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Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Cellular Networks
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Cellular Network Organization
Use multiple low-power transmitters (100
W or less)
Areas divided into cells
o Each served by its own antenna
o Served by base station consisting of
transmitter, receiver, and control unit
o Band of frequencies allocated
o Cells set up such that antennas of all neighbors
are equidistant (hexagonal pattern)
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Frequency Reuse
Adjacent cells assigned different
frequencies to avoid interference or
crosstalk
Objective is to reuse frequency in nearby
cells
o 10 to 50 frequencies assigned to each cell
o Transmission power controlled to limit power at
that frequency escaping to adjacent cells
o The issue is to determine how many cells must
intervene between two cells using the same
frequency
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Cellular Concept
 Several small cells instead of a single transmitter=> frequency reuse: better efficiency
 Fixed Channel Allocation:
 Cluster of size N = i2+ij+j2; and D = sqrt(3N)R
 R cell radius and
 D distance at which a frequency can be reused with acceptable interference
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Frequency Assignment Problems
 Cellular systems provider allocates frequencies
from a licensed spectrum
 Constraints:
o For any cell, interference from nearby cells within an
acceptable minimum
o For any cell, the frequency bandwidth allocated sufficient
to support the load in the cell
 Objectives:
o Minimize the total bandwidth (or width of the spectrum)
allocated across all cells
o Minimize call blocking probability
o Minimize average interference
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Solving FAPs
 Since the programs are all integer programs, hard
to solve in general
o NP-hard
 Can apply standard mathematical programming
heuristics
o Branch and bound
o Cutting plane techniques
o Local search
o Simulated annealing
o Tabu search…
 Some problems can be expressed as graph
coloring problems in specialized graphs
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Formulating FAPs
 Can be expressed as mathematical programs
o Mostly linear
o Some non-linear (e.g., minimizing interference)
 Approach:
o Represent the cellular structure as a graph
o Each node represents a cell (center)
o Interference relationships represented by the graph
edges
o Assigning a frequency same as assigning a fixed-width
band centered around the frequency
o Binary variables that indicate whether a (center)
frequency is assigned
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Approaches to Cope with
Increasing Capacity
 Adding new channels
 Frequency borrowing – frequencies are taken
from adjacent cells by congested cells
 Cell splitting – cells in areas of high usage can be
split into smaller cells
 Cell sectoring – cells are divided into a number of
wedge-shaped sectors, each with their own set of
channels
 Microcells – antennas move to buildings, hills, and
lamp posts
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Cellular System Overview
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Cellular Systems Terms
 Base Station (BS) – includes an antenna, a
controller, and a number of receivers
 Mobile telecommunications switching office
(MTSO) – connects calls between mobile units
 Two types of channels available between mobile
unit and BS
o Control channels – used to exchange information having
to do with setting up and maintaining calls
o Traffic channels – carry voice or data connection between
users
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Steps in an MTSO Controlled Call
between Mobile Users
Mobile unit initialization
Mobile-originated call
Paging
Call accepted
Ongoing call
Handoff
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Additional Functions in an MTSO
Controlled Call
Call blocking
Call termination
Call drop
Calls to/from fixed and remote mobile
subscriber
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Mobile Radio Propagation Effects
Signal strength
o Must be strong enough between base station
and mobile unit to maintain signal quality at
the receiver
o Must not be so strong as to create too much
cochannel interference with channels in another
cell using the same frequency band
Fading
o Signal propagation effects may disrupt the
signal and cause errors
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Handoff Performance Metrics
Cell blocking probability – probability of a
new call being blocked
Call dropping probability – probability that
a call is terminated due to a handoff
Call completion probability – probability
that an admitted call is not dropped before
it terminates
Probability of unsuccessful handoff –
probability that a handoff is executed while
the reception conditions are inadequate
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Handoff Performance Metrics
 Handoff blocking probability – probability that
a handoff cannot be successfully completed
 Handoff probability – probability that a handoff
occurs before call termination
 Rate of handoff – number of handoffs per unit
time
 Interruption duration – duration of time during
a handoff in which a mobile is not connected to
either base station
 Handoff delay – distance the mobile moves
from the point at which the handoff should
occur to the point at which it does occur
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Handoff Strategies Used to
Determine Instant of Handoff
Relative signal strength
Relative signal strength with threshold
Relative signal strength with hysteresis
Relative signal strength with hysteresis
and threshold
Prediction techniques
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Power Control
Design issues making it desirable to
include dynamic power control in a cellular
system
o Received power must be sufficiently above the
background noise for effective communication
o Desirable to minimize power in the transmitted
signal from the mobile
• Reduce cochannel interference, alleviate health
concerns, save battery power
o In SS systems using CDMA, it’s desirable to
equalize the received power level from all
mobile units at the BS
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Types of Power Control
Open-loop power control
o Depends solely on mobile unit
o No feedback from BS
o Not as accurate as closed-loop, but can react
quicker to fluctuations in signal strength
Closed-loop power control
o Adjusts signal strength in reverse channel
based on metric of performance
o BS makes power adjustment decision and
communicates to mobile on control channel
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Traffic Engineering
Ideally, available channels would equal
number of subscribers active at one time
In practice, not feasible to have capacity
handle all possible load
For N simultaneous user capacity and L
subscribers
o L < N – nonblocking system
o L > N – blocking system
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Blocking System Performance
Questions
Probability that call request is blocked?
What capacity is needed to achieve a
certain upper bound on probability of
blocking?
What is the average delay?
What capacity is needed to achieve a
certain average delay?
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Traffic Intensity
Load presented to a system:
•  = mean rate of calls attempted per unit time
• h = mean holding time per successful call
• A = average number of calls arriving during average
holding period
h
A 

Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Capacity in Cellular Systems
 Blocking Probability (Grade Of Service): Erlang B
formula
 Based on the above formula, we can determine
the minimum N needed to support a desired
grade of service.
 
 C
n
n
C
n
A
C
A
GOS
0
!
/
!
/
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Factors that Determine the Nature
of the Traffic Model
Manner in which blocked calls are handled
o Lost calls delayed (LCD) – blocked calls put in a
queue awaiting a free channel
o Blocked calls rejected and dropped
• Lost calls cleared (LCC) – user waits before another
attempt
• Lost calls held (LCH) – user repeatedly attempts
calling
Number of traffic sources
o Whether number of users is assumed to be
finite or infinite
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
First-Generation Analog
Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS)
o In North America, two 25-MHz bands allocated
to AMPS
• One for transmission from base to mobile unit
• One for transmission from mobile unit to base
o Each band split in two to encourage
competition (12.5MHz per operator)
o Channels of 30 KHz: 21 control channels (FSK),
395 traffic channels (FM voice) per operator
o Frequency reuse exploited (N = 7)
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
AMPS Operation
 Subscriber initiates call by keying in phone
number and presses send key
 MTSO verifies number and authorizes user
 MTSO issues message to user’s cell phone
indicating send and receive traffic channels
 MTSO sends ringing signal to called party
 Party answers; MTSO establishes circuit and
initiates billing information
 Either party hangs up; MTSO releases circuit,
frees channels, completes billing
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Differences Between First and
Second Generation Systems
 Digital traffic channels – first-generation systems
are almost purely analog; second-generation
systems are digital
 Encryption – all second generation systems
provide encryption to prevent eavesdropping
 Error detection and correction – second-
generation digital traffic allows for detection and
correction, giving clear voice reception
 Channel access – second-generation systems
allow channels to be dynamically shared by a
number of users
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Sample TDMA Design Considerations
Number of logical channels per physical
channel (number of time slots in TDMA
frame): 8
Maximum cell radius (R): 35 km
Frequency: region around 900 MHz
Maximum vehicle speed (Vm):250 km/hr
Maximum coding delay: approx. 20 ms
Maximum delay spread (m): 10 s
Bandwidth: Not to exceed 200 kHz (25 kHz
per channel)
GSM Network Architecture
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Architecture of the GSM system
 Several providers setup mobile networks following
the GSM standard within each country
 Components
o MS (mobile station)
o BS (base station)
o MSC (mobile switching center)
o LR (location register)
 Subsystems
o RSS (radio subsystem): covers all radio aspects
• Base station subsystem
o NSS (network and switching subsystem): call forwarding,
handover, switching
o OSS (operation subsystem): management of the network
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
GSM: elements and interfaces
NSS
MS MS
BTS
BSC
GMSC
IWF
OMC
BTS
BSC
MSC MSC
Abis
Um
EIR
HLR
VLR VLR
A
BSS
PDN
ISDN, PSTN
RSS
radio cell
radio cell
MS
AUC
OSS
signaling
O
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Um
Abis
A
BSS
radio
subsystem
MS MS
BTS
BSC
BTS
BTS
BSC
BTS
network and
switching subsystem
MSC
MSC
Fixed partner networks
IWF
ISDN
PSTN
PDN
SS7
EIR
HLR
VLR
ISDN
PSTN
GSM: system architecture
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Radio subsystem
 Components
o MS (Mobile Station)
o BSS (Base Station Subsystem):
consisting of
• BTS (Base Transceiver Station):
sender and receiver
• BSC (Base Station Controller):
controlling several transceivers
 Interfaces
o Um : radio interface
o Abis : standardized, open interface
with
16 kbit/s user channels
o A: standardized, open interface
with
64 kbit/s user channels
Um
Abis
A
BSS
radio
subsystem
network and switching
subsystem
MS MS
BTS
BSC MSC
BTS
BTS
BSC
BTS
MSC
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Mobile Station
Mobile station communicates across Um
interface (air interface) with base station
transceiver in same cell as mobile unit
Mobile equipment (ME) – physical
terminal, such as a telephone or PDA
o ME includes radio transceiver, digital signal
processors and subscriber identity module
(SIM)
GSM subscriber units are generic until SIM
is inserted
o SIMs roam, not necessarily the subscriber
devices
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Base Station Subsystem (BSS)
BSS consists of base station controller and
one or more base transceiver stations
(BTS)
Each BTS defines a single cell
o Includes radio antenna, radio transceiver and a
link to a base station controller (BSC)
BSC reserves radio frequencies, manages
handoff of mobile unit from one cell to
another within BSS, and controls paging
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Network and switching subsystem
Components
 MSC (Mobile Services Switching Center):
 IWF (Interworking Functions)
 ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network)
 PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network)
 PSPDN (Packet Switched Public Data Net.)
 CSPDN (Circuit Switched Public Data Net.)
Databases
 HLR (Home Location Register)
 VLR (Visitor Location Register)
 EIR (Equipment Identity Register)
network
subsystem
MSC
MSC
fixed partner
networks
IWF
ISDN
PSTN
PSPDN
CSPD
N
SS7
EIR
HLR
VLR
ISDN
PSTN
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Network Subsystem (NS)
Provides link between cellular network and
PSTNs
Controls handoffs between cells in different
BSSs
Authenticates users and validates accounts
Enables worldwide roaming of mobile users
Central element of NS is the mobile
switching center (MSC)
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Mobile Switching Center (MSC)
Databases
 Home location register (HLR) database – stores
information about each subscriber that belongs to it
 Visitor location register (VLR) database – maintains
information about subscribers currently physically in
the region
 Authentication center database (AuC) – used for
authentication activities, holds encryption keys
 Equipment identity register database (EIR) – keeps
track of the type of equipment that exists at the
mobile station
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
TDMA Format – Time Slot Fields
 Trail bits – allow synchronization of transmissions
from mobile units located at different distances
 Encrypted bits – encrypted data
 Stealing bit - indicates whether block contains data
or is "stolen"
 Training sequence – used to adapt parameters of
receiver to the current path propagation
characteristics
o Strongest signal selected in case of multipath propagation
 Guard bits – used to avoid overlapping with other
bursts
GSM Speech Processing
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
GSM Speech Processing Steps
Speech compressed using a predictive
coding scheme
Divided into blocks, each of which is
protected partly by CRC and partly by a
convolutional code
Interleaving to protect against burst errors
Encryption for providing privacy
Assembled into time slots
Modulated for analog transmission using
FSK
GSM Signaling Protocol
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Functions Provided by Protocols
Protocols above the link layer of the GSM
signaling protocol architecture provide
specific functions:
o Radio resource management
o Mobility management
o Connection management
o Mobile application part (MAP)
o BTS management
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Mobile Terminated Call
PSTN
calling
station
GMSC
HLR VLR
BSS
BSS
BSS
MSC
MS
1 2
3
4
5
6
7
8 9
10
11 12
13
16
10 10
11 11 11
14 15
17
 1: calling a GSM subscriber
 2: forwarding call to GMSC
 3: signal call setup to HLR
 4, 5: connect with current
VLR
 6: forward responsible
MSC to GMSC
 7: forward call to current
MSC
 8, 9: get current status of MS
 10, 11: paging of MS
 12, 13: MS answers
 14, 15: security checks
 16, 17: set up connection
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Mobile Originated Call
PSTN GMSC
VLR
BSS
MSC
MS
1
2
6 5
3 4
9
10
7 8
 1, 2: connection
request
 3, 4: security check
 5-8: check resources
(free circuit)
 9-10: set up call
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
MTC/MOC
BTS
MS
paging request
channel request
immediate assignment
paging response
authentication request
authentication response
ciphering command
ciphering complete
setup
call confirmed
assignment command
assignment complete
alerting
connect
connect acknowledge
data/speech exchange
BTS
MS
channel request
immediate assignment
service request
authentication request
authentication response
ciphering command
ciphering complete
setup
call confirmed
assignment command
assignment complete
alerting
connect
connect acknowledge
data/speech exchange
MTC MOC
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
4 types of handover
MSC MSC
BSC BSC
BSC
BTS BTS BTS
BTS
MS MS MS MS
1
2 3 4
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Handover decision
receive level
BTSold
receive level
BTSold
MS MS
HO_MARGIN
BTSold BTSnew
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Security in GSM
 Security services
o access control/authentication
• user  SIM (Subscriber Identity Module): secret PIN (personal identification
number)
• SIM  network: challenge response method
o confidentiality
• voice and signaling encrypted on the wireless link (after successful
authentication)
o anonymity
• temporary identity TMSI
(Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identity)
• newly assigned at each new location update (LUP)
• encrypted transmission
 3 algorithms specified in GSM
o A3 for authentication (“secret”, open interface)
o A5 for encryption (standardized)
o A8 for key generation (“secret”, open interface)
“secret”:
• A3 and A8
available via the
Internet
• network providers
can use stronger
mechanisms
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
GSM - authentication
A3
RAND
Ki
128 bit 128 bit
SRES* 32 bit
A3
RAND Ki
128 bit 128 bit
SRES 32 bit
SRES* =? SRES SRES
RAND
SRES
32 bit
mobile network SIM
AC
MSC
SIM
Ki: individual subscriber authentication key SRES: signed response
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
GSM - key generation and
encryption
A8
RAND
Ki
128 bit 128 bit
Kc
64 bit
A8
RAND Ki
128 bit 128 bit
SRES
RAND
encrypted
data
mobile network (BTS) MS with SIM
AC
BTS
SIM
A5
Kc
64 bit
A5
MS
data data
cipher
key
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
IS-95 (CdmaOne)
 IS-95: standard for the radio interface
 IS-41: standard for the network part
 Operates in 800MHz and 1900MHz bands
 Uses DS-CDMA technology (1.2288 Mchips/s)
 Forward link (downlink): (2,1,9)-convolutional code,
interleaved, 64 chips spreading sequence (Walsh-Hadamard
functions)
 Pilot channel, synchronization channel, 7 paging channels, up
to 63 traffic channels
 Reverse link (uplink): (3,1,9)-convolutional code, interleaved,
6 bits are mapped into a Walsh-Hadamard sequence,
spreading using a user-specific code
 Tight power control (open-loop, fast closed loop)
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Advantages of CDMA Cellular
 Frequency diversity – frequency-dependent
transmission impairments have less effect on
signal
 Multipath resistance – chipping codes used for
CDMA exhibit low cross correlation and low
autocorrelation
 Privacy – privacy is inherent since spread
spectrum is obtained by use of noise-like signals
 Graceful degradation – system only gradually
degrades as more users access the system
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Drawbacks of CDMA Cellular
Self-jamming – arriving transmissions
from multiple users not aligned on chip
boundaries unless users are perfectly
synchronized
Near-far problem – signals closer to the
receiver are received with less attenuation
than signals farther away
Soft handoff – requires that the mobile
acquires the new cell before it relinquishes
the old; this is more complex than hard
handoff used in FDMA and TDMA schemes
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
CDMA Design Considerations
RAKE receiver – when multiple versions of
a signal arrive more than one chip interval
apart, RAKE receiver attempts to recover
signals from multiple paths and combine
them
o This method achieves better performance than
simply recovering dominant signal and treating
remaining signals as noise
Soft Handoff – mobile station temporarily
connected to more than one base station
simultaneously
Principle of RAKE Receiver
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Forward Link Channels
 Pilot: allows the mobile unit to acquire timing
information, provides phase reference and
provides means for signal strength comparison
 Synchronization: used by mobile station to obtain
identification information about cellular system
 Paging: contain messages for one or more mobile
stations
 Traffic: the forward channel supports 55 traffic
channels
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Forward Traffic Processing Steps
Speech is encoded at a rate of 8550 bps
Additional bits added for error detection
Data transmitted in 2-ms blocks with
forward error correction provided by a
convolutional encoder
Data interleaved in blocks to reduce effects
of errors
Data bits are scrambled, serving as a
privacy mask
o Using a long code based on user’s electronic
serial number
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Forward Traffic Processing Steps
 Power control information inserted into traffic
channel
 DS-SS function spreads the 19.2 kbps to a rate of
1.2288 Mbps using one row of 64 x 64 Walsh
matrix
 Digital bit stream modulated onto the carrier
using QPSK modulation scheme
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Reverse Traffic Processing Steps
 Convolutional encoder at rate 1/3
 Spread the data using a Walsh matrix
o Use a 6-bit piece of data as an index to the Walsh matrix
o To improve reception at base station
 Data burst randomizer
 Spreading using the user-specific long code mask
Wireless Networks Fall 2007
Third-Generation Capabilities
 Voice quality comparable to the public switched
telephone network
 144 kbps data rate available to users in high-
speed motor vehicles over large areas
 384 kbps available to pedestrians standing or
moving slowly over small areas
 Support for 2.048 Mbps for office use
 Symmetrical/asymmetrical data transmission rates
 Support for both packet switched and circuit
switched data services

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Cellular Networks in routing and switching

  • 1. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Cellular Networks
  • 2. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Cellular Network Organization Use multiple low-power transmitters (100 W or less) Areas divided into cells o Each served by its own antenna o Served by base station consisting of transmitter, receiver, and control unit o Band of frequencies allocated o Cells set up such that antennas of all neighbors are equidistant (hexagonal pattern)
  • 3. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Frequency Reuse Adjacent cells assigned different frequencies to avoid interference or crosstalk Objective is to reuse frequency in nearby cells o 10 to 50 frequencies assigned to each cell o Transmission power controlled to limit power at that frequency escaping to adjacent cells o The issue is to determine how many cells must intervene between two cells using the same frequency
  • 4. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Cellular Concept  Several small cells instead of a single transmitter=> frequency reuse: better efficiency  Fixed Channel Allocation:  Cluster of size N = i2+ij+j2; and D = sqrt(3N)R  R cell radius and  D distance at which a frequency can be reused with acceptable interference
  • 5. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Frequency Assignment Problems  Cellular systems provider allocates frequencies from a licensed spectrum  Constraints: o For any cell, interference from nearby cells within an acceptable minimum o For any cell, the frequency bandwidth allocated sufficient to support the load in the cell  Objectives: o Minimize the total bandwidth (or width of the spectrum) allocated across all cells o Minimize call blocking probability o Minimize average interference
  • 6. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Solving FAPs  Since the programs are all integer programs, hard to solve in general o NP-hard  Can apply standard mathematical programming heuristics o Branch and bound o Cutting plane techniques o Local search o Simulated annealing o Tabu search…  Some problems can be expressed as graph coloring problems in specialized graphs
  • 7. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Formulating FAPs  Can be expressed as mathematical programs o Mostly linear o Some non-linear (e.g., minimizing interference)  Approach: o Represent the cellular structure as a graph o Each node represents a cell (center) o Interference relationships represented by the graph edges o Assigning a frequency same as assigning a fixed-width band centered around the frequency o Binary variables that indicate whether a (center) frequency is assigned
  • 8. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Approaches to Cope with Increasing Capacity  Adding new channels  Frequency borrowing – frequencies are taken from adjacent cells by congested cells  Cell splitting – cells in areas of high usage can be split into smaller cells  Cell sectoring – cells are divided into a number of wedge-shaped sectors, each with their own set of channels  Microcells – antennas move to buildings, hills, and lamp posts
  • 9. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Cellular System Overview
  • 10. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Cellular Systems Terms  Base Station (BS) – includes an antenna, a controller, and a number of receivers  Mobile telecommunications switching office (MTSO) – connects calls between mobile units  Two types of channels available between mobile unit and BS o Control channels – used to exchange information having to do with setting up and maintaining calls o Traffic channels – carry voice or data connection between users
  • 11. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Steps in an MTSO Controlled Call between Mobile Users Mobile unit initialization Mobile-originated call Paging Call accepted Ongoing call Handoff
  • 12. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Additional Functions in an MTSO Controlled Call Call blocking Call termination Call drop Calls to/from fixed and remote mobile subscriber
  • 13. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Mobile Radio Propagation Effects Signal strength o Must be strong enough between base station and mobile unit to maintain signal quality at the receiver o Must not be so strong as to create too much cochannel interference with channels in another cell using the same frequency band Fading o Signal propagation effects may disrupt the signal and cause errors
  • 14. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Handoff Performance Metrics Cell blocking probability – probability of a new call being blocked Call dropping probability – probability that a call is terminated due to a handoff Call completion probability – probability that an admitted call is not dropped before it terminates Probability of unsuccessful handoff – probability that a handoff is executed while the reception conditions are inadequate
  • 15. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Handoff Performance Metrics  Handoff blocking probability – probability that a handoff cannot be successfully completed  Handoff probability – probability that a handoff occurs before call termination  Rate of handoff – number of handoffs per unit time  Interruption duration – duration of time during a handoff in which a mobile is not connected to either base station  Handoff delay – distance the mobile moves from the point at which the handoff should occur to the point at which it does occur
  • 16. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Handoff Strategies Used to Determine Instant of Handoff Relative signal strength Relative signal strength with threshold Relative signal strength with hysteresis Relative signal strength with hysteresis and threshold Prediction techniques
  • 17. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Power Control Design issues making it desirable to include dynamic power control in a cellular system o Received power must be sufficiently above the background noise for effective communication o Desirable to minimize power in the transmitted signal from the mobile • Reduce cochannel interference, alleviate health concerns, save battery power o In SS systems using CDMA, it’s desirable to equalize the received power level from all mobile units at the BS
  • 18. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Types of Power Control Open-loop power control o Depends solely on mobile unit o No feedback from BS o Not as accurate as closed-loop, but can react quicker to fluctuations in signal strength Closed-loop power control o Adjusts signal strength in reverse channel based on metric of performance o BS makes power adjustment decision and communicates to mobile on control channel
  • 19. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Traffic Engineering Ideally, available channels would equal number of subscribers active at one time In practice, not feasible to have capacity handle all possible load For N simultaneous user capacity and L subscribers o L < N – nonblocking system o L > N – blocking system
  • 20. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Blocking System Performance Questions Probability that call request is blocked? What capacity is needed to achieve a certain upper bound on probability of blocking? What is the average delay? What capacity is needed to achieve a certain average delay?
  • 21. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Traffic Intensity Load presented to a system: •  = mean rate of calls attempted per unit time • h = mean holding time per successful call • A = average number of calls arriving during average holding period h A  
  • 22. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Capacity in Cellular Systems  Blocking Probability (Grade Of Service): Erlang B formula  Based on the above formula, we can determine the minimum N needed to support a desired grade of service.    C n n C n A C A GOS 0 ! / ! /
  • 23. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Factors that Determine the Nature of the Traffic Model Manner in which blocked calls are handled o Lost calls delayed (LCD) – blocked calls put in a queue awaiting a free channel o Blocked calls rejected and dropped • Lost calls cleared (LCC) – user waits before another attempt • Lost calls held (LCH) – user repeatedly attempts calling Number of traffic sources o Whether number of users is assumed to be finite or infinite
  • 24. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 First-Generation Analog Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) o In North America, two 25-MHz bands allocated to AMPS • One for transmission from base to mobile unit • One for transmission from mobile unit to base o Each band split in two to encourage competition (12.5MHz per operator) o Channels of 30 KHz: 21 control channels (FSK), 395 traffic channels (FM voice) per operator o Frequency reuse exploited (N = 7)
  • 25. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 AMPS Operation  Subscriber initiates call by keying in phone number and presses send key  MTSO verifies number and authorizes user  MTSO issues message to user’s cell phone indicating send and receive traffic channels  MTSO sends ringing signal to called party  Party answers; MTSO establishes circuit and initiates billing information  Either party hangs up; MTSO releases circuit, frees channels, completes billing
  • 26. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Differences Between First and Second Generation Systems  Digital traffic channels – first-generation systems are almost purely analog; second-generation systems are digital  Encryption – all second generation systems provide encryption to prevent eavesdropping  Error detection and correction – second- generation digital traffic allows for detection and correction, giving clear voice reception  Channel access – second-generation systems allow channels to be dynamically shared by a number of users
  • 27. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Sample TDMA Design Considerations Number of logical channels per physical channel (number of time slots in TDMA frame): 8 Maximum cell radius (R): 35 km Frequency: region around 900 MHz Maximum vehicle speed (Vm):250 km/hr Maximum coding delay: approx. 20 ms Maximum delay spread (m): 10 s Bandwidth: Not to exceed 200 kHz (25 kHz per channel)
  • 29. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Architecture of the GSM system  Several providers setup mobile networks following the GSM standard within each country  Components o MS (mobile station) o BS (base station) o MSC (mobile switching center) o LR (location register)  Subsystems o RSS (radio subsystem): covers all radio aspects • Base station subsystem o NSS (network and switching subsystem): call forwarding, handover, switching o OSS (operation subsystem): management of the network
  • 30. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 GSM: elements and interfaces NSS MS MS BTS BSC GMSC IWF OMC BTS BSC MSC MSC Abis Um EIR HLR VLR VLR A BSS PDN ISDN, PSTN RSS radio cell radio cell MS AUC OSS signaling O
  • 31. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Um Abis A BSS radio subsystem MS MS BTS BSC BTS BTS BSC BTS network and switching subsystem MSC MSC Fixed partner networks IWF ISDN PSTN PDN SS7 EIR HLR VLR ISDN PSTN GSM: system architecture
  • 32. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Radio subsystem  Components o MS (Mobile Station) o BSS (Base Station Subsystem): consisting of • BTS (Base Transceiver Station): sender and receiver • BSC (Base Station Controller): controlling several transceivers  Interfaces o Um : radio interface o Abis : standardized, open interface with 16 kbit/s user channels o A: standardized, open interface with 64 kbit/s user channels Um Abis A BSS radio subsystem network and switching subsystem MS MS BTS BSC MSC BTS BTS BSC BTS MSC
  • 33. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Mobile Station Mobile station communicates across Um interface (air interface) with base station transceiver in same cell as mobile unit Mobile equipment (ME) – physical terminal, such as a telephone or PDA o ME includes radio transceiver, digital signal processors and subscriber identity module (SIM) GSM subscriber units are generic until SIM is inserted o SIMs roam, not necessarily the subscriber devices
  • 34. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Base Station Subsystem (BSS) BSS consists of base station controller and one or more base transceiver stations (BTS) Each BTS defines a single cell o Includes radio antenna, radio transceiver and a link to a base station controller (BSC) BSC reserves radio frequencies, manages handoff of mobile unit from one cell to another within BSS, and controls paging
  • 35. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Network and switching subsystem Components  MSC (Mobile Services Switching Center):  IWF (Interworking Functions)  ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network)  PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network)  PSPDN (Packet Switched Public Data Net.)  CSPDN (Circuit Switched Public Data Net.) Databases  HLR (Home Location Register)  VLR (Visitor Location Register)  EIR (Equipment Identity Register) network subsystem MSC MSC fixed partner networks IWF ISDN PSTN PSPDN CSPD N SS7 EIR HLR VLR ISDN PSTN
  • 36. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Network Subsystem (NS) Provides link between cellular network and PSTNs Controls handoffs between cells in different BSSs Authenticates users and validates accounts Enables worldwide roaming of mobile users Central element of NS is the mobile switching center (MSC)
  • 37. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Databases  Home location register (HLR) database – stores information about each subscriber that belongs to it  Visitor location register (VLR) database – maintains information about subscribers currently physically in the region  Authentication center database (AuC) – used for authentication activities, holds encryption keys  Equipment identity register database (EIR) – keeps track of the type of equipment that exists at the mobile station
  • 38. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 TDMA Format – Time Slot Fields  Trail bits – allow synchronization of transmissions from mobile units located at different distances  Encrypted bits – encrypted data  Stealing bit - indicates whether block contains data or is "stolen"  Training sequence – used to adapt parameters of receiver to the current path propagation characteristics o Strongest signal selected in case of multipath propagation  Guard bits – used to avoid overlapping with other bursts
  • 40. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 GSM Speech Processing Steps Speech compressed using a predictive coding scheme Divided into blocks, each of which is protected partly by CRC and partly by a convolutional code Interleaving to protect against burst errors Encryption for providing privacy Assembled into time slots Modulated for analog transmission using FSK
  • 42. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Functions Provided by Protocols Protocols above the link layer of the GSM signaling protocol architecture provide specific functions: o Radio resource management o Mobility management o Connection management o Mobile application part (MAP) o BTS management
  • 43. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Mobile Terminated Call PSTN calling station GMSC HLR VLR BSS BSS BSS MSC MS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 16 10 10 11 11 11 14 15 17  1: calling a GSM subscriber  2: forwarding call to GMSC  3: signal call setup to HLR  4, 5: connect with current VLR  6: forward responsible MSC to GMSC  7: forward call to current MSC  8, 9: get current status of MS  10, 11: paging of MS  12, 13: MS answers  14, 15: security checks  16, 17: set up connection
  • 44. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Mobile Originated Call PSTN GMSC VLR BSS MSC MS 1 2 6 5 3 4 9 10 7 8  1, 2: connection request  3, 4: security check  5-8: check resources (free circuit)  9-10: set up call
  • 45. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 MTC/MOC BTS MS paging request channel request immediate assignment paging response authentication request authentication response ciphering command ciphering complete setup call confirmed assignment command assignment complete alerting connect connect acknowledge data/speech exchange BTS MS channel request immediate assignment service request authentication request authentication response ciphering command ciphering complete setup call confirmed assignment command assignment complete alerting connect connect acknowledge data/speech exchange MTC MOC
  • 46. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 4 types of handover MSC MSC BSC BSC BSC BTS BTS BTS BTS MS MS MS MS 1 2 3 4
  • 47. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Handover decision receive level BTSold receive level BTSold MS MS HO_MARGIN BTSold BTSnew
  • 48. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Security in GSM  Security services o access control/authentication • user  SIM (Subscriber Identity Module): secret PIN (personal identification number) • SIM  network: challenge response method o confidentiality • voice and signaling encrypted on the wireless link (after successful authentication) o anonymity • temporary identity TMSI (Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identity) • newly assigned at each new location update (LUP) • encrypted transmission  3 algorithms specified in GSM o A3 for authentication (“secret”, open interface) o A5 for encryption (standardized) o A8 for key generation (“secret”, open interface) “secret”: • A3 and A8 available via the Internet • network providers can use stronger mechanisms
  • 49. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 GSM - authentication A3 RAND Ki 128 bit 128 bit SRES* 32 bit A3 RAND Ki 128 bit 128 bit SRES 32 bit SRES* =? SRES SRES RAND SRES 32 bit mobile network SIM AC MSC SIM Ki: individual subscriber authentication key SRES: signed response
  • 50. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 GSM - key generation and encryption A8 RAND Ki 128 bit 128 bit Kc 64 bit A8 RAND Ki 128 bit 128 bit SRES RAND encrypted data mobile network (BTS) MS with SIM AC BTS SIM A5 Kc 64 bit A5 MS data data cipher key
  • 51. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 IS-95 (CdmaOne)  IS-95: standard for the radio interface  IS-41: standard for the network part  Operates in 800MHz and 1900MHz bands  Uses DS-CDMA technology (1.2288 Mchips/s)  Forward link (downlink): (2,1,9)-convolutional code, interleaved, 64 chips spreading sequence (Walsh-Hadamard functions)  Pilot channel, synchronization channel, 7 paging channels, up to 63 traffic channels  Reverse link (uplink): (3,1,9)-convolutional code, interleaved, 6 bits are mapped into a Walsh-Hadamard sequence, spreading using a user-specific code  Tight power control (open-loop, fast closed loop)
  • 52. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Advantages of CDMA Cellular  Frequency diversity – frequency-dependent transmission impairments have less effect on signal  Multipath resistance – chipping codes used for CDMA exhibit low cross correlation and low autocorrelation  Privacy – privacy is inherent since spread spectrum is obtained by use of noise-like signals  Graceful degradation – system only gradually degrades as more users access the system
  • 53. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Drawbacks of CDMA Cellular Self-jamming – arriving transmissions from multiple users not aligned on chip boundaries unless users are perfectly synchronized Near-far problem – signals closer to the receiver are received with less attenuation than signals farther away Soft handoff – requires that the mobile acquires the new cell before it relinquishes the old; this is more complex than hard handoff used in FDMA and TDMA schemes
  • 54. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 CDMA Design Considerations RAKE receiver – when multiple versions of a signal arrive more than one chip interval apart, RAKE receiver attempts to recover signals from multiple paths and combine them o This method achieves better performance than simply recovering dominant signal and treating remaining signals as noise Soft Handoff – mobile station temporarily connected to more than one base station simultaneously
  • 55. Principle of RAKE Receiver
  • 56. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Forward Link Channels  Pilot: allows the mobile unit to acquire timing information, provides phase reference and provides means for signal strength comparison  Synchronization: used by mobile station to obtain identification information about cellular system  Paging: contain messages for one or more mobile stations  Traffic: the forward channel supports 55 traffic channels
  • 57. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Forward Traffic Processing Steps Speech is encoded at a rate of 8550 bps Additional bits added for error detection Data transmitted in 2-ms blocks with forward error correction provided by a convolutional encoder Data interleaved in blocks to reduce effects of errors Data bits are scrambled, serving as a privacy mask o Using a long code based on user’s electronic serial number
  • 58. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Forward Traffic Processing Steps  Power control information inserted into traffic channel  DS-SS function spreads the 19.2 kbps to a rate of 1.2288 Mbps using one row of 64 x 64 Walsh matrix  Digital bit stream modulated onto the carrier using QPSK modulation scheme
  • 59. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Reverse Traffic Processing Steps  Convolutional encoder at rate 1/3  Spread the data using a Walsh matrix o Use a 6-bit piece of data as an index to the Walsh matrix o To improve reception at base station  Data burst randomizer  Spreading using the user-specific long code mask
  • 60. Wireless Networks Fall 2007 Third-Generation Capabilities  Voice quality comparable to the public switched telephone network  144 kbps data rate available to users in high- speed motor vehicles over large areas  384 kbps available to pedestrians standing or moving slowly over small areas  Support for 2.048 Mbps for office use  Symmetrical/asymmetrical data transmission rates  Support for both packet switched and circuit switched data services