Title: Overview of Mobile Communication Systems
1Overview of Mobile Communication Systems
- Transferring knowledge to future leaders
Presented by Professor Johnson I Agbinya
jagbinya_at_uwc.ac.za
2History of Cellular Networks
- First Ever Mobile Network
- Deployed by Bell Mobile System
- In New York (1970)
- Used one High Powered Transmitter (limited in
range, power and scope) - Good coverage
- Limited capacity
- Limited mobility
- Inefficient use of bandwidth
3Single Cell Network
4First (Generation) Cellular Network
- By Nippon Telephone Telegraph (NTT)
- In Japan (NTT System)
- In 1979 (Analog system)
- Operated in the 800 MHz range
- Used 25 kHz channel spacing
- Used 5 kHz guard band
5First Generation Cellular Networks (1)
- Operate Mostly in the 800 MHz range
- First 1G cellular networks Early 1980s
- Analog systems
- Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT)
- Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS)
- Total Access Communication System (TACS)
6First Generation Cellular Networks (2)Nordic
Mobile Telephone (NMT)
- Operated in the 450 MHz range
- In the Scandinavia (1981)
- Analog system
- Architecture
- Duplex system (10 MHz separation in links)
- 180 channels (1.2 kbps, very low rate)
- Frequency modulation ( 5 kHz deviation )
- Digital control signal (FSK)
7First Generation Cellular Networks (3)Advanced
Mobile Phone System (AMPS)
- Operated in the 800 to 900 MHz band
- USA (1983) - after NMT introduction
- Analog system
- 40 MHz spectrum allocation (10 MHz link
separation) - 666 channels (10 kbps rate)
- 20 MHz per operator (333 channels)
- Latter increased to 416 channels (25 MHz /
operator) - 30 kHz per channel
- 21 control channels (FSK, 8 kHz deviation)
8First Generation Cellular Networks
(3a)Limitations of AMPS
- Low calling capacity
- Limited Spectrum
- No room for spectrum growth
- Poor data communication
- Minimal privacy (low security of user
information) - Inadequate fraud protection (subject to cloning)
9First Generation Cellular Networks (4)Total
Access Communication System (TACS)
- Operated in the 900 MHz band
- UK (1985) - after introduction of AMPS
- Analog system
- 45 MHz (duplex) uplink and downlink separation
- 1000 channels (8 kbps rate)
- 25 kHz per channel
- Frequency modulation ( 9.5 kHz deviation )
- digital control channels (FSK, 6.4 kHz deviation)
10Second Generation Cellular Networks
- Pushed by demand for
- more subscribers
- limited frequency resource
- saturated networks
- need for better system security
- Digital Systems
112G Cellular Networks (1)
- 2G Access technologies
- GSM (Global System for Mobile communication)
- Combination of FDMA and TDMA
- Europe, Africa, Asia/Pacific regions
- CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
- North America, parts of Asia/Pacific
- TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)
- South America (mostly)
122G Cellular Networks (1)
- CDMA (orthogonal codes given to users)
- FDMA (Spectrum divided as f W / N)
- TDMA (Time duration T1 Tf / N)
- Channels are non-overlapping
132G Cellular Networks (2)
- CDMA (IS-95 series networks)
- Users are identified by orthogonal codes
- Uses spread spectrum digital modulation
techniques (1.25 MHz bandwidth, 1.2288 Mchip) - Rake receivers popular
- Rejection of Interference high
- Suffers from cell breathing (contraction and
expansion of cell range as a function of the
number of users on network)
142G Cellular Networks (3)
- TDMA (GSM and TDMA networks)
- Users share frequencies but transmit at different
time slots - Most popular air interface
- Used mostly in Europe and Africa
- Limited in data rates
- cell range dependent on transmitted power and
environmental effects
152G Cellular Networks (4)
- Examples of TDMA networks
- IS-54 (dual mode TDMA/AMPS)
- IS-54B
- electronic serial number
- better authentication
- better caller ID
- IS-54C
- Evolution path is through EDGE to 3G
162G Cellular Networks (5)
- Characteristics of IS-54 and EIA-553
172G Cellular Networks (6)
- TDMA Characteristics
- IS54 standard specifies traffic on digital voice
channels - initial implementation triples the calling
capacity of AMPS systems - capacity improvements of 6 to 15 times that of
AMPS are possible - many blocks of spectrum in 800 MHz and 1900 MHz
are used - all transmissions are digital
- TDMA/FDMA supported 7. 3 callers per channel (6
callers on half rate later), providing 3 times
the AMPS capacity
182G Cellular Networks (7)
- Characteristics of IS-54 networks
- 30 kHz channel spacing
- DQPSK encoding at 24.3 kbaud rate
- 6 time slots
- 48.6 kbps channel capacity (48.6/6 kbps per TS)
- vector sum excited linear prediction (VSELP)
vocoder at 7.95 kbps - dual mode handsets to accommodate AMPS
- 3 times capacity of AMPS
192G Cellular Networks (8)
- Characteristics of PDC networks
- Operated in Japan (1991)
- 25 kHz channel spacing
- 80 MHz link spacing (810-826, 956-980 MHz
1429-1453, 1477-1501 MHz) - Used space diversity to reduce carrier
interference - Reuse factor of 4
- DQPSK modulation at 42 kbps signaling rate
- mobile assisted handoff and VSELP at 6.7 kbps
202G Cellular Networks (9)
- Characteristics of PCS 1900 networks
- North American implementation of DCS 1800 (GSM)
- 80 MHz link separation
- Uplink and downlink are paired mirror images of
each other
21Evolution of 2G Networks to 3G
- Politics of GSM and CDMA competition means
different designation of cdma2000 1x EV (is it a
2.5G or 3G network?)
22Evolution of CDMA Networks to 3G
- IS-95 to cdma2000 1xRTT (144 kbps)
- cdma2000 1x EV-DO (DO for data only)
- Voice carried on IS-95 network
- 1.25 MHz channels
- Reuses IS-95 channels (saves costs)
- Peak rate to be 2.4 Mbps in future
23Evolution of GSM Networks to 3G
- GSM to GPRS (171.2 kbps)
- Voice on GSM and data on GPRS (2.5G)
- GPRS uses packet switching
- GPRS to EDGE
- EDGE is considered a 3G network
- packet switching capacity of 384 kbps
- will support both voice and data
- uses more time slots to increase capacity
243G Networks
- All employ wideband CDMA (W-CDMA)
- UMTS (European ETSI/3GPP standard)
- CDMA2000 (American standard)
- Uses packet switching (UTRA FDD and TDD)
- Peak rate to be 2.4 Mbps
- First networks deployed in 2001
- BT (UMTS in Isles of Man)
- NTT DoCoMo (Japan) - FOMA
253G Networks - UTRA FDD and TDD
- Frequency Division Duplex
- distinct frequency bands for each user
- forward band - traffic from base station to
mobile - reverse band - traffic from mobile to base
station - Time Division Duplex
- communication on a single frequency
- distinct time slots for forward and reverse links
- small time differences between the slots for one
person to make transmission look simultaneous
26Questions and Answers
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- Tell me what you think about this
lecture - jagbinya_at_uwc.ac.za
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- Next lecture February .