consisting of switches, base station controllers and related functions, analogous to a telephone company “central office”. The negative consequences of this are:
- the present system avoids these problems by the following techniques:
- a “Core Network Unit” (network controller) 10 is associated with a cluster of up to 3 base stations. These base stations may be either at 3 separate cell sites or 3 sectors of a single sectored cell site.
- an ATM (asynchronous transfer mode) network connection is provided between core network functions controlling base stations with overlapping coverage 10 rather than via the Internet to ensure a constant latency (delay) in the transfer of time critical macro-diversity data which has been discussed briefly above.
- a service tier is defined as a rate in kilobits per second (kbps) approximately equivalent to a dedicated channel of the same speed, as perceived by the typical Internet user. For example, a 384 kbps tier (provided via a shared packet data channel of 1536 kbps) is perceived by the Internet user to be similar in speed to a dedicated channel of 384 kbps.
- the approach is based on the difference between peak data rates (the actual speed of packet data transmission) and average data rates over a period of time.
- a typical Internet user perceives the average data rate over a period of time. For example, a typical Internet user (while engaged for example in Web browsing) is only sending or receiving data for 10% of the time. If that user is allocated 10% of the time of a 1536 kbps channel, he will perceive a data rate of approximately 1536 kbps. However, if he is allocated 5% of the time on the same channel, he will perceive a rate of half the channels speed, or 768 kbps. Tiering is thus achieved by the percentage of the time allocated on the channel to each user according to his tier of service.
- the invention provides tiering by prioritization of packets according to the defined tier of service of the sending/receiving customer in the media access control protocol operating between the radio network controller 14 and the subscriber terminal 17 via the base station 11 .
- the radio network controller 14 routinely sends a polling request message to all of the user equipment.
- the logical channels used to transmit this information are derived from a benefit obtained from Wideband CDMA where transmission of multiple logical data channels can operate simultaneously on the same radio channel using different spreading codes.
- the user equipment When the user equipment sees the Polling Request Message given that it has traffic queued to send, it will respond with a the polling response message with, firstly, the fact that it has information to send and, secondly, with how much data it wishes to send. That is received by the RNC, by its scheduler.
- the scheduler receives these requests from all of the user equipment and the role of the scheduler is to allocate time on a traffic channels via time slots in accordance with the amount of data each user equipment has to send and also in accordance with the tier priority assigned to that subscriber's user equipment. Additionally, its tier of service, providing further accuracy to the prioritization scheme, determines the polling frequency of each subscriber terminal.
- the scheduler operates as follows for inbound traffic from subscriber terminals 17 to the Internet 27 via the base station 11 and core network functions 10 :
- the request from user equipment from the subscribers with the highest tiers of service, for example, tier 8 will get priority so the request will go towards the front of the scheduler queue.
- Another factor taken into account in the scheduler is how long a request from a user's equipment has been waiting to be serviced.
- the scheduler After the scheduler has determined the schedule, it sends out information in an allocation message to the user equipment which tells each of them what time slots on the traffic channels they are being assigned to transmit their information and the user equipment on receiving it sends its traffic on the allotted time slot.
- outbound traffic from the Internet 27 to the subscriber terminal 17 is queued for transmission in the radio network controller 4 .
- the downlink scheduler in the radio network controller 14 prioritizes traffic in its packet queue for transmission in accordance with the tier of service of the destination subscriber terminal 17 , the amount of data and the time a packet has been waiting in the queue.
- An allocation message is sent to the user equipment by the scheduler in the radio network controller 14 to indicate the allocation of timeslots on the downlink.
- the overall purpose of the tiering is that with merely one radio resource at the base station and one channel in each direction which has a maximum speed of for example 3 Mbps, a tier 2 subscriber for example may easily be accommodated who has a 384 kbps service. However, data is actually being sent and received to that subscriber at the full speed of 3 Mbps which is the actual net burst rate that is being transmitted. But by allocating only a limited proportion of the time on the channel, that subscriber has the appearance of the average speed of approximately 384 kbps.
- the present system uses “enhanced time-division duplex (TDD) to solve these problems:
- the first level of time division (“T”) is between radio frames 115 - 1 .
- Frames are allocated either to subscriber access (base station to UE) 115 - 2 or to peer-to-peer backhaul between base stations 115 - 3 .
- a higher transmission rate 115 - 5 is used on radio frames allocated to backhaul, allowing each backhaul radio frame to carry the volume of traffic to/from two consecutive subscriber access radio frames.
- the second level of time division is within each radio frame 115 - 4 , which is divided into 15 timeslots. Timeslots 0 and 1 are reserved for common control/signaling purposes. The remaining 13 timeslots can be allocated to uplink and downlink traffic on any ratio. For example, for typical asymmetric Web browsing traffic the ratio could be 3 slots uplink and 11 slots downlink. The ratio can be changed over time to reflect changing traffic patterns.
- the data rate transmitted in a digital cellular wireless system is determined by the worst case position of a subscriber in the coverage area of a cell and other worst case radio channel parameters.
- subscribers close in to the base station typically around 30%-50% of subscribers would be able to transmit and receive at a higher data rate if the system could determine the channel conditions to and from each subscriber unit and set transmission speeds accordingly.
- the present system solves this problem by allowing the transmission rate to be selected for each subscriber unit according to the channel conditions applicable to such subscriber unit both in the uplink and downlink directions.
- This technique is called rate adaption, and is made possible by the use of direct sequence spread spectrum transmission and the use of time-division-duplex.
- the usable spreading factor for the radio path to and from the base station 11 to each subscriber terminal 17 is determined by the delay spread on the signal caused by multipath propagation 17 - 1 resulting from the combination of a direct path signal 17 - 2 and indirect path signals 17 - 3 at the receiver and by the ratio of the wanted signal at the receiver to the combined noise 17 - 4 and interference 17 - 5 present.
- the multipath and other characteristics of the radio channel in both the uplink (subscriber terminal to base station) and downlink (base station to subscriber terminal) are identical, allowing the base station to measure the channel characteristics at its receiver and set the transmission data rates for both uplink and downlink transmissions.
- the base station measures excess delay spread caused by multipath and reports this information to the radio network controller which sets the spreading factor and therefore the user data rate to be used on subsequent transmissions in both the uplink and downlink directions according to the relationship between the excess delay spread time and the symbol period of each transmitted bit of data For example, if the excess delay is below a set threshold value a spreading factor of 8 is set for that particular user equipment resulting in twice the transmitted bit rate, otherwise a spreading factor of 16 is indicated.
- the base station also measures the ratio of wanted signal to noise plus interference and reports the resulting signal to interference figure (S/I) to the radio network controller which compares this with a predetermined threshold. If the ratio is below the threshold and a spreading factor of 8 is indicated by excess delay measurement as described above, the spreading factor will be increased to 16 and the user data rate reduced according to permit more reliable communication.
- S/I signal to interference figure
- the radio network controller signals the spreading factor determined by such measurement in respect to a particular subscriber terminal to both the base station and that subscriber terminal, which spreading factor is then used for subsequent transmissions to and from such subscriber terminal until such time as the radio network controller determines new parameters.
Abstract
Description
-
- 1. Modification for operation in the MMDS Band and compliance with the FCC regulations (Frequency, bandwidths and radio transmission requirements).
- 2. Optimization of the UTRAN protocols (user polling and allocation) and bearer channel improvements to efficiently support packet data.
- 3. Modifications to the UTRAN air interface to support higher data rates (up to 6 Mbps) to subscriber equipment with antennas mounted inside buildings and cell sizes larger than 1.5 miles in radius.
- 1. Aggregate signal level no greater than the −65 dB relative to “reference level” on a co-channel (same channel as an adjoining service area). The “reference Level” is a field strength level determined by the level of signal transmitted by the operator in the adjoining area when measured at the 35 mile boundary.
- 2. Aggregate signal level no greater than 0 dB relative to the wanted signal level on an adjacent channel (channel adjacent in frequency to that used by another licensee).
- 3. Absolute aggregate signal level no greater than −73 dBW/m2 at the boundary of an adjoining service area
- 1. Removes the requirement for the use of directional antennas at subscriber equipment (referred to by the FCC as “response stations” where the transmitted power is less than −6 dBW Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) (250 milliwatts)
- 2. Removes the need for professional installation of subscriber equipment in a situation where the transmitted power is less than −6 dBW EIRP (250 milliwatts). In situations where the transmitted power is greater than −6 dBW EIRP (250 milliwatts) but less than 18 dBW (63 watts) professional installation is only required within 150 feet of an existing ITFS Instructional Television Fixed Service receive site
- 3. (Power levels specified above are for a 6 MHz channel in the case of a channel wider or narrower than 6 MHz the allowable power is adjusted proportionately.)
- 1. The use of spread spectrum wideband modulation as implemented in the present system reduces the transmitter power level required for a given base station to subscriber terminal path and service data rate. Thus, for example, the maximum power for a subscriber terminal is approximately 0.25 watts, which is significantly below the applicable FCC limit of 2 watts and is compliant with the FCC “Report and Order on Reconsideration.” The effective radiated power of a cellular base station is substantially below the applicable FCC limit of 2,000 watts.
- 2. Dynamic power control is used which sets and continually adjusts the transmitted power levels to the minimum required to maintain a viable link between subscriber and base station (not shown).
- 3. The location of both subscriber terminals and base stations at low elevations above the surrounding ground level on average so that the surrounding building and foliage attenuation and terrain losses reduce the signal originated towards its distant receiver locations in adjacent service areas.
- 4. The location of subscriber terminal transmit antennas typically inside the subscriber premises such that building penetration losses further attenuate the signal originated toward distant receiver locations in adjacent or joining service areas.
- 5. High system gain defined as a high permissible path loss between transmitter and receiver which is achieved by the use of multiple simultaneous data bearers each operating at a lower rate than the required aggregate data rate, the use of orthogonal spreading codes on the downlink, and successive interference cancellation of multiple codes used on the uplink.
- 1. The UMTS CDMA radio technology is designed to operate in channels of 6 MHz, 12 MHz, 18 MHz and 24
MHz bandwidth 91, these being multiples of the standard 6 MHz MMDS/ITFS channels. The base station and associated User Equipment is able to support “chip” rates (wideband spread spectrum transmitted bit-rates) after spreading of 3.84, 7.68 and 15.36 Mchips/sec (Mcps), and the appropriate rate is selected according to the channel bandwidth available. - 2. The system is designed to allow universal frequency reuse for adjacent base stations, such that a channel (6 MHz, 12 MHz, 18 MHz or 24 Hz bandwidth) can be reused (92) on every base station radio in a network serving a given geographic area (including on every sector of a sectored base station). Universal frequency reuse enables the systems to provide high subscriber capacity in a limited amount of spectrum (such as a single 24 MHz channel). The system achieves this through the nature of the spread spectrum CDMA technology, and the use of “Macro-diversity.”
- 3. The system uses “time-division-duplex” (TDD)
transmission 93. In contrast to traditional “frequency division” duplex (FDD) which uses separate sets of frequencies for transmit and receive, TDD allows the system to operate in any channel (or block of up to 4 contiguous channels) anywhere in the MMDS band. TDD is where transmit and receive occur on the same channel/frequency but in alternate or separate time intervals. This allows the present system to operate in a single 6 MHz, 12 MHz, 18 MHz and 24 MHz channel, unlike conventional cellular wireless systems which use FDD and require the acquisition of two separate channels, spaced apart in frequency to prevent a transmitter interfering with its co-located receiver.
- 1. Transmitting for example 4 “bearers” 110-1 simultaneously on the same RF channel 110-2, separated by different CDMA spreading codes. Each bearer in this example is ¼ of the data rate required by users. By using a lower data rate, the symbol period for each bit (time to transmit or receive one bit) is increased, allowing for greater delay spread (and therefore greater distance) before bits delayed by multipath arrive during the symbol periods of later bits, causing corruption of data. Orthogonal spreading codes are used on such bearers to minimize interference between them and maximize system gain.
- 2. The 4 bearers are aggregated or “inverse multiplexed” 110-3 by interleaving of bits to and from each bearer at both the base station and the User Equipment to provide aggregate user data rates of 4 times the bearer rate, (for example 4×384 kbps bearers are aggregated to provide a user data rate of 1.536 Mbps).
- 3. Implementation of Interference Cancellation (see
FIG. 18 ) in the receiver of the base station to provide similar system gain on the uplink as achieved by orthogonal codes on the downlink to increase data transmission capacity and cell radius under loaded conditions, as described below.
- 1. Use of a radio transmission technique (Wideband CDMA modulation and Rake Receivers) capable of operating with multipath signals (direct and reflected signals following different paths and arriving at slightly different times);
- 2. Covering the service area with a number of radio cells of small diameter to reduce signal losses, thus allowing more signal margin to penetrate inside buildings;
- 3. Location of microcell base stations at approximately rooftop level to increase the building penetration of the signal (building penetration can be maximized by the signal-arriving horizontally);
- 4. Use of macro-diversity, where a building is served simultaneously on the same frequency by two or more cells, from different directions. Macro-diversity increases the probability of reliable coverage at any point within the building.
- 5. Multiple bearer transmission as described above and in
FIG. 10 . - 6. Interference Cancellation in the receiver of the base station as described-above and in
FIG. 18 .
- 1. The (relatively) high cost of the core network equipment makes it difficult to scale the system down to a small market (e.g. a small city), where the cost of such equipment must be spread over a relatively low number of subscribers.
- 2. All base stations served by a set of core network equipment must be connected by backhaul transmission typically to a single core network point serving the entire network. This is costly, and can be difficult logistically.
- 3. A centralized core network generally implies one connection point to the Internet.
- 1. Distribution of the core network functions 12 in
FIG. 4 across the network of base stations. Core network functions are provided for each group of 3 base stations (i.e. 3 single-channel micro cells or 3 sectors of a sectored cell site). - 2. Providing for each group of 3 base stations (through the core network functions therein) to connect directly to the Internet. This enables the network of base stations to connect to multiple Internet “points-of-presence,” and thereby reduces backhaul transmission costs and the logistics of providing backhaul.
- 1. The system is designed to typically provide a total of 15 timeslots per radio frame between the base station and the subscriber terminals. Two of these are for signaling and the remaining 13 for base station-subscribers downlink and subscribers-base station uplink. Backhaul is supported by the allocation of radio frames for this function, in fact stealing them from the CDMA air interface. The overall time allocation ratio between the three (CDMA downlink, CDMA uplink and backhaul) can be set according to the traffic asymmetry and the backhaul requirement.
- 2. In timeslots used for backhaul, higher transmission rates may be used (with less coding or spreading), taking advantage of the use of directional antennas between base stations.
Claims (36)
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EP1098539A3 (en) | 2003-12-03 |
US6865169B1 (en) | 2005-03-08 |
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