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CHAPTER NO. 6
MULTIPLE ACCESS TECHNIQUES FOR MOBILE COMMUNICATION
Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)
Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
These multiple access systems have very different approaches to the bandwidth problem.
6.1: FREQUENCY DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS (FDMA)
Each FDMA subscriber is assigned a specific frequency channel (Fig. 6.1). No one
else in the same cell or a neighboring cell can use the frequency channel while it is
assigned to a user. This reduces interference, but severely limits the number of users.
FIG. NO. 6.1 FREQUENCY DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS (FDMA)
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Frequency-division multiplexing (FDM) advantage of the fact that the useful bandwidth of
the medium exceeds the required bandwidth of a given signal
6.2: TIME DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS (TDMA)
TDMA users share a common frequency channel (Fig. 6.2), but use the channel for
only a very short time. They are each given a time slot and only allowed to transmit during
that time slot. When all available time slots in a given frequency are used, the next user
must be assigned a time slot on another frequency. These time slices are so small that the
human ear does not perceive the time slicing
FIG. NO. 6.2: TIME DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS (TDMA)
Time-division multiplexing (TDM) takes advantage of the fact that the achievable bit rate
of the medium exceeds the required data rate of a digital signal
6.3: CODE DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS (CDMA)
Code-Division Multiple Access (CDMA) is one of the most important concepts to
any cellular telephone system is that ofmultiple access.A large number of users share acommon pool of radio channels and any user can gain access to any channel. In other
words CDMA is a form ofmultiplexing, which allows numerous signals to occupy a single
transmission channel, optimizing the use of available bandwidth. Though CDMAs
application in cellular telephone is relatively new, but it is not a new technology. CDMA
has been used in many military applications, such as anti-jamming (because of the spread
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6.4: GENERATING A CDMA SIGNAL
There are five steps in generating a CDMA signal (Fig. 6.4).
I. Analog to digital conversion
II. Vocoding
III. Encoding and interleaving
IV. Channelizing the signals
V. Conversion of the digital signal to a Radio Frequency (RF) signalThe use of codes is a key part of this process.
FIG. NO. 6.4: GENERATING A CDMA SIGNAL
(I) ANALOG TO DIGITAL CONVERSION
The first step of CDMA signal generation is analog to digital conversion,
sometimes called A/D conversion. CDMA uses a technique called Pulse
Code Modulation (PCM) to accomplish A/D conversion.
(II) VOCODING (or Voice Compression)
The second step ofCDMA signal generation is voice compression. CDMA
uses a device called a vocoder to accomplish voice compression (Fig. 6.5).
The term "vocoder" is a contraction of the words "voice" and "code."
Vocoders are located at the BSC and in the phone.A CDMA vocoder variescompression of the voice signal into one offour data rates based on the rate
of the user's speech activity. The four rates are: Full, 1/2, 1/4 and 1/8. The
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vocoder uses its full rate when a person is talking very fast. It uses the 1/8
rate when the person is silent or nearly so.
FIG. NO. 6.5: GENERATING AN A/D COMPRESSED SIGNAL
(III) ENCODING AND INTERLEAVING
Encoders and interleavers are built into the BTS and the phones. The
purpose of the encoding and interleaving is to build redundancy into the
signal so that information lost in transmission can be recovered. The type of
encoding done at this stage is called "convolutional encoding." A simplified
encoding scheme is shown here. A digital message consists offour bits (A,
B, C, D) ofvocoded data. Each bit is repeated three times. These encoded
bits are called symbols. The decoder at the receiver uses a majority logic
rule. Thus, if an error occurs, the redundancy can help recover the lost
information.
EXAMPLE:
BURST ERROR: A burst error is a type of error in received digital
telephone signals. Burst errors occur in clumps ofadjacent symbols. These
errors are caused by fading and interference. Encoding and interleaving
reduce the effects of burst errors. Interleaving is a simple but powerful
method ofreducing the effects of burst errors and recovering lost bits. In the
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example shown in the Fig. 6.6, the symbols from each group are interleaved
(or scrambled) in a pattern that the receiver knows.De-interleaving at the
receiver unscrambles the bits, spreading any burst errors that occur during
transmission.
FIG. NO. 6.6: ENCODING AND INTERLEAVING
(IV) CHANNELIZING
The encoded voice data is further encoded to separate it from other encoded
voice data. The encoded symbols are then spread over the entire bandwidth
of the CDMA channel. This process is called channelization.
The receiver knows the code and uses it to recover the voice data.
KINDS OF CODES: CDMA uses two important types of codes to
channelize users.
(a) Walsh codes channelize users on the forward link (BTS to mobile).
Walsh codes provide a means to uniquely identify each user on the
forward link. Walsh codes have a unique mathematical property,
that is, they are "orthogonal." In other words, Walsh codes are
unique enough that a receiver applying the same Walsh code can only
recover the voice data. All other signals are discarded as
background noise.
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(a)Pseudorandom Noise (PN) codes channelize users on the reverse link
(mobile to BTS). Pseudorandom Noise (PN) codes uniquely identify
users on the reverse link. A PN code is one that appears to be random,
but isn't. The PN codes used in CDMA yield about 4.4 trillion
combinations of code. This is a key reasonwhy CDMA is so secure.
(IV) CONVERSION OF DIGITAL TO RADIO FREQUENCY (RF) SIGNAL
The BTS combines channelized data from all calls into one signal. It then
converts the digital signal to a Radio Frequency (RF) signal for
transmission.
6.5: CODE CHANNELS USED IN CDMA
A code channel is a stream of data designated for a specific use or person. This
channel may be voice data or overhead control data. Channels are separated by codes. The
forward and reverse links use different types of channels.
(I) FORWARD LINK CHANNELS: uses four types ofchannels to transmit voice
and control data to the mobile. The types of forward link channels are:
i. Pilot
ii. Sync
iii. Paging
iv. Traffic
FIG. NO. 6.7: FORWARD LINK CHANNELS
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(i) PILOT CHANNELThe BTS constantly transmits the pilot channel. The mobile uses the pilot signal
to acquire the system. It then uses the pilot signal to monitor and adjust the power
needed in order to transmit back to the BTS.
FIG. NO. 6.8: PILOT CHANNEL
(ii) SYNC CHANNEL
The BTS constantly transmits over the sync channel so the mobile can synchronize with
the BTS. It provides the mobile with the system time and the identification number of
the cell site. The mobile ignores the sync channel after it is synchronized.
FIG. NO. 6.9: SYNC CHANNEL
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(III) PAGING CHANNEL
CDMA uses up to seven paging channels. The paging channel transmits overhead
information such as commands and pages to the mobile. The paging channel also
sends commands and traffic channel assignment during call set-up. The mobile
ignores the paging channel after a traffic channel is established.
FIG. NO. 6.10: PAGING CHANNEL
(IV) FORWARD LINK TRAFFIC CHANNEL
CDMA uses between fifty-five and sixty-one forward traffic channels to send both
voice and overhead control data during a call. Once the call is completed, the
mobile tunes back in to the paging channel for commands and pages.
FIG. NO. 6.11: TRAFFIC CHANNEL
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(II) REVERSE LINK CHANNELS: uses two types ofchannels to transmit voice and
control data to BTS. The types of reverse link channels are:
i. Access
ii. Traffic
FIG. NO. 6.12: REVERSE LINK CHANNELS
(i) ACCESS CHANNEL
The mobile uses the access channel when not assigned to a traffic channel. The
mobile uses the access channel to:
Register with the network
Originate calls
Respond to pages and commands from the base station
Transmit overhead messages to the base station
FIG. NO. 6.13: ACCESS CHANNEL
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(II) REVERSE LINK TRAFFIC CHANNEL
The reverse traffic channel is only usedwhen there is a call. The reverse traffic
channel transmits voice data to the BTS. It also transmits the overhead control
information during the call.
FIG. NO. 6.14: REVERSE LINK TRAFFIC CHANNNEL
6.6: CALL PROCESSING STAGES IN CDMA
There are four stages or modes in CDMA call processing(Fig. 6.15):
Initialization mode Idle mode Access mode Traffic mode.
(I) INITIALIZATION MODE: During initialization, the mobile acquires the system
via the Pilot code channelsynchronizes with the system via the Sync code channel
(II) IDLE MODE: The mobile is not involved in a call during idle mode, but it must
stay in communication with the base station. The mobile and the base station
communicate over the access and paging code channels. The mobile obtains
overhead information via the paging code channel.
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FIG. NO. 6.15: CALL PROCESSING STAGES IN CDMA
(III) ACCESS MODE: The mobile accesses the network via the Access code
channel during call origination. The Access channel and Paging channel carry
the required call set-up communication between the mobile phone and the BTS
until a traffic channel is established.
(IV) TRAFFIC MODE: During a land to mobile (LTM) call: The mobile receives a
page on the paging channel. The mobile responds on the access channel. The
traffic channel is established and maintained throughout the call.
During a mobile to land call (MTL): The call is placed using the Access channel.
The base station responds on the paging channel. The traffic channel is
established and maintained throughout the call.
Call processing (messages): During the call overhead messaging continues on
the traffic channel in a limited fashion. This messaging uses "Dim and Burst"
or "Blank and Burst" signaling, which replaces part of the voice traffic with
system messages. The user does not detect this signaling, however, due to the
strong data recovery schemes inherent to CDMA.
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FIG. NO. 6.16: MOBILE CALL PROCESSING
6.7: FEATURES OF CDMA
CDMA has several unique features that make it a cost-effective, high quality
wireless solution. The following features are unique to CDMA technology:
(a) Universal frequency reuse
(b)Fast and accurate power control
(c)Different types of handoff(a)FREQUENCY REUSE: The frequency spectrum is a limited resource.
Therefore, wireless telephony, like radio, must reuse frequency assignments.
Each BTS in a CDMA network can use all available frequencies. Adjacent
cells can transmit at the same frequency because users are separated by code
channels, not frequency channels. This feature of CDMA, called "frequency
reuse of one," eliminates the need for frequency planning
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FIG. NO. 6.17: POWER CONTROL
(b)POWER CONTROL: Power control is a CDMA feature that enables mobiles
to adjust the power at which they transmit. This ensures that the base station
receives all signals at the appropriate power. The CDMA network
independently controls the power at which each mobile transmits. Both forward
and reverse links use power control techniques.
Reverse link power control: Reverse link power control consists of two
processes:
Open loop power control: Open loop is the mobile's estimate of the
power at which it should transmit. The open loop estimate is based
on the strength of the pilot signal the mobile receives. As the pilot
signal gets weaker or stronger, the mobile adjusts its transmission
strength upwards or downwards. Open loop is used any time the
mobile transmits.
Closed loop power control: In closed loop, the BTS sends a command
to the mobile to increase or decrease the strength at which it is
transmitting. The BTS determines this command based on the quality
of the signal it receives from the mobile. Closed loop is only used
during a call. Closed loop commands are sent on the forward traffic
channel.
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(C) HANDOFF IN CDMA: Handoffis the process of transferring a call from one
cell to another. This is necessary to continue the call as the phone travels.
CDMA is unique in how it handles handoff.
TYPES OF CDMA HANDOFF: CDMA has three primary types of
handoff:
i. SOFT
ii. HARD
iii. IDLE
(i) SOFT HANDOFF
A soft handoff establishes a connection with the new BTS prior to breaking the
connection with the old one. This is possible because CDMA cells use the same
frequency and because the mobile uses a rake receiver.
FIG. NO. 6.18: SOFT HANDOFF
Variations of the soft handoff: There are two variations of soft handoffs involving
handoffs between sectors within a BTS:
Softer
Soft-softer
The softer handoff: occurs between two sectors of the same BTS. The BTS decodes and
combines the voice signal from each sector and forwards thecombined voice frame to the
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BSC. The soft-softer handoff is combination handoff involving multiple cells and multiple
sectors within one of the cells.
FIG. NO. 6.19: SOFTER HANDOFF
(ii) HARD HANDOFF
A hard handoffrequires the mobile to break the connection with the old BTS prior
to making the connection with the new one. CDMA phones use a hard handoff
when moving from a CDMA system to an analog system because soft handoffs are
not possible in analog systems. A Pilot Beacon Unit (PBU) at the analog cell site
alerts the phone that it is reaching the edge of CDMA coverage. The phone
switches from digital to analog mode as during the hard handoff.
Hard handoffmay also be used when moving to a different:
- RF channel- MTSO- Carrier- Market
(iii) IDLE HANDOFF
An idle handoffoccurs when the phone is in idle mode. The mobile will detect a
pilot signal that is stronger than the current pilot. The mobile is always searching
for the pilots from any neighboring BTS. When it finds a stronger signal, the mobile
simply begins attending to the new pilot.
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6.8: ADVANTAGES OF CDMA
CDMA technology has numerous advantages including:
i. COVERAGE
ii. CAPACITY
iii. CLARITY
iv. COST
v. COMPATIBILITY
vi. CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
(i) COVERAGE
CDMA's features result in coverage that is between 1.7 and 3 times that ofTDMA.
Power control helps the network dynamically expand the coverage area. Coding
and interleaving provide the ability to cover a larger area for the same amount of
available power used in other systems.
(II) CAPACITY
CDMA capacity is ten to twenty times that ofanalog systems, and it's up to four
times that ofTDMA.
Reasons for this include:
CDMA's universal frequency reuse
CDMA users are separated by codes, not frequencies
Power control minimizes interference, resulting in maximized capacity.
CDMA's soft handoffalso helps increase capacity. This is because a soft handoffrequires
less power.
FIG. NO. 6.20: ADVANTAGES OF CDMA
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(iii) CLARITY
Often CDMA systems can achieve "wire line" clarity because of CDMA's strong
digital processing.Specifically:
The rake receiverreduces errors
The variable rate vocoder reduces the amount of data transmitted per
person, reducing interference.
The soft handoffalso reduces power requirements and interference.
Power controlreduces errors by keeping power at an optimal level.
CDMA's wide band signal reduces fading. Encoding and interleaving reduce
errors that result from fading.
(iv) COSTCDMA's better coverage and capacity result in cost benefits:
Increased coverage per BTS means fewer are needed to cover a given area.
This reduces infrastructure costs for the providers.
Increased capacity increases the service provider's revenue potential.
A CDMA cost per subscriber has steadily declined since 1995 for both
cellular and PCS applications.
FIG. NO. 6.21: COST OF CDMA
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(v) COMPATIBILITY
CDMA phones are usually dual mode. This means they can work in both CDMAs
systems and analog cellular systems. Some CDMA phones are dual band as well
as dual mode. They can work in CDMA mode in the PCS band, CDMA mode in
the cellular band, or analog mode in an analog cellular network.
(vi) CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
CDMA results in greater customer satisfaction because CDMA provides better:
Voice quality
Longer battery life due to reduced power requirements
No cross-talk because of CDMA's unique coding
Privacy--again, because of coding
FIG. NO. 6.22 CDMA CUSTOMER SATISFACTION6.8: ARCHITECTURE OF THE CDMA NETWORK
A CDMA network is composed ofseveral functional entities, whose functions and
interfaces are specified. The CDMA network can be divided into three broad parts. The
Mobile Station is carried by the subscriber. The Base Station Subsystem controls the radio
link with the Mobile Station. The Network Subsystem, the main part of which is the
Mobile services Switching Center (MSC), performs the switching of calls between the
mobile users, and between mobile and fixed network users. The MSC also handles the
mobility management operations. Not shown is the Operations and Maintenance Center,
which oversees the proper operation and setup of the network. The Mobile Station and the
Base Station Subsystem communicate across the Um interface, also known as the air interface
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or radio link. The Base Station Subsystem communicates with the Mobile services Switching
Center across the A interface.
FIG. NO. 6.23 GENERAL ARCHITECTURE OF A CDMA NETWORK
(I) MOBILE STATION
The mobile station (MS) consists of the mobile equipment. The mobile equipment
is uniquely identified by the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI).
FIG. NO. 6.24: MOBILE EQUIPMENTS
(II) BASE STATION SUBSYSTEM
The Base Station Subsystem is composed of two parts:
(a) The Base Transceiver Station (BTS)
(b) The Base Station Controller (BSC).
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These communicate across the standardized Abis interface, allowing operation between
components made by different suppliers.
FIG. NO. 6.25: BASE STATION SUBSYSTEM
(a) The Base Transceiver Station (BTS)houses the radio transceivers that define a
cell and handles the radio-link protocols with the Mobile Station. In a large urban area,
there will potentially be a large number of BTSs deployed, thus the requirements for a BTS
are ruggedness, reliability, portability, and minimum cost.
The base station is under direction of a base station controller so traffic gets sent
there first. The base station controller gathers the calls from many base stations and passes
them on to a mobile telephone switch. From that switch come and go the calls from the
regular telephone network.
(b) The Base Station Controller (BSC) manages the radio resources for one or
more BTSs. It handles radio-channel setup, frequency hopping, and handovers, as
described below. The BSC is the connection between the mobile station and the Mobile
service Switching Center (MSC). Another difference between conventional cellular and
CDMA is the base station controller. It's an intermediate step between the base station
transceiver and the mobile switch. This a better approach for high-density cellular
networks. As If every base station talked directly to the MSC, traffic would become too
congested. To ensure quality communications via traffic management, the wireless
infrastructure network uses Base Station Controllers as a way to segment the network
and control congestion. The result is that MSCs route their circuits to BSCs which in turn
are responsible for connectivity and routing of calls for 50 to 100 wireless base stations."
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FIG. NO. 6.26: BASE STATION CONTROLLER
BSC functions includes:
Performs vocoding of the voice signal
Routes calls to the MTSO
Handles call control processes
Maintains a database of subscribers
Maintains records of calls for billingThe voice coders or vocoders are built into the handsets a cellular carrier
distributes. They're the circuitry that turns speech into digital. The carrier specifies which
rate they want traffic compressed, either a great deal or just a little. The cellular system is
designed this way, with handset vocoders working in league with the equipment of the base
station subsystem.
(III) THE MOBILE SWITCHING CENTER
The central component of the Network Subsystem is the Mobile services
Switching Center (MSC).
FIG. NO. 6.27: THE MOBILE SWITCHING CENTER
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It acts like a normal switching node of the PSTN or ISDN, and additionally
provides all the functionality needed to handle a mobile subscriber, such as registration,
authentication, location updating, handovers, and call routing to a roaming subscriber .
These services are provided in conjunction with several functional entities, which together
form the Network Subsystem. The MSC provides the connection to the fixed networks
(such as the PSTN or ISDN). Signaling between functional entities in the Network
Subsystem uses Signaling System Number 7 (SS7), used for trunk signaling in ISDN and
widely used in current public networks.
(IV) HOME LOCATION REGISTER (HLR) & VISITED LOCATION REGISTER (VLR)
The Home Location Register (HLR) and Visitor Location Register (VLR), together
with the MSC, provide the call routing and roaming capabilities. The HLR contains all the
administrative information of each subscriber registered in the network, along with the
current location of the mobile. The location of the mobile is typically in the form of the
signaling address of the VLR associated with the mobile station. The Visitor Location
Register (VLR) contains selected administrative information from the HLR, necessary for
call control and provision of the subscribed services, for each mobile currently located in
the geographical area controlled by the VLR. Most often these two directories are located
in the same place. The HLR and VLR are big databases maintained on computers called
servers, often UNIX workstations. To operate its nationwide cellular system, iDEN,
Motorola uses over 60 HLRs nationwide.
(V) EQUIPMENT IDENTITY REGISTER (EIR)
The other two registers are used for authentication and security purposes. The
Equipment Identity Register (EIR) is a database that contains a list of all valid mobile
equipment on the network, where each mobile station is identified by its International
Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI). An IMEI is marked as invalid if it has been reported
stolen or is not type approved.
(Vi) THE INTERFACESCellular radio's most cryptic terms belong to these names: A, Um, Abis, and Ater.
A telecom interface means many things. It can be a mechanical or electrical link connecting
equipment together. Or a boundary between systems, such as between the base station
system and the network subsystem. Interfaces are standardized methods for passing
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information back and forth. The transmission media isn't important. Whether copper or
fiber optic cable or microwave radio, an interface insists that signals go back and forth in
the same way, in the same format. With this approach different equipment from any
manufacturer will work together.
A-bis " is a French term meaning 'the second A Interface. In most cases the
actual span or physical connection is made on an E1 line. But regardless of the material
used, the transmission media, it is the signaling protocol that is most important.
Although the interface is unlabeled, the mobile switch communicates with the
telephone network using Signaling System Seven, an internationally agreed upon
standard. More specifically, it uses ISUP over SS7. "ISUP defines the protocol and
procedures used to set-up, manage, and release trunk circuits that carry voice and data calls
over the public switched telephone network (PSTN). ISUP is used for both ISDN and
non-ISDN calls."
6.9: COMPARISON OF MULTIPLE ACCESS SYSTEMS
The table summarizes in Fig.6.28 shows some of the technical aspects of the multiple
access technologies. The technology used determines the channel's capacity. TDMAtriples
the capacity of FDMA, but CDMA capacity can be up to seven times that of TDMA.
FIG. NO. 6.28: COMPARISON OF MULTIPLE ACCESS SYSTEMS
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