Difference between revisions of "Quality of Service on CDMA platforms"

From DolceraWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Power Control)
(Power Control)
Line 70: Line 70:
 
[[Image:cdma16.jpg|thumb|600px|center|Dynamic output power adjustment for CDMA transmitters]]
 
[[Image:cdma16.jpg|thumb|600px|center|Dynamic output power adjustment for CDMA transmitters]]
  
====Power Control==== As the propagation losses between BS and MS's are different according to individual communication distances, the received levels at the base station are different from each other when all mobile stations transmit their signals at the same power. Moreover, the received level fluctuates quickly due to fading. In order to maintain the strength of received signal level at BS, power control technique must be employed in CDMA systems.<br>.
+
===Power Control===  
 +
As the propagation losses between BS and MS's are different according to individual communication distances, the received levels at the base station are different from each other when all mobile stations transmit their signals at the same power. Moreover, the received level fluctuates quickly due to fading. In order to maintain the strength of received signal level at BS, power control technique must be employed in CDMA systems.<br>.
 
[[Image:cdma17.jpg]]<br>
 
[[Image:cdma17.jpg]]<br>
 
Power control can be implemented in two ways : open loop power control and closed loop power control<br>
 
Power control can be implemented in two ways : open loop power control and closed loop power control<br>

Revision as of 22:25, 26 June 2006

Cellular Communication

A cellular mobile communications system uses a large number of low-power wireless transmitters to create cells — the basic geographic service area of a wireless communications system. Variable power levels allow cells to be sized according to the subscriber density and demand within a particular region. As mobile users travel from cell to cell, their conversations are handed off between cells to maintain seamless service. Channels (frequencies) used in one cell can be reused in another cell some distance away. Cells can be added to accommodate growth, creating new cells in unserved areas or overlaying cells in existing areas. Source

There are three main entities in cellular communication

  • Mobile Station (MS): A mobile station consists of 2 entities - equipment and SIM card
  • Base Transceiver station(BTS): A base transceiver station consists of 2 entities - a base transceiver (transmitter and receiver) station and a base station controller. The BTS is the antenna tower site.
  • Main Switching centre(MSC): The main switching centre is the heart of the network - the central switching office which controls all the base stations and provides connection with landline phones. It performs three main tasks. It:
  1. connects calls from sender to receiver,
  2. collects details of the calls made and received, and
  3. supervises operation of the rest of the network components.

Cellular System Architecture

Cellular systems are increasing in demand as more users are added to their systems. The amount of frequency spectrum available for mobile cellular use was limited, and efficient use of the required frequencies was needed for mobile cellular coverage. In modern cellular telephony, rural and urban regions are divided into areas according to specific provisioning guidelines. Provisioning for each region is planned according to an engineering plan that includes cells, clusters, frequency reuse, and handovers.

Cells

A cell is the basic geographic unit of a cellular system. Cells are base stations transmitting over small geographic areas that are represented as hexagons.

Clusters

A cluster is a group of cells. No channels are reused within a cluster. Normally a cluster has seven cells in it as shown below.

Frequency Reuse

The number of radio channel frequencies is limited. The concept of frequency reuse is based on assigning to each cell a group of radio channels used within a small geographic area. Cells are assigned a group of channels that is completely different from neighboring cells. The coverage area of cells is called the footprint. This footprint is limited by a boundary so that the same group of channels can be used in different cells that are far enough away from each other so that their frequencies do not interfere.

Cell Splitting

As a service area becomes full of users, this approach is used to split a single area into smaller ones. In this way, urban centers can be split into as many areas as necessary to provide acceptable service levels in heavy-traffic regions, while larger, less expensive cells can be used to cover remote rural regions.

Handoff

The final obstacle in the development of the cellular network involved the problem created when a mobile subscriber traveled from one cell to another during a call. As adjacent areas do not use the same radio channels, a call must either be dropped or transferred from one radio channel to another when a user crosses the line between adjacent cells. Because dropping the call is unacceptable, the process of handoff was created. Handoff occurs when the mobile telephone network automatically transfers a call from radio channel to radio channel as a mobile crosses adjacent cells.

Evolution of Cellular Systems

Cdma1.jpg

Multiple Access Methods

There are predominantly three types of multiple access methods.

Frequency Division Multiple Access

In this system, each user is allotted a different set of frequencies to operate upon. The uplink(mobile to base station) frequency is different from downlink frequency(base station to mobile).

Time Division Multiple Access

In this system, each user is allocated a different time slot. Forward link frequency and reverse link frequency is the same. A synchronous switch is responsible for the time switching.

TDMA

Code Division Multiple Access

There is no restriction on time and frequency in this scheme. All the users can transmit at all times and at all frequencies. Because users are isolated by code, they can share the same carrier frequency, eliminating the frequency reuse problem encountered in other technologies.

CDMA

A comparative study between the above three access technologies with respect to time and frequency is as shown below.

Comparison of cellular access schemes

Code Division Multiple Access

The CDMA technology can be implemented in two ways

  • Direct Sequence Spread Sprectrum - DSSS CDMA
  • Frequency Hopping - FH CDMA

Direct Sequence Spread Sprectrum - DSSS CDMA

In this method, the direct sequence(input data) which is spread over a limited bandwidth is multiplied with a code or spreading sequence (a pseudorandom sequence) which will spread the input data over the entire bandwidth of the communication channel. The power density is also reduced and is spread over the frequency spectrum and hence is known as spread spectrum method. The modulation part of DSSS is as shown below.

CDMA Modulation

The modulated signal is transmitted over the channel and all users can receive it but only the user which knows the correct code can decode the message. This is depicted in the figure below.

CDMA Demodulation

Frequency Reuse

The number of radio channel frequencies is limited. The concept of frequency reuse is based on assigning to each cell a group of radio channels used within a small geographic area. Cells are assigned a group of channels that is completely different from neighboring cells. The coverage area of cells is called the footprint. This footprint is limited by a boundary so that the same group of channels can be used in different cells that are far enough away from each other so that their frequencies do not interfere.

Soft Handoff

Handoff means switching a cellular phone transmission from one cell to another as a mobile user moves into a new cellular area. It is so called because the radio link with the previous sector(s) is not broken before a link is established with a new sector; this type of handoff is described as "make before break". In CDMA, due to this soft handoff, there is no interruption of call even at the border of a cell site which means more number of customers can be accommodated, automatically increasing the capacity of the cell site.

Multipath Fading

In a mobile environment, a mobile station will receive one direct signal from the base station and multiple signals which are reflected from obstructions like buildings and towers. Each signal would have travelled a different length and would be displaced in time. Due to this, when they are combined at the mobile handset, it will cause interference resulting in poor signal quality. This is known as fading. This problem is handled in a very good way in CDMA. Here, the phase of the multiple signals is modified such that only positive interference(addition) takes place and the overall signal strength increases. A receiver that implements the above principle is known as a RAKE receiver as shown in the figure below.

RAKE receiver

Near Far Problem

The problem is best described by taking an example: Consider a receiver and two transmitters (one close to the receiver; the other far away). If both transmitters transmit simultaneously and at equal powers, then due to the inverse square law, the receiver will receive more power from the nearer transmitter. This makes the farther transmitter voice more difficult to understand. Since one transmission's signal is the other's noise the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the farther transmitter is much lower. If the nearer transmitter transmits a signal that is orders of magnitude higher than the farther transmitter, then the SNR for the farther transmitter may be below detectability and the farther transmitter may just as well not transmit. This effectively jams the communication channel. In CDMA systems, this is commonly solved by dynamic output power adjustment of the transmitters. That is, the closer transmitters use less power so that the SNR for all transmitters at the receiver is roughly the same. This sometimes can have a noticeable impact on battery life, which can be dramatically different depending on distance from the base station.

Dynamic output power adjustment for CDMA transmitters

Power Control

As the propagation losses between BS and MS's are different according to individual communication distances, the received levels at the base station are different from each other when all mobile stations transmit their signals at the same power. Moreover, the received level fluctuates quickly due to fading. In order to maintain the strength of received signal level at BS, power control technique must be employed in CDMA systems.
. Cdma17.jpg
Power control can be implemented in two ways : open loop power control and closed loop power control
Cdma18.jpg

Effect of Power Control: Power control is capable of compensating the fading fluctuation. Received power from all MS are controlled to be equal. Near-Far problem is mitigated by the power control. Cdma19.jpg

Quality of Service(QoS)

CDMA is being accepted as a third generation (3G) system and a specific feature of 3G systems is that they offer a radio interface adapted for all kinds of services and combination of services (such as data, voice, video etc). The big challenge is multiplexing these services which have do not have the same demands in terms of quality of service(QoS) which can be represented as BER(bit error rate), processing delay, frame error rate etc. Different QoS will require different channel encoding and interleaving strategies. The demand of BER can be satisfied when the coding bits have at least a code dependent ratio Eb/I(ratio of bit energy to interference). There are several influences that might change system performance(BER) and hence Eb/I ratio, of which the most effective is variation of Bit Rate by a step of Rate Matching.

Rate Matching and QoS

The patent EP1385290 titled "Method for balancing Eb/I ratio in a service multiplexing CDMA system and a telecommunication system using this method" targets this concept of Rate matching and introduces an algorithm for calculating effective data output bits by a process of repetition or puncturing of the input bits governed by a rate matching ratio and puncturing ratio received from the sending entity (can be a BS or MS). The following framework highlights the various steps involved in providing variable QoS. The received data from the transport block is classified into different processes based on their QoS. Data is split onto various transport channels to which a CRC code is attached for error correction. Further, all these transport channels are multiplexed on one line by concatenation, interleaved, segmented and then rate matched. The rate matching step is performed using the rate matching ratio and puncturing ratio which is received from the sending entity (an exchange of handshaking signals occurs).

Rate matching and QoS

Power Control, Rate Matching and QoS

According to one of the methods of dynamic power control (Code Hopping) used in W-CDMA technology, the Rate Information (RI) field in the uplink control channel in W-CDMA frame can be used to notify the base station about the variable bit rates (VBR) it wants to send, then the base station computes and assigns optimal powers according to the new spreading factor for each radio frame. Spreading factor(Gi) is defined as the ratio of bandwidth of the system to the data rate of the radio frame. Mathematically,
Gi = W / Ri,where W=system bandwidth which is a constant for a system and Ri= data rate of radio frame.
A power index (gi) is calculated from this Spreading Factor(Gi) using the following expression
gi= (vi / (vi+Gi)), where vi is minimum QoS for the ith session which is a constant.
This power index will ascertain the optimal power to be alloted to each service channel.
Pi = (gi*No*W )/ (Hi*(1-(Sgj)
where No is AWGN(Additive White Guassian Noise)a constant,
Hi is path loss which is dependent on the distance and is a costant for a path,
and Sgj is sum of the power index of all the sessions which is constant for all sessions of the radio frame.

From the above analysis, we observe that the bit rate is inversely proportional to the spreading factor which will inversely effect the power index and hence the optimal power. Therefore, the Bit Rate and Optimal power go hand in hand, and have the same effect on Eb/I and QoS.

The method and algorithm to schedule optimal power is detailed in the IEEE paper Dynamic Resource Scheduling for Variable QoS Traffic in W-CDMA - Ozgur Gurbuz, Henry Owen.

Thus, we conclude that by adjusting the optimal power we are actually trying to implement a rate matching step.

Power control and QoS

Transmission power of mobile station is proportional to power control law, which is a function of distance from the base station, transmission rates, interference level (number of active users). In this method, the Bit Error probability of the multi-rate CDMA mobile station is calculated at the Base station using transmission rates of the mobile. The optimal power control functions are derived based on the bit error probability at the base station and these power control functions are transmitted to the mobile handset. The mobile calculates the optimum power using dynamic programming and transmits its data at this power level. It is of interest to note that the optimum power level is related to power index which will determine the spreading gain and hence the overall bit rate. Thus the optimum power level is acheived by transmitting the data at the calculated bit rate.

Conclusion

Substantial amount of research has been done in the field of QoS in CDMA communication system in the year 1998-99 and this has led to the invention of multitude of methodologies ranging from power control to Rate matching and so on with the sole aim of improving QoS.