Title: New and Emerging Wireless Technologies Beyond 3G
1New and Emerging Wireless Technologies Beyond 3G
- Sam Samuel
- Lucent Technologies
- Swindon UK
2TOC
- Economics and Vision
- Background to the Problem
- Future and Emerging Technologies
- MIMO
- OFDM
- Beam forming IA and Antenna Array
- Interference cancellation
- Network Time Scheduling
- IEEE Approaches
- Summary
3Wireless Experience Curve 1985 to 1996
CEOs
Note DRAM and airtime both reduced 10x from
1985-1995
Real Estate Agents
1985
Replace Calling Cards
1986
1987
Cost per Minute
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
Intercom
1993
1994
Elasticity 3
1995
1996
Def of Elasticity change in X/ change in y
Source G.Blonder, ATT Labs, 1977
Cumulative Minutes (B)
Note Cost excludes marketing and sales expense
and are in 1996 dollars
- Next generation systems must be spectrally
efficient across the network (bandwidth where
needed). - Equipment providers will provide the compilers
for application creation. - Partnering will be the norm.
4Economics and Visions
5Information Anywhere VisionExample project EU
6FP Ambient Networks
- Ambient Networks
- Common Control Services
- Dynamic Network Composition
Services
Services
Ambient Connectivity
Community
Personal
Home
Vehicular
PAN
CAN
VAN
HAN
6Background to the problem Motivation
7The wireless channel
- Scattering causes local signal fading
- Delay spread dependent on environment (small for
indoor, large for macrocell)
8Channel Normal-modes
- Classic static multipath channel is linear.
- Normal modes are simple sinusoids. OFDM then is
optimal in this sense. - Information is broken into small frequency bands
with flat fading. Great for MIMO type
applications. - Active research areas within Bell Labs
- OFDM, chirped pulses, MC-CDMA, OFDM-CDMA for
legacy and practical implementation
9Increasing the Data Rate in CDMA
Rake Receiver
Original signal
Multipath channel
Rx signal
time diversity
UMTS
10Live Wireless Transaction Measurements
- Netscape Browser access to www.adobe.com
- blue dots are downlink packets, red dots are
uplink packets. - average downlink Kbps to 1 second peak
4.31 - average uplink Kbps to 1 second peak 4.71
- MRU was 1500 bytes
- TCP Window Size was 8,192 bytes
- Traffic characteristics
- Initial download of HTTP skeleton resulted in
GET of large objects. Many 1500 packets
retrieved. - Period 9 - 20 consumed by DNS accesses to
resolve www.xxx.com addresses to IP addresses. - End of transaction resulted in many small
object retrievals. Large uplink payloads for
smaller downlink payloads. - Latency chart illustrates queuing within system
as generated load piles up in uplink and
downlink directions. - This traffic profile is typical of Web accesses.
We cannot ignore delay TTI Issues
We cannot ignore uplink Symmetry Issues
11General Throughput Equation
- To optimize data performance we should combine
rate and power control - OFDM is convenient for water filling
- Keep number of sub-carriers manageable for uplink
channel information
12Future and Emerging Technologies
13MIMO
14Space The Last Frontier
- Convergence of ubiquitous wireless access and
broadband internet creates insatiable demand for
high bit rate wireless access - System capacity is interference limited - cannot
be increased by increasing transmitted power - The spectrum has become a scarce and very
expensive resource - For Cellular systems reducing cell size is not
viable - Increasing spectral efficiency with multiple
transmit and multiple receive antennas opens a
new dimension, space, offering exceedingly high
bit rates without increasing transmitted power
bandwidth allocation
15Bandwidth Efficiency Limits
16Efficiency Limits with a Single Array
- Adding a single array does provide diversity
against fading, but it does not change the (slow
growth) logarithmic nature of the bandwidth
efficiency limit
17Lifting the Limits with Dual Arrays
s1
18Predicted outage capacities
150 100 50
SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY vs. NUMBER ANTENNAS
AT 1 OUTAGE
24dB
12dB
18 dB
SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY (bps/Hz)
6 dB
1?N Optimum Combining at 24 dB
0 dB
8
0 10
20 30
40 50 60
NUMBER OF UNCORRELATED ANTENNAS (MN)
19MIMO Capacity Increases
C/Wlog2(det(IrHHH))
Nlog2(1SNR)
Capacity grows as the number of antennas!
- Increases the spectral efficiency
- Compact antenna arrays
- Low-cost receivers
20MIMO
MIMO Increase data rates by exploiting multiple
antennas at both Tx and Rx.
Channel
21The Wireless Channel in MIMO Processing
- Multiple antenna techniques rely on the
- characteristics of the spatial signature
- Diversity techniques rely on the assumption that
distinct spatial signatures correspond to
different pairs of transmit-receive antennas. - Intelligent antenna techniques rely on the
efficient adaptation of the array pattern
according to the spatial distribution of the
desirable user and interferers.
22Open-Loop Transmit Diversity
- Time-Switched Transmit Diversity (TSTD)
x1
Data
Mobile
time
x1 , x2
x2
time
- Space-Time Block Code Transmit Diversity (STC)
x1
x2
Space-Time Block Code
Data
Mobile
time
x1 , x2
x1
x2
time
23MIMO Research Trends
Advanced MIMO receivers can be costly on the
downlink due to limitations in mobile form-factor
and complexity.
- High-performance, low-complexity detection
algorithms for MIMO. Algorithms based on
joint-detection or serial/parallel interference
cancellation techniques following space-time
equalization.
- High-performance, low-complexity receiver
architectures for MIMO based on multiple
iterations between a low-complexity detector and
a error-correcting decoder.
- Transmitter encoding for High-Order Modulations
in MIMO, allowing reduced complexity at the
receiver.
- Dynamic packet scheduling across multiple
antennas.
24Propagation Modeling Measurements
Indoor propagation measurements consistently show
high BLAST gains. Recent outdoor measurements
demonstrate similar results.
Mobile Measurements
theory
omni ant.
BLAST/1x1 capacity
120 ft
antenna in laptop
time (sec)
- narrowband channel capacity in mobile suburban
80 of theory - narrowband channel capacity of laptop in van is
65 of theory - Capacity improvements are real
25OFDM
26Orthogonal Frequency Division Duplexing
- Breaks high-speed data into low-rate parallel
streams - Longer symbol period reduces ISI ICI for spread
OFDM - fnfcnDf, where for orthogonality DfTs1
- Simple DFT implementation
27Beam Forming Intelligent Antenna
28Performance Enhancements
- Transmit Diversity achieves
- Improved call quality on the downlink by
combating multipath fading. - Reduced BTS transmit power, thereby reducing
downlink inter-cell interference. - Intelligent Antennas achieve
- Higher antenna gain - by maximising received
energy or transmitting more effective power. - Reduction of Interference by maximising Signal
to - Interference Ratio
29Intelligent Antennas
- An antenna-array transceiver system.
- Combined with a base station architecture and
signal processing techniques designed to
dynamically select or form the optimum beam
pattern per user.
30 Adaptive Antenna Principle
31Closed-Loop Transmit Diversity
w1
Mobile
Data
w2
Feedback on Uplink
Closed-loop TxAA
Quantised Weights
- Weights are computed by the mobile as a function
of the downlink channel estimates to maximise the
received signal energy. - Weights are then quantised in amplitude/phase and
sent back on the uplink control channel.
32Multi-Antenna Solutions
Pathloss (dB)
dB
antenna separation
time
- Signal fades in time and space. Include both
space and time diversity
33Base and terminal Smart Antenna Prototypes
34Basestation Antenna Configurations
- two beam lobes
- polarization and spacial diversity configurations
- 2-6 dB improvement
- high gain for low-speed users
- 4-fold diversity on the uplink
polarization beams
- 16 element tower top electronics
- 9o beamwidth with -35 dB side lobes
- Space-division multiple access
35Polarization Antennas at Mobile
Without scattering polarization perpendicular to
k-vector
Tripole antenna
- Three omni-antennas co-located at feed point
- Key feature to obtain MIMO gains
- achieving the separation between Antennas on the
end device - Ceramic Antenna, Tripole Antenna
36Interference Cancellation
37Interference Mitigation (1)Cellular Downlink
Intra- and inter-cell interference mitigation
algorithms at the mobile.
- Iterative detectors based on space-time
filtering. Filter weights trained via transmitted
pilots of the desired signal using Least squares
and semi-blind (e.g. constant modulus)
optimisation criteria.
38Interference Mitigation (2)WLAN
Inter-system Interference due to co-existing
technologies in unlicensed bands.
- Space-time filtering at the receiver in
conjunction with enhanced MAC algorithms to cope
with inter-system interference.
39Interference Mitigation Advances
K4, M2, Nt20, Nd80, SIR0dB, 500 trials
0
10
Known parameters
LR with outliers selection
LS
Conventional solutions
LSB
SB (delta0.1)
Proposed semi-blind solution
-1
10
MSE
Finite data ML benchmark
Optimal solution Full a priori info
-2
10
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
SNR, dB
Techniques advancing to point where they
approaching theoretical limits
40Network Time Scheduling
41Short Delay vs. Long Delay Services
link loss
Tx power
Delay constraints force user to power control
through fades
delay jitter
Tx power
Schedule transmission around fades. Transmit at
full power maximum rate. Higher latency.
42Data scheduling
- Partition low and high latency services in power
43Coordinated Cell Scheduling
- MESH Network
- 802.16a
- Other relay techniques
- being proposed in 4G
- research
- Considered a key
- Future Emerging
- Technology by EU
possible 3X improvement
- High priority packets are sent with neighbors
quiet. - Coordination is local between nearest neighbour
44IEEE Approaches
45Impact of 802.20, 802.16 , 802.11
- IEEE approach is largely OFDM based
- Even IEEE 802.15.3 is OFDM based
- Actively adding mobility to the standards
- 802.16e and 802.20
- 802.11 considering management plane that would
allow mobility - Differences
- 802.20 wide scale mobility (vehicular)
- frequency band 500Mhz to 3.5GHz
- 802.16e pedestrian
- Based on 802.16a frequency band 2GHz to 6 GHz
- Appears there is an overlap between two
46Efficiency Targets for 802.20
Source IEEE 802.20
47802.11 Indoor Wireless LAN Migration
IEEE 802.11 Fourth-Generation of Wireless
Communications
First Generation Wireless LANs
- Peer/Peer and Client/Server
- Small User Population
- Isolated "Cells" and User Groups
- Non-Contiguous Coverage
- Indoor Operation
- Limited Mobility
- Mostly Asynchronous Traffic
- Slower than Ethernet
- Larger User Population
- Managed Services
- Full Roaming/Handoff Capability
- Contiguous Coverage in Dense Areas
- Wider Area Coverage for Community LANs
- Mobility (Follow-Me Service)
- Mix of Async and Isochronous Traffic
- Higher System Utilization
- Enhanced Security
Merge of 3G and 4G services (WLAN WAN)
Source ATT proposal to IEEE 802.11
48802.11 Device Management
Process of Managed 802.11 devices in the Standards
(Small steps to make good progress)
Inter-Access Port Protocol
Inter-Communications between APs (Now a Standard)
Radio Resource Measurements
Ability to obtain MAC and PHY measurements by
Upper Layers (Now a Task Group)
Enable external entities to manage Devices (APs
and Clients) (Proposed Next Logical
Step)
Remote Managed Device
Source ATT proposal to IEEE 802.11
49IEEE impact on 4G
- Mobility
- Higher layer approach to mobility
- MIP and enhancements e.g. Dynamic Home Agents
- Considering proposals to Link layer mobility
- That all 802.xx standards adhere to MAC and VLAN
bridging - Conclusion
- Aim is for improved spectral efficiency
- Incorporating ideas of
- PAN - 802.15.x
- VAN 802.20, 802.16e
- HAN 802.11(a-g)
- CAN 802.16a
- Potential High Impact on 4G
50Summary
51- In this talk we have
- Looked at the motivation and vision for the
emergence of new technologies - Looked at which technologies are likely to
succeed - Noticed that the IEEE approach to 4G
standardisation may succeed before others - Thank You!!