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3G

3G Radio
Radio
Network
Network
Planning
Planning
Fundamentals
Fundamentals
--Day
Day22-1

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management
Pre-Launch Optimisation
Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family
WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
RAN Sharing
Multilayer Planning

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

List
Listall
allRRM
RRMentities
entitiesand
andexplain
explaintheir
their
function
function
Explain
Explainthe
theinterworking
interworkingbetween
betweenLoad
Load
Control,
Admission
Control
and
Packet
Control, Admission Control and Packet
Scheduler
Scheduler
Describe
Describethe
thedifferent
differenthandover
handover
possibilities
possibilities
List
Listthe
thetwo
twomost
mostimportant
importantsoft
softhandover
handover
parameters
parameters
Describe
Describethe
thedifference
differencebetween
betweennonnoncontrollable
and
controllable
traffic
controllable and controllable traffic
Explain
Explainwhy
whyLA,
LA,RA,
RA,SA
SAand
andURA
URAarea
area
planning
is
needed
planning is needed
Explain
Explainthe
thecell
cellsearch/synchronisation
search/synchronisation
procedure
of
the
procedure of theUE
UE
Explain
Explainhow
howscrambling
scramblingcode
codeplanning
planning
affects
cell
search
performance
affects cell search performance
Explain
Explainthe
theconcept
conceptof
ofgroup
groupplanning
planning

Radio Resource Management


UMTS Traffic Classes

CS domain

Conversational

PS domain

Streaming

RT traffic

Interactive

Background

NRT traffic

Conversational class is meant for traffic which is very


delay sensitive while background class is the most delay
insensitive traffic class.
Conversational and streaming classes are mainly intended
to be used to carry real time traffic flows.
Interactive class and Background are mainly meant to be
used by traditional Internet applications like WWW, Email,
Telnet, FTP and News
4

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


RAN Data Rates

AMR speech
Rate (kbps) 12.20

10.20

7.95

7.40

32

28.8

6.70

5.90

5.15

4.75

Transparent CS data
Rate (kbps)

64

33.6

Extensive multicall
capability

Non-transparent CS data
Rate (kbps) 57.6

28.8

14.4

PS data
Rate (kbps) 512*

* RAN2
DL
** RAN2
5

NOKIA

384

320

256

144**

128

64

32

16

Maximum user data rate 384 kbps (512kbps DL in


RAN2)

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Overview

Radio Resource Management (RRM) is responsible for efficient


utilization of the air interface resources
RRM is needed to maximize the radio performance
Guarantee Quality of Service (BLER, BER, delay)
Maintain the planned coverage for each service
Ensure planned capacity with low blocking
optimise the use of capacity
RRM can be divided into
Power control
Admission Control
Power Control
Handover control
Load Control
Load Control
Iub
Admission control
Load control (Congestion control)
Power Control
Packet scheduling
BTS
DRNC
Resource Manager
Iur
Admission Control
Packet Scheduler
Load Control
Handover Control
Power Control
Iu

MS
Iub
BTS

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

SRNC

Radio Resource Management


Logical Model

LC

PS
RM

AC Admission Control

AC

LC Load Control

Network based functions

PS Packet Scheduler

RM Resource
Manager

PC

PC Power Control

HC

HC HO Control

Connection based functions

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Overview of RRM Algorithms

Power control (PC) maintains radio link level quality


by adjusting the uplink and downlink powers.

The quality requirements are tried to get with minimum


transmission powers to achieve low interference in radio access
network. The basic functions of WCDMA power control are:
Open loop power control (RACH, FACH)
Fast closed loop power control (DCH, DSCH)
Outer loop power control

Handover Control (HC) controls the active state


mobility of UE in RAN.

NOKIA

HC maintains the radio link quality and minimises the radio


network interference by optimum cell selection in handovers.
The Handover Control (HC) of the Radio Access Network (RAN)
supports the following handover procedures:
Intra-frequency soft/softer handover
Intra-frequency hard handover
Inter-frequency handover
Inter-system (GSM) handover
FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Overview of RRM Algorithms

Admission Control (AC) decides whether a request


to establish a Radio Access Bearer (RAB) is admitted
in the Radio Access Network (RAN) or not.

Admission control is used to maintain stability and to achieve


high traffic capacity of RAN. The AC algorithm is executed
when radio access bearer is setup or the bearer is modified.
The AC measures take place as well with all kind of
handovers.

Load Control (LC) continuously updates the load


information of cells controlled by RNC

NOKIA

Load Control and provides this information to the AC and PS


for radio resource controlling purposes. In overload
situations, the LC performs the recovering actions by using
the functionalities of AC, PS and HC.

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Overview of RRM Algorithms

Packet scheduler (PS) schedules radio resources for


NRT radio access bearers both in uplink and downlink
direction.

10

The traffic load of cell determines the scheduled transmission


capacity. The information of load caused by NRT bearers is
determined by PS.
It can be said that PS controls the NRT load when system is not
in overload.
PS also allocates and changes the bitrates of NRT bearers. PS
controls both dedicated and shared channels.

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Wideband Power Based RRM

Nokia RRM has the following principles for the operation of network
based algorithms, admission control, packet scheduler and load control:

RRM is operating cell basis, i.e. operations are done for a single cell
without taking neighbouring cells account.
System load is measured based on total averaged power/ interference
in a cell. In uplink it is the total received wideband interference power
(PrxTotal) and in downlink it is the total transmitted power (PtxTotal).
AC, PS and LC operations are based these two measurements.
AC, PS and LC operations are done separately for uplink and downlink.
Uplink

Downlink

Node B Measurement

Total received
wideband power
PrxTotal

Total transmitted
wideband power
PtxTotal

RRM in RNC

Keep load at PrxTraget

Keep load at PrxTraget

RRM has the ability to manage


cell loading(max)
based on the total average
(max)
uplink/downlink power, which has the affect of eliminating the cell
shrinkage occurring due to variations in neighbour cell interference
levels.

11

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Power Control

The target of the power control (PC) is to achieve the minimum signal-tointerference ratio (SIR) that is required for the sufficient quality of the
connection
Power control provides protection against large changes in shadowing,
immediate response for fast changes in signal levels and interference
levels (SIR). Power control is also needed to cope with the near far
problem
PC entity fulfils the radio link power related adjustment by the following
basic procedures:
Uplink open loop PC algorithm and random access procedure
PC for downlink common physical channels
Fast closed loop PC
Outer loop PC

12

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Power Control Loops

Fast Closed loop PC measures the Interference level


Outer loop PC maintains the set quality

Immediate response
to fading andfast
changes in signal
and interference
levels

Fast Closed
Loop PC

DL Outer
UE
Loop PC

SRNC RNC

Iub

Node B

Quality loop: Maintains


the specified error rate

13

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

UL Outer
Loop PC

Radio Resource Management


Power Control Loops

UL Open loop power control for initial power setting of the UE


UE performs the initial transmission power calculation with the help of received info
from RNC
path loss between Node B and UE
uplink interference level (measured by Node B)
required received C/I
With Random Access Channel (RACH) power ramping is done with preambles
Preamble: In the beginning mobile sends low power and increases it until Node B is
able to detect it
After the initial transmission and the synchronisation procedure the fast closed loop
PC starts.
L1 ACK / AICH

Downlink / BS

Not detected
P2

Uplink / MS

P1

Preamble
14

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Preamble

RACH

Message part

Radio Resource Management


Power Control Loops

Fast Closed loop power control (UL/DL)


Closed loop PC mechanism aims to maintain a SIR target value
specified by outer loop PC. The SIR is measured on pilot bits of the
dedicated control channel and a corresponding transmit power
control (TPC) command is sent on the reverse link.
In UL closed loop PC, the BTS measures the SIR on pilot bits of the
UL DPCCH and transmits the corresponding Transmit Power
Control (TPC) value on DL DCH. The UE decodes the TPC value
and responds accordingly
In DL closed loop PC UE measures the SIR value on pilots bits of
the DL DPCH and transmits the corresponding TPC command on
UL DPCCH.
In Nokia RAN 1.5 the DL closed loop PC will be such that a TPC
command will be generated by the UE for every time slot in a
radio frame.

15

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Power Control Loops

Outer loop power control


The outer loop PC adjusts the SIR target used by the closed loop
PC. The SIR target is independently adjusted for each connection
based on the estimated quality of the connection. The initial value
is provided by admission control functionality in the RNC.
The SIR target value is to be set so that the usage of radio
resources is most effective, the power is set to minimum possible,
still ensuring that the quality of the connection is good enough.
In uplink outer loop PC the RNC monitors the link quality and
adjusts the new SIR target accordingly for the fast closed loop PC.
UE takes care of the downlink outer loop PC. Downlink outer loop
PC sets the SIR target for the downlink fast closed loop PC
according to quality estimates of the received channel.
Downlink outer loop PC functions are mainly located in the UE, but
some control parameters, e.g. BLER target, are set by the RNC.

16

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Power Control Loops
TPC commands

if SIR > (SIR)set then "down"


else "up"

P1
P2

UE adjusts
power according
UE1
to TPC commands

UE1 and UE2 are transmitting on the same frequency


TPC commands => equalizing transmitter powers is critical ("near-far" proble
Optimum situation: P1 = P2 at the Node B at all times

Node B

UE2

Different path attenuations are compensated by using


power control.
Open loop power control: UE adjusts its initial transmitter
power according to received signal level
Closed loop power control: Node B commands UE
to increase or decrease its transmission power at 1.5 kHz
It is based on received signal to interference ratio (SIR)
estimates in Node B.

Closed loop power control also follows the fast fading pattern
at low and medium speeds (< 50 km/h)
17

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management

Uplink Outer Loop Power Control

required (SIR)set for 1 % FER

outer loop TPC maintains link


quality
optimises capacity / range
is the "link adaptation"
method in WCDMA

MS stands still

time

during soft handover: comes


after soft handover frame
selection

if FER increase then


(SIR)set "up"
else (SIR)set "down"

CN

18

NOKIA

RNC
outer loop
control

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

(SIR)set adjustment
command
frame reliability info

if SIR > (SIR)set then "down"


else "up"

Radio Resource Management

Common Channel Power Planning

BTS power allocation rule:


For Pilot CPCIH 10 %,
For other common channels, 10 %
For dedicated channels, the rest
Ec/Ior=fraction of the power of the channel of interest
from the total BS power.
19

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Power Control & Diversity

At low UE speed, power control compensates the


fading : fairly constant receive power and Tx power
with high variations
With diversity the variations in Tx power is less
At UE speed >100km/h fast power control cannot
follow the fast fading, therefore diversity helps keep
receive power level more or less constant
In the UL Tx affects adjacent cell interference and Rx
power affects interference within the cell.

20

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Handovers

Soft/Softer handover
In Soft HO MS is simultaneously connected to multiple cells
In softer HO MS is simultaneously connected to multiple cell within same Node B
Mobile Evaluated Handover (MEHO)
Intra-frequency handover
Hard handover
Intra-Frequency hard handover
Arises when inter-RNC SHO is impossible
Decision procedure is the same as SHO
MEHO and RNC controlled HO
Causes temporary disconnection of the user
Inter-Frequency handover (RAN1.5)
Can be intra-BS hard handover, intra-RNC hard handover, inter-RNC hard
handover
Network Evaluated Handover (NEHO)
Decision algorithm located in RNC
Handovers both for RT and NRT Services
Inter-System handover (RAN1.5)
Handovers for CS voice and CS data (NEHO)
Network initiated cell Re-selection for PS (RT or NRT) data to GSM/GPRS

21

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Soft Handover

Softer-Soft HO

Soft-Soft HO
Softer HO
Soft HO

22

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Nokia Soft Handover Algorithm

MS Ec/N0

Strongest pilot in active set


MS Ec/N0 value

1. The CPICH Ec/N0 exceeds


Strongest pilot in active set Addition Window. The mobile
station starts Addition Time
timer

2. The CPICH Ec/N0 has been


continuously higher than
Drop Window
Strongest pilot in active set
Addition Window, RNC add the
neighbour to Active set after the
Addition Time timer expires.
3. The CPICH Ec/N0 is smaller
than Strongest pilot in active set
1. 2.
3.
4.
- Drop Window. The mobile
time station starts Drop Time timer
Addition Time
Drop Time
4. The CPICH Ec/N0 has been
Neighbour
Set Active Set Neighbour
Set
Neighbor Set
Neighbor Set
continuously smaller than
Strongest pilot in active set
Drop Window, RNC drops the
cell from the active set to the
neighbour set after the Drop
Time timer expires.
Addition Window

23

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Load Control

The purpose of load control is to optimise the capacity


of a cell and prevent overload situation.
Load control consists of Admission Control (AC) and
Packet Scheduler (PS) algorithms, and Load Control
(LC) which updates the load status of the cell based on
resource measurements and estimations provided by
AC and PS.
Load change
info

Load status

LC

24

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

NRT load

AC

PS

Radio Resource Management


Load Control

Since the main criteria in a WCDMA system for the


radio resources is the interference, the load of the cell
under the RNC is measured periodically based on
uplink interference level
downlink transmission power levels
In uplink, the basic measured quantity indicating load
is the total received power of a Node B, PrxTotal
In downlink, the basic measured quantity indicating
load is the total transmitted power of a Node B,
PtxTotal

25

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Radio Interface Load in Uplink
PrxTarget (dB) defines the optimal operating point of
the cell interference power, up to which the AC of the
RNC can operate. Noise rise as a function of fractional load
20
18
16

Noise rise [dB]

14
12
10
8
6

OVERLOAD AREA
MARGINAL LOAD AREA
FEASIBLE LOAD AREA

PrxTarget [dB] + PrxOffset [dB]


PrxTarget [dB]

2
0

26

NOKIA

Noise floor
0

0.1

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

0.2

0.3

0.4
0.5
0.6
Fractional load

0.7

0.8

0.9

Radio Resource Management


Radio Interface Load in DL

In the downlink, the own cell load factor can be defined


as the ratio of the measured transmission power,
PtxTotal, to the maximum transmission power of cell
PtxTotal
[dBm]

Ptx _ total

Loadin DL

Ptx _ BTS max

Cell maximum[dBm]

OVER LOADAREA

PtxTarget [dBm]+PtxOffset [dB]

MARGINAL LOAD AREA

PtxTarget [dBm]

FEASIBLE LOADAREA

[0...1]
0

27

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Load

Radio Resource Management


Admission Control

Admission Control (AC) decides whether a request to establish a Radio


Access Bearer (RAB) is admitted in the RAN or not.
AC is used to maintain stability and to achieve high traffic capacity of
RAN. The AC algorithm is executed when radio access bearer is setup or
the bearer is modified. The AC measures take place as well with all kind
of handovers.
The AC algorithm estimates the load increase, which the establishment of
the bearer would cause in the radio network. Both uplink and downlink
direction is estimated separately.
The inter-cell interference effect is estimated. Bearer is not admitted if
the predicted load exceeds particular thresholds either in uplink or
downlink.
In decision procedure AC will use the load information produced by the
Load Control (LC) and packet scheduler (PS) functionalities of RRM.

28

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Admission Control

The traffic can be divided into two groups


Real Time (RT) or non-controllable
Non-Real Time (NRT) or controllable
THUS some portion of capacity must be reserved for
the RT traffic for mobility purposes all the time. The
proportion between RT and NRT traffic varies all the
time.
Overload area
Overload Margin
Power

Load Target

Measured load caused


by noncontrollable load
Time

29

NOKIA

Estimated capacity for


NRT traffic.

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Admission Control

Since it is not enough to divide the load to RT and NRT one must take into
account the interference coming from surrounding cells.
Traffic is divided into controllable and non-controllable traffic.
Non-controllable traffic = RT users +
other-cell users +
noise +
other NRT users which
operate minimum bit rate
Controllable traffic=

30

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

NRT users

Radio Resource Management


Admission Control

power

PrxOffset / PtxOffset
PrxTarget / PtxTarget

PrxTotal / PtxTotal
PrxNrt / PtxNrt
PrxNc / PtxNc

controllable power
non-controllable power
time

ADMISSION DECISION: ARAB request is acceptedif the estimatednoncontrollableuplinkand downlink load, measuredin total received interference
power andtransmittedcarrier power, keeps below theplannedloadtarget and
thecurrent total loadbelow the overload threshold, defined bytarget and
offset parameters.

31

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Packet Scheduler
Packet scheduler is a general feature, which takes care of scheduling
radio resources for NRT radio access bearers for both UL and DL
Admission control (AC) and packet scheduler (PS) both participate to the
handling of NRT radio bearers
Packet scheduler allocates appropriate radio resources for the duration of
a packet call, i.e. active data transmission.
Admission control handles
bit rate

NRT RAB allocated, packet service session


RACH/FACH, DSCH or DCH
allocation
Packet call

Short inactive
periods during
packet call

32

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

time
Packet scheduler handles

Radio Resource Management


Resource Manager
The main function of RM is to allocate logical radio resources of NodeB
according to the channel request by the RRC layer for each radio
connection
The RM is located in the RNC and it works in close co-operation with the
AC and the PS
The actual input for resource allocation comes from the AC /PS and RM
informs the PS about the resource situation
The RM is able to switch codes and code types for different reasons such
as soft handover and defragmentation of code tree.
Manages the Node B logical resources
Node B reports the available logical HW resources
Maintains the code tree,
Allocates the DL channelization codes, UL scrambling code, UL
channelization code type
Allocates UTRAN Registration Area(URA) specific Radio Network Temporary
Identifier(RNTI) allocated for each connection and reallocated when
updating URA

33

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Resource Manager

Spreading = channelization and scrambling operations (producing


the signal at the chip rate, i.e. spreads the signal to the wideband)
Downlink: Scrambling code separates the cells and channelization
code separates connection
The length of the channelization code is the spreading factor
All physical channels are spread with channelization codes, C m(n)
and subsequently by the scrambling code, CFSCR
The code order, m and the code number, n designates each and
every channellization code in the layered orthogonal code
sequences.
user data

widespread data
scrambling
chanellization
code
code

34

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


DL Primary Scrambling Code

DL Scrambling code Info is needed for Synchronization between


UE and Node B for cell search & identification procedure during

call set up
handover

Most Important
Cell search procedure in UE & in frame synchronization step !

search step 1: slot synchronization to a cell


search step 2: frame synchronization & code group identification
search step 2: scrambling code identification

Each cell has it's own Scrambling code (like BCCH is GSM) which
need to be planned (like frequency planning in GSM)
Total 512 scrambling codes are available (0511), they are in 64
groups, each group having 8 codes
Codes could be allocated from same group of from different
groups in the planning area

35

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Primary Scrambling Code

Here is how Primary Scrambling codes are seen for


Planning Engineer (i=0511)
Codes
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7

0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7

Code
Group 1

36

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

1
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

2
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

63
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511

Radio Resource Management

DL Scrambling Code Planning Rule


Scrambling code should be selected in optimum way because
It has affect to the cell search algorithm (time)
The call setup/HO performance depends on the reliability of the
search procedure in cell search step 2 and 3
There must be large enough separation (minimum reuse) between
two cells using the same scrambling code (like frequency reuse in
GSM)
Recommended minimum reuse is 64

Scrambling code Planning Rule


Minimize the number of used code groups
Maximize the number of codes per group
The rule is valid in all neighbour sets in all
environments
37

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management

DL Scrambling Code Planning Rule


Scrambling code planning is independent for each
carrier layer => same codes could be used
Cell search time increases when the number of
neighbours is high like in Urban area
The size of the neighbour sets should be large enough
to include all useful candidates but as small as possible
to maintain fast synchronization process

38

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management

DL Scrambling Code Planning Rule Example

6
UE

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

23
24

25

11

Cluster of cells
27having 2 code
groups
29

NOKIA

26

10

13

IntraFreqNcell
ScrCode

22

12

39

21

28

14

20

35

Assign the codes such


18
5
that codes form
geographic cluster of
17
cells.
4
16
Two code groups enough
up to 15 neighbours
15

34

19

33

31

Area with 12 Node


B(1+1+1) sites

32

30

PriScrCode

Radio Resource Management


Registration and Service Areas - Overview
Four Registration areas are known in UMTS

Location area (LA) in core network CS domain


Routing area (RA) in core network PS domain
UTRAN registration area (URA) in UTRAN (not visible to the core
network)
Cell as the smallest entity in the UTRAN (not visible to the core
network)

Service Area (SA)

40

Used to inform the core network about the location of a UE


location based services
UTRAN does not make use of SA

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Location Area (LA)

LA is used for location information in the CS domain of the core


network
Each cell in the network is assigned a single location area code
(LAC)
No overlap between location areas.
A LA consists of a set of cells with a size of at minimum one cell
and at maximum an MSC/VLR area.
A RNC may include many LAs or a LA may span over many RNC
areas
When crossing the border of an LA in idle mode, the UE has to
perform a location (LA) update procedure.

41

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Routing Area (RA)

The RA is used for paging in PS domain of the core network


Each cell in the network is assigned a single location area code (RAC)
No overlap between routing areas.
A RA has to be a subset of a LA and cannot span upon more than one
LA.
A RA has a size of at minimum one cell and at maximum a SGSN
area.
When crossing the border of a RA, the UE has to perform a routing
area (RA) update procedure.
A RNC may include many RAs or a RA may span over many RNC
areas.
42

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


UTRAN Registration Area (URA)

URA area is used inside UTRAN, but not at CN level


Each cell in the network is assigned at least one URA identifier
(URAid)
Overlapping URAs are possible
Overlapping URAs reduces the number of URA updates for a given UE
URA consist of number of cells belonging to either one or several
RNCs
URA is used to avoid high amount of cell updates for high mobility
UEs. RNC commands the UE to change from CELL_PCH state to
URA_PCH state
only URA updates instead of cell updates
URA update is a RRC procedure
43

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Cell

A cell is the smallest entity in the UTRAN, it is not known in the


core network
A cell update takes place if the UE leaves the cell border while it is
in CELL_FACH, CELL_DCH or CELL_PCH state.

Cell update is a RRC procedure

44

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management


Service Area (SA)

The SA identifies an area consisting of one or more cells beloning


to the same LA
The Service Area Identifier is composed of the PLMN Identifier, the
Location Area Code (LAC) and the Service Area Code (SAC).
Service Area is used for location based services
In RAN1.5 the max accuracy is the cell level
In RAN2.1 the accuracy is better -inside the cell
In RAN2.0 there is the Service Area Broadcast feature which
enables information providers to submit short messages for
broadcasting to a specified Service Area within the PLMN.
These messages could be used for informing about e.g. PLMN
news, emergencies, traffic reports, road accidents, delayed trains,
weather reports, theatre programmes, telephone numbers or
tariffs
45

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Radio Resource Management

Impact of Registration Areas on Common


Channel Traffic
LA, RA or URA size affects the amount of traffic on PCH in (paging)
and on RACH and FACH (area updates)
With increasing sizes of LA, RA or URA, traffic on the PCH will
increase.
The bigger the registration area, the higher the probability that
extra PCH traffic is produced in a cell and the higher the PCH
traffic is in that cell.
With increasing sizes of LA, RA and URA, the traffic on RACH and
FACH will decrease.
The bigger the registration area, the lower the probability for a
specific UE to cross an area border and therefore traffic caused
by LA, RA or URA updates decreases.
The planning task is to define the registration area such, that
FACH, RACH and PCH traffic is kept low while the battery liftime of
the UEs is kept high.
46

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family
WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
RAN Sharing
Multilayer Planning

47

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation
- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

48

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

List
List the
the actions
actions which
which are
are done
done
during
during pre-launch
pre-launch optimisation
optimisation
List
List the
the tools
tools which
which are
are used
used during
during
pre-launch
optimisation
pre-launch optimisation
List
List at
at least
least three
three parameters
parameters which
which
could
could be
be tuned
tuned during
during pre-launch
pre-launch
optimisation
optimisation
Explain
Explain the
the three
three golden
golden rules
rules for
for
pre-launch
optimisation
pre-launch optimisation

Pre-launch Optimisation
Introduction

Pre-launch Optimisation means actions to meet the


defined coverage and quality criteria
Drive tests are done to test

Coverage for different data rate services


Pilot channel coverage
Soft handover areas and probabilities
Quality (BLER)

Key Performance Indicators (KPI) are defined to


measure the criteria

49

Cell total data throughput


Call setup success rates for different services
Call drop rates
Soft Handover performance

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-launch Optimisation
Process

WCDMA RAN

Network Management
Nokia NetActTM for 3G
Field Tool Server

configuration
KPIs, counters

me
as
Configuration

ur e
me

KPIs,
measurements

nts

air-interface

RAN Optimisation
pre-defined procedures
semi / full automated

S ta rt

W in d o w A d d
W in d r o w D ro p
C h a n g e 1 s t e p s iz e C h a n g e 1 s t e p s i z e

N o

C o m p T h r e s h o ld
C h a n g e 1 s t e p s iz e

D r o p T im e r
C h a n g e 1 s t e p s iz e

N M S : C o lle c t
n e tw o rk
p e rfo r m a n c e d a ta

E v a lu a t e K P I
' H O O v e r h e a d '.
O K ?

Yes

E v a l u a t e a ll
n e tw o r k K P Is .
O K ?
Yes

End

50

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

No

G o to re le va n t
o p t im i s a t i o n
f lo w - c h a rt

Field Tool

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Tools

Drive test tools for Coverage verification

Agilent scanner

Nemo Technologies TOM

Ericsson TEMS

Post Processing tool for rollout verification, planning


validation, infrastructure verification and network
optimisation

Actix Analyzer v. 4.1 and NetAct

Network Configuration tool for Performance Info (PI, KPI)

Network Element Management Unit (Nemu)

Network protocol analyzer for troubleshooting

NetHawk

Uplink and Downlink loading tools


51

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Additional
terminals (if
available)
used to
increase
network
load.
Hardblocking
will be used
to limit
required
number of
terminals

Pre-Launch Optimisation

Initial Drive Testing Configuration

RNC
BTS

Iu-CS

STM-1

( ATM )

Iub
(ATM)

STM-1

Iu-PS
(IP)

A WCDMA scanner (Agilent, Nemo


Technologies TOM or Ericsson TEMS) can
be used for (passive) idle mode downlink
measurements:
CPICH Ec/Io
Active set (neighbor list
measurements)
Location information
When used together with a UE (no
monitoring) and the protocol analyzer,
it can (analysing messaging in Iub
interface) be used to assess the UE
behavior

52

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nethawk analyser

Postprocessing (Actix
and/or a customised tool)
tool to correlate the data
from network and
terminal side by using
the timestamp

Extract radio parameters which


are exchanged over the RRC
protocol:
Uplink SIR target, Downlink
BLER target, UL CRC OK/NOK etc.
NBAP
Radio link Measurement
report
Dedicated RRC messages

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Load Generation

Because the load situation in the network in the beginning is


small, load generation is needed to simulate the situation in
loaded network
In uplink there is a possibility to generate noise simply by adding
noise to the UL branch to test coverage
by using the UEs which increases the the load in the cell (noise
like interference)
Use X simultaneous Y kbits/s RT services to achieve the load
In downlink it is more challenging and also important since a
smaller or larger part of the interference is orthogonal and it is
less thermal noise like.
Orthogonal Channel Noise Simulator (OCNS) is a mechanism
used to simulate the users or control signals on the other
orthogonal channels of a downlink link
OCNS is a feature candidate in RAN2.1

53

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Soft Handover Optimisation Example
There are few parameters
that have a great influence
for the Soft Handover of the
network

to o h ig h

+ S o ft H O
O v e rh e a d

T o o w id e s o f t H O
a re a

u n n e c e s s a ry s o ft
H O b ra n c h
a d d it io n

- D L T ro u g h p u t

T o o s m a ll s o ft H O
a re a

U L m a c r o d iv e r s it y
g a in d e c r e a s e

- U L T ro u g h p u t

fre q u e n t H O s

+ s ig n a llin g
o v e rh e a d

A d d it io n
W in d o w
to o lo w

54

Add Window
Drop Window
Maximum Active Set Size
Drop Time
Transmission power of the CPICH channel
Replacement Window

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation

Optimising Soft Handover Areas


Before

After
Active set
size
Microscopic
analysis
on area of 1
km22
and 39 sites

SHOO [%]

KPI improvement
Purpose: Increase network
performance
Target: Soft Handover Overhead
at optimal point

55

40
35
30
30

Method: adjust window_add and


window_drop parameters

25

Result: Optimal parameter value


found

20

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Degraded performance

Selected
optimal
paramete
r value
0

Semi-optimal

3
4
Simulation Phase

Pre-Launch Optimisation

Optimisation Based on Statistics


Optimisation is mainly based on Nokia NetAct reports
Field measurements are used to get additional information
from the pinpointed problem spots
Useful for optimisation
To locate the problem spots geographically and by network
elements
To prioritise actions needed with the help of KPIs
To identify reasons for non-performance by giving information
on various statistical indicators and network history
Basis for area-wide performance improvement
Area wide parameter tuning based on long-term statistics and
trends
Alarms of future problems in fast-growing traffic areas
Prior notice to be able to react in time and to be prepared for
network expansions

56

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation

Dynamic Simulations for Higher Visibility

Static simulations
Snapshot
Algorithms
Traffic

Performance
analysing
Propagation
Mobility

57

NOKIA

Simplified and limited


algorithms, e.g no
power control
No traffic model
Statistics collected
from snapshots
Ray-tracing
propagation
model with vector map
Static

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Dynamic simulationsReal network


Movie
Reality
Realistic Nokia
algorithms; also
future algorithms

Current
software
versions in use

Realistic traffic
model;
projection of traffic
Statistics
collected
growth
over time period
from detailed call
simulations
Ray-tracing
propagation model
with vector map
Moving randomly
or along roads
with random speed

Traffic is low in
network launch
Statistics
collected from
network
management
Multipath
system
propagation
Moving in three
dimensions

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Optimisation Example
Initial network plan consisted of total 59 cells, of which
24 were in micro layer and 35 were in macro layer
In the first optimisation round antenna tilts and
bearings were tuned in macro cells
The sites were already optimised for GSM
Number of served users increased
outdoor users about 2.5%
indoor users about 2.6%
mixed case about 3.1%
Change of other to own cell interference i (average)
outdoor: from 0.43 to 0.44
indoor: from 0.47 to 0.43
mixed: from 0.43 to 0.44
58

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Macro: Little i in the beginning

59

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Macro: Little i after Optimisation

60

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Pre-Launch Optimisation

Capacity increase after Optimisation


Total number of users is 2500 both in macro and micro layers
Indoor case means that 14 dB attenuation has been used
compared to outdoor
Mixed case means that 30 % mobiles are inside
Increase is more than 10 % as shown below
Biggest outage reason is the max achieved Node B power
Macro layer

Micro layer

optimised
optimised
users users
change users users
change

61

NOKIA

Outdoor 1931

2206

+14%

1486

1689

+12%

Indoor

1872

2079

+11%

1559

1755

+11%

mixed

1943

2211

+13%

1485

1713

+13%

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

3
Golden
rules

Under
stand

Detect

Pre-Launch Optimisation
Optimisation Principles

Avoid
unnecessary
overlapping
Problem

Problem
- High i
indicator
- Low capacity
in Planning - High soft handover
Tool
overhead

NOKIA

Cell sizes do not match


to user distribution

- Outage due to BTS


power or uplink load
- Other cell do not
collect traffic

No coverage

- Outage due to UE power


- Outage due to DL link
power

- Blocking in some cells - Dropped calls


- Other cells do not
- Bad quality
collect traffic
- Low bit rates for packets

Solutions

- Antenna downtilt
- De-Splitting => 2 cells
- Remove sites
- SHO parameters?

- Antenna tilting
- CPICH adjustment

Results??

- 10-20% higher capacity

- 10-20% higher capacity


- Cells collect traffic
more equally

Solve

62

Put cells close to users

- High noise rise while


low throughput in UL
- High soft handover
overhead

Problem
indicator
in network

Check

Overlapping of cells,
no clear dominance

Make sure there is


coverage

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

- More sites
- Higher link power in DL

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management
Pre-Launch Optimisation

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
RAN Sharing
Multilayer Planning

63

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

64

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Name
Name all
all Nokia
Nokia Node
Node Bs
Bs with
with their
their
maximum
maximum configuration
configuration
Explain
Explain the
the signal
signal flow
flow through
through aa
Node
Node BB
Locate
Locate the
the Node
Node BB units
units in
in aa cabinet
cabinet
Describe
Describe different
different HW
HW configuration
configuration
possibilities
for
a
Node
possibilities for a Node BB
List
List all
all antenna
antenna system
system components
components

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Overview

Complete Nokia WCDMA BTS Family for every need


Nokia UltraSiteTM WCDMA BTS for all indoor and outdoor
environments
Nokia MetroSiteTM WCDMA BTS for "siteless" installations
Triple-mode Nokia UltraSite EDGE BTS for joint GSM and
WCDMA networks
Nokia UltraSite
Nokia
WCDMA BTS
MetroSit
Optima
e
WCDMA
BTS

Indoor
65

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia UltraSite
WCDMA BTS
Optima Compact

Outdoor

Nokia UltraSite
WCDMA BTS
Supreme

Triple-mode
Nokia UltraSite
EDGE BTS

Indoor Outdoor Indoor Outdoor

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


UltraSite Optima Compact

Small high capacity WCDMA BTS with integrated battery backup


freedom in single cabinet configurations
6 WCDMA carriers and IBBU OR 12 WCDMA carriers
3 or even 6 sector configurations supported with single
cabinet
3 sectors with IBBU OR 6 sectors
Widest service area
excellent RF performance
output power 10/20/40 W
optimized for Nokia Smart Radio Concept
2+2+2 with SRC UL/DL supported with one cabinet
without IBBU
Single cabinet solution for quick roof-top installations
unobtrusive in roof-top installations due to low cabinet
height
cabinet height 1300 mm
minimum floor space when battery back-up is needed
footprint less than 1m 2 (790 x 1200 mm)
outdoor cabinet

66

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Outdoor
1300 x 1200 x
790 mm
-33C ... +50 C
IP55

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family

UltraSite Optima Compact with RF Extension

67

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family

UltraSite
Optima
Rectifiers:
3 x BATA
3.9 Compact with IBBU
Extension

kW DC

Power Distribution Unit


(PDU)
Common Control Unit
(CCUA)
LTE space: 3 x HU
Batteries: 90 Ah (@ 48
68

NOKIA
V DC)

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


UltraSite Optima Indoor

Widest service area

excellent RF performance

output power 10/20/40 W

cost optimized solution for network roll-out

Highest possible capacity for every bandwidth

designed to fully occupy 10 MHz band

2+2+2 supported with 1 cabinet

Fits to every site

minimized site requirements due to compact size


indoor cabinet 1100 x 600 x 600 mm (H x W x D)
Indoor
1100 x 600 x 600 mm
cabinet for indoor installations
-5C ... +50 C
IP20

69

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


UltraSite Supreme

High-capacity multimedia BTS

supports 6 sectored solutions


up to 12 WCDMA carriers per cabinet
cabinet chaining for extreme configurations

chaining of 4 cabinets supported

optimal for operators with 15 MHz band or


more

1 cabinet supports up to 4+4+4 with 20W


configurations

Widest service area

excellent RF performance

output power 10/20/40 W

full support for Nokia Smart Radio Concept

2+2+2 with SRC UL/DL supported with one


cabinet

Minimized footprint

smallest foot print per WCDMA carrier

70

indoor cabinet footprint 600 x 600 mm for 12


WCDMA carriers
outdoor cabinet footprint 770 x 790 mm for 12
WCDMA carriers

cabinets for indoor and outdoor installations

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Outdoor
Indoor
1940 x 770 x 790
1800 x 600 x 600 mmmm
-5C ... +50 C
-33C ... +50 C
IP20
IP55

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


MetroSite WCDMA

"Siteless" WCDMA BTS appropriate for many different


applications
cost-effective road-side coverage
in-fill coverage
indoor services
targeted coverage and capacity for hot spots
multi-layer networks
Revolutionary all-in-one solution
smallest 2 carrier WCDMA BTS
everything integrated in a single cabinet

base station, integrated transmission, integrated antenna and


short-term mains failure protection

common cabinet for indoor and outdoor installations

Macro BTS RF performance in micro BTS size


as good RX sensitivity as in Nokia UltraSite WCDMA BTS

output power 8 W

71

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

996 x 270 x 392 mm


-33C ... +50 C
IP55

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


UltraSite EDGE/WCDMA

14

Configurations
1+1+1, 8W
2+2+2, 4W

13

KEY:
1 Wideband Transceiver unit (WTR)
2 Wideband Power Amplifier unit (WMP)
3 Wideband Input Combiner unit (WIC)
4 Wideband Antenna Filter unit (WAF)
5 Wideband Suming and Multiplexing unit (WSM)
6 Wideband Application Manager unit (WAM)
7 Wideband Signal Processor unit (WSP)
8 Wideband Power Supply unit (WPS)
9 Wideband System Clock unit (WSC)
10 ATM Multiplexer unit (AXU)
11 Interface unit (IFU)
12 Wideband Fan Module (WFA)
13 Transmission unit (VXxx)
14 Bias Tee unit (BPxx)

BTS capacity
max. 10 Mbit/s per cabinet

Other features
6 7
6 GSM/EDGE TRXs and
2
1
WCDMA carriers or 12
8 11
2
3
GSM/EDGE TRXs in single
10
9
cabinet
4 4 4
12
tri- sectored solutions
2-port uplink diversity as
Indoor
Outdoor
standard
1800 x 600 x 570 mm
1940 x 770 x 750 mm
AC or DC power feed
-5C ... +50 C
-33C ... +50 C
IP20
IP55
2

72

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Unit Positions in UltraSite Supreme
WEA (1pc)
WAF (6pcs)

Antenna
Filter

External Alarm
Unit

WPA (6pcs)
Power
Amplifier

WTR (6pcs)

Transmitter &
Receiver

WIC
(3pcs)

Input
WSC
Combiner

WSM (3pcs)

Summing &
Multiplexing

WSP
(18pcs)
Signal
WAM (6pcs)

Processor
Application
Manager

73

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

(2pcs)

System
IFU
Clock

(5pcs)

Interface
AXU (1pc)
Unit
ATM Cross-connect
Unit

WPS
(3pcs)
Power
Suppy

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Optima and Optima Compact
Configurations

Optima
Number of
Configuration cabinets
1 carrier omni
3 sector 1
carrier (1+1+1)
2+2+2
2+2+2

20W
20W

384
384

768
768

20W
20W

1
1

20W
10W

384
384

768
768

40W
20W

Output power
per carrier

1
1
1
1
1
1

*Available in Release 2
74

NOKIA

Max. HW channel
Max. HW channel WPA version
capacity / HW Rel.1 capacity / HW Rel.2

1
1

Optima
Number of
Compact
cabinets
Configuration
1 carrier omni
1+1+1
1+1+1+1+1+1
2+2+2
4+4+4*
2+2+2+2+2+2*

Output power
per carrier

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

20W
20W
20W
20W
20W
20W

Max. HW channel
Max. HW channel WPA version
capacity / HW Rel.1 capacity / HW Rel.2
384
384
384
384
384
384

768
768
768
768
768
768

20W
20W
20W
20/40W
40W
40W

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family

Supreme and Triple-Mode Configurations


Supreme
Configuration
1 carrier omni
1+1+1
1+1+1
1+1+1+1+1+1
2+2+2
4+4+4*
2+2+2+2+2+2*
4+4+4+4+4+4*

Triple- Mode
Configuration
1 +1 +1
2 +2 +2*

Number of Output power Max. HW channel Max. HW channel WPA version


cabinets
per carrier capacity / HW Rel.1 capacity / HW Rel.2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2

NOKIA

576
576
576
576
576
576
576
1152

1152
1152
1152
1152
1152
1152
1152
2304

Number of Output power Max. HW channel Max. HW channel


cabinets
per carrier capacity / HW Rel.1 capacity / HW Rel.2
1
8W
160
320
1
4W
160
320

*Available in Release 2
75

20W
20W
40W
20W
20W
20W
20W
20W

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

20W
20W
20/40W
20W
20/40W
40W
40W
40W

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Signal Flow

Power Amplifier
Linear amplification of 1
to 4 carriers

Tx
R x
B i- d ir e c tio n a l
C LK

R F

ATM Cross Connect


ATM Switching from/to
other BS/RNC

Signal Processor
RAKE Receiver, (De-)
Spreading, Channel
coding, ...

Interface Unit
Termination point for
transmission

BB
fr o m /to a d j.
W SM

fro m /to 2 ./3 . W A M

W PA

W IC

W TR

W SM

T x /R x

W AF

W
S
P

W
S
P

AXU

W
S
P

IF U
Iu b

R x D iv
t o W T R o f 2 . c a r r ie r

fro m W T R o f 2 .
c a r r ie r

fro m /to W T R o f 2 .
c a r r ie r

W AM

fr o m /to a d j.
W SM

Summing & Muliplexing


Summing Tx-Samples
from WSP. Distributing
Rx-Samples from WTR to
all WSP

Antenna Filter
Filters, amplifies and
devides the Rx-signal
76

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Input Combiner
2-way combiner & 2way devider

Transmitter & Receiver


Modulation/Demodulation,
Tx power control, Rx
power measurements

W SC

C L K to W S M /
W TR

C L K fro m /to o th e r
c a b in e t( s )

System Clock
Baseband reference
clocks. Synchronises
with Iub
Application Manager
ATM termination point
Contol functions for BS

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


1+1+1 (20/carrier) without SRC
W PA

Tx
R x
R x
W TR
W SM
W AF

W
S
P

W
S
P

W
S
P

W
A
M

W IC

W PA
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

W AF

W SM

W
S
P

W
S
P

W
S
P

W SM

W
S
P

W
S
P

W
S
P

RF section
will change
for SRC
configuratio
ns
W
A
M

W IC

W PA
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

W AF

77

NOKIA

AXU

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

W IC

W
A
M

IF U
Iu b

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Uplink SRC 1 Carrier 20W

A n t1

W PA
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

R x M a in
R x D iv 1

C a r r ie r 1

W AF
W IC

A n t2

R x D iv 2
R x D iv 3

W AF
78

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Tx
R x
R x
W TR

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Uplink & Downlink SRC 1 Carrier,
20W/Branch
Tx1

A n t1

W PA
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

R x M a in
R x D iv 1

C a r r ie r 1

W AF
A n t2

W PA
Tx2

R x D iv 2
R x D iv 3

W AF
79

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

W IC
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Uplink & Downlink SRC 2 Carriers,
20W/Branch
W PA

Txsum
Tx
R x
R x
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

W AF
W IC

80

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

C a r r ie r 2

Note:

W PA

W AF

C a r r ie r 1

Requires Release 2
Units
Txsum
Tx
R x
R x
Tx
R x
R x
W TR

C a r r ie r 1
C a r r ie r 2

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Upgrade Path

Add
LPA

2nd carrier
2+2+2
2+2+2
2x10
2x10W
W R
O
80
Erl
80 Erl C
Add
3 TRXs

Add
IncreasedLPA

power
2+2+2
2+2+2
2x20
2x20W
W
100
100Erl
Erl

2
sector
2+2+2
2+2+2
6x10
6x10W
W
240
240Erl
Erl

C
E
C

2 carriers/
sector
2+2+2
2+2+2
6x20
6x20W
W C
E
300
300Erl
Erl C

2 carriers/BTS 2 carriers/BTS 2 carriers/sect


2 carriers/sect
10W/carrier
20W/carrier 10W/carrier 20W/carrier
40 Erl/carrier 50 Erl/carrier 40 Erl/carrier 50 Erl/carrier
Increased
power
1+1+1
1+1+1 R
40
40W
W O
60
60Erl
Erl C

81

R
O
C

Add
3 LPAs
carriers/

1st carrier
1+1+1
1+1+1
20
20W
W R
O
50
50Erl
Erl C
Add
Add
roll-out phase
1 LPA 1 carrier/BTS
1 LPA
1 carrier/BTS
40W/carrier
50 Erl/carrier
60 Erl/carrier
NOKIA
FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Add
carrier/sector3 TRXs

1+1+1
1+1+1
3x20
3x20W
W
150
150Erl
Erl

C
E
C

1 carrier/sect
20W/carrier
50 Erl/carrier

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Nokia SRC Capacity Growth Path

2nd carrier
4-way diversity for maximum cell coverage
+60%
downlink diversity for enhanced capacity

DL diversity
4-way UL div
+3 dB
coverage
gain
- 20%
capacity

1+1+1
20W
150Erl
without SRC
50 Erl/carrier
82

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

+75%
capacity
gain

1+1+1
20W
120Erl
6 TRXs or
3 dualTRXs
3 LPAs
40 Erl/carrier

capacity
gain

1+1+1
2 x 20W
210Erl
3 dualTRXs
6 LPAs
70Erl/carrier

2+2+2
2 x 20W
336Erl
6 dualTRXs
6 LPAs
56 Erl/carrier

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System - Overview

The WCDMA UltraSite Antenna System contains the


follwing components
Antennas
WCDMA

Masthead Amplifiers (MHA)


Bias-T, supplies WCDMA MHA with DC power through
feeder cable, provides lightning protection (can also be
used w/o MHA)
EMP Protector, lightning protection, only needed if no
Bias-T is used
Diplexers, combining/dividing two bands such as
WCDMA and GSM to a common feeder line
Triplexers, combining/dividing three bands such as
WCDMA GSM1800 and GSM900 to a common feeder line
Feeder and Jumper cables, Grounding kits
83

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System WCDMA Panels

WCDMA Broadband Antennas


Antenna Type
CS72761.01 XPol F-Panel
CS72761.02 XPol F-Panel
CS72761.05 Xpol F-Panel
CS72761.07 XPol F-Panel
CS72761.08 XPol F-Panel
CS72761.09 XPol F-Panel

Dimensions
342/155/69 mm
1302/155/69 mm
1302/155/69 mm
1942/155/69 mm
1302/155/69 mm
662/155/69 mm

Weight Frequency Range


(kg)
(MHz)
2.0
1710-2170
6.0
1710-2170
7.5
1710-2170
10.0
1710-2170
7.5
1710-2170
3.5
1710-2170

Gain
(dBi)
12.5
18.5
17
19.5
18
15.5

Beam
Width
65
65
88
65
65
65

Weight Frequency Range


(kg)
(MHz)
12.0
1900-2170

Gain
(dBi)
21

Beam
Width
30

Downtilt
2
2
0..8
0..6
0..8
0..10

WCDMA NarrowbeamAntennas
Antenna Type
CS727762.01 XPol F-Panel

Dimensions
1302/299/69 mm

Downtilt
0..8

WCDMA Dual Broadband Antennas (WCDMA/GSM1800 or SRC)


Weight Frequency Range
Gain
Beam
Antenna Type
Dimensions
Downtilt
(kg)
(MHz)
(dBi)
Width
CS72764.01 XXPol F-Panel
1302/299/69 mm
12.0
1710-2170
18.5/18.5 65/65 0..8/0..8
CS72764.02 XXPol F-Panel
1302/299/69 mm
12.0
1710-2170
17/17 85/85 0..8/0..8
WCDMA Omni Antennas

84

Antenna Type

Dimensions

CS727760 Omni

1570/148/112 mm

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Weight Frequency Range


(kg)
(MHz)
5.0
1920-2170

Gain
(dBi)
11

Beam
Width
360

Downtilt
--

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System - Mast Head Amplifier
Technical Data Sheet:

Passive Intermodulation Products


PIM level in RX band
-119 dBm / 200 kHz
-37 dBm / 200 kHz
PIM level in TX band
Rated Power at Ports
ANT port
in-band 5 dBm
out-of-band 20 dBm
BTS port
avg 46 dBm in-band
peak 62 dBm in-band
Critical Input RX filter rejections
GSM1800, 1805-1880
65 dB
71 dB
UMTS TX, 2110-2170
Critical TX filter rejections
65 dB
UMTS RX, 1920-1980
Alarm Setting Conditions
Alarm current range
200 - 300 mA
100 msec
Switch time

85

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Gain, RX band
Nominal gain of 12 dB
+/- 0.5 dB room
Ripple
+/- 0.9 dB all temps
0.6 dB
Insertion Loss
0 dB within 20 MHz of
Response, other freqs
passband
MHA Input Dynamic Range
3rd-order intercept
10 dBm
1dB compression
-5 dBm
Noise Figure

2 dB

Return Loss, ANT and BTS ports


RX band
16 dB
TX band
18 dB
Group delay distortion

20 ns over 5 MHZ

DC Power supplied
7.0 - 8.6V, UltraSite/MetroSite
Voltage
11 - 13 V , CoSited BTS
Nominal current
190 mA
Max. current
350 mA
Bypass Mode
Insertion Loss
3 dB
Return Loss
12 dB

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System - Diplexers / Triplexers
Unit types
Nokia Triplexer Unit
Nokia GSM 900 / WCDMA Diplexer Unit
Nokia GSM 1800 / WCDMA Diplexer Unit
Selectable DC pass function in each unit
Technical Data Sheet:
RF Performance
Insertion Loss,
0.3 dB
Port - Common
Isolation, port to
50 dB
port
Return Loss, any
>18 dB
port
Passive Intermodulation
GSM RX band
-116 dBm

Nokia Triplexer

GSM 900 BTS

WCDMA BTS

GSM 1800 BTS


86

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Rated Power at Ports


GSM
120 W avg
1.44 kW peak
UMTS
55 W avg
2.15 kW peak

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System Bias-T

RF Performance
Insertion loss
0.3 dB
Return loss
18 dB
Rated power
55 W avg, 2.2 kW peak
Alarm Signal
VSWR alarm
7 dB nominal
threshold
+/- 2 dB tolerance
no alarm: 0 V, 50 mA max
Logic
alarmed : 3.3V, 0 mA
Response time
0.5 sec
no RF power, high VSWR (no
Alarm indicates:
DC power implied)
DC and Signal
Voltage drop
0.5 V
Rated power
7.5 - 9.1V, 350 mA max
DC supply via:
RJ-45 from BTS
Ins loss @ 1 MHz 3 dB

87

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Function

Provides DC power for MHA


through feeder line
Lightning protection

Features

Fault monitoring of MHA and


Antenna line
Fowards alarms to WAF
Low insertion loss (<0.3dB)
Can be installed on mast or in
any
WCDMA UltraSite
cabinet

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Antenna System - Feeders

Diameter Weight
Feeder Type
(inch)
(kg/m)
CS72251
CS72252
CS72254

88

NOKIA

1/2
7/8
1 5/8

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

0.35
0.55
1.45

Min. Bending
Radius (mm)
Single
80
120
250

Repeated
160
250
500

Attenuation
@2170MHz (dB/100m)
11.9
6.52
4.05

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


Upgrades to Current GSM Antennas
150 mm

1300 mm

Current :
space
diversity

150 mm

Upgrade :
space +
polarization
diversity
Space diversity
improves performance
0.5..1.0 dB compared
to single radome.
The gain of 2.5 dB
assumes single
radome.

Current :
polarization
diversity

89

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Upgrade:
2 x polarization
diversity within
one radome

260 mm

Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family


SRC Antenna Solutions

90

NOKIA

pcsX-pol
X-pol
22pcs
antennas
antennas
persector
sector
per
upto
to33m
m
up
apartform
form
apart
eachother
other
each
FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

pcs X-pol
X-pol
22pcs
antennasper
per
antennas
sector
sector
installednext
next
installed
toeach
each
to
others
others

OneSRC
SRC
One
antennaper
per
antenna
sector.The
The
sector.
numberof
of
number
antennas
antennas
doesnot
not
does
increase.
increase.

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management
Pre-Launch Optimisation
Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
RAN Sharing
Multilayer Planning

91

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

92

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Describe
Describe what
what can
can cause
cause interference
interference
in
WCDMA/GSM
Co-Siting
in WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Describe
Describe the
the different
different antenna
antenna
system
sharing
solutions
system sharing solutions
Describe
Describe the
the meaning
meaning of
of coupling
coupling
loss
and
isolation
criteria
in
loss and isolation criteria in shared
shared
antennas
antennas
List
List the
the aspects
aspects having
having influence
influence to
to
the
overall
network
quality
the overall network quality
Explain
Explain the
the impact
impact of
of site
site &
& antenna
antenna
location
to
the
network
quality
location to the network quality

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Co-Siting Example: UltraSite & Citytalk


GSM
GSM
2+2+2
2+2+2

GSM
GSM 2+2+2
2+2+2
Site Space for 3 cabinets

Base Station Equipment:

Nokia UltraSite WCDMA BTS Suppreme with 6


Carriers,
Nokia Citytalk BTS with 6 TRXs.

Transmission Equipment:

Nokia FlexiHopper Microwave Radio

Separate Antennalines and Shared


Antennas:

3 pcs GSM/WCDMA Dual Band X-pol antennas 65


deg
Optional: Mast Head Amplifiers for one or both
networks

Nokia UltraSite Support:

7.8 kW rectifier capacity with N+1 redundancy


up to 180 Ah battery capacity
Backup time 1 hour

Site Environmental Data:

93

NOKIA

Footprint (Width mm x Depth mm)


Indoor: 1800 mm x 620 mm
Outdoor: 2310 mm x 1110mm
Weight: Indoor 1030 kg, Outdoor 1290 kg
FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA
WCDMA 2+2+2
2+2+2
(10
W)
(10 W)

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Co-Siting Example: UltraSite & Citytalk

94

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Co-Siting Example: UltraSite & Citytalk
GSM
GSM
2+2+2
2+2+2

GSM
GSM 2+2+2
2+2+2
Site Space for 4 cabinets

Base Station Equipment:

2 pcs Nokia UltraSite WCDMA BTS Supreme with 12 carriers in


each,
Citytalk GSM BTS with 6 TRXs.

Transmission Equipment:

Nokia UltraHopper Microwave Radio

Separate Antennalines and Shared Antennas:


3 pcs GSM/WCDMA Dual Band X-pol 65 deg/33 deg,
3 pcs WCDMA X-pol 33 deg antennas
Optional: Mast Head Amplifiers for one or both networks

UltraSite Support:

14.3 kW rectifier capacity with N+1 redundancy


up to 180 Ah battery capacity
Backup time 1 hour

Site Environmental Data:

Footprint (Width mm x Depth mm)


Indoor: 2400 mm x 620 mm
Outdoor: 3080 mm x 1110mm
Weight: Indoor 1320 kg, Outdoor 1650 kg

95

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

W
W 4+4+4+4+4+4
4+4+4+4+4+4
(10
(10 W)
W)

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Interference from Other System


GSM spurious emissions and intermodulation results of
GSM 1800 interfere WCDMA receiver sensitivity
WCDMA spurious emissions interfere GSM receiver
sensitivity
GSM transmitter blocks WCDMA receiver
WCDMA transmitter blocks GSM receiver

GSM
1800
UL
1710-1785
MHz
96

NOKIA

GSM
1800
DL
1805-1880
MHz

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

40
MHz

UMTS
UL

UMTS
DL

1920-1980
MHz

2110-2170
MHz

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Interference from Other System


Two main reasons to isolate GSM and WCDMA
Blocking
Sensitivity

Thermal noise floor of the


WCDMA band is -108 dBm
=> in theory -108 dBm - (-80
dBm) = 28 dB isolation
needed between GSM1800
and WCDMA

-106

-106.5

-107

-107.5

-108
30

97

More information: TS 25.104 and GSM 05.05

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

NEW spec: -96 dBm / 0.1 MHz

-105.5

Noise Power (dBm)

GSM1800 BTS can have up


to -96 dBm / 0.1 MHz = -80
dBm / 4 MHz (relation to 3,84
Mchips) spurious emissions
at the antenna connector1

40

50

60
70
Antenna Isolation (dB)

80

90

100

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Harmonic distortion

Harmonic distortion can be a problem in the case of cositing of GSM900 and WCDMA.
GSM900 DL frequencies are 935 - 960 MHz and second
harmonics may fall into the WCDMA TDD band and into
the lower end of the FDD band.
2nd harmonics
fGSM = 950 - 960 MHz
GSM900
935 - 960 MHz

...
WCDMAWCDMA FDD
TDD 1920 - 1980

2nd
harmonics
can be filtered
out at the
output of
GSM900 BTS.
f

98

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

1900 -1920
MHz

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

IM Distortion from GSM1800 DL to WCDMA


UL

GSM1800 IM3 (3 means


third order) products
are hitting into the
WCDMA FDD UL RX
fIM3 = 2f2 - f1
band if
1862.6 f2 1879.8 MHz
1805.2 f1 1839.6 MHz
f1

f2
X dBc fIM3

GSM1800
UL

GSM1800
DL

For active elements IM


products levels are high
than IM products produc
by passive components
Typical IM3 suppressio
values for power amplifi
are -30 -50 dBc
depending on frequency
spacing and offset
Typical values for pass
elements are
-100 -160 dBc

WCDMA
UL

WCDMA
DL

1710 - 1785 MHz 1805 - 1880 MHz


40 MHz1920 - 1980 MHz 2110 - 2170 MHz
99

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Spurious Emissions from GSM to WCDMA


Horizontal separation between antennas
By proper antenna placement 50dB
isolation reachable
No deterioration in performance if GSM
BTS compliant with -96dBm

100

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

GSM BTS

WCDMA BS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Spurious Emissions from GSM to WCDMA


Nokia's diplexer/triplexer combines
GSM/WCDMA to one feeder cable
Diplexer/Triplexer isolation > 50dB

Multiband Antenna

No deterioration in performance if
GSM BTS compliant with -96dBm

Nokia Diplexer/ Triplexer

101

NOKIA

GSM BTS

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA BS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Spurious Emissions from GSM to WCDMA


Multipanel Antenna in use
Antenna isolation >30dB
General GSM requirements
fulfilled if GSM BTS compliant
with -96dBm

102

NOKIA

GSM BTS

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multiband Antenna

WCDMA BS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Spurious Emissions from GSM to WCDMA


Worst case scenario

Multiband Antenna

>30dB isolation assumption


GSM BTS spurious emissions
comply "old spec." -30dBm

Addiotional filter needed

Non-compliant GSM BTS


103

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA BS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Separate Antenna Lines

Typical Requirement for Minimum Coupling Loss between GSM and WCD
Nokia equipment
30 dB
Other
50 dB

Without Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers


With Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers
Antennas
for GSM

Nokia MHAs
for GSM

GSM BTS WCDMA BTS


104

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia Bias-Ts
GSM BTS

Antennas
for WCDMA

Nokia MHAs for


WCDMA

NokiaBias-Ts
WCDMA BTS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Shared Antenna Lines with Separate Antennas


Typical Isolation Requirement for diplexers used with:
Nokia equipment
30 dB
Other
50 dB

With Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers


Without Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers
GSM AntennaWCDMA Antenna

GSM Antenna WCDMA Antenna

Nokia MHAs for GSM

Nokia GSM / WCDMA


Diplexer Units

GSM BTS
105

NOKIA

WCDMA BTS

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia WCDMA MHAs


Nokia Outdoor
Bias-Ts

Separate DC feed
for new Nokia MHAs

Nokia GSM/WCDMA
Diplexer Units with
Selectable DC pass

Nokia Bias-Ts
GSM BTS

WCDMA BTS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Shared Antenna Lines with Shared


Antennas
Without Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers
With Nokia Mast Head Amplifiers
GSM/WCDMA Dual Band
X-polarized antenna with
4 antenna connectors
(Separate Elements for both

GSM/WCDMA Dual Band


X-polarized antenna with
2 antenna connectors
(1800/WCDMA wideband

Systems))

element or
built in diplexer function)

GSM/WCDMA
Diplexer Units inside
GSM BTS cabinet

GSM BTS

106

NOKIA

WCDMA BTS

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Nokia
Outdo
or
BiasTs

Nokia GSM/WCDMA
Diplexer Units with
Selectable DC pass

Nokia
Bias-Ts
GSM BTS

Separate DC feed
for new Nokia MHAs

WCDMA BTS

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Antenna Isolation Measurement Example:


Horizontal
Antenna A
(fixed)
GSM1800

Antenna B
UMTS

Front View

horizontal
separation
distance

Side View
direction of radiation

1000mm
2000mm
400mm

650mm

Figure 5. Sketch of measurement configuration


107

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Antenna Isolation Measurement Example:


Horizontal
GSM1800 65 deg to UMTS 65 deg
Horizontal co-polar measurements
75.00

Isolation (dB)

70.00

1900MHz
1950MHz
1980MHz

65.00
60.00
55.00
50.00

50dB marker

45.00
40.00

Distance (m)
108

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Antenna isolation measurements II:


Vertical

Antenna B
UMTS

Antenna A
GSM1800
(fixed)

10m

Figure 11. Sketch of measurement configuration


109

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Antenna isolation measurements II:


Vertical
GSM1800 115 deg to UMTS 65 deg
85.00
80.00

Noise Floor
Noise Floor

Is o la tio n (d B )

75.00

1900MHz
1950MHz
1980MHz

70.00
65.00
60.00
55.00
50.00

Distance (m)
110

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Planning Rules in Co-siting


Isolation requirement
With Nokia equipment 30 dB
Without Nokia equipment 50 dB
GSM- WCDMA co-siting is possible if antenna isolation
requirement is fulfilled
By proper antenna placement

Di-

minimum Horizontal distance (~0.3 m)


minimum Vertical distance (0.25 m)

or triplexer is needed in case feeder and antenna


is shared between different systems
Tighter filtering is needed in Antenna line of Noncompliant GSM BTS to avoid the TX power
interference to WCDMA Rx
Careful frequency planning in GSM won't cause
interference to WCDMA
111

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Network Assessment

Network Assessment

Assessment means the evaluation existing 2G sites &


antenna system and possible interference situation for
2G/3G Co-siting

112

NOKIA

Network Planning &

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Design

Site Acquisition

Civil
Works

Imp Integrate.

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Network Assessment - Network Quality
Requested Network Quality
as guaranteed KPI values =
Equipment Quality +
Network Implementation Quality Network
+
Planning
Network Planning Quality
Quality

TR
S

PS
Co
C
S
C re
or
Network Implementation Quality
e

Equipment Quality

Network Quality does NOT


depend only from network planning
113

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Network Assessment - Dominance & little i


43 dBm

MS TX power

21 dBm

Ec/Io

-16.5 dB

BTS Eb/No

1.5

MS Eb/No

5.5

128 kbps

170

165

160

Other to own cell 0.2, 0.4, 0.6,


interference ratio i
0.8
Orthogonality

0.6

Channel profile
MS speed

ITU Vehicular
A, 3 km/h
3 km/h

MS/BTS NF

8 dB / 4 dB

Antenna gain

16 dBi

NOKIA

0.2
0.2
0.4
0.4
0.6
0.6
0.8
0.8

150

145

140

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

=
=
=
=
=
=
=
=

155

500

1000

DL throughput in kbps

Doubling of the "little i" will cause throughput


to decrease to 70% of the original value
114

i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i

D
C
B

Maximum propagation loss (dB)

BTS TX power

1500

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Network Assessment - Question


Which one of the sites is suitable for 3G ?

115

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Network Assessment - Answer
Low other to own cell interference can
be achieved by planning clear
dominance areas:
The cell coverage (and overlap) must
be properly controlled. The cell should
cover only what it is supposed to cover

Low(er) antenna heights and down tilt of


the antennas

Use buildings and other environmental


structures to isolate cells coverage

Use indoor solutions to take advantage


of the building penetration loss

Avoid sites "seeing" the buildings in


horizon especially over the water or
otherwise open area (due to huge
interference)
116

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

< 300 m

> 3 km

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Network Assessment - Impact of tilting


Cell B - downhill gradient

Cell A - uphill gradient

Connnected to
over 15
neighbours !

significantly
greater
catchment
area
Too high
visibility across
the network

Has low capacity due to


huge inter-cell
interference and SHO
overhead
117

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

relatively
limited
catchment
area

The obvious solution is to


increase the antenna
downtilt to restrict the
cell footprint to a more
reasonable area

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Network Assessment - Check List


Basic
Basicrules
rules

(1)
(1)Make
Makesure
sure
there
is
coverage
there is coverage
(2)
(2)Avoid
Avoidunnecessary
unnecessary
overlapping
overlappingof
ofcells
cells
(3)
(3)Locate
Locatecells
cells
close
to
users
close to users
(4)
(4)Make
Makecell
cellsizes
sizes
match
user
distribution
match user distribution
118

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Problem
Problemindication
indication
ififrule
ruleisisnot
notapplied
applied

Solutions
Solutions

Dropped
Droppedcalls
calls
Bad
Badquality
quality
Low
bit
Low bitrates
rates

Do
Donot
notuse
usethis
thissite
site

Not
Notclear
cleardominance
dominancearea
area

High
Highinter-cell
inter-cellinterference
interference

Low
capacity
Low capacity

1.1.Use
UseAntenna
Antennatilting
tilting
2.2.Put
PutAntennas
Antennaslower
lower
3.3.Do
not
use
the
Do not use thesite
site

Users
Usersat
atthe
thecell
celledge
edge

high
highinter-cell
inter-cellinterference
interference

high
soft
handover
high soft handoveroverhead
overhead
Blocking
Blockingininsome
somecells,
cells,
others
do
not
collect
others do not collecttraffic
traffic

1.1.Use
UseDifferent
Differentsite
site
2.2.Use
Antenna
tilting
Use Antenna tilting
1.1.Use
UseAntenna
Antennatilting
tilting
2.2.Do
not
use
the
Do not use theSite
Site

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Co-siting Optimisation Example


WCDMA 1900 Network
Identified places for optimisation
Urban area:
high other-cell interference
Rural area:
a few sites collecting a lot of
interference
Optimisation approaches
Antenna down tilting
Antenna lowering

119

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Co-siting Optimisation Example - Rural
Area
27 sites, 49 cells
Omni, 2-sector and 3sector sites
Varying antenna heights
Area 15 km x 15 km
On average 8 km2 per site
Terrain: hilly with waters

120

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Co-siting Optimisation Example - Urban
Area
16 sites, 48 cells
All 3-sector sites
similar height
Area 10 km x 12 km
On average 7 km2 per site
Terrain: flat without waters

121

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
5 Degree Downtilt Everywhere - Capacity
Down tilting everywhere improved capacity in urban area
by 13%, but reduced slightly capacity in the rural area
The urban area benefited from down tilting because of
high overlapping of the cells before optimisation (=high i)
Optimization Effect
Before Optim
After Optim

Number of Users

2000
1500
1000
500
0

122

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Rural

Urban

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
5 Degree Downtilt Everywhere - Coverage
Coverage probability got lower in urban area after
downtilting
Optimisation
2 branch Rx diversity
Indoor coverage
Outdoor coverage
(+20 dB loss)
Rural
before
Speech 12.2 kbps
95%
Data 64 kbps 85%
Data 144 kbps 78%
Urban
before
Speech 12.2 kbps
99.9%
Data 64 kbps 99.8%
Data 144 kbps99.1%

after before after


89%
40%
37%
77%
22%
22%
68%
15%
16%
after before after
99.9% 74%
61%
98.6% 46%
38%
96.2% 33%
29%

Coverage %
reduced after
downtilting
123

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
Optimisation Affects Neighbouring Sites
Those sites which
suffered are close to the
optimised sites
Also the surrounding
sites should be
considered in the
optimisation

performance
decreased
optimised
site

124

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Little i After Optimisation Urban Area

After optimisation the little i is more uniform in all cells,


i.e. the performance of the worst cells has clearly
improved
Average little i 1.3 0.78

125

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Number of Users After Optimisation Urban


Area
Worst
cells
clearly
improve
d

After optimisation the number of users per cell is more


uniform in all cells, i.e. the performance of the worst cells
has clearly improved
Average number of users 36 41 (i.e. capacity increase
~13%)
126

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

Soft Handover Overhead After


Optimisation

Soft Hand-Off Overhead and Probability (Original)

Soft Hand-Off Overhead and Probability (Optim)

45%

Rural

40%

Urban

45%

Rural

40%

35%

35%

30%

30%

25%

25%

20%

20%

15%

15%

10%

10%

5%

5%

Urban

0%

0%
SHOProb.

Soft(+er)HOverhead

SHOverhead

AreaProb%

SHOProb.

Soft(+er)HOverhead

SHOverhead

AreaProb%

Soft handover overhead is reduced after optimisation in


urban area since the cell overlapping (=little i) is
reduced
Soft handover probability reduced 30% 26%
Soft handover overhead reduced 39% 33%
127

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management
Pre-Launch Optimisation
Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family
WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting

RAN Sharing
Multilayer Planning

128

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

RAN Sharing
- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

129

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Explain
Explain the
the meaning
meaning of
of RAN
RAN sharing
sharing
and
its
key
benefits
and its key benefits
Explain
Explain what
what network
network elements
elements are
are
possible
to
be
shared
in
RAN
possible to be shared in RAN
Describe
Describe the
the most
most important
important network
network
planning
issues
to
be
taken
into
planning issues to be taken into
account
account in
in RAN
RAN sharing
sharing

RAN Sharing
Overview

Network sharing, i.e. one network operator provides the


entire network for certain area's with the other acting as a
MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator).
No impact on the radio network dimensioning
Geographical network sharing, i.e. one operator south, one
north
No impact on the radio network dimensioning
Site sharing, i.e. sharing new or existing sites including
antennas, site support systems and potentially transmission
No impact on the radio network dimensioning
RAN sharing (Multioperator RAN), i.e. sharing the entire
RAN in a specific area where the amount of traffic is predicted
to be low, so that it does not make economically sense to build
independent networks

130

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

RAN Sharing

From Site Sharing to RAN Sharing


Scope of sharing:

RNC
Site environment
BTS Equipment space (cabinet)
SiteSupportSystem
Transmission
Antenna and feeders (optional)

Cost savings in

Civil works
Equipment (feeders, antennas,
BBU)
Annual rents
Site acquisition( hunting,
permissions etc)
Operational costs
Transmission (and transmission
management)

131

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Sharing of RNCs and BTSs:

Initial coverage with low service


demand
Low-traffic areas
Places with limited BTS sites,
e.g. subways
Fewer sites with larger
configurations when
Environmental impact counts

Up to 4 operators with own:

Core networks
Services
Network Management System
Dedicated RAN from any vendor
in non-shared areas

RAN Sharing
Concept

Operator 1
CS CN

MNC 1

Operator 1
PS CN

Shared RNC

Frequency 1
MNC 1

Shared BTS
Operator 2

Frequency 2

CS CN

Operator 2
PS CN

MNC 2
MNC 2

3) dedicated BTS for each operator

OSS of
one operator
or Multi-RAN OSS

1) cabinet, BB, WAF, WPA shared


dedicated WTR
Reqired: Frequencies within 20MHz band!
132

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

2) cabinet and BB shared


dedicated WAF,WPA, WTR

RAN Sharing
Concept

1. Sharing whole BTS including WPA:


ANT1/1
ANT2/1

D
P
X

WPA
WAF 28/50 W

2. Cabinet and BB shared:


D
P
X

WAF
ANT2/1

D
P
X

Common Antennasystem
(feeders, antennas, MHAs)
133

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Operator specific
WTR

TX
RX
RX

Common Antennasystem
WAF and WPA

ANT1/1

WTR
TX
RX
RX

WPA
28/50 W
WPA
28/50 W

NOTE: Frequencies
need to be within 20
MHz band
WTR
TX
RX
RX
WTR
TX
RX
RX

Operator specific
WTR, WPA and
WAF

- no frequency restriction
- higher outputpower per carrier
- with Rel.2 units up to 4+4+4/20W
per carrier

RAN Sharing

How Operators can work with shared RAN ?


Each Operator has own
PLMN -id
Carrier Frequency
RRM parameters & traffic Monitoring
Neighbour cell lists (own Inter-System HO decisions)
Operators may add independently BTS where they
want to provide better coverage or more capacity
Due to own Frequencies and PLMN-id.
Operator specific cell is possible
Mobile Stations (MS) can show appropriate operator logo
Global roaming easy
No extra support features from MSs needed,
works with 3GPP R99 WCDMA MSs
Needs SW-update to Nokia WCDMA RAN
134

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Agenda Day 2
Radio Resource Management
Pre-Launch Optimisation
Nokia WCDMA Base Station Family
WCDMA/GSM Co-Siting
RAN Sharing

Multilayer Planning

135

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
- Objectives At the end of this module you will be able to...

136

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Explain
Explain the
the meaning
meaning of
of WCDMA/GSM
WCDMA/GSM
interworking
interworking
Explain
Explain the
the reasons
reasons for
for multilayer
multilayer
usage
and
how
it
is
done
usage and how it is done
Describe
Describe the
the 3G
3G network
network evolution
evolution
from
cell
layer
point
of
view
from cell layer point of view
Explain
Explain when
when compressed
compressed mode
mode is
is
needed
and
what
drawback
it
has
needed and what drawback it has
Explain
Explain on
on what
what criteria
criteria cellcellreselection
and
handover
reselection and handover strategies
strategies
are
based
on
are based on

Multilayer Planning

Interworking in RAN 1.5


Interworking means Handover functionality between GSM and
WCDMA or between WCDMA carriers
Handover from GSM to WCDMA or from WCDMA to GSM is intersystem hard handover
Handover between WCDMA carriers is inter-frequency hard
handover (intra-BTS, intra-RNC, inter-RNC handover)
Interworking is possible also in idle mode when making cell reselection
Handover reasons are mainly based on
coverage in WCDMA and load in GSM
Compressed mode is used in WCDMA for
inter-frequency or inter-system
neighbour measurements before
handover decision
Service downgrade/upgrade might be
needed during inter-system handover
137

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning

Handover Types in RAN 1.5


Operator 1

Operator 2
3G HLR/AUC

E-interface
MSC/VLR
3G

3G MSC
3G HLR/AUC

MGW

A-interface

2G MSC/VLR

Iu (cs)-interface
GSM BSS

MGW

GSM BSS

Intersystem,
Intra-MSC,
Intra-PLMN

UMTS RAN

Intrasystem,
Intra-MSC,
Intra-PLMN
UMTS RAN

138

NOKIA

Intrasystem,
Inter-MSC,
Inter-PLMN

UMTS RAN

Intrasystem,
UMTS RAN Inter-MSC,
Intra-PLMN

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Intersystem,
Inter-MSC,
Inter-PLMN

MSC/VLR
2G

2G HLR/AUC
GSM BSS

Multilayer Planning
Introduction

Multilayer Network means


the use of microcellular
network to give more
capacity needed in traffic hot
spots
Macro layer is mainly used
for coverage and fast moving
mobiles
Micro layer is used to provide
capacity for traffic hot spots
Typically different
frequencies are used for
different layers
Other layers frequency
can be reused in some
cases
139

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning

Capacity in Macro vs. Micro Environments

Packet data throughput, calculated with CDMA capacity


formulas
Assumptions
Micro cell:
higher orthogonality

Micro: higher
isolation between cells
Results

These figures without


transmit diversity

Downlink capacity is more sensitive to the environment because of


orthogonal codes (other cell interference affects more downlink)
Micro cells provide a higher capacity due to less multipath
140

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
Multilayer Antennas

The general rule is that microcellular antenna placement provides


better (very high) capacity but lower coverage
The key question is : When this should be done?
The capacity is high because the cells are well isolated and the DL
is quite orthogonal
The coverage is low because the very same buildings that isolate
the cells from each other also isolate the mobiles from the Node B
in larger cells
The factors affecting the decision include at least
Traffic density
Max required bitrate in the UL direction
Inter-cell interference with different antenna positions
Propagation loss with different antenna positions
Site acquisition costs
Etc.

141

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
Solution 1

Most simple usage of two carriers.


In an area which is covered by a
continuous cell layer and the
capacity requirement exceeds the
available capacity the most simple
solution is to add a second carrier
fWCDMA
ff1, WCDMA
ff2
ff1 , ff2
to the cells, co-located with the WCDMA
WCDMAff1,1,WCDMA
f22
1, WCDMA
2
1, 2
first carrier.
This process can be continued
further to additional carriers.
Compressed mode raises the
interference.
The traffic between the carriers
could be balanced by directed RRC
connection setup in the call setup
phase and by inter-frequency
handovers.
142

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
Solution 2

Micro cell layer in the middle of


surrounding macro cells using the same
carrier as the macro cells.
This way of mixing different cell types is
fully applicable but it requires that clear
dominance areas for micro and macro
WCDMA
WCDMA
WCDMAff11
WCDMAff11
layers.
This is a microcell solutions for covering
W
f1
Wff11W
Wff1W
holes
1W f1
In long run going to smaller cell sizes
cannot be avoided in hot-spot areas, and
a micro cellular solution has the benefit
that inter-cell interference is minimised,
leading to increasing cell throughput and
user bit-rates.

143

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
Solution 3

Different frequencies are used


for different layers (Hierachical
Cell Structure HCS)
From the network planning point
of view this solution is easier to
deploy than the previous since
overlapping is possible.
The macro layer can collect
traffic from micro layer's
dominance area whereas in
solution 2 macro cells and micro
cells collect traffic within their
own dominance areas.
This is the microcell solutions for
capacity reasons

144

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

WCDMA
WCDMAff11

WCDMA
WCDMAff11

W
Wff22 W
Wff22 W
Wff22 W
Wff22

Multilayer Planning
Solution 4

In addition to solution 3 the


GSM/GPRS macrolayer is added to
HCS
Dual mode UEs can change to
GSM/GPRS where no WCDMA
coverage exists, this enables to
provide seamless 3G services
without seamless WCDMA
coverage
Allows traffic balancing between
GSM/GRPS and WCDMA
Compressed mode raises the
interference. BSIC decoding is
time consuming
This is the solution if WCDMA/GSM
interworking is required
145

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS
WCDMA
WCDMAff11

WCDMA
WCDMAff11

W
Wff22 W
Wff22W
Wff22W
Wff22

Multilayer Planning

RAN1.5 Handover functionality


GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS
WCDMA
WCDMA
Load reason IS-HO W
from GSM(BSS10.5) W

WCDMA
WCDMA
W
W

W
W

W
W

GSM handover

Based on RSSI measurements of all cells in neighbour list


Controlled by HO algorithms in BSC

Based on pilot Ec/No measurements of all cells in neighbour lists on the same frequency
Mobile Evaluated handover (MEHO) controlled by SHO parameters

Based on measurement results in serving cell

WCDMA soft handover

WCDMA IF & IS handover

146

Coverage (CPICH RSCP or CPICH Ec/No)


UL DCH quality,UL DCH Power, DL DPCH power

Network evaluated handover (NEHO) controlled by IF and IS HO parameters

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS
WCDMA
WCDMA

GSM/GPRS
GSM/GPRS

Coverage reason IS-HO

Coverage reason IF-HO

Multilayer Planning

WCDMA Compressed Mode


Compressed mode is the method to create idle periods (=gap) in the
transmission in order to perform Inter-Frequency or Inter-System
measurements during the gap

Measurement
Measurementgap
gap
Normal frame

Compressed
mode

Normal frame

Because same data amount is sent during shorter time it has the
following affect to the cell
Reduced UL coverage
Reduces DL capacity
Reduced Quality
147

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning
Cell Re-selection between layers
Cell selection & re-selection can be done

without HCS operation


with HCS operation

Normally cell re-selection is done to cell having better coverage,


but with HCS operation the cell re-selection is also possible to the
weaker cell or to the GSM (in case they have higher priority)
Both quality and level should be good enough in the neighbour
cell before cell re-selection
Neighbour cells with different priorities could be prioritised by
using offset during penalty time
Cells having same priorities (or HCS not used) are ranked and cell
re-selection is done to the best cell
Traffic balancing with directed RRC connection setup is possible in
WCDMA

148

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning

Usage of Hierarchical Cells


Use HCS parameters => mobile camps to micro cell
whenever it is available
HCS parameters not supported in dedicated mode
Macro

Hot spot
area

f1
f1
f2
f2 f2
f2 f2
f2 f2
f2
f2
f2

f1
f1

f1
f1

Fast
Fastmoving
movingMSsMSsfeature
can
also
feature can also
be
beused
usedtotopush
push
UE
to
Macro
UE to MacroLayer
Layer
totoavoid
frequent
avoid frequent
cell
cellre-selection
re-selection

Micros
f1
f1

f1
f1

Start call in micro cell Coverage reason handover


because of HCS priorities from micro to macro
149

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning

Fast Moving Mobiles in Micro Cells


Fast moving mobiles can be handed over from micro
frequency to macro frequency
High mobility is detected based on the frequency of
active set updates
WCDMA
WCDMAmacro
macrof1
f1

Micro
Microf2
f2

Micro
Microf2
f2

Fast moving mobile

150

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Micro
Microf2
f2

XMicro f2

Micro f2

Too frequent active set updates


within micro frequency initiate
inter-frequency handover to
macro frequency

Multilayer Planning
Cell Re-selection Rules
During cell re-selection it is possible to camp on GSM
or WCDMA depening how parameters are set in serving
and neighbouring cell
Camping on GSM is recommended:
Continious GSM coverage
3G ->2G handover amount is reduced or it is not at
all supported
Camping on WCDMA is recommended:
Continious 3G coverage, utilize fully 3G network
For dual mode Mobiles
2G ->3G handover is not supported
Initial Nokia implementation strategy is to push all
dual mode MS to WCDMA

151

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

Multilayer Planning

Inter-System Handover Rules


5 Handover Triggering reasons is possible from WCDMA

CPICH Ec/No, CPICH RSCP, UL quality & Power, DL Power

GSM neighbours are measured only in Compressed


mode, not all the time
UE needs more power for neighbour measurements
during compressed mode -> measurements should
start early enough
BSIC decoding time need to be taken into account; the
ISHO procedure could take more time in case many
GSM neighbours are measured as neighbours
Handover from GSM to WCDMA is done only if GSM
load is high enough

152

NOKIA

FILENAMs.PPT/ DATE / NN

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