Title: Mobile Broadband: Vision
1Mobile Broadband Vision Evolution
- Siavash M. Alamouti, Intel Fellow
- Chief Technology Officer, Mobile Wireless Group
2Outline
- Intel Vision for Mobile Broadband
- Mobile Internet Requirements
- Mobile WiMAX Technical Overview
- Mobile WiMAX Performance and Comparative Analysis
- Evolution of Mobile WiMAX
- Areas of Future Research
3Acknowledgements
- Hujun Yin, Intel
- Material for overview and Comparative Performance
- Pouya Taaghol, Intel
- Material for Systems and Network Architecture
- Jose Puthenkulam, Intel
- Material for Standards Timelines
- Shilpa Talwar, Intel
- Material for Future Research
4What is the Killer Application?
- Anything the Internet can provide today
-
- possibly more
need a mobile broadband technology that can meet
the requirements of mobile internet
5Mobile Internet Requirements
- Low cost of devices and subscription
- Transparency of service
- Ubiquity of service
- Ubiquity of user experience
6Transparency Data Rate Comparison of Wireline
Wireless Technologies
Interesting rule of thumb the actual capacity
(Mbps per channel per sector) in a multi-cell
environment for most wireless technologies is
about 20 to 30 of the peak theoretical data
rate.
7WiMAX Fixed, Nomadic, Mobile?
- Industry has evolved from a vision of Fixed
Wireless to Mobile Wireless - WiMAX industry is aligned on the vision that
Fixed and Nomadic are special cases of Mobile and
we need one technology for all to benefit from
economies of scale. - IEEE 802.16e is the basis of Mobile WiMAX.
8Mobile Broadband Evolution to 4G
9Primary Devices for Mobile Broadband?
- The gateway to the internet is the PC (desktops,
laptops) - The larger the screen, the larger the required
bandwidth - Primary devices for mobile internet will be
smaller PCs (not larger handsets) - PC-like application processing power (service
transparency) - Full Microsoft/MAC/Linux OS support (application
transparency) - Always on experience
- Leadership for a whole new class of devices
(UMPCs) - Small form factor
- Good battery life
- Low cost
10Mobile WiMAX Technical Overview
11Mobile WiMAX Salient Features
12Key Radio Technology OFDMA
Backup?
- For large bandwidths TDMA and CDMA suffer from
inter-symbol-interference in larger cells - Large bandwidth small symbol duration
- Symbols gets smaller and channel does not change
- How to combat frequency selective fading?
- parallel orthogonal flat narrowband channels
- Orthogonal subcarriers, high spectral
efficiency, efficient implementation - Efficient MIMO implementation
OFDMA is a cost-effective technology for Mobile
Internet
13Complexity of MIMO-OFDM vs. MIMO-CDMA
- Receiver complexity for MIMO-CDMA grows
exponentially with bandwidth and linearly for
MIMO-OFDM
14Mobile WiMAX Media Access
- Fast dynamic scheduling
- Contention access for bandwidth requests only
- Resource allocation exclusively by BS retains
tight policy control by network - Efficient for both bursty, unpredictable traffic
and voice
- Static Allocation (slot or code based)
- Efficient for voice traffic
- Inefficient for bursty traffic (email, http)
- CSMA/CA
- Efficient for unpredictable traffic in an
unlicensed band - Inefficient for predictable traffic (voice)
- Sharing model designed for unlicensed band
- No control of resource allocation policy
Optimal MAC for Mobile Internet
15Smart Antennas and MIMO
16Smart Antenna Support
2 Tx / 2 Rx
- Space Time Block Coding (STBC)
- Reduces fade margin by spatial diversity
- Open loop
- Peak rate is not increased
- Spatial Multiplexing (SM)
- Increases peak rate
- Open loop
- Requires good SINR and low spatial correlation
- Adaptive MIMO switch (AMS)
- Optimally select STBC or SM to adapt to channel
condition - Reduced feedback
- Significantly improves capacity
- AAS (beamforming)
- Improves link budget
- Reduce interference
- Minor change to client
- 4 or more antennas for significant impact
1 Tx / 2 Rx
1 Tx / 2 Rx
Minimum Configuration for Mobile WiMAX Wave II
17MIMO-OFDMA Architecture
- MIMO operation in frequency domain
- Flat subcarriers - hij is scalar
- Simple frequency domain one-tap equalizer
- Scalable with bandwidth
h11 h21
H
h12 h22
Multi-Element Transmitter
Multi-Element Receiver
h11
h12
IFFT
h21
MIMO Encoder
MIMO Sub-ch Mapping
FFT
MIMO Decoder
h22
IFFT
y Hs n
18DL Adaptive MIMO Switching (AMS)
STBC Encoder
AMS
Channel Encoder
Symbol Mapper
MCS
SM Encoder
MIMO mode
LA Decision Unit
CSI SNR
MCS Modulation and Coding Scheme LA Link
Adaptation CSI Channel State Information SNR
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
19Performance of AMS
Spectral efficiency (SE)
AMS overcomes the deficiencies of STBC and SM and
leads to spectral efficiency very close to the
ideal one at both low and high SNR regions
20Up Link Collaborative MIMO
- MSs spatially uncorrelated
- no 3dB power penalty
21System Architecture
22Mobile WiMAX Network Flat Very-Flat
Architectures
Flat Architecture
ASN
CSN
ASN GW
BS
R6
R3
R8
Policy Server
HLR HSS
MIP HA
R1
DHCP
AAA
R6
BS
R3
R5 (Roaming)
R4
R1
ASN
MS
Another Operators CSN
Policy Server
Very Flat Architecture
HLR HSS
MIP HA
DHCP
AAA
NSP (Network Service Provider)
NAP (Network Access Provider)
Mobile WiMAX networks offer co-existence
interoperability of Flat and Very-Flat solutions
23Comparison of User Planes Data Flows
Backup?
3G User Plane and Data Flow
too many protocols, too many nodes
Mobile WiMAX User Plane and Data Flow
Simple. Few protocols. Easy-to-implement.
Mostly, IETF protocols. Few MS requirements
24Mobile WiMAX- 3GPP SAE Interworking
All-IP Core Network
BS Radio Functions
PDN
IMS
Internet
SAE integrates WiMAX to operators core network
as other 3GPP access technologies are with
seamless vertical mobility
25Mobile WiMAX Comparative Performance
26Simulation methodology and assumptions
- Methodology based on CDMA2000 methodology
specified by 3GPP2, now also adopted by 3GPP - Channel models exhibit lesser delay spread than
realistic broadband channels and will hence
benefit the other technologies and soften the
performance advantage of WiMAX - Only standards-based features are included.
Simulation results do not include - Adaptive Antenna Systems (AAS)
- Interference cancellation or mitigation (at BS or
MS) - Novel receiver designs
- Novel frequency/space scheduling (very simple
scheduler) - Compared technologies performance are based on
two receivers in MS and BS with known receiver
combining techniques
27WiMAX, EVDO and HSPA Features
1
28System Configuration
29Channel Models with Relatively Smaller Delay
Spread (according to EV-DV Methodology)
30WiMAX, HSPA and EVDO Comparison
- 1Tx 2Rx Rake receiver for EVDO and HSPA
- 2x2 Adaptive MIMO for WiMAX DL
- 1x2 Collaborative MIMO for WiMAX UL
31Mobile WiMAX, HSPA and EVDO Comparison
results do not include possible improvements with
AAS or interference canceling receivers
32Beyond Access Opportunity
- Old Model Walled Garden
- Advantage complete control
- Disadvantage few applications, no leveraging of
creative Internet application - Broadband Model Open Internet (Dumb Pipe)
- Advantage access to all applications over the
internet - Disadvantage operator revenues limited to access
- Mobile WiMAX Model Smart Pipe
- Mobile operators partner with content and
application providers to deliver enhanced mobile
services - Advantage user transparent quality access to
Internet applications, opportunity for shared
revenue on contents - Win-Win
33802.16 Evolution Vision
IEEE 802.16 Standards
WiMAX Forum Profiles
Networks Targeted
802.16e Corrigendum2
Mobile WiMAX System Profile Release 1 (R1)
(2006)
TDD Solution for Sprint, Clearwire, KT
FDD Solution (for FDD Spectrum) ?
802.16REV
Mobile WiMAX System Profile Release 1.x (R1.x)
(2007)
802.16m
Mobile WiMAX System Profile Release 2 (R2) (2008)
Global TDD FDD Europe, etc.
- IEEE 802.16m PAR Approved Dec 06 Work Starts
Jan 07 Completion expected Q2 08 - IEEE 802.16 REV PAR starts Jan 07 and Work
Starts May07 Completion Q4,07 - Mobile WiMAX R2 will be fully backward
compatible with R1. - Harmonized spectrum for IMT-2000 and
IMT-Advanced available for Mobile WiMAX - Mobile WiMAX R1 already competitive with 3GPP
LTE and 3GPP2 AIE - Mobile WiMAX R2 expected to deliver superior
performance to 3GPP-LTE and 3GPP2 AIE - Strong support of 802.16e/WiMAX community for
802.16m
34802.16m Candidate Requirements Competitive
Comparison
35Areas of Future Research
36How to Increase System Capacity?
- Capacity increases
- linearly with RF bandwidth
- as logarithm of signal to noise plus interference
ratio - linearly with number of independent spatial
channels (cells, sectors, MIMO channels,)
- Can we go higher in frequency?
- As frequency increases, the line-of-sight range
- decreases with frequency if both antennas
dimensions are scaled with wavelength - remains constant if one of the antennas physical
dimensions is held fixed - increases with frequency if both antennas
physical dimensions are held fixed
antenna gain
aperture size (m2)
Frequency (Hz)
smaller cells, larger bandwidths, higher order
MIMO, and interference management
Speed of light (m/sec)
37System Capacity Metric
- A meaningful metric is needed to study capacity
of scaleable systems - Areal Capacity Sum information rate of users in
a cell, normalized by cell area bandwidth - The metric provides insight into means for
increasing capacity - Increase single-link capacity between client BS
(Rk) - Increase multi-link Cell capacity between clients
in a cell BS - Decrease Cell area, which is a standard cellular
approach
Cell Capacity
38Interference Limits Capacity Growth
In-Cell interference 2 devices attempt to
access BS simultaneously
Out-Cell interference interference from clients
in neighboring cells
39Interference a theoretical perspective
- Cell capacity with N users in a cell is no more
than a constant due to in-cell and out-cell
interference - Single cell medium-access methods (TDM, FDM)
improve capacity, but still bounded by constant - Multi-cell multi-user co-operative techniques
promise to eliminate interference by treating it
as useful information, and approach SNR limited
capacity. Users add a new dimension to capacity
improvement
40Key Cooperative Technologies for 4G
NETWORK LAYER Interference co-ordination
Intelligent Relays
Channel-aware routing Network coding
PHYSICAL LAYER Interference cancellation
Multi-user MIMOSuperposition coding
MAC LAYER Fast link adaptationTraffic-aware
scheduling Multi-cell scheduling