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3G Evolution – An Overview of LTE for Mobile BroadBand James Kempf* Research Area Packet Technologies Ericsson Research May 11, 2010 with thanks to Dr. Stefan Parkvall, Ericsson Research
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3G Evolution – An Overview of LTE for Mobile BroadBandJames Kempf*Research Area Packet TechnologiesEricsson ResearchMay 11, 2010

with thanks to Dr. Stefan Parkvall, Ericsson Research

Mobile Broadband

HSPAHSPA

LTELTE

TurboTurbo--3G3G

More Than 400* HSPA Devices!

› 203 HSPA phones, media players, camera (50%)› 161 PC with embedded HSPA, PC cards, USB modems (40%)› 39 wireless routers (10%)

*Commercially launched as of August 2007

2010 – 3G iPad!

Outline

› Introducing Ericsson Research Silicon Valley› Basic Principles› 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)› LTE Advanced› Standardization› Summary

Introducing Ericsson Research Silicon Valley

Ericsson Research Silicon ValleyPart of our global research organization

Sweden

Montreal

RTP

GermanySilicon Valley

Finland

ItalySpain

Hungary

China

Japan

• ~600 people• GSM, 3G and LTE technologies were invented here• Leading IP competence in IETF• Delivers concepts and pre-commercial prototypes• Files over 50 % of all Ericsson patents

• Packet Networking • Open Application environment• Radio Access Tech & Signal processing• Led by Jan Söderström V.P. Research USA

Ericsson Research

ER SiliconValley

Research Focus Silicon Valley

Service Layer

Standard Services and IMS

Multi Access Edge

Wireline Access Wireless Access

Internet

IP, Routers & Networks Applications & Mobile Internet

Precoding Matrices

Receiver Matrices

G1

P = [P1,…,PK]

G2

H2

H1

GK

HK

G = diag{G1,…,GK}

Radio Access

Lagg

ing

Dep

loy-

men

t Protocol X Fully deployed>> 10 years

Ex. IPv6, RSVP, HIP...

Next Generation InternetTr

ends

& Is

sues

Mob

ility

1

2

3

2008 2013

FixedMobile

Bill

ion

subs

cr.

Sign

allin

g/co

ntr

ol

Fixed BB

Nomadic

Mobile

Sec

urity

Revenues

Relative PriceBandwitdhprocessingstorage

Time

Traf

fic

20072005

Daily Spam Billions

50

100Botnets and Spoofing- Now an industry Google Apps (Gmail, ..

MobileMeWindows LiveSalesForce

Gliffy

Google Apps (Gmail, ..MobileMe

Windows LiveSalesForce

Gliffy

Google AppEngineMicrosoft Azure

Sun Project CarolineForce.comRollbase

Google AppEngineMicrosoft Azure

Sun Project CarolineForce.comRollbase

PaaSAmazon EC2

GoGridJoyentMosso

FlexiScale

Amazon EC2GoGridJoyentMosso

FlexiScale

IaaSSaaS

substrate router

virtual router

substrate link

slice

virtual end-

system

New

Tec

hnol

ogie

s

Cloud computing

NW Virtualization

Mobile Broadband

A new network paradigm - without a clean slate deployment

HSPAHSPA Ev.

LTE

LTE Ev

3G

Ene

rgy

& h

eat

processing

TimeTime

Revenues

Time

B-w

idth

&

cos

t

Traf

fic

Revenues

Time

Traf

fic

Revenues

Time

Traf

fic

Revenues

Time

Traf

fic

Revenues

Time

Basic Principles

Trend – Data is overtaking Voice

› Data is overtaking voice......but previous cellular systems designed primarily for voice

Source: NetQB

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

sep-06 okt-06 nov-06 dec-06 jan-07 feb-07 mar-07 apr-07 maj-07 jun-07 jul-07 aug-07 sep-07 okt-07 nov-07 dec-07

GBi

t/RN

C/h

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

# R

NCs

Sum of Meas RNCs Sum of Total traffic (GBit/RNC/h) Sum of Speech traffic (GBit/RNC/h)Sum of Packet (DCH+HS) traffic (GBit/RNC/h) Sum of DCH Packet traffic (GBit/RNC/h) Sum of HS Packet traffic (GBit/RNC/h)Sum of CS64 traffic (GBit/RNC/h) Sum of Others traffic (GBit/RNC/h)

3

Ctr l + Shi f t + E

PacketPacket

VoiceVoice

WCDMA & HSPA world average

History

NMT/AMPS, ...NMT/AMPS, ...Analog, speechAnalog, speech

1980 1990 2000 2010

GSM, ...GSM, ...Digital, speech and lowDigital, speech and low--rate datarate data

HighHigh--speed data speed data (up to ~20 Mbps)(up to ~20 Mbps)

WCDMA/HSPAWCDMA/HSPA

20 MHz

5 MHz

200 kHz

HighHigh--speed data speed data (up to 300 Mbps)(up to 300 Mbps)

LTELTE

30 kHz

Research and standardization

Research and standardization

Research and standardization

HSPA and LTE = Mobile Broadband

› HSPA – High-Speed Packet Access– Evolution of 3G/WCDMA – Gradually improved performance at a low additional cost– Data rates up to ~40 Mbit/s in 5 MHz

””4G4G””LTELTE LTELTE--AdvancedAdvanced

R99 Rel4 Rel5 Rel6 Rel7 Rel8

HSPAHSPAWCDMAWCDMA HSPA evolutionHSPA evolutionHSDPAHSDPA

Rel10

› LTE – Long-Term Evolution– Significantly improved performance in a wide range of spectrum allocations– Data rates up to ~300 Mbit/s in 20 MHz– First step towards IMT-Advanced (”4G”)

Extending broadband data networking from wired to wireless

Wireless vs Wireline

› Many aspects are similar……but there are some fundamental differences!

› Cable› “No” spectrum limitation

– over-provisioning› Relatively static channels

– No fading› Congestion ⇒ lost packets› No mobility

Wireline› No cable ☺› Spectrum is scare

– Radio-resource management› Time-varying radio channel

– Fast fading› Fading ⇒ lost packets › Mobility

Wireless

Radio-Channel Variations

› Transmitted power PTx received power PRx <PTx

Fast

Slo

w› Path loss– Given by Tx-to-Rx distance

› Log-normal fading– Due to random variations in terrain (large scale)– Received signal strength in dB given by normal distribution

› Fast fading– Random variations in environment– Often modeled by a Rayleigh distribution

Radio-Channel Variations

› Transmitted signal reflected in numerous objects– multiple delayed signal copies received

› ’Large’ delay difference– components can be processed separately

› ’Small’ delay difference– components add constructively...

...or destructively– Large number of components

central-limit theoremGaussian-distributed amplitudeRayleigh-distributed power (Rayleigh-fading, fast fading) frequency space

Power

Multi-path fading

Radio-channels – rapidly varying signal quality

Traffic Variations

› Traditional voice services– Low, ~10 kbit/s, data rate– Fairly constant during the call

› Packet-data services– Behavior depends on type of service– Typically rapidly and randomly varying

rate requirements(’all-or-nothing’ resource requirement)

circuit-switched ok!

Packet-data systems – rapidly varying data rates

packet-switched NW

TCP Basics› TCP – Internet’s end-to-end transport layer protocol (non-real time)

› Main responsibilities of TCP:– provide reliable data transport– avoid congestion in the network

TCP

Appl.

IP

TCP

Appl.

IP

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

IPIP

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

Client ServerRouterRouter

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

IPIP

Phy. Layer

Link Layer

Interaction with wireless links requires attention!

TCP Basics

› Error recovery and congestion control are intertwined– lost packets are used as congestion signal by TCP

radio-link errors should be ‘hidden’ from TCP– Lost packets timeout slow start

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800

Time [ms]

Seq

No

[byt

es]

RTT=30 ms

RTT=60 ms

Slow start phase

Congestion avoidance

phase

Slow start phase

Congestion avoidance phase

› TCP congestion management– Window = not-yet-ACKed packets in transmission– Phase 1: Slow start

› Increase window by one on each received ACK› window grows exponentially

– Phase 2: Congestion avoidance› Increse window by 1/window_size on each ACK› window grows linearly

TCP Basics

› TCP performance determined by data rate and latency– High data rate alone not sufficient – need low latency as well– Delay-bandwidth product

Length of the pipe: Latency

Width of the pipe: Data Rate

High data rate and low latency

Radio Channels and Packet Data

› Radio-channel quality varies...– ...distance to base station– ... random variations in the environment

› Traffic pattern varies...– ...user behavior– ...server load

Adapt to and exploit channel and traffic variations!

3GPP Long TERM Evolution (LTE)

LTE – Background

› LTE – Long-Term Evolution– Significantly improved performance [compared to HSPA]

in a wide range of spectrum allocations– Data rates up to ~300 Mbit/s in 20 MHz– First step towards IMT-Advanced (”4G”)– Packet-switched services only

2004 2005 2006 2007 20092008

Requirement work started

Products availableStudies Specification work

Spectrum Flexibility

› Spectrum flexibility operation in differently-sized spectrum allocations

10 MHz 15 MHz 20 MHz2.5 MHz 5 MHz1.25 MHz

min 6 resource blocks

max 110 resource blocks

system bandwidth NRB

cell search and broadcast of basic system information in the 6 center resource blocks

› Support for paired and unpaired spectrum allocations

fDL

fUL

FDDfDL

fUL

Half duplex FDDfDL/UL

TDD

Paired spectrum Reduced UE complexity Unpaired spectrum

Downlink (DL)

Uplink (UL)

LTE radio access

Downlink: OFDM› Parallel transmission on large number of

narrowband subcarriersUplink: DFTS-OFDM› DFT-precoded OFDM

› Benefits:– Avoid own-cell interference– Robust to time dispersion

› Main drawback– Power-amplifier efficiency

› TX signal has single-carrier propertiesImproved power-amplifier efficiency– Improved battery life – Reduced PA cost– Critical for uplink

› Equalizer needed Rx Complexity– Not critical for uplink

Cyclic-prefixinsertion

OFDM modulatorDFT precoder

DFT IFFTIFFT Cyclic-prefixinsertion

Basic Principles

› Shared-channel transmission– Packet-data only– No CS support

› Channel-dependent scheduling– In time and frequency

› Hybrid-ARQ with soft combining

data1data2data3data4

Focus Here!

MIMO, ICIC, and MBSFNWho said you were tired of abbreviations?

› Multi-antenna support– Integral part of LTE– All terminals support at least 2 Rx antennas TXTX

MultiMulti--layer transmissionlayer transmission((““MIMOMIMO””))

Reduced Tx power› ICIC– Inter-Cell Interference Coordination– To improve cell-edge performance

› MBSFN– Multicast-Broadcast Single-Frequency Network

Focus Here!

Multi-antenna transmission techniques

Diversity for improved system peformance

Beam-forming for improved coverage(less cells to cover a given area)

SDMA for improved capacity(more users per cell)

Multi-layer transmisson (”MIMO”) for higher data rates in a given bandwidth

The multi-antenna technique to use depends on what to achieve

Hybrid ARQ with Soft Combining

› Retransmsision of erroneously received packets– Fast no disturbance of TCP behavior

› Soft combining of multiple transmission attempts– Soft combining improved performance

NAK

ACK

NACK

ACK

ACK

+ +

Transmitter

P1,1 P1,2 P2,1 P2,2 P3,1

P1,1 P1,1 P2,1 P2,2 P3,1

P1,2 P2,2

› Coding– add redundancy at transmitter– exploit redundancy at receiver to correct (most)

transmission errors– code rate R = k/n, code rate fine tuned by

puncturing– The lower the code rate, the lower the error

rate but the higher the overhead

› Hybrid-ARQ– correct most errors with coding– detect uncorrectable transmission errors,

request retransmsisions

Receiver

k information bits

n’ coded bits

n transmitted bits

Puncturing

Coding

Segmentation, ARQ

Ciphering

Header Compr.

Hybrid ARQHybrid ARQ

MAC multiplexing

Antenna and resrouce mapping

Coding + RM

Data modulation

Antenna and resource mapping

Coding

ModulationAntenna and resource assignment

Modulationscheme

MA

C s

ched

uler

Retransmission control

Priority handling, payload selection

Payload selection

RLC

PHY

PDCP

User #i User #j

Reassembly, ARQ

Deciphering

Header Compr.

Hybrid ARQHybrid ARQ

MAC demultiplexing

Antenna and resrouce mapping

Coding + RM

Data modulation

Antenna and resource demapping

Decoding

Demodulation

RLC

PHY

PDCP

MAC

eNodeB mobile terminal (UE)

Red

unda

ncy

vers

ion

IP packet IP packet

SAE bearers

Radio Bearers

Logical Channels

Transport Channel

MAC

MAC

Protocol Architecture

Protocol Architecture

› PDCP – Packet Data Convergence Protocol– Header compression to reduce overhead– Ciphering for security

› RLC – Radio Link Control– Segmentation/concatenation– RLC retransmissions– In-sequence delivery

› MAC – Medium Access Control– Multiplexing of radio bearers– Hybrid-ARQ retransmissions

› PHY – Physical Layer– Modualtion, coding– Multi-antenna processing

Sch

edul

er

Network Architecture

› Core network evolved in parallel to LTE– EPC – Evolved Packet Core

› Flat architecture, single RAN node, the eNodeB– Compare HSPA, which has an RNC

Core Network

Internet

eNodeBUE

Dedicated channels

RNC RNC

NodeB

PSTN Internet

to other Node Bs to other Node Bs

UE

Core Network

LTELTE HSPAHSPA

MSC SGSN

GGSN

ANG

PDG

LTE Advanced

LTE-Advanced

› LTE-Advanced– the next major step of LTE evolution

› LTE-Advanced should...– ...provide higher data rates– ...enable extended multi-antenna deployments and

more dense infrastructure in a cost-efficient way– ...target low terminal and network power consumption– ...allow for smooth evolution from LTE

LTELTE LTE AdvancedLTE Advanced

LTE-Advanced – Time schedule

2009 2010 20112008ITU-R #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9

ProposalsProposalsEvaluationEvaluationConsensusConsensus

SpecificationSpecification

#10 #11 #12

IMT-Advanced requirements

Submission of IMT-Advanced

candidatesIMT-Advanced

standard

LTE-Advanced workshop

3GPP #39 #40 #41 #42 #43 #44 #45 #46 #47 #48 #49

Work ItemWork ItemStudy ItemStudy Item

Targets forLTE-Advanced

ITU submissionready

Final submission LTE release 10(”LTE-Advanced”)

Wider bandwidth – Carrier aggregation

› LTE-Advanced should support wider bandwidth– Needed for very high peak data rates– Needed for power-efficient support for high wide-area data rates– Specification should support up to at least 100 MHz

› Spectrum compatibility Carrier aggregation preferred– Aggregation of multiple component carriers into an overall wider bandwidth– Each component carrier appear as LTE R8 carrier to LTE R8 UE– LTE-Advanced UE can access and benefit from overall wider bandwidth

Example

e.g. 20 MHz

Five component carriers Total bandwidth of 100 MHz

Component carriers(LTE Rel. 8 carriers)

Multi-Antenna Solutions

› Further improved multi-antenna solutions– In addition to the ones already in LTE

Higher data rates,improved cell edge performance

High SNR required

Beamforming andmulti-layer transmission

eNodeB

Denser deployment

Cost-efficient dense infrastructureSelf-backhauling and relaying

› LTE radio access in the back-haul › Wireless connection of eNodeB to central hub› Shared or separate spectrum

Standardization

Why standardization?

› From Wikipedia– Standardization is the process of agreeing on technical standards– A standard is a document that establishes uniform engineering or technical specifications,

criteria, methods, processes, or practices. – Some standards are mandatory while others are voluntary. Some standards are de facto,

meaning informal practices followed out of convenience, meaning formal requirements…– The goals of standardization can be to help with independence of single suppliers

(commodification), compatibility, interoperability, safety, repeatability, or quality.

› Interoperability – e.g. Nokia phone in Ericsson network› Creates mass market! Economy-of-scale!

What is standardized?

Terminal

Internet PSTN

Radio control/aggregator node

Base station

User PlaneGateways

ControlNodesCN

RAN

Services

› Logical architecture› Protocol on interfaces› Radio transmitters (RF aspects)

– required by regualtions/law› Behavior required to fulfill functionality

– Terminals standardized according to ”master-slave principle”

Standardized – ensures interoperability

› Physical implementation› Algorithms

– Scheduler, handover, admission, ...– Receiver algorithms – sufficient to fulfill requirements

Not standardized – vendor differentiation

Where – Some Standardization Fora

› 3GPP– Core Network and Radio Access Network for WCDMA/HSPA, LTE, GSM/GPRS/EDGE

› 3GPP2– Standardization of IS-95, cdma2000/HRPD, UMB

› IEEE– Large variety of stds, e.g. 802.11 (WiFi) and 802.16 (WiMAX)

› WiMAX Forum– Promote conformance and interoperability of 802.16 standards

› IETF– Develops/promotes internet standards (IP, TCP, FTP, ROHC, …)

› ITU– International radio and telecommunications standards, allocation of spectrum. Part of UN.

Where in the network?

› IETF– Internet services/protocols end-to-end with the

terminal (e.g. IP, TCP, ROHC)– Transport protocols/functions in the CN (IP, MIP)

› 3GPP, 3GPP2– Architecture, functions, protocols for the

complete Radio Access and Core Network› IEEE

– Architecture, functions, protocols for Radio Access Network

› ITU– Spectrum, radio regulations

Terminal

Internet PSTN

Radio control/aggregator node

Base station

User PlaneGateways

ControlNodesCN

RAN

Services

Standardization Process

Requirements

Architecture

Detailed specifications

Testing and verification

› Stage 1– Requirements, no detailed solutions

› Stage 2– Logical architecture, functional split, interfaces, protocol architecture,

overall solutions

› Stage 3– All details, e.g., header formats, exact coding scheme, values in

requirements, ...

› Test– Snapshots with test cases from standard to ensure proper

operation

Certification

Standardization in Practice

› Contribution driven

› Decision by consensus– Coffee-breaks important part of meetings (off-line)

› Good relations important– Social relations across cultural borders– Mutual respect and co-operation

› One week meetings Long meeting days

Summary

Summary – Basic Principles

› Adapt to and exploit…– variations in radio channel quality– variations in the traffic pattern

…instead of combating them!

› Traffic pattern is time varying

› Radio-channel quality is time varying

Summary – Basic Principles

› Shared channel transmission

› Channel-dependent scheduling

› Rate control

› Hybrid-ARQ with soft combining

Summary – HSPA and LTE

› HSPA – High-Speed Packet Access– Evolution of 3G/WCDMA – Gradually improved performance at a low additional cost– Data rates up to 42 Mbit/s in 5 MHz

””4G4G””LTELTE LTELTE--AdvancedAdvanced

R99 Rel4 Rel5 Rel6 Rel7 Rel8

HSPAHSPAWCDMAWCDMA HSPA evolutionHSPA evolutionHSDPAHSDPA

Rel10

› LTE – Long-Term Evolution– Significantly improved performance in a wide range of spectrum allocations– Data rates up to 300 Mbit/s in 20 MHz– First step towards IMT-Advanced (”4G”)

Summary – Standardization

› Interfaces and protocols standardized– Implementation is not

› 3GPP– Standardization of radio-access and core network for the major

mobile technologies

› ITU– Radio regulations, spectrum allocations

Summary – Further Insight

...or read The Book!

Open the LTE specifications...


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