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Description
Issue 10
Date 2019-03-30
and other Huawei trademarks are trademarks of Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
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Website: http://www.huawei.com
Email: support@huawei.com
Contents
1 Introduction.................................................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Functions ...................................................................................................................................................................... 1
1.2 Exterior ......................................................................................................................................................................... 1
1.3 Boards ........................................................................................................................................................................... 2
1.3.1 UMPT ........................................................................................................................................................................ 3
1.3.2 UBBP ......................................................................................................................................................................... 8
1.3.3 USCU....................................................................................................................................................................... 11
1.3.4 UPEU ....................................................................................................................................................................... 12
1.3.5 UEIU........................................................................................................................................................................ 13
1.3.6 FAN ......................................................................................................................................................................... 14
1.4 Board Configuration ................................................................................................................................................... 15
1.4.1 Board Configuration for a Single-RAT BBU5900 ................................................................................................... 16
1.4.2 Board Configuration for a Separate-MPT BBU5900 ............................................................................................... 18
1.4.3 Board Configuration for a Co-MPT BBU5900 ........................................................................................................ 23
1 Introduction
1.1 Functions
The BBU5900 is a baseband control unit that provides the following functions:
Manages the entire base station system in terms of operation and maintenance (OM) and
system clock.
Processes signaling messages.
Provides physical ports for information exchange between the base station and the
transport network.
Provides an OM channel between the base station and the LMT, SMT, or U2000.
Processes uplink and downlink baseband signals, and provides common public radio
interface (CPRI) ports for communication with radio frequency (RF) modules.
Provides ports for receiving and transmitting signals from environment monitoring
devices.
1.2 Exterior
The BBU5900, 19 inches wide and 2 U high, is a universal baseband unit that can be applied
to diverse radio access technologies (RATs).
The BBU5900 exteriors with half-width and full-width slots are shown in the following two
figures.
1.3 Boards
The following table lists the boards supported by a BBU5900.
1.3.1 UMPT
The UMPT is a universal main processing and transmission unit. A BBU5900 can be
configured with a UMPTb, UMPTe, or UMPTg.
Functions
The UMPT provides the following functions:
Manages configurations and devices, monitors performance, and processes signaling of a
base station.
Processes signaling and manages resources for other BBU boards.
Provides the USB port, transmission port, and maintenance port for signal transmission,
automatic software upgrade, and BBU maintenance on the LMT or U2020.
Panel
Figure 1-3 shows the UMPTb1 panel.
Ports
Table 1-2 describes the ports on the UMTPb1 or UMPTb2.
Supported RATs
The following table lists the RATs supported by the UMPTb, UMPTe, and UMPTg.
UMPTb Single-mode: GSM, UMTS, LTE FDD, LTE NB-IoT, LTE TDD
Multimode: GU, GL, UL, GUL
UMPTe Single-mode: GSM, UMTS, LTE FDD, LTE NB-IoT, LTE TDD, NR TDD
Multimode: GU, GL, UL, GUL, LN
UMPTg Single-mode: GSM, UMTS, LTE FDD, LTE NB-IoT, LTE TDD, NR TDD
Multimode: GU, GL, UL, GUL, LN, GULN
In the table, L indicates LTE FDD, but LTE FDD, LTE TDD, and LTE NB-IoT dynamically share
the specifications of the main control board.
For information about the LTE TDD single mode, see DBS5900 LTE TDD Product Description.
1.3.2 UBBP
The UBBP is a universal baseband processing unit. A BBU5900 can be configured with the
following types of UBBP boards:
UBBPd (UBBPd1/UBBPd2/UBBPd3/UBBPd4/UBBPd5/UBBPd6)
UBBPe (UBBPe1/UBBPe2/UBBPe3/UBBPe4/UBBPe5/UBBPe6/UBBPex2)
UBBPf (UBBPfw1)
UBBPg (UBBPg2/UBBPg2a/UBBPg3)
Functions
The UBBP provides the following functions:
Provides CPRI ports for communication with RF modules.
Supports deployment of multiple RATs on one UBBP.
Panel
The panels of the UBBPd1, UBBPd2, UBBPd3, UBBPd4, UBBPd5, and UBBPd6 are the
same, as shown in Figure 1-8.
The panels of the UBBPe1, UBBPe2, UBBPe3, UBBPe4, UBBPe5, and UBBPe6 are the
same, as shown in Figure 1-9.
Ports
Table 1-7 describes the ports on the UBBPd, UBBPe, or UBBPg.
Supported RATs
The following table lists the RATs supported by the UBBP.
For information about the LTE TDD single mode, see DBS5900 LTE TDD Product Description.
1.3.3 USCU
The USCU is a universal satellite card and clock unit. A BBU5900 can be configured with a
USCUb11 or USCUb14.
Functions
The USCU provides the following functions:
The USCUb11 provides ports to communicate with the Remote Global Positioning
System (RGPS) and building integrated timing supply (BITS) equipment. It does not
support GPS signals.
The USCUb14 contains a u-blox satellite card. This board does not support RGPS
signals.
Panel
The USCUb11 and USCUb14 have the same panel, as shown in Figure 1-13.
Ports
The USCUb11 and USCUb14 have the same ports, as listed in Table 1-10.
1.3.4 UPEU
The UPEU is a universal power and environment interface unit. A BBU5900 can be
configured with a UPEUe.
Functions
Converts –48 V DC input power into +12 V DC and provides an output power of 1100 W.
Two UPEUe boards support 1100 W hot backup or 2000 W load sharing.
Provides two ports with each transmitting one channel of RS485 signals and two ports
with each transmitting four channels of Boolean signals.
Panel
Figure 1-14 shows the UPEUe panel.
Ports
Table 1-11 describes the ports on the UPEUe.
1.3.5 UEIU
The UEIU is a universal environment interface unit. A BBU5900 can be configured with a
UEIUb.
Functions
A UEIU performs the following functions:
Provides two ports, each transmitting one channel of RS485 signals.
Provides two ports, each transmitting four channels of Boolean signals, which can only
be dry contact or ordinary clock (OC) signals.
Transmits information reported by the environment monitoring device and alarm
information to the main control board.
Panel
Figure 1-15 shows the UEIUb panel.
Ports
Table 1-12 describes the ports on the UEIUb.
1.3.6 FAN
The FAN is a fan unit. A BBU5900 can be configured with an FANf.
Functions
The FAN provides heat dissipation for a BBU, controls the rotational speed of the fans,
detects the temperature of the FAN board, and reports the status of the fans and FAN board.
Panel
Figure 1-16 shows the FANf panel.
Unless otherwise specified, board configuration in this document is based on a BBU5900 with
half-width slots.
Among slots 0 to 5, any two horizontally adjacent half-width slots can be reconstructed into a
full-width slot. The number of the full-width slot is the same as that of the half-width slot on
the left before the reconstruction. The following figure shows an example of BBU5900 slots
in hybrid mode.
G&U indicates that GSM and UMTS use different main control boards. Other RAT combinations are
the same.
LTE FDD is used as a typical board configuration example. The board configuration of LTE NB-IoT
is the same.
Figure 1-28 Typical board configuration for a G&L BBU5900 (same as G&M BBU5900)
Figure 1-29 Typical board configuration for a U&L BBU5900 (same as U&M BBU5900)
G&U+L indicates that GSM and UMTS are deployed in BBU 0 and LTE is deployed in BBU 1.
Other RAT combinations are the same.
When a BBU3900 or BBU3910 involved in BBU interconnection is configured with a GTMU board,
the BBU3900 or BBU3910 must serve as the root BBU.
For details of BBU3900 and BBU3910 slot assignments, see BBU3900 Description and BBU3910
Description.
LTE FDD is used as a typical board configuration example. The board configuration of LTE NB-IoT
is the same.
The following table lists the typical board configuration for 1 BBU3900/BBU3910+1
BBU5900.
The following table lists the typical board configuration for 1 BBU5900+1 BBU5900.
LTE FDD is used as a typical board configuration example. The board configuration of LTE NB-IoT is
the same.
Figure 1-35 Typical board configuration for a GL co-MPT BBU5900 (same as GM co-MPT
BBU5900 and GLM co-MPT BBU5900)
Figure 1-36 Typical board configuration for a UL co-MPT BBU5900 (same as UM co-MPT
BBU5900 and ULM co-MPT BBU5900)
Figure 1-37 Typical board configuration for a GUL co-MPT BBU5900 (same as GUM co-MPT
BBU5900 and GULM co-MPT BBU5900)
The typical board configuration for a co-MPT BBU5900 (NR involved) is as follows:
Main control board: A maximum of two main control boards are installed, in descending
order of priority, in slots 7 and 6.
Baseband processing board: A maximum of six UBBP boards are installed, in descending
order of priority, in slots 4, 2, 0, 1, 3, and 5.
2 Technical Specifications
UBBPd1 24
UBBPd2 24
UBBPd3 24
UBBPd4 24
UBBPd5 36
UBBPd6 48
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 2R cells are supported. In these configurations, the total number of
cells cannot exceed the maximum of 2R cells.
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 4R cells or 2R and 4R cells are supported. In these configurations,
the total number of cells cannot exceed the maximum of 4R cells.
(1): The Standard Ratio parameter for the board is set to FDD_ENHANCE(FDD Enhance).
Table 2-5 Number of LTE FDD UEs per main control board
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 2R cells are supported. In these configurations, the total number of
cells cannot exceed the maximum of 2R cells.
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 4R cells or 2R and 4R cells are supported. In these configurations,
the total number of cells cannot exceed the maximum of 4R cells.
(3):
If a 400 kHz cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed three. If more than
three 200 kHz cells have been set up, no 400 kHz cell can be set up.
(4):
For 4T4R cells: If a 400 kHz 4T4R cell has been set up, the total number of 4T4R cells cannot
exceed three. If more than three 200 kHz 4T4R cells have been set up, no 400 kHz cell can be set up.
For 2T4R cells: If more than six 2T4R cells have been set up, no 4T4R cell can be set up. If a 400
kHz 2T4R cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed six and the total number of
400 kHz cells cannot exceed three. If more than six 200 kHz 2T4R cells have been set up, no 400
kHz cell can be set up.
(5):If a 400 kHz cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed six and the total number
of 400 kHz cells cannot exceed three. If more than six 200 kHz cells have been set up, no 400 kHz
cell can be set up.
(6):
If a 400 kHz cell or a 4T4R cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed six. If
more than six 2T4R cells have been set up, neither 400 kHz cells nor 4T4R cells can be set up.
(7):
If a 400 kHz cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed six. If more than six
200 kHz cells have been set up, no 400 kHz cell can be set up.
(8):
If a 400 kHz cell has been set up, the total number of cells cannot exceed twelve. If more than
twelve 200 kHz cells have been set up, no 400 kHz cell can be set up.
The following table lists the maximum number of UEs supported by an LTE NB-IoT cell.
(9):
When Enhanced Multi-Carrier(NB-IoT) is enabled, a single 400 kHz NB-IoT cell supports a
maximum of 1200 UEs in RRC connected mode.
The following table lists the maximum number of UEs supported by a main control board
working in LTE NB-IoT.
Table 2-12 Number of LTE NB-IoT UEs per main control board
The following table lists the maximum number of UEs supported by a baseband processing
board working in LTE NB-IoT.
Table 2-13 Number of LTE NB-IoT UEs per baseband processing board
Board Maximum Number of Maximum Number of
UEs in RRC Connected UEs
Mode
UBBPd3 3600 865,000
UBBPd4 3600 865,000
UBBPd5/UBBPd6 3600 1,270,000
UBBPe1/UBBPe2 3600 865,000
UBBPe3/UBBPe4 3600 1,385,000
UBBPe5 3600 1,735,000
UBBPe6 4800 2,080,000
UBBPeb 3600 1,735,000
UBBPg2 4800 2,312,000
UBBPg2a 4800 2,312,000
The following table provides the uplink and downlink LTE NB-IoT throughput per baseband
processing board.
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 2R cells are supported. In these configurations, the total number of
cells cannot exceed the maximum of 2R cells.
Hybrid configurations of 1R and 4R cells or 2R and 4R cells are supported. In these configurations,
the total number of cells cannot exceed the maximum of 4R cells.
If a UBBPd is configured with LTE NB-IoT cells, the maximum board throughput will decrease and
the proportion of the maximum throughput to the total LTE cell bandwidth will decrease.
If a UBBPd/UBBPe is configured, one LTE FDD cell can be associated with one in-band LTE
NB-IoT cell. (If a UBBPd is configured and Standard Ratio is set to FDD_ENHANCE, the LTE
FDD cells cannot be associated with in-band LTE NB-IoT cells.)
Table 2-17 Number of LTE FDD+NB-IoT UEs per main control board
Board Maximum Number of Maximum Number of LTE
LTE NB-IoT UEs in FDD+NB-IoT UEs
RRC Connected Mode
UMPTb 10,800 7500+345,000
UMPTe 14,400 11,500+1,040,000
UMPTg 28,800 23,000+2,080,000
The maximum number of UEs supported by a board is affected by the traffic model. The maximum
number of UEs in the preceding table is based on the LTE NB-IoT traffic model. For details of the LTE
NB-IoT traffic model, see 2.7 Traffic Model.
The preceding specifications are supported only when uplink-downlink subframe configuration 1 or 2 is
used for TDD.
(1): In this document, the NR TDD mmWave specifications in SRAN15.0 are for tests only.
A mmWave sector consists of multiple cells. In SRAN15.0 or SRAN15.1, a single sector supports a
maximum of four cells.
Table 2-30 Throughput per cell served by a baseband processing board (NSA) (SRAN15.0)
Board Cell Configuration Maximum DL Maximum UL
Throughput per Cell Throughput per Cell
(DL:UL = 4:1) (DL:UL = 4:1) (Mbit/s)
(Gbit/s) (64QAM)
(256QAM)
UBBPf NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 0.650 136
w1 40 MHz 8T8R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 1.010 200
60 MHz 8T8R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 1.334 281
80 MHz 8T8R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 1.670 357
100 MHz 8T8R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 2.238 136
40 MHz 32T32R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 3.416 200
60 MHz 32T32R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 4.612 281
80 MHz 32T32R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 5.764 357
100 MHz 32T32R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 2.238 136
40 MHz 64T64R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 3.416 200
60 MHz 64T64R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 4.612 281
80 MHz 64T64R
NR TDD sub-6 GHz: 5.764 357
100 MHz 64T64R
Table 2-31 Throughput per cell served by a baseband processing board (NSA) (SRAN15.1)
Table 2-32 Throughput per cell served by a baseband processing board (SA) (SRAN15.1)
Table 2-33 Throughput per sector served by a baseband processing board (NSA) (SRAN15.0)
Board Sector Maximum DL Maximum UL
Configuration Throughput per Throughput per Sector
Sector (DL:UL = 4:1) (DL:UL = 4:1) (Gbit/s)
(Gbit/s) (64QAM) (64QAM)
UBBPf NR TDD mmWave: 8.56 2
w1 4x200 MHz 4T4R
Table 2-34 Throughput per sector served by a baseband processing board (NSA) (SRAN15.1)
Boar Configuration Maximum DL Maximum UL
d Throughput per Throughput per
Sector (DL:UL = 4:1) Sector (DL:UL = 4:1)
(Gbit/s) (64QAM) (Gbit/s) (64QAM)
UBB NR TDD mmWave: 100 1.07 0.27
Pg3 MHz 4T4R
NR TDD mmWave: 200 2.14 0.6
MHz 4T4R
NR TDD mmWave: 8.56 2.4
1x4x200 MHz 4T4R
NR TDD mmWave: 100 0.48 0.13
In GL, UL, and GUL co-BBP scenarios, the UBBP board supports hybrid configurations of 1R and 4R
LTE cells or hybrid configurations of 2R and 4R LTE cells.
(1), (2), (3): The Standard Ratio parameter for the board is set to FDD_ENHANCE(FDD Enhance).
(1): The Standard Ratio parameter for the board is set to NR_ENHANCE(NR Enhance).
Number of LTE FDD 3x10 MHz 4T4R 3x10 MHz 2T2R 3x10 MHz 4T4R
Cells
Maximum Number 1800 which can 1800 which can be 1800 which can be
of LTE NB-IoT UEs be shared with shared with LTE shared with LTE FDD;
in RRC Connected LTE FDD; ≤ FDD; ≤ 3600 in ≤ 3600 in total
Mode 3600 in total total
Board UBBPe5
Maximum Number of LTE NB-IoT 1800 which can be shared with LTE FDD; ≤
UEs in RRC Connected Mode 3600 in total
Maximum Number of LTE NB-IoT 1800 which can be shared with LTE FDD; ≤
UEs in RRC Connected Mode 3600 in total
Number of UMTS 6 3 12
Cells
Maximum Number 3x400 kHz 3x400 kHz 4T4R 3x400 kHz 4T4R
of LTE NB-IoT 4T4R
Cells
Specifications
Maximum Number 1800 which can 1800 which can be 1800 which can be
of LTE NB-IoT UEs be shared with shared with LTE FDD; ≤ shared with LTE
in RRC Connected LTE FDD; ≤ 3600 in total FDD; ≤ 4800 in
Mode 3600 in total total
(1): The Standard Ratio parameter for the board is set to FDD_ENHANCE(FDD Enhance).
Board UBBPd6
Item Specifications
Item Specifications
One UMPTe:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 10 Gbit/s.
One UMPTg:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 20 Gbit/s.
Maximum number of UEs in One UMPTb: 10,800
RRC connected mode UMPTe:
− One UMPTe board: 14,400
− Two UMPTe boards: 28,800
One UMPTg: 28,800
Maximum number of data One UMPTb: 32,400
radio bearers (DRBs) per One UMPTe: 43,200
eNodeB
One UMPTg: 86,400
Item Specifications
Item Specifications
Maximum number of cells One UMPTb:
36 cells (4T4R, 20 MHz/600 kHz)
One UMPTe:
72 cells (4T4R, 20 MHz/600 kHz)
One UMPTg:
144 cells (4T4R, 20 MHz/400 kHz)
Maximum throughput UMPTb1/UMPTb2:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 1.5 Gbit/s.
UMPTb3/UMPTb9:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 2 Gbit/s.
One UMPTe:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 10 Gbit/s.
One UMPTg:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 20 Gbit/s.
Maximum number of UEs in One UMPTb: 10,800
RRC connected mode One UMPTe: 14,400
One UMPTg: 28,800
LTE FDD and LTE NB-IoT share the maximum number of LTE cells and UEs on the main control
board.
Item Specifications
Item Specifications
− Two UMPTb1/UMPTb2 boards: The sum of uplink
and downlink data rates at the MAC layer is 3
Gbit/s.
UMPTb3/UMPTb9:
− One UMPTb3/UMPTb9 board: The sum of uplink
and downlink data rates at the MAC layer is 2
Gbit/s.
− Two UMPTb3/UMPTb9 boards: The sum of uplink
and downlink data rates at the MAC layer is 4
Gbit/s.
One UMPTe:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 10 Gbit/s.
One UMPTg:
The sum of uplink and downlink data rates at the MAC
layer is 20 Gbit/s.
Maximum number of UEs in One UMPTb: 10,800
RRC connected mode UMPTe:
− One UMPTe board: 14,400
− Two UMPTe boards: 28,800
One UMPTg: 28,800
Maximum number of DRBs One UMPTb: 32,400
per eNodeB One UMPTe: 43,200
One UMPTg: 86,400
LTE FDD and TDD dynamically share the specifications of the main control board.
LTE FDD cells support the 1.4, 3, 5, 10, 15, or 20 MHz bandwidth.
For details of bandwidths supported by LTE TDD cells, see DBS5900 LTE TDD Product Description.
When the UBBPfw1 is configured, the maximum numbers of LTE and NR cells are restricted by both
main control board and baseband processing board capabilities. This section only lists the maximum cell
numbers in typical configurations. When the UMPTe is configured in LN concurrency scenarios, a
maximum of 72 LTE cells and 36 NR cells are supported, and a maximum of 5400 LTE UEs and 2400
NR UEs in RRC connected mode are supported.
The maximum numbers of LTE and NR cells are restricted by both main control board and baseband
processing board capabilities. This section only lists the maximum cell numbers in typical
configurations. In GULN concurrency scenarios, a maximum of 72 GSM cells, 48 UMTS cells, 72 LTE
cells, and 72 NR cells are supported.
UMPTb 360,000
UMPTe 1,620,000
For details of the Huawei control plane reference traffic model, see 2.7.3 NR Traffic Model.
If GSM is configured with 72 TRXs (S24/24/24), each TRX can be configured with only one
SDCCH. If GSM is configured with 24 TRXs (S8/8/8), each TRX can be configured with three
SDCCHs.
Common NodeB Application Protocol (CNBAP) indicates the signaling traffic of a NodeB over the
Iub interface. The NodeB application part (NBAP) is defined in 3GPP specifications, and one
CNBAP indicates one radio link (RL) establishment procedure.
In a typical GL, UL, or GUL scenario where the signaling specifications of GSM and UMTS remain
unchanged, LTE signaling specifications (BHCA) of the main control board are affected after LTE
NB-IoT is available. LTE FDD and LTE NB-IoT share LTE signaling processing specifications of
the main control board. On commercial networks, it is recommended that 30% of LTE signaling
processing specifications be allocated to LTE NB-IoT.
When the UBBPfw1 is configured, the LTE and NR signaling specifications are restricted by both main
control board and baseband processing board capabilities. This section only lists the signaling
specifications in typical configurations. When the UMPTe is configured in LN concurrency scenarios,
the maximum LTE and NR signaling specifications are 540,000 BHCAs and 432,000 BHCAs,
respectively.
(1): The topologies vary with the RATs and scenarios. For details, contact Huawei frontline engineers.
(2): The specifications are supported using a QSFP28 to SFP28 adapter (QSA28) or QDA.
For details of QSA, see 4.2 Appendix 2: QSA28.
Table 2-71 Mapping between the CPRI port rate and the number of GSM TRXs
Table 2-72 Mapping between the CPRI port rate and the number of UMTS cells
CPRI Port Rate (Gbit/s) Number of 1T2R/2T2R* Cells
1.25 4
2.5 8
4.9 16
6.144 24
9.8 32
40.55 48
The asterisk (*) indicates that the number of supported cells is reduced by half if the 2T2R cell supports
VAM and the two TX antennas are configured on two RF modules in two CPRI links for VAM.
Table 2-73 Mapping between the CPRI port rate and the number of LTE FDD cells
Table 2-74 Mapping between the CPRI port rate and the number of LTE NB-IoT cells
CPRI Port Rate Number of 1T2R/2T2R Number of 2T4R/4T4R
(Gbit/s) Cells Cells
1.25 4 2
2.5 8 4
4.9 16 8
9.8 32 16
Table 2-75 Mapping between the CPRI port rate and the number of NR cells
M CPR Number of Cells Number of Cells Number of Number of
od I (Sub-6 GHz (Sub-6 GHz Cells Cells
e Port 64T64R/32T32R) 8T8R) (mmWave (mmWave
Rate 4T4R) 2T2R)
(Gbi
t/s)
eC 1x25 2 (cell bandwidth - 8 (cell -
PR = 20/30/40/50 bandwidth
I MHz) = 100
1 (cell bandwidth MHz)
= 60/70/80/90/100 4 (cell
MHz) bandwidth
= 200
MHz)
eC 1x10 2 (cell bandwidth - - -
PR = 20 MHz)
I 1 (cell bandwidth
= 30/40 MHz)
CP 1x25 - 2 (cell bandwidth = - 8 (cell
RI 20/30/40/50/60/70/8 bandwidt
0/90/100 MHz) h = 100
MHz)
4 (cell
bandwidt
h = 200
MHz)
CP 1x10 - 2 (cell - -
RI bandwidth =
20/30/40 MHz)
1 (cell
bandwidth =
50/60/70/80
MHz)
The cell types and the number of supported cells or sectors in the preceding table only apply to typical
scenarios. For cell types that are not listed here, contact Huawei engineers to obtain the corresponding
number of supported cells.
The maximum distance between a BBU and AAUs/RRUs depends on the capabilities of optical modules
or fronthaul solutions.
The following maximum distances between a BBU and AAUs/RRUs are based on fronthauls in a
point-to-point direct drive mode.
RAT Specifications
UMPTe 2 FE/GE electrical ports and 2 XGE optical ports
UMPTg 2 FE/GE electrical ports and 2 YGE optical ports
LTE UMPTb1/UMPTb 1 E1/T1 port (transmitting 4 channels of E1/T1 signals),
2 1 FE/GE electrical port, and 1 FE/GE optical port
UMPTb3/UMPTb 1 FE/GE electrical port and 1 FE/GE optical port
9
UMPTe 2 FE/GE electrical ports and 2 XGE optical ports
UMPTg 2 FE/GE electrical ports and 2 YGE optical ports
NR UMPTe 2 XGE optical ports
UMPTg 2 YGE optical ports
This section describes only the transmission ports on a BBU working in a single RAT. The number of
transmission ports on a BBU working in multiple RATs equals the sum of the transmission ports on the
boards in each RAT.
Item Specifications
Dimensions (H x W x 86 mm x 442 mm x 310 mm
D)
Weight BBU5900 ≤ 18 kg (full configuration)
Item Specifications
Heat dissipation The maximum heat dissipation capability is 2100 W when the
Item Specifications
ambient temperature is 50°C.
(1):
Traffic models described in the preceding table are obtained during busy hours. @BH refers to at
busy hour.
The following table describes the user plane (UP) specifications for traffic model 1.
Based on the definition of traffic model 1, one BHCA (for example, one combined PS call) is
defined by taking every item in traffic model 1 divided by the PS call density. The details of
one BHCA are listed below.
PS Call Attempts 1
Dedicated Bearer Attempts 0.0278
TAU & Attach & Detach Attempts 0.1667
Intra-eNodeB Handover Attempts 0.0556
Inter-eNodeB X2 Based Handover Out Attempts 0.2222
Inter-eNodeB X2 Based Handover In Attempts 0.2222
Inter-eNodeB S1 Based Handover Out Attempts 0
Inter-eNodeB S1 Based Handover In Attempts 0
Inter-RAT Handover Attempts 0.0167
Inter-RAT Redirection Attempts 0.0667
CSFB Based Inter-RAT Handover Attempts 0
CSFB Based Inter-RAT Redirection Attempts 0.0278
CA Scell Configuration Update Attempts 0.0556
Syn2Unsyn Attempts 0
Unsyn2Syn Attempts 0
RRC Re-Establish Attempts 0.0111
A3 reports Number 0
(2):
Traffic models described in the preceding table are obtained during busy hours. @BH refers to at
busy hour.
(3): The TAU timer is extended to 310 hours.
4 Appendix