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LTE RF Planning and

Dimensioning

RA41203EN60GLA0 2014 Nokia Solutions and Networks. All rights reserved.


Table of contents

LTE Overview LTE-A Air Interface Air Interface Baseband Deployment


Overview Dimensioning Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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Table of contents

LTE Overview LTE-A Air Interface Air Interface Baseband Deployment


Overview Dimensioning Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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LTE Overview - LTE/SAE Network Elements

Main references to architecture in 3GPP specs.: TS23.401,TS23.402,TS36.300


Evolved UTRAN (E-UTRAN) Evolved Packet Core (EPC)
HSS
eNB Mobility
Management
Entity Policy & Charging
S6a Rule Function

X2
MME S10
S7 Rx+
PCRF
S11
S1-U S5/S8 SGi
PDN
LTE-Uu Serving PDN
Evolved Node B
Gateway Gateway
LTE-UE (eNB)
SAE
Gateway

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LTE Overview - Schedule for 3GPP releases

Next step for


GSM/WCDMA/HSPA A true global roaming technology
and cdma2000
Specification: HSUPA HSPA+
UMTS/ HSDPA LTE-A
WCDMA IMS MBMS LTE Studies studies LTE-
WLAN IW LTE & EPC
A
3GPP Rel. 99/4 Rel. 5 Rel. 6 Rel. 7 Rel. 8 Rel. 9 Rel. 10

2000 2003 2005 2007 2008 2009 2011 year


LTE have been developed by the same standardization organization. The target has been simple multimode implementation
and backwards compatibility.
HSPA and LTE have in common:
Sampling rate using the same clocking frequency
Same kind of Turbo coding
The harmonization of these parameters is important as sampling and Turbo decoding are typically done on hardware due to
high processing requirements.
WiMAX and LTE do not have such harmonization.

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LTE Overview - Radio Interface Key Features

LTE Radio Evolved Packet Core (EPC)


Access Network
(EUTRAN)
SAE-GW
MME Packet
Data
eNode-B Serving PDN Network
GW GW

LTE Radio Interface Key Features


Retransmission Handling (HARQ/ARQ)
Spectrum Flexibility
FDD & TDD modes
Multi-Antenna Transmission
Frequency and time Domain scheduling
Uplink (UL) Power Control

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LTE Overview - EUTRAN Key Features

LTE Radio Evolved Packet Core (EPC)


Access Network
(EUTRAN)
SAE-GW
MME Packet
Data
eNode-B Serving PDN Network
GW GW

EUTRAN Key Features:


Evolved NodeB
IP transport layer
UL/DL resource scheduling
QoS Awareness
Self-configuration

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LTE Overview - EPC Key Features

LTE Radio Evolved Packet Core (EPC)


Access Network
(EUTRAN) SAE-GW
MME Packet
Data
eNode-B Serving PDN Network
GW GW

EPC Key Features:


IP transport layer
QoS Awareness
Packet Switched Domain only
3GPP (GTP) or IETF (MIPv6) option
Prepare to connect to non-3GPP access networks

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LTE Overview - LTE Radio Interface & the X2 Interface
LTE-Uu interface
Air interface of LTE
(E)-RRC User PDUs .. User PDUs
Based on OFDMA in DL & SC-FDMA in UL
PDCP
RLC FDD & TDD duplex methods
TS 36.300
MAC Scalable bandwidth: 1.4MHz - 20 MHz
LTE-L1 (FDD/TDD-OFDMA/SC-FDMA) eNB
X2 interface
LTE-Uu
Inter eNB interface
X2-UP
X2AP: special signaling protocol (Application
X2-CP (User Plane) Part)
(Control Plane) User PDUs
Functionalities:
TS 36.423 X2-AP GTP-U
X2 In inter- eNB HO to facilitate Handover and
SCTP UDP TS 36.424 provide data forwarding.
TS 36.422 IP IP
In RRM to provide e.g. load information to
TS 36.421 L1/L2 L1/L2 TS 36.421 neighbouring eNBs to facilitate interference
management.
TS 36.420 Logical interface: doesnt need direct site-to-
site connection, i.e. can be routed via CN as
eNB well
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LTE Overview - S1-MME & S1-U Interfaces
S1 interface is divided into two parts: S1-MME
(Control Plane)
S1-MME interface
NAS Protocols
Control Plane interface between eNB & MME TS 36.413 S1-AP MME
S1AP:S1 Application Protocol TS 36.412 SCTP
IP
MME & UE will exchange NAS signaling via eNB L1/L2 TS 36.411
through this interface ( i.e. authentication, tracking S1-U
area updates) (User Plane)
User PDUs
S1 Flex: an eNB is allowed to connect to a eNB GTP-U Serving
maximum of 16 MME. (LTE2, RL20)
TS 36.414 UDP Gateway
S1-U interface IP
TS 36.411 L1/L2
User plane interface between eNB & Serving
Gateway.
TS 36.410
Pure user data interface (U=User plane)
LTE4: Multi-Operator Core Network (MO-CN): An eNB can be connected simultaneously to the different
Evolved Packet Cores (EPCs) of different operators, and shared by them.

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LTE Overview - LTE UE Categories Power Tx Power Tolerance
Class (dBm) (dB)
All categories support 20 MHz 1 [+30]
64QAM mandatory in downlink, but not in uplink 2 [+27]
(except Cat 5 & 8) 3 +23 +/-2 dB
4 [+21]
2x2 MIMO mandatory in other classes except Cat 1
LTE-A Category 6 Onward

Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 Category 5 Category 6 Category 7 Category 8

peakrate DL/UL 10/5 Mbps 50/25 Mbps 100/50 Mbps 150/50 Mbps 299/75 Mbps 301/50 Mbps 301/102 Mbps 3000/1500 Mbps

RF bandwidth 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz

Modulation DL 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM 64QAM

Modulation UL 16QAM 16QAM 16QAM 16QAM 64QAM 16QAM 16QAM 64QAM

Rx diversity Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

MIMO DL Optional 2x2 2x2 2x2 4x4 2x2 or 4x4 2x2 or 4x4 8x8

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LTE Overview: Voice in LTE CS Fallback

- CS Fallback is performed during the call setup as:


Inter-RAT handover from LTE to UTRAN or
Inter-RAT cell change order from LTE to GERAN (NACC)
The EPC needs to support CS inter-working because the MME indicates the eNB to perform
HO/NACC
- Benefits
Existing 2G/3G infrastructure can be reused in initial LTE deployments
CSFB feature can be further utilized in roaming scenarios

Switching is based on priorities of layers


configured by an operator:
GSM layer = set of BCCH frequencies,
UMTS layer = carrier frequency.

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LTE Overview: Single Radio Voice Call Continuity (SRVCC)

- At this phase, the operator provides VoIP over LTE access and IMS is used as
enabling SIP session control machinery for VoIP. However, as shown in it is assumed
that LTE coverage is not yet complete and thus interworking with underlying legacy access
technology is required. From the voice traffic perspective this implies handing over LTE VoIP call to
CS voice call provided by the legacy access technology. The handover functionality from VoIP to
CS domain is referred to as Single Radio Voice Call Continuity (SRVCC).

Neighbor cell list, measurements and


thresholds like for standard inter-RAT HO
(blacklisting possible).

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LTE Overview: Voice over LTE
- Similar to step SRVCC, at this phase the operator provides VoIP-over-LTE access and IMS is used
as enabling SIP session control machinery for VoIP traffic However, the difference compared to
step SRVCC is that LTE coverage is complete and mature for Voice User thus no interworking with
underlying legacy CS access technologies is required. Furthermore, IMS is used as a generic SIP
session control machinery for all services, thus removing the need for a CS service infrastructure.
At this time the need for CSFB and SRVCC solutions have disappeared.

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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Air Interface Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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LTE Advanced Overview - First features standardized in 3GPP Release10

Key aspects in
3GPP Rel.10 Carrier Aggregation
Carrier Bandwidth extension by carrier aggregation
.. Downlink: Up to 100 MHz bandwidth with 2 Release 8 carriers from
Carrier1 Carrier2 Carrier n different frequency bands
8x MIMO 4x Uplink: Only single band carrier aggregation
New codebook for downlink (DL) 8TX MIMO
Feedback enhancements for DL 2TX/4TX Multiuser MIMO
Coordinated Multipoint
2TX/4TX Uplink Single/Multiuser MIMO
Coordinated multipoint transmission (CoMP), also
known as cooperative system
Receiving transmission from multiple sectors
(not necessary visible for UE)
Single Relay Node architecture based on self-backhauling eNB
Simple intercell interference coordination in time domain
Enhancements for office Femto handovers

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LTE Advanced Overview - Bandwidth Extension by Carrier Aggregation

Key aspects in Carrier Aggregation


3GPP Rel.10 .. up to 100 MHz
Carrier1 Carrier2 Carrier n
Flexible component carrier aggregation
8x MIMO 4x
different frequency bands Component Carrier
asymmetric in UL/DL (LTE rel. 8 Carrier)
Mobility
Coordinated Multipoint 20 MHz 10 MHz

Aggregated BW: 30MHz


20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz 20 MHz
in JuneAggregated
2009 BW: 5x20MHz = 100MHz

300Mbps 300Mbps 300Mbps 300Mbps 300Mbps

1.5Gbps

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LTE Advanced Overview - Carrier Aggregation (CA)
- High peak data rate of 1 Gbps in downlink and 500 Mbps in uplink can be achieved with
bandwidth extension from 20 MHz up to 100 MHz.
- Backwards compatibility to Release 8 by combining N Release 8 component carriers to N x
LTE bandwidth, for example 5 x 20 MHz = 100 MHz
- Old LTE terminals use one carrier, new ones all N

Both contiguous and


non-contiguous CA is
supported offering
improved spectrum
flexibility (e.g. for
refarming).
CA also offers opportunities
for autonomous interference
management schemes
especially relevant for
heterogeneous networks.

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LTE Advanced Overview - Coordinated Multipoint Transmission (CoMP)

Key aspects in Carrier Aggregation


3GPP Rel.10
..
Carrier1 Carrier2 Carrier n

8x MIMO 4x

Coordinated Multipoint
Cooperation of antennas of multiple
sectors / sites
Interference free
by coordinated
transmission /
reception
Highest
performance
potential Service Area

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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Air Interface Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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Air Interface: Multiple Access Methods Comparison

TDMA FDMA CDMA OFDMA


Time Division Frequency Division Code Division Frequency Division
Orthogonal subcarriers

f f f f

t t t t

f f f f
OFDM is the state-of-the-art and most efficient and robust air interface
User 1 User 2 User 3 User 4
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Air Interface: OFDM Basics
Transmits hundreds or even thousands of separately modulated radio
signals using orthogonal subcarriers spread across a wideband channel

Total transmission bandwidth


15 kHz in LTE: fixed Orthogonality:

The peak ( centre


frequency) of one
subcarrier
intercepts the
nulls of the
neighbouring
subcarriers

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Air Interface: The OFDM Signal

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Air Interface: Bandwidth and Subcarrier in LTE
- Channel bandwidth: DL bandwidths ranging from 1.4 MHz to 20 MHz
- Data subcarriers: the number of data subcarriers varies with the bandwidth
72 for 1.4 MHz to 1200 for 20 MHz

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Air Interface: SC-FDMA in UL

- Single Carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access:


Transmission technique used for Uplink
Variant of OFDM that reduces the PAPR:
Combines the PAR of single-carrier system with the
multipath resistance and flexible subcarrier frequency

OFDMA
allocation offered by OFDM.

SC-FDMA
It can reduce the PAPR between 69dB compared to
OFDMA
TS36.201 and TS36.211 provide the mathematical
description of the time domain representation of an SC-
FDMA symbol.
- Reduced PAPR means lower RF hardware requirements
(power amplifier)

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Air Interface: SC-FDMA and OFDMA Comparison

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Air Interface: LTE Physical Layer
It provides the basic bit transmission functionality over air
LTE physical layer based on OFDMA DL & SC-FDMA in UL
This is the same for both FDD & TDD mode of operation
There is no macro-diversity in use
System is reuse 1, single frequency network operation is feasible
no frequency planning required
There are no dedicated physical channels anymore, as all resource mapping is dynamically driven by the
scheduler

FDD Frequency band 1


.. ..
Frequency band 2
.. ..

TDD Single frequency band


.. ..

Downlink Uplink

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Air Interface: Subframe structure & CP length

Subframe length: 1 ms for all bandwidths


Slot length is 0.5 ms
1 Subframe= 2 slots
Slot carries 7 symbols with normal CP or 6 symbols with long CP
CP length depends on the symbol position within the slot:
Normal CP: symbol 0 in each slot has CP = 160 x Ts = 5.21s; remaining symbols CP= 144 x
Ts = 4.7s
Extended CP: CP length for all symbols in the slot is 512 x Ts = 16.67s
Ts:
Short cyclic prefix: sampling time of the overall channel
5.21 s basic Time Unit
= 32.5 nsec
Long cyclic prefix: 1 sec
Ts =
16.67 s Subcarrier spacing X max FFT size
= Data
= Cyclic prefix Copy

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Air Interface: Physical Resource Blocks

12 subcarriers
In both the DL & UL direction, data is
.. ..
allocated to users in terms of
Frequency resource blocks (RBs).
Resource 1 ms subframe a RB consists of 12 consecutive
block or TTI subcarriers in the frequency domain,
reserved for the duration of 0.5 ms
0.5 ms slot slot.
Time The smallest resource unit a
During each TTI,
scheduler can assign to a user is a
resource blocks for
scheduling block which consists of
different UEs are
two consecutive resource blocks
scheduled in the
eNodeB

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Air Interface: Resource Block and Resource Element

Physical Resource Block PBR or Resource Block RB:


12 subcarriers in frequency domain x 1 slot period in time domain
Capacity allocation based on Resource Blocks

Subcarrier 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Channel bandwidth 1.4 3 5 10 15 20


0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 (MHz)
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Number of 72 180 300 600 900 1200
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 subcarriers
KHz

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
180

Number of resource 6 15 25 50 75 100


0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 blocks
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Resource Element RE:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 subcarrier x 1 symbol period
Subcarrier 12 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 theoretical min. capacity allocation unit
1 slot 1 slot 1 RE is the equivalent of 1 modulation symbol
1 ms subframe on a subcarrier, i.e. 2 bits (QPSK), 4 bits
(16QAM), 6 bits (64QAM).

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Air Interface: FDD Physical Layer Frame Structure

FDD Frame structure ( also called Type 1 Frame) is common to both UL & DL
Divided into 20 x 0.5ms slots
Structure has been designed to facilitate short round trip time
- Frame length = 10 ms
0.5 ms slot
- FDD: 10 sub-frames of 1 ms for UL & DL
sy sy sy sy sy sy sy
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 - 1 Frame = 20 slots of 0.5ms each
10 ms frame - 1 slot = 7 (normal CP) or 6 OFDM
symbols (extended CP)
s s s s s s s s .. s18 s19
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
0.5 ms slot
SF: SubFrame
SF0 SF1 SF2 SF3 .. SF9
s: slot
1 ms sub-frame Sy: symbol
In FDD, there is a time offset between uplink and downlink transmission.

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Air Interface: TDD Physical Layer Frame Structure
Frame Type 2 (TS 36.211-900; 4.2)
each radio frame consists of 2 half frames = 10 subframes = 10 ms (1 subframe = 1 ms)
Half-frame = 5 ms = 5 Sub-frames of 1 ms
UL-DL configurations with both 5 ms & 10 ms DL-to-UL switch-point periodicity are supported
Special subframe with the 3 fields DwPTS, GP & UpPTS; length of DwPTS + UpPTS +GP = 1 subframe; (i.e. depending
on frame configuration one or two Special Subframes)
DL / UL ratio can vary from 1/3 to 8/1 according to service requirements of the carrier
Radio Frame: 10ms
Half Frame: 5 ms
f SF
DwPTS

SF SF SF SF

DwPTS
SF SF SF

UpPTS
UpPTS
GP

GP
UL/DL
carrier
#0 #2 #3 #4 #5 #7 #8 #9

Subframe 1ms time


DwPTS: Downlink Pilot time Slot Downlink Subframe
UpPTS: Uplink Pilot Time Slot Uplink Subframe
GP: Guard Period to separate between DL/UL Special Subframe
DL or UL Subframe

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Air Interface : TDD UL/DL Configurations
- TDD allows flexible bandwidth allocation between UL & DL to support asymmetric traffic
The number of subframes dedicated to UL & DL within the 10ms frame can be adjusted
- 7 different frame configurations
Chosen UL/DL Configuration should be the same across all cells of a network to avoid interference between
transmission directions (Rel.8 static or semi-static TDD system)
- Nokia supports Configuration 1 & 2:
Configuration 1 DL:UL=2:2
Configuration 2 DL:UL=3:1
Uplink-downlink Downlink-to-Uplink Subframe number
configuration Switch-point periodicity 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
0 5 ms D S U U U D S U U U
1 5 ms D S U U D D S U U D
2 5 ms D S U D D D S U D D
3 10 ms D S U U U D D D D D
4 10 ms D S U U D D D D D D
5 10 ms D S U D D D D D D D
6 5 ms D S U U U D S U U D

D Downlink S Special U Uplink

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Air Interface: Special Subframe Configuration
More info: TS36.21
- Total length of special subframe is 1ms but the length of the each field may vary
9 different formats supported
Nokia supports formats 5 & 7
Fields:
- Downlink Pilot time Slot (DwPTS)
shortened DL subframe
for Reference Signals & control information
may carry user data
contains PSS (note: SSS transmitted on
the last symbol of subframe 0)
- Uplink Pilot Time Slot (UpPTS)
mainly used for RACH and SRS transmission
- Guard Period (GP)
Switching point between DL & UL transmission
Compensates for the delay when switching between transmission directions
Its length determines the maximum supportable cell size

For 5ms periodicity subframe#6 is also


a special subframe (otherwise is normal)

SUBFRAME 1
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Air Interface: Cell-Specific Reference Signals Mapping
R0 R0

R0 R0
For Channel estimation
R0 R0
Measurements (e.g. RSRP)
R0
l =0
R0
l =6 l =0 l =6
Synchronisation in frequency & time
Cell Id (Physical Layer Cell Identity)
R0 R0 R1

R0 R0 R1 R1 For more detailed information


R0 R0 R1 R1
according to UE specific
Reference Signals and their
R0
l =0
R0
l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0
R1
l =6 l =0
R1
l =6
position see: TS 36.211; 6.10.
RSRP: Reference Signal Received Power

R0 R0 R1 R1 R2 R3

R0 R0 R1 R1 R2 R3

R0 R0 R1 R1 R2 R3

R0 R0 R1 R1 R2 R3
l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6 l =0 l =6

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Air Interface: DL Physical Channels

There are no dedicated traffic channels in LTE, neither UL nor DL.


PDSCH: Physical Downlink Shared Channel
carries user data, L3 signaling, System Information Blocks & Paging
PBCH: Physical Broadcast Channel
for Master Information Block only
PMCH: Physical Multicast Channel
for multicast traffic as MBMS services
PCFICH: Physical Control Format Indicator Channel
indicates number of OFDM symbols for Control Channels = 1..4
PDCCH: Physical Downlink Control Channel
carries resource assignment messages for DL capacity allocations & scheduling grants for UL
allocations
PHICH: Physical Hybrid ARQ Indicator Channel
carries ARQ Ack/Nack messages from eNB to UE in respond to UL transmission

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Air Interface: UL Physical Channels

PUSCH: Physical Uplink Shared Channel


Transmission of user data, L3 & L1 signaling (L1 signaling: CQI, ACK/NACKs, etc.)

PUCCH: Physical Uplink Control Channel


Carries L1 control information in case that no user data are scheduled in this subframe (e.g. H-ARQ
ACK/NACK indications, UL scheduling request, CQIs & MIMO feedback).
These control data are multiplexed together with user data on PUSCH, if user data are scheduled in
the subframe

PRACH: Physical Random Access Channel


For Random Access attempts; SIBs indicates the PRACH configuration (duration; frequency;
repetition; number of preambles - max. 64)

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Air Interface: Mapping of Signals on Physical Layer

Example shown below for 72 subcarrier (1.4 MHz), single


antenna case
Primary and Secondary Synchronisation Signals occupy 2 blocks of
symbols per 10 ms (central 72 subcarriers for all channel bandwidths)

Reference Signals
20 slots = 10 subframes = 10 ms = 10 TTI

Synchronisation Signals
72 subcarriers

Check Online
http://dhagle.in/LTE

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Air Interface: Example Mapping of Physical Channels on Physical Layer
PBCH, PCFICH, PDCCH and PHICH physical channels
also occupy symbols and represent an overhead
PDSCH physical channel used to transfer application data has access
to whatever is left over
PBCH
20 slots = 10 subframes = 10 ms = 10 TTI
PCFICH

PDCCH
72 subcarriers

PHICH

PDSCH

Reference Signals

Control information at start TTI


of every TTI Check Online Synchronisation Signals
http://dhagle.in/LTE

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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Air Interface Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Aspects

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Air Interface Dimensioning : Scenario Approach
Network scenarios can be divided into two principal categories:
Greenfield
The greenfield scenario means building the network from scratch, that is, the operator does not have any existing
cellular network or sites.
Overlay with existing 2G or 3G Network
The most frequent case, however, is that the operator has an existing network or sites and uses LTE as a capacity
expansion layer
Radio dimensioning process can be divided into two main parts:
Coverage dimensioning link budget calculations taking into account air interface physical aspects along with impact of signal
propagation in a real environment resulting in the estimated cell range value and as a turn in the number of sites
required to assure network coverage in the area
Baseband dimensioning calculations taking into account real hardware (Flexi System Modules) capabilities and assumed
Traffic Model resulting in the number of site required to assure enough processing capacity to serve the assumed area
.
Coverage Output Capacity Output Equipment Output
Customer Coverage Capacity Equipment
number of sites number of sites number of sites
Requirements Dimensioning Dimensioning (capacity)
Dimensioning (baseband)
(coverage)
cell range cell capacity

System parameters System parameters System parameters


TX power spectral efficiency
system module
antenna scheme capacity gains
Infrastr. parameters Traffic demand Planning parameters
number of sectors service type
number of connected UEs
required coverage area number of subscribers
Planning parameters Planning parameters
interference margin
cell load
environment type
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Air Interface Dimensioning : Example of Overlay Scenario

2G BCCH TRX Received Level = 10*log(Px1000) PL(gsm)


3G CPICH Received Level = 10*log(Px10%x1000) PL(umts)
4G RSRP Received Level = 10*log(Px1000) 10*log(12*PRB) PL(lte)

Assumption:
All Technologies using the same power 20Watt
The same Value for PL(gsm)=PL(umts)=PL(lte)=140db*

2G BCCH TRX= 43dbm 140 db = -97dbm


3G CPICH = 33dbm 140 db = -107dbm
4G RSRP 5Mhz = 18.23 dbm 140db = -122dbm
*In Actual Path Loss between Technologies are different to due many parameters such as Bandwidth, Service Bearer,
Noise Figure.

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Air Interface Dimensioning : Link Budget 1/2
LTE Link Budget
calculated based on service throughput at cell edge. This
Service Throughput must be defined by operator Coverage
- EIRP
- RX sensitivity
Parameter Consideration
- Other margins (i.e.
User Throughput Defined at Cell edge body loss, gains,
Operating Spectrum interference margin) - Carrier frequency
TDD/FDD Selection - eNB / UE height
Maximum Allowable Path
Channel Bandwidth (1.4, 3, 5, 10, 15 and 20 MHz) Loss
- Clutter specific
corrections
System Overhead Capacity (All related with
- Shadowing std.
signalling, such as PDCCH Symbol, Cyclic Prefix, deviation
RACH Density, etc) Propagation
Propagation models:
Transmit Power/RF Module 20W, 30W, and 40W) macro and indoor
Noise Figure Coverage reliability
Antenna Configuration and Gain
Cell Load Factor (Interference Margin) Cell range
UE Power Class
Site count

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Air Interface Dimensioning : Link Budget 2/2

Assumption
Operating Band: 1800Mhz (FDD) UE Power Class : Class 3 (23dBm, h=1.5 meter)
Channel Bandwidth: 5 Mhz Cell Load Factor : 50%
Flexi RF Unit: 20Watt (43 dBm) Propagation: Cost 231 TWO slope
Feeder Loss: 0.5 dB (Feederless) Other parameters: using
Antenna Configuration: 2Tx-2Rx MIMO Channel Mode: Enhanced Pedestrian 5Hz(EPA05)
Antenna Gain and Heigh: 18 dBi/30 meter (Dense valid for low speed mobile in General
Urban)

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban
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Uplink Limited
Air Interface Dimensioning: Impact of cell-edge throughput

UL Link Budget is clearly determined


by the amount of allocated resources
UPLINK (due to sharing the Tx power among
allocated subcarriers).

DL Link Budget is less impacted by


throughput requirement (especially in
range of throughput<2Mbps).
DOWNLINK

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Air Interface Dimensioning : LTE-FDD 1800 5 Mhz vs 3 Mhz Coverage

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban

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Air Interface Dimensioning : LTE-FDD1800 5 Mhz vs 10 Mhz Coverage

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban

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Air Interface Dimensioning : Total Overhead System per Channel Bandwidth

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Air Interface Dimensioning : TDD Link Budget

TDD LTE Link Budget


Most of parameters in FDD apply for TDD Link Budget

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Air Interface Dimensioning : LTE-FDD 1800 vs LTE-TDD 2300 Coverage

Special Sub-frame 5

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban
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Air Interface Dimensioning : LTE-FDD1800 vs GSM1800 Coverage

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban

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Air Interface Dimensioning : TDD 2300 10MHz vs FDD2600 5MHz vs FDD2600 10MHz

TDD2300 with different DL:UL Ratio Configuration TDD2600 with different Channel Bandwidth

* *

* *

* 8db Std Dev, 93% Coverage Probability, and 20 db Building Penetration Loss for Dense
Urban
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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Link Budget Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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Baseband Capacity Dimensioning: Baseband Dimensioning Process

Baseband Dimensioning are based on


three aspects
Bandwidth and Number of Cells
(Carrier) per Site
Maximum Throughput per cell
Connected User per cell

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Baseband Capacity Dimensioning: Bandwidth and Number of Cell

Flexi Multiradio 10 BTS: System Module Sharing 2G and LTE mode

customer confidential
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Baseband Capacity Dimensioning: Cell Throughput

Average site throughput

Peak throughput
Maximum FSMD / FSME / FSMF / Lite HW Capacity with 2 TX MIMO and
2 RX

Bandwidth [MHz] 5 10 15* 20*


Peak L1 DL Throughput
37 75 110 150
per cell [Mbit/s]

Peak L1 UL Throughput
12 25 38 50
per cell [Mbit/s] *

Note: Numbers subject to change according to radio conditions,


3GPP standardization and product optimization.
Initial releases of UE are not expected to support 64QAM in UL, thus max 16QAM considered.
* 15 and 20 MHz not in Flexi Lite

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Baseband Capacity Dimensioning: Connected User

Flexi Multiradio 10 BTS: System Module Sharing 2G and LTE mode

Maximum number of connected users per cell


(assuming 2x2 MIMO, IRC for 2RX)
1,4 MHz 3 MHz 5 MHz 10 MHz 15 MHz 20 MHz
FSMF
40 120 480 600 720 840
(up to 3 cells)
FSMF
- - 420 420 - -
(up to 6 cells)

Maximum number of connected users per cell


(assuming 4x2 DL MIMO and IRC 4Rx)
1,4 MHz 3 MHz 5 MHz 10 MHz 15 MHz 20 MHz
FSMF
- - 480 600 - -
(up to 3 cells)
FSMF
- - - - - -
(up to 6 cells)

customer confidential
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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Link Budget Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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E-UTRAN Cell Global Identifier (EGCI)

The E-UTRAN Cell Global Identifier (ECGI) is specified within 3GPP TS 36.300. It is used to identify
cells globally, and is constructed from the MCC, MNC and E-UTRAN Cell Identifier (ECI). The ECI is
used to identify cells within the PLMN. The MCC, MNC and ECI are broadcast within SIB 1. The ECI
has a fixed length of 28 bits and contains the eNodeB Identifier (eNB-ID).

ECGI

MCC MNC E-UTRAN Cell Identifier (ECI)

eNB-ID Cell-ID

Id Range
eNB id 0 to1048575
Cell id 0 to 255

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PCI Planning
What is the PCI?

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PCI Planning
Planning Overview

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PCI Planning
Impact in Reference Signal Position (1/2)

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PCI Planning
Impact in Reference Signal Position (2/2)

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PCI Planning
Module 3 Rule

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PCI Planning
MIMO 2x2

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PCI Planning
Module 3 Rule

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PCI Planning
Module 6 Rule

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PCI Planning
Module 30 Rule

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PCI Planning
Recommendations

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PCI Planning
6 Sector Sites

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PCI Planning Methods

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TAC Planning
Introduction (1/2)

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TAC Planning
Introduction (2/2)

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TAC Planning
Planning Guidelines 1/2
Tracking areas should be planned to be relatively large (100 eNodeB, 3 cells/eNodeB) rather than
relatively small
Their size should be reduced subsequently if the paging load become high
Tracking areas should not run close to and parallel to major roads nor railway. Likewise, boundaries
should not traverse dense subscriber areas.
Cells which are located at a tracking area boundary and which experience large numbers of updates
should be monitored to evaluate the impact of the update procedures
A UE can be registered in multiple tracking area to avoid unnecessary tracking areas updates at the
tracking area borders. This is done via the TA list i.e. a list allowed TA delivered to the UE in the attach
and TAU procedures. The TA list is configured in the MME.
Tacking Area (TA) capacity dimensioning is proprietary of MME capacity.

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TAC Planning
Planning Guidelines 2/2
Tracking Area:
Tracking Area are used for EPS Mobility Management(EMM)
Each eNB can contains cells belonging to different tracking areas
Paging messages are broadcasted across the tracking area within which the UE is registered
A tracking area can be shared by Multiple MME
Tracking Area Idenity (TAI) constructed from MCC + MNC + TAC . All broadcasted within SIB1

General Tracking Area Recommendations:


Tracking areas should be planned to be relatively large, rather than relatively small
Their size should be reduced subsequently if the paging load becomes high
Existing 2G or 3G location area (LAC) should be used as a basis for defining LTE tracking area
boundaries
Tracking areas should not run close to and parallel to major roads nor railways. Likewise, boundaries
should not traverse dense subscriber areas
Cells which are located at a tracking area boundary and which experience large numbers of updates
should be monitored to evaluate the impact of the update procedures

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Table of contents

LTE LTE-A Air Interface Link Budget Baseband Deployment


Overview Overview Dimensioning Aspects

Simulation, Lab
1 and Field Findings

Performance
Simulation

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Cell Edge Data Rate Simulations

100
L TE 2 0 M H z
90 L TE 1 0 M H z
L TE 5 M H z
80 HSDPA 5 M Hz

70

60
Median (50%) data rate over
Mbps

50 the cell area (70% distance)


40 HSDPA 3.4 Mbps
LTE 10 MHz 8 Mbps
30
LTE 20 MHZ 16 Mbps
20

10

0 Cell edge G-factor = -4 dB


0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
D is t a n c e fro m B T S [ re la t ive t o c e ll ra d iu s , 1 = c e ll e d g e ] 2x2 MIMO
G- factor: own cell to other cell interference value

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Aspect Performance: Impact of interference from neighbour, SINR

SINR & Throughput

100

90

80

70

60
UE
dB/Mbps

PCTel S-SCH
50 PCTel RS
R&S S-SCH
Throughput
40

30
Big variance on SINR
20
measurements,
depending on:
10
Measurement method
0
1 15 29 43 57 71 85 99 113 127 141 155 169 183 197 211 225 239 253 267 281 295 309 323 337 351 365 379 Measurement
sec
equipment

Both cell in idle state Download started in Download started in Download stopped in Neighbor cell
(no traffic) the serving cell the neighbor cell the neighbor cell shut down

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Performance Aspect: Impact of wrong PCID settings for RS SINR(1/2)

Original PCID settings

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Performance Aspect: Impact of wrong PCID settings for RS SINR(2/2)

Original PCID
settings

PCID 31 -> 33
PCID 32 cell shut down

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Cell Load

Cell Load [%]


- Cell load represents the average resource utilization in terms of PRBs
It accounts for the average load of the system over longer time period (minutes, hours,...)
For the link budget calculation, which is a single cell-edge user case to estimate maximum
possible coverage, cell load reflects the average neighbour load but it does not impact own cell
resource allocation
In other words a cell edge user occupying 100% resources per TTI (100% of PRBs) does not
mean 100% load (i.e. over long time period)

- Affects the Interference Margin (IM)


Higher cell load means higher interference from the neighbour cells
High neighbour cell load increases the IM that in terms reduces the MAPL*
High neighbour cell load limits the possibility of selecting high MCS
- Recommended value: 50% (subject to change)
- Customer may provide this value

*MAPL = Maximum Allowed Path Loss


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DL Interference Margin

Interference margin IM
Interference Margin can be defined as a relation between signals received with & without interference

S/N
IM =
S /( I own + I other + N )

S: useful signal (received power)


Iown: own cell interference ( 0 in LTE due to the orthogonality of subcarriers)
Ioth: other cell interference
N: noise power

100% orthogonality could be assumed in UL & DL due to OFDM & SC-FDMA so that the Intra-cell
interference is close to zero
The only interference which counts is the Inter-cell interference
DL Interference Margin could be derived analytically

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Interference Margin
Downlink (simulation for 10MHz BW)

By selecting high neighbour cell load we are


limiting to the usage of low ( robust) MCS
since for higher MCS the IM increases a lot.

IM as a function of Neighbour Cell Load for different MCS and cell Edge User
Throughputs

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Interference Margin
Uplink

- Uplink Interference Margin


Currently obtained from system level simulations. Due to the non-deterministic
characteristic of uplink interferences it is difficult to make a mathematical model (like in
downlink)
It is a function of cell load

IM as a function of Cell Load

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