SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Mobile Handset Cellular Network
Wireless Mobile Communication
Seminar
Cellular Network Basics
• Cellular network/telephony is a radio-based technology; radio
waves are electromagnetic waves that antennas propagate.
• Most signals are in the 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, and
1900 MHz frequency bands
Cell phones operate in this frequency
range (note the logarithmic scale)
Cellular Network
• Base stations transmit to and receive from mobiles at the
assigned spectrum.
– Multiple base stations use the same spectrum (spectral reuse)
• The service area of each base station is called a cell.
• Each mobile terminal is typically served by the ‘closest’ base
stations.
– Handoff when terminals move
Cellular network
Cellular Network Generations
It is useful to think of cellular Network/telephony in terms
of generations:
• 0G: Briefcase-size mobile radio telephones
• 1G: Analog cellular telephony
• 2G: Digital cellular telephony
• 3G: High-speed digital cellular telephony (including video telephony)
• 4G: IP-based “anytime, anywhere” voice, data, and multimedia
telephony at faster data rates than 3G. (To be deployed in 2012–2015)
Evolution of Cellular Networks
1G 2G 3G 4G2.5G
The Multiple Access Problem
• The base stations need to serve many mobile terminals at the
same time (both downlink and uplink).
• All mobiles in the cell need to transmit to the base station.
• Interference among different senders and receivers.
• So we need multiple access scheme.
Multiple Access Schemes
• Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
• Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)
• Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
3 orthogonal Schemes:
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
• Each mobile is assigned a separate frequency channel for the duration of
the call.
• Sufficient guard band is required to prevent adjacent channel interference.
• Usually, mobile terminals will have one downlink frequency band and one
uplink frequency band.
• Different cellular network protocols use different frequencies.
• “Frequency is a precious and scare resource. We are running out of it”
frequency
Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)
• Time is divided into slots and only one mobile terminal transmits
during each slot.
– Like during the lecture, only one can talk, but others may take the
floor in turn.
• Each user is given a specific slot. No competition in cellular network
– Unlike Carrier Sensing Multiple Access (CSMA) in WiFi
Guard time – signal transmitted by mobile terminals at different
locations do no arrive at the base station at the same time.
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
• Use of orthogonal codes to separate different transmissions.
• Each symbol of bit is transmitted as a larger number of bits
using the user specific code – Spreading
– Bandwidth occupied by the signal is much larger than the information
transmission rate
– But all users use the same frequency band together
Orthogonal among users
2G (GSM)
GSM
• Abbreviation for Global System for Mobile
Communications.
• Concurrent development in USA and Europe
in the 1980’s.
• The European system was called GSM and
deployed in the early 1990’s.
GSM Services
• Voice, 3.1 kHz
• Short Message Service (SMS)
– 1985 GSM standard that allows messages of at most 160 chars. (incl.
spaces) to be sent between handsets and other stations.
– Over 2.4 billion people use it; multi-billion $ industry.
• General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
– GSM upgrade that provides IP-based packet data transmission up to
114 kbps.
– Users can “simultaneously” make calls and send data.
– GPRS provides “always on” Internet access and the Multimedia
Messaging Service (MMS) whereby users can send rich text, audio,
video messages to each other.
– Performance degrades as number of users increase.
– GPRS is an example of 2.5G telephony - 2G service similar to 3G.
GSM Channels
• Physical Channel: Each timeslot on a carrier is referred to as a
physical channel.
• Logical Channel: Variety of information is transmitted between the
MS and BTS. Different types of logical channels:
– Traffic channel
– Control Channel
Downlink
Uplink
Channels
GSM Frequencies
• Originally designed on 900MHz range, now also
available on 800MHz, 1800MHz and 1900 MHz ranges.
• Separate Uplink and Downlink frequencies
– One example channel on the 1800 MHz frequency band,
where RF carriers are spaced every 200 MHz.
1710 MHz 1880 MHz1805 MHz1785 MHz
UPLINK FREQUENCIES DOWNLINK FREQUENCIES
UPLINK AND DOWNLINK FREQUENCY SEPARATED BY 95MHZ
GSM Architecture
Mobile Station (MS)
• MS is the user’s handset and has two parts:
1) Mobile Equipment
– Radio equipment
– User interface
– Processing capability and memory required for various
tasks:
• Call signaling
• Encryption
• SMS
– Equipment IMEI number
2) Subscriber Identity Module
Subscriber Identity Module (SIM)
• A small smart card
• Encryption codes needed to identify the subscriber
• Subscriber IMSI number
• Subscriber’s own information (telephone directory)
• Third party applications (banking etc.)
• Can also be used in other systems besides GSM, e.g., some
WLAN access points accept SIM based user authentication
Base Station Subsystem
• Transcoding Rate and Adaptation Unit (TRAU)
– Performs coding between the 64kbps PCM coding used in the backbone
network and the 13 kbps coding used for the Mobile Station (MS)
• Base Station Controller (BSC)
– Controls the channel (time slot) allocation implemented by the BTSes
– Manages the handovers within BSS area
– Knows which mobile stations are within the cell and informs the
MSC/VLR about this
• Base Transceiver System (BTS)
– Controls several transmitters
– Each transmitter has 8 time slots, some used for signaling, on a specific
frequency
Network and Switching Subsystem
• The backbone of a GSM network is a telephone network with
additional cellular network capabilities
• Mobile Switching Center (MSC)
– An typical telephony exchange (ISDN exchange) which supports
mobile communications
– Visitor Location Register (VLR)
• A database, part of the MSC
• Contains the location of the active Mobile Stations
• Gateway Mobile Switching Center (GMSC)
– Links the system to PSTN and other operators
• Home Location Register (HLR)
– Contain subscriber information, including authentication information
in Authentication Center (AuC)
• Equipment Identity Register (EIR)
– International Mobile Station Equipment Identity (IMEI) codes for e.g.,
blacklisting stolen phones
Home Location Register
• One database per operator
• Contains all the permanent subscriber information
– MSISDN (Mobile Subscriber ISDN number) is the telephone
number of the subscriber
– International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) is a 15 digit code
used to identify the subscriber
• It incorporates a country code and operator code
– IMSI code is used to link the MSISDN number to the subscriber’s
SIM (Subscriber Identity Module)
– Charging information
– Services available to the customer
• Also the subscriber’s present Location Area Code, which
refers to the MSC, which can connect to the MS.
Other Systems
• Operations Support System
– The management network for the whole GSM network
– Usually vendor dependent
– Very loosely specified in the GSM standards
• Value added services
– Voice mail
– Call forwarding
– Group calls
• Short Message Service Center
– Stores and forwards the SMS messages
– Like an E-mail server
– Required to operate the SMS services
Location Updates
• The cells overlap and usually a mobile station can
‘see’ several transceivers (BTSes)
• The MS monitors the identifier for the BSC
controlling the cells
• When the mobile station reaches a new BSC’s
area, it requests an location update
• The update is forwarded to the MSC, entered
into the VLR, the old BSC is notified and an
acknowledgement is passed back
Handoff (Handover)
• When a call is in process, the changes in location
need special processing
• Within a BSS, the BSC, which knows the current radio
link configuration (including feedbacks from the MS),
prepares an available channel in the new BTS
• The MS is told to switch over to the new BTS
• This is called a hard handoff
– In a soft handoff, the MS is connected to two BTSes
simultaneously
Roaming
• When a MS enters another operators network, it
can be allowed to use the services of this
operator
– Operator to operator agreements and contracts
– Higher billing
• The MS is identified by the information in the SIM
card and the identification request is forwarded
to the home operator
– The home HLR is updated to reflect the MS’s current
location
3G, 3.5G and 4G (LTE)
3G Overview
• 3G is created by ITU-T and is called IMT-2000
Evolution from 2G
IS-95 IS-136 & PDCGSM-
EDGE
GPRS
HSCSD
IS-95B
Cdma2000-1xRTT
Cdma2000-1xEV,DV,DO
Cdma2000-3xRTT
W-CDMA
EDGE
TD-SCDMA
2G
3G
2.5G
3GPP3GPP2
Service Roadmap
Improved performance, decreasing cost of delivery
Typical
average bit
rates
(peak rates
higher)
WEB browsing
Corporate data access
Streaming audio/video
Voice & SMS Presence/location
xHTML browsing
Application downloading
E-mail
MMS picture / video
Multitasking
3G-specific services take
advantage of higher bandwidth
and/or real-time QoS
3G-specific services take
advantage of higher bandwidth
and/or real-time QoS
A number of mobile
services are bearer
independent in nature
A number of mobile
services are bearer
independent in nature
HSDPA
1-10
Mbps
WCDMA
2
Mbps
EGPRS
473
kbps
GPRS
171
kbps
GSM
9.6
kbps
Push-to-talk
Broadband
in wide area
Video sharing
Video telephony
Real-time IP
multimedia and games
Multicasting
CDMA
2000-
EVDO
CDMA
2000-
EVDV
CDMA
20001x
GSM Evolution to 3G
GSM
9.6kbps (one timeslot)
GSM Data
Also called CSD
GSM
General Packet Radio Services
Data rates up to ~ 115 kbps
Max: 8 timeslots used as any one time
Packet switched; resources not tied up all the time
Contention based. Efficient, but variable delays
GSM / GPRS core network re-used by WCDMA (3G)
GPRS
HSCSD
High Speed Circuit Switched Data
Dedicate up to 4 timeslots for data connection ~ 50 kbps
Good for real-time applications c.w. GPRS
Inefficient -> ties up resources, even when nothing sent
Not as popular as GPRS (many skipping HSCSD)
EDGE
Enhanced Data Rates for Global
Evolution
Uses 8PSK modulation
3x improvement in data rate on short distances
Can fall back to GMSK for greater distances
Combine with GPRS (EGPRS) ~ 384 kbps
Can also be combined with HSCSD
WCDMA
UMTS
• Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
(UMTS)
• UMTS is an upgrade from GSM via GPRS or EDGE
• The standardization work for UMTS is carried out by
Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP)
• Data rates of UMTS are:
– 144 kbps for rural
– 384 kbps for urban outdoor
– 2048 kbps for indoor and low range outdoor
• Virtual Home Environment (VHE)
UMTS Frequency Spectrum
• UMTS Band
– 1900-2025 MHz and 2110-2200 MHz for 3G transmission
– In the US, 1710–1755 MHz and 2110–2155 MHz will be
used instead, as the 1900 MHz band was already used.
UMTS Architecture
Mobile Station
MSC/
VLR
Base Station
Subsystem
GMSC
Network Subsystem
AUCEIR HLR
Other Networks
Note: Interfaces have been omitted for clarity purposes.
GGSN
SGSN
BTS
BSC
Node
B
RNC
RNS
UTRAN
SIM
ME
USIM
ME
+
PSTN
PLMN
Internet
UMTS Network Architecture
• UMTS network architecture consists of three
domains
– Core Network (CN): Provide switching, routing and
transit for user traffic
– UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (UTRAN):
Provides the air interface access method for user
equipment.
– User Equipment (UE): Terminals work as air interface
counterpart for base stations. The various identities
are: IMSI, TMSI, P-TMSI, TLLI, MSISDN, IMEI, IMEISV
UTRAN
• Wide band CDMA technology is selected for UTRAN air
interface
– WCDMA
– TD-SCDMA
• Base stations are referred to as Node-B and control equipment
for Node-B is called as Radio Network Controller (RNC).
– Functions of Node-B are
• Air Interface Tx/Rx
• Modulation/Demodulation
– Functions of RNC are:
• Radio Resource Control
• Channel Allocation
• Power Control Settings
• Handover Control
• Ciphering
• Segmentation and reassembly
3.5G (HSPA)
• High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) is an amalgamation of two
mobile telephony protocols, High Speed Downlink Packet Access
(HSDPA) and High Speed Uplink Packet Access (HSUPA), that extends
and improves the performance of existing WCDMA protocols.
• 3.5G introduces many new features that will enhance the UMTS
technology in future. 1xEV-DV already supports most of the features
that will be provided in 3.5G. These include:
- Adaptive Modulation and Coding
- Fast Scheduling
- Backward compatibility with 3G
- Enhanced Air Interface
4G (LTE)
• LTE stands for “Long Term Evolution”
• Next Generation mobile broadband
technology
• Promises data transfer rates of 100 Mbps
• Based on UMTS 3G technology
• Optimized for All-IP traffic
Advantages of LTE
Comparison of LTE Speed
Major LTE Radio Technogies
• Uses Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing (OFDM) for downlink
• Uses Single Carrier Frequency Division
Multiple Access (SC-FDMA) for uplink
• Uses Multi-input Multi-output(MIMO) for
enhanced throughput
• Reduced power consumption
• Higher RF power amplifier efficiency (less
battery power used by handsets)
LTE Architecture
LTE vs UMTS
• Functional changes compared to the current UMTS
architecture
THANK YOU
10ECE037 Aman Kumar Sharma
10ECE038 Aman Niranjan
10ECE060 P. Pradeep Chandra
10ECE062 Pramod Kumar Tiwari
10ECE067 Shameer Keelaillam

More Related Content

PPT
5432 cellular network
PPT
Cellular communication
PPTX
CELLULAR COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
PPT
Cellular Communication
PPT
cellular wireless networks
PPTX
Cellular communication
PPT
Cellular network presentation
PPTX
Global System For Mobile Communication by Ummer &Maroof
5432 cellular network
Cellular communication
CELLULAR COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
Cellular Communication
cellular wireless networks
Cellular communication
Cellular network presentation
Global System For Mobile Communication by Ummer &Maroof

What's hot (20)

PPT
Cellular Mobile Communication Concept and GSM Frequency Band
PPTX
Cellular Networks Presentation in distributed systems, Mobile Networks
PPT
cellular communication
PDF
Introduction To Cellular Networks
PPT
Cellular communication
PPT
Cellular communication
PPT
Cellular communication
PPT
2 g 3g_4g_tutorial
PPT
Telecom journey tutorial
PPT
1cellulñar network
PPT
Gsm network
PPT
Cellular networks
PPT
cellular networks
PDF
Modern cellular communication
PPTX
Pcs ch1
PPTX
GSM(Global System For Mobile) Communication
PDF
Mobile network structure
PPT
Gsm – global system for mobile communication
PPT
Cellular mobile communication
PPT
Mobile communication fundamental
Cellular Mobile Communication Concept and GSM Frequency Band
Cellular Networks Presentation in distributed systems, Mobile Networks
cellular communication
Introduction To Cellular Networks
Cellular communication
Cellular communication
Cellular communication
2 g 3g_4g_tutorial
Telecom journey tutorial
1cellulñar network
Gsm network
Cellular networks
cellular networks
Modern cellular communication
Pcs ch1
GSM(Global System For Mobile) Communication
Mobile network structure
Gsm – global system for mobile communication
Cellular mobile communication
Mobile communication fundamental
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPT
Gsm architecture
PDF
Digital Cellular Network Technology
PPTX
Analog to Digital Converter
PDF
How cell phone work?(mobile communication)
PPTX
Mobile cellphone battery charging circuit with explanation
PPTX
Gsm based irrigation control
PPT
Power amplifire analog electronics
PPTX
Network communication
PPT
Audio power amplifier
PPT
PPT
DAC , Digital to analog Converter
PDF
Network and Mobile Operating System
PPT
Basics of amplifier
PDF
RF Circuit Design - [Ch4-2] LNA, PA, and Broadband Amplifier
PPTX
Cell phone jammer
PPTX
ANALOG TO DIGITAL AND DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERTER
PDF
Mobile Network Layer
DOCX
Cellphone detector report
PDF
RF Module Design - [Chapter 6] Power Amplifier
PDF
RF Module Design - [Chapter 1] From Basics to RF Transceivers
Gsm architecture
Digital Cellular Network Technology
Analog to Digital Converter
How cell phone work?(mobile communication)
Mobile cellphone battery charging circuit with explanation
Gsm based irrigation control
Power amplifire analog electronics
Network communication
Audio power amplifier
DAC , Digital to analog Converter
Network and Mobile Operating System
Basics of amplifier
RF Circuit Design - [Ch4-2] LNA, PA, and Broadband Amplifier
Cell phone jammer
ANALOG TO DIGITAL AND DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERTER
Mobile Network Layer
Cellphone detector report
RF Module Design - [Chapter 6] Power Amplifier
RF Module Design - [Chapter 1] From Basics to RF Transceivers
Ad

Similar to Cellular network (20)

PPT
5432 cellular network
PPT
Cellular network
PPT
5432_CELLULAR_NETWORK.ppt
PPT
694_CELLULAR_NETWORK.ppt
PPT
Mobile Handset Cellular Network
PPT
2G_3G_4G_Tutorial.ppt
PPT
694 cellular network
PPT
Lectures on 2 g,3g,3.5g,4g
PPT
Lectures on 2 g,3g,3.5g,4g By Professor Dr Arshad Abbas Khan
PDF
Introduction to Cellular Network and its applications
PPT
2 g 3g_4g - brief
PDF
Cellular_Net.pdf
PPT
1 g 2g_3g_4g_tutorial
PPTX
The GSM Technology
PDF
Mobile Handset cellular network Telecommunication
PDF
Journey of Evolution of UMTS and CDMA
PDF
IT6601 Mobile Computing Unit III
PDF
Global System for Mobile GSM
PDF
IT8602 Mobile Communication Unit II
PPT
In Depth Basics of GSM for beginner (Telecom)
5432 cellular network
Cellular network
5432_CELLULAR_NETWORK.ppt
694_CELLULAR_NETWORK.ppt
Mobile Handset Cellular Network
2G_3G_4G_Tutorial.ppt
694 cellular network
Lectures on 2 g,3g,3.5g,4g
Lectures on 2 g,3g,3.5g,4g By Professor Dr Arshad Abbas Khan
Introduction to Cellular Network and its applications
2 g 3g_4g - brief
Cellular_Net.pdf
1 g 2g_3g_4g_tutorial
The GSM Technology
Mobile Handset cellular network Telecommunication
Journey of Evolution of UMTS and CDMA
IT6601 Mobile Computing Unit III
Global System for Mobile GSM
IT8602 Mobile Communication Unit II
In Depth Basics of GSM for beginner (Telecom)

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
composite construction of structures.pdf
PPTX
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
PDF
SM_6th-Sem__Cse_Internet-of-Things.pdf IOT
PDF
Mitigating Risks through Effective Management for Enhancing Organizational Pe...
PPTX
Strings in CPP - Strings in C++ are sequences of characters used to store and...
PDF
Embodied AI: Ushering in the Next Era of Intelligent Systems
PPTX
Recipes for Real Time Voice AI WebRTC, SLMs and Open Source Software.pptx
PPT
Project quality management in manufacturing
PPTX
web development for engineering and engineering
PPTX
bas. eng. economics group 4 presentation 1.pptx
PDF
Mohammad Mahdi Farshadian CV - Prospective PhD Student 2026
PPTX
Construction Project Organization Group 2.pptx
DOCX
573137875-Attendance-Management-System-original
PPTX
Lesson 3_Tessellation.pptx finite Mathematics
PPTX
UNIT-1 - COAL BASED THERMAL POWER PLANTS
PPTX
M Tech Sem 1 Civil Engineering Environmental Sciences.pptx
PDF
BMEC211 - INTRODUCTION TO MECHATRONICS-1.pdf
PDF
Structs to JSON How Go Powers REST APIs.pdf
PDF
July 2025 - Top 10 Read Articles in International Journal of Software Enginee...
PDF
keyrequirementskkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
composite construction of structures.pdf
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
SM_6th-Sem__Cse_Internet-of-Things.pdf IOT
Mitigating Risks through Effective Management for Enhancing Organizational Pe...
Strings in CPP - Strings in C++ are sequences of characters used to store and...
Embodied AI: Ushering in the Next Era of Intelligent Systems
Recipes for Real Time Voice AI WebRTC, SLMs and Open Source Software.pptx
Project quality management in manufacturing
web development for engineering and engineering
bas. eng. economics group 4 presentation 1.pptx
Mohammad Mahdi Farshadian CV - Prospective PhD Student 2026
Construction Project Organization Group 2.pptx
573137875-Attendance-Management-System-original
Lesson 3_Tessellation.pptx finite Mathematics
UNIT-1 - COAL BASED THERMAL POWER PLANTS
M Tech Sem 1 Civil Engineering Environmental Sciences.pptx
BMEC211 - INTRODUCTION TO MECHATRONICS-1.pdf
Structs to JSON How Go Powers REST APIs.pdf
July 2025 - Top 10 Read Articles in International Journal of Software Enginee...
keyrequirementskkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk

Cellular network

  • 1. Mobile Handset Cellular Network Wireless Mobile Communication Seminar
  • 2. Cellular Network Basics • Cellular network/telephony is a radio-based technology; radio waves are electromagnetic waves that antennas propagate. • Most signals are in the 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, and 1900 MHz frequency bands Cell phones operate in this frequency range (note the logarithmic scale)
  • 3. Cellular Network • Base stations transmit to and receive from mobiles at the assigned spectrum. – Multiple base stations use the same spectrum (spectral reuse) • The service area of each base station is called a cell. • Each mobile terminal is typically served by the ‘closest’ base stations. – Handoff when terminals move
  • 5. Cellular Network Generations It is useful to think of cellular Network/telephony in terms of generations: • 0G: Briefcase-size mobile radio telephones • 1G: Analog cellular telephony • 2G: Digital cellular telephony • 3G: High-speed digital cellular telephony (including video telephony) • 4G: IP-based “anytime, anywhere” voice, data, and multimedia telephony at faster data rates than 3G. (To be deployed in 2012–2015)
  • 6. Evolution of Cellular Networks 1G 2G 3G 4G2.5G
  • 7. The Multiple Access Problem • The base stations need to serve many mobile terminals at the same time (both downlink and uplink). • All mobiles in the cell need to transmit to the base station. • Interference among different senders and receivers. • So we need multiple access scheme.
  • 8. Multiple Access Schemes • Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) • Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) • Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) 3 orthogonal Schemes:
  • 9. Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) • Each mobile is assigned a separate frequency channel for the duration of the call. • Sufficient guard band is required to prevent adjacent channel interference. • Usually, mobile terminals will have one downlink frequency band and one uplink frequency band. • Different cellular network protocols use different frequencies. • “Frequency is a precious and scare resource. We are running out of it” frequency
  • 10. Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) • Time is divided into slots and only one mobile terminal transmits during each slot. – Like during the lecture, only one can talk, but others may take the floor in turn. • Each user is given a specific slot. No competition in cellular network – Unlike Carrier Sensing Multiple Access (CSMA) in WiFi Guard time – signal transmitted by mobile terminals at different locations do no arrive at the base station at the same time.
  • 11. Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) • Use of orthogonal codes to separate different transmissions. • Each symbol of bit is transmitted as a larger number of bits using the user specific code – Spreading – Bandwidth occupied by the signal is much larger than the information transmission rate – But all users use the same frequency band together Orthogonal among users
  • 13. GSM • Abbreviation for Global System for Mobile Communications. • Concurrent development in USA and Europe in the 1980’s. • The European system was called GSM and deployed in the early 1990’s.
  • 14. GSM Services • Voice, 3.1 kHz • Short Message Service (SMS) – 1985 GSM standard that allows messages of at most 160 chars. (incl. spaces) to be sent between handsets and other stations. – Over 2.4 billion people use it; multi-billion $ industry. • General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) – GSM upgrade that provides IP-based packet data transmission up to 114 kbps. – Users can “simultaneously” make calls and send data. – GPRS provides “always on” Internet access and the Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) whereby users can send rich text, audio, video messages to each other. – Performance degrades as number of users increase. – GPRS is an example of 2.5G telephony - 2G service similar to 3G.
  • 15. GSM Channels • Physical Channel: Each timeslot on a carrier is referred to as a physical channel. • Logical Channel: Variety of information is transmitted between the MS and BTS. Different types of logical channels: – Traffic channel – Control Channel Downlink Uplink Channels
  • 16. GSM Frequencies • Originally designed on 900MHz range, now also available on 800MHz, 1800MHz and 1900 MHz ranges. • Separate Uplink and Downlink frequencies – One example channel on the 1800 MHz frequency band, where RF carriers are spaced every 200 MHz. 1710 MHz 1880 MHz1805 MHz1785 MHz UPLINK FREQUENCIES DOWNLINK FREQUENCIES UPLINK AND DOWNLINK FREQUENCY SEPARATED BY 95MHZ
  • 18. Mobile Station (MS) • MS is the user’s handset and has two parts: 1) Mobile Equipment – Radio equipment – User interface – Processing capability and memory required for various tasks: • Call signaling • Encryption • SMS – Equipment IMEI number 2) Subscriber Identity Module
  • 19. Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) • A small smart card • Encryption codes needed to identify the subscriber • Subscriber IMSI number • Subscriber’s own information (telephone directory) • Third party applications (banking etc.) • Can also be used in other systems besides GSM, e.g., some WLAN access points accept SIM based user authentication
  • 20. Base Station Subsystem • Transcoding Rate and Adaptation Unit (TRAU) – Performs coding between the 64kbps PCM coding used in the backbone network and the 13 kbps coding used for the Mobile Station (MS) • Base Station Controller (BSC) – Controls the channel (time slot) allocation implemented by the BTSes – Manages the handovers within BSS area – Knows which mobile stations are within the cell and informs the MSC/VLR about this • Base Transceiver System (BTS) – Controls several transmitters – Each transmitter has 8 time slots, some used for signaling, on a specific frequency
  • 21. Network and Switching Subsystem • The backbone of a GSM network is a telephone network with additional cellular network capabilities • Mobile Switching Center (MSC) – An typical telephony exchange (ISDN exchange) which supports mobile communications – Visitor Location Register (VLR) • A database, part of the MSC • Contains the location of the active Mobile Stations • Gateway Mobile Switching Center (GMSC) – Links the system to PSTN and other operators • Home Location Register (HLR) – Contain subscriber information, including authentication information in Authentication Center (AuC) • Equipment Identity Register (EIR) – International Mobile Station Equipment Identity (IMEI) codes for e.g., blacklisting stolen phones
  • 22. Home Location Register • One database per operator • Contains all the permanent subscriber information – MSISDN (Mobile Subscriber ISDN number) is the telephone number of the subscriber – International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) is a 15 digit code used to identify the subscriber • It incorporates a country code and operator code – IMSI code is used to link the MSISDN number to the subscriber’s SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) – Charging information – Services available to the customer • Also the subscriber’s present Location Area Code, which refers to the MSC, which can connect to the MS.
  • 23. Other Systems • Operations Support System – The management network for the whole GSM network – Usually vendor dependent – Very loosely specified in the GSM standards • Value added services – Voice mail – Call forwarding – Group calls • Short Message Service Center – Stores and forwards the SMS messages – Like an E-mail server – Required to operate the SMS services
  • 24. Location Updates • The cells overlap and usually a mobile station can ‘see’ several transceivers (BTSes) • The MS monitors the identifier for the BSC controlling the cells • When the mobile station reaches a new BSC’s area, it requests an location update • The update is forwarded to the MSC, entered into the VLR, the old BSC is notified and an acknowledgement is passed back
  • 25. Handoff (Handover) • When a call is in process, the changes in location need special processing • Within a BSS, the BSC, which knows the current radio link configuration (including feedbacks from the MS), prepares an available channel in the new BTS • The MS is told to switch over to the new BTS • This is called a hard handoff – In a soft handoff, the MS is connected to two BTSes simultaneously
  • 26. Roaming • When a MS enters another operators network, it can be allowed to use the services of this operator – Operator to operator agreements and contracts – Higher billing • The MS is identified by the information in the SIM card and the identification request is forwarded to the home operator – The home HLR is updated to reflect the MS’s current location
  • 27. 3G, 3.5G and 4G (LTE)
  • 28. 3G Overview • 3G is created by ITU-T and is called IMT-2000
  • 29. Evolution from 2G IS-95 IS-136 & PDCGSM- EDGE GPRS HSCSD IS-95B Cdma2000-1xRTT Cdma2000-1xEV,DV,DO Cdma2000-3xRTT W-CDMA EDGE TD-SCDMA 2G 3G 2.5G 3GPP3GPP2
  • 30. Service Roadmap Improved performance, decreasing cost of delivery Typical average bit rates (peak rates higher) WEB browsing Corporate data access Streaming audio/video Voice & SMS Presence/location xHTML browsing Application downloading E-mail MMS picture / video Multitasking 3G-specific services take advantage of higher bandwidth and/or real-time QoS 3G-specific services take advantage of higher bandwidth and/or real-time QoS A number of mobile services are bearer independent in nature A number of mobile services are bearer independent in nature HSDPA 1-10 Mbps WCDMA 2 Mbps EGPRS 473 kbps GPRS 171 kbps GSM 9.6 kbps Push-to-talk Broadband in wide area Video sharing Video telephony Real-time IP multimedia and games Multicasting CDMA 2000- EVDO CDMA 2000- EVDV CDMA 20001x
  • 31. GSM Evolution to 3G GSM 9.6kbps (one timeslot) GSM Data Also called CSD GSM General Packet Radio Services Data rates up to ~ 115 kbps Max: 8 timeslots used as any one time Packet switched; resources not tied up all the time Contention based. Efficient, but variable delays GSM / GPRS core network re-used by WCDMA (3G) GPRS HSCSD High Speed Circuit Switched Data Dedicate up to 4 timeslots for data connection ~ 50 kbps Good for real-time applications c.w. GPRS Inefficient -> ties up resources, even when nothing sent Not as popular as GPRS (many skipping HSCSD) EDGE Enhanced Data Rates for Global Evolution Uses 8PSK modulation 3x improvement in data rate on short distances Can fall back to GMSK for greater distances Combine with GPRS (EGPRS) ~ 384 kbps Can also be combined with HSCSD WCDMA
  • 32. UMTS • Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) • UMTS is an upgrade from GSM via GPRS or EDGE • The standardization work for UMTS is carried out by Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) • Data rates of UMTS are: – 144 kbps for rural – 384 kbps for urban outdoor – 2048 kbps for indoor and low range outdoor • Virtual Home Environment (VHE)
  • 33. UMTS Frequency Spectrum • UMTS Band – 1900-2025 MHz and 2110-2200 MHz for 3G transmission – In the US, 1710–1755 MHz and 2110–2155 MHz will be used instead, as the 1900 MHz band was already used.
  • 34. UMTS Architecture Mobile Station MSC/ VLR Base Station Subsystem GMSC Network Subsystem AUCEIR HLR Other Networks Note: Interfaces have been omitted for clarity purposes. GGSN SGSN BTS BSC Node B RNC RNS UTRAN SIM ME USIM ME + PSTN PLMN Internet
  • 35. UMTS Network Architecture • UMTS network architecture consists of three domains – Core Network (CN): Provide switching, routing and transit for user traffic – UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network (UTRAN): Provides the air interface access method for user equipment. – User Equipment (UE): Terminals work as air interface counterpart for base stations. The various identities are: IMSI, TMSI, P-TMSI, TLLI, MSISDN, IMEI, IMEISV
  • 36. UTRAN • Wide band CDMA technology is selected for UTRAN air interface – WCDMA – TD-SCDMA • Base stations are referred to as Node-B and control equipment for Node-B is called as Radio Network Controller (RNC). – Functions of Node-B are • Air Interface Tx/Rx • Modulation/Demodulation – Functions of RNC are: • Radio Resource Control • Channel Allocation • Power Control Settings • Handover Control • Ciphering • Segmentation and reassembly
  • 37. 3.5G (HSPA) • High Speed Packet Access (HSPA) is an amalgamation of two mobile telephony protocols, High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) and High Speed Uplink Packet Access (HSUPA), that extends and improves the performance of existing WCDMA protocols. • 3.5G introduces many new features that will enhance the UMTS technology in future. 1xEV-DV already supports most of the features that will be provided in 3.5G. These include: - Adaptive Modulation and Coding - Fast Scheduling - Backward compatibility with 3G - Enhanced Air Interface
  • 38. 4G (LTE) • LTE stands for “Long Term Evolution” • Next Generation mobile broadband technology • Promises data transfer rates of 100 Mbps • Based on UMTS 3G technology • Optimized for All-IP traffic
  • 41. Major LTE Radio Technogies • Uses Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) for downlink • Uses Single Carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access (SC-FDMA) for uplink • Uses Multi-input Multi-output(MIMO) for enhanced throughput • Reduced power consumption • Higher RF power amplifier efficiency (less battery power used by handsets)
  • 43. LTE vs UMTS • Functional changes compared to the current UMTS architecture
  • 44. THANK YOU 10ECE037 Aman Kumar Sharma 10ECE038 Aman Niranjan 10ECE060 P. Pradeep Chandra 10ECE062 Pramod Kumar Tiwari 10ECE067 Shameer Keelaillam