Title: Introduction to the Advanced Mobile Phone System AMPS
1Introduction to the Advanced Mobile Phone System
(AMPS)
- EE421
- Fall 2001
- Dr. Julie Dickerson
2Information Sources
- Theodore Rappaport, Wireless Communications
Principles Practice, Prentice-Hall, 1996 - Gallagher Snyder, Mobile Telecommunications
Networking with IS-41, McGraw-Hill - Tutorial on Mobile Communications from the
International Engineering Consortium - on course
web site
3History
- 1946 First mobile phones deployed, FM 120KHz,
half-duplex - 1950 FM 60KHz, better RF filters available
- Mid 1960s 30KHz, full-duplex, IMTS (Improved
Mobile Telephone Service), limited capacity 12
channels, 543 paying customers in New York City
(1976)
4Early Mobile Systems
5Cellular Communications
- 1968 Cell concept proposed by ATT
- 1983 FCC allocates 40 MHz of spectrum in 800
MHz band, 30 kHz for each one-way channel (for
full-duplex) analog - Channels split between two carriers
- More frequencies allocated, 1.8-1.9 GHz, etc.
over time - Bandwidth limited
6Cellular Concept
7Digital Communications
- Early 1990s digital systems begin with the goal
of increasing the number of users, D-AMPS - TDMA
- FDMA
- CDMA
8FDMA-Frequency Division Multiple Access
-Requires no synchronization or central timing,
channels independent.
9TDMA-Time Division Multiple Access Fixed Slots
10CDMA-Code Division Multiple Access Frequency
Hopping
Frequency
Time
11(No Transcript)
12Terminology
- Base Station
- Fixed station used for radio communication with
mobiles. Located at the center or edge of
coverage region. Consists of radio channels,
transmit/receive antennas. - Control Channels
- Radio channels used for transmission of call
setup, request, initiation and other control
purposes - Full Duplex
- Communication system that allows simultaneous
two-way communication, transmission reception
usually on two different frequencies (FDD)
13- Forward Channel
- Radio channel for transmission from base station
to mobile - Reverse channel
- Radio channel for transmission from mobile to
base station - Handoff
- Process of transferring a mobile from one channel
or base station to another - Mobile Switching Center
- Switching center that coordinates call routing in
a large service area. MSC connects cellular base
stations and the mobiles to the PSTN (also called
Mobile Telephone switching office (MTSO)
14Wireless System Basics
Reverse Link
Forward Link
Control or Setup Channels
Mobile Unit
Base Station
15Cellular System
16Making calls from a cellphone
- Mobile sends call initiation request, its ID
number to base station on reverse control channel - Base station receives and relays to the MSC
- MSC validates user, instructs base station to
move mobile to voice channels - Base station pages mobile with instructions
- Mobile moves to voice channel
- MSC connects mobile to PSTN
- Voice transmission/reception between mobile and
base station begins
17Making calls to a cellphone
- MSC receives call from PSTN , sends page to base
stations - Base stations send page on forward control
channel to mobiles - Mobile receives page and acknowledges on reverse
control channel sends validation information - MSC validates mobile, asks base station to put
user on voice channel pair - Base station sends voice channel information on
FCC, mobile moves to voice channel - Voice transmission/reception initiated MSC
connects with PSTN.
18Forward/Reverse Channels
849-851 Air Mobile, air cellular 851-869 Private
land mobile, public safety frequencies, trunk
lines
19Cell Frequency Reuse
20Locating Cells
N19 (i 3, j2)
21Channel Assignment
- Need to assign frequencies to users/cell
- Fixed
- Each cell has predetermined number of channels
- If all channels used, cell is blocked, no
service - Cells can borrow channels from neighboring cells
- Dynamic
- No permanent allocation
- Frequency band requested from MSC, assigned using
reuse distance, blocking probabilities, use of
channel, signal strength
22Handoff Scenarios
23Umbrella Cells
24Interference and Capacity
- Interference causes
- cross-talk, poor quality,(voice channel)
- blocking and missed calls (control channel)
- Co-channel interference
- Frequency reuse in nearby cells
- Adjacent channel interference
- Signal in adjacent frequency band
- Signals from other cell companies
25Co-Channel Interference
26Adjacent Channel Interference
- Comes from imperfect filters that allow frequency
leakage into the band - Serious problem if interferer is nearby, near-far
effect - Nearby mobile transmits on a frequency near to
that of a weak mobile - Base station receivers need high-Q filters to
reject adjacent channel interference.
27Power Control
- Each mobile should use the minimum amount of
power to have good quality. - Base station controls power
- CDMA power toggles up and down continuously, like
delta modulation - TDMA, AMPS adjusted by base station
28Increasing Capacity
- Cell Sectoring
- Divide cell up into angular sections, typically 3
or 6 - Increases reuse
- Cell Splitting
- Subdivide cell into smaller cells, increases the
number of channels, keep same structure - Needs power control
29Cell Sectoring
30Cell Splitting
31AMPS Specs
32AMPS Voice Processing
Compander compresses signal in amplitude,
roughly 21 ratio Deviation Limiter assures that
the max. deviation is the /- 12
kHz Postdeviation limiter filter LPF,
attenuated signal to keep in band and avoid
interfering with SAT tones
33Other Cell Specs
- IS-54 Digital cellular in US, DQPSK
- IS136 PCS
- IS 95 A CDMA spread spectrum
- Global system for mobiles (GSM)
- TDMA with channelization