Title: Radio%20LANs
1Radio LANs
A Presentation by Radio Spectrum Management
Department (TRC)
2Presentation Scope
- Introduction to Radio LAN topologies.
- Radio LAN standards.
- Spectrum usage and Radio LAN regulations.
- Power limitations.
- Actual market implementations case studies.
- Scaling up WLANs Wireless MANs.
- WMAN standards.
- Third Generation wireless technologies.
3Radio LAN Topologies
4Peer To Peer
- Also called Ad Hoc.
- Limited coverage area.
- Everyone should be within reach from everyone
else. - Simplex communication.
Wireless Cell
Wireless Clients
Modem
5Infrastructure
Wireless Cell
Wireless Cell
Channel Y
Channel X
wired Backbone
Access Point
Access Point
Wireless Clients
Wireless Clients
- Clients communicate to each other via the AP.
- Infrastructure offers larger coverage area than
Peer-To-Peer does. - Provides multi-cell structure.
6Wireless Bridging
- Layer-2 LAN-to-LAN connectivity.
- With proper design, distance can reach up to 40
km.
7Spectrum Usage
8United States
- Radio LANs operate in the following unlicensed
bands - 902 928 MHz Industrial Scientific Medical
(ISM) band. (Not used anymore for Radio LANs). - 2400 2483.5 MHz ISM band.
- Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure
(UNII) bands - - 5.15 5.25 GHz.
- - 5.25 5.35 GHz.
- 5.725 5.850 GHz ISM band.
9ISM Bands
- ISM Bands are defined according to RR5-28,
Article 5.150. - Radiocommunication services operating within
these bands must accept harmful interference
which may be caused by other ISM applications.
10Europe
- The following unlicensed bands are approved for
Radio LANs operation as defined by CEPT1 - 2400 2483.5 MHz, on ISM basis.
- 5.15 5.35 GHz.
- 5.470 5.725 GHz.
- 1. European Conference of Postal and
Telecommunications Administrations
11Jordan
- The following bands are currently approved for
the - operation of Radio LANs, on non-interfering
basis1 - 2400 2483.5 MHz.
- 5.15 5.25 GHz.
- 5.725 5.850 GHz.
- 1. a) A user does not have the right to claim
protection against interference from other Radio
LAN users. - b) A Radio LAN user must take all necessary
measures to avoid interfering with other users.
12Jordan TRC Regulations
(cont )
- For devices utilizing lt10mW, only type approval
is needed. - Otherwise, spectrum licensing is also needed.
Output EIRP is restricted to 100mW. - Licensed for confined area of a building
usage. - 3. Outdoor connectivity (beyond the confined
area of building 100mW scope ) may be granted
on a case-by-case basis to study the case
depending on the availability of the frequency.
13Radio LAN Spectrum Bands
2400
2483.5
5150
5250
5300
5350
5470
5725
5850
North America
Europe
Jordan
14Radio LAN Standards
15IEEE Standards
- IEEE originally formed a committee (802)
concerned in networking technologies. - IEEE 802.11 is a sub committee concerned with
Wireless LAN technologies.
16IEEE 802.11
- Final draft issued in 1997.
- Standard is approved by FCC, ETSI.
- Band of operation 2400 2483.5 MHz.
- Technologies - Radio (RF).
- - Infra Red (IR).
- The standard defines the use of FHSS and DSSS.
- Modulation 1. BPSK _at_ bit rate 1Mbps.
- 2. QPSK _at_ bit rate 2 Mbps.
17IEEE 802.11b
- Final draft was issued in 1999.
- Standard approved by FCC, ETSI.
- Band of operation 2400 2483.5 MHz.
- Offers three 22-MHz non-overlapping channels.
- Defines only one RF technology DSSS.
- Bit rate up to 11Mbps, using CCK modulation.
- Backward compatible with IEEE 802.11.
- Channels - North America 11 channel.
- - Europe 13 Channels.
- - Japan 14 Channels.
18802.11b Channel Distribution
Center frequencies of channels are separated by
5MHz
10
5
4
9
3
8
2
7
1
11
6
2400
2483
2437
Frequency
19802.11b channel sets in different regulatory
domains
Japan France/ Singapore Mexico Europe North America Center Frequency Channel ID
X X X X 2412 1
X X X X 2417 2
X X X X 2422 3
X X X X 2427 4
X X X X 2432 5
X X X X 2437 6
X X X X 2442 7
X X X X 2447 8
X X X X 2452 9
X X X X X 2457 10
X X X X X 2462 11
X X X 2467 12
X X X 2472 13
X 2484 14
20IEEE 802.11a
- Final draft issued in 2000.
- Standard approved by FCC.
- Band of operation 5.15 5.25 GHz 5.25 5.35
GHz. - Defines the use of Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing (OFDM). - Bit rate up to 54Mbps using 64-QAM modulation.
- Offers up to 8 20-MHz non-overlapping channels.
- Channels - FCC 8 channels.
- - TELEC (Japan) 4 channels.
- - ETSI (Europe) uses
another standard. -
21802.11a channel sets in different regulatory
domains
Taiwan Singapore Japan North America Frequency Channel ID
X 5170 34
X X 5180 36
X 5190 38
X X 5200 40
X 5210 42
X X 5220 44
X 5230 46
X X 5240 48
X X 5260 52
X X 5280 56
X X 5300 60
X X 5320 64
5745 149
5765 153
5785 157
5805 161
22IEEE 802.11g
- Expected to be finalized by the end of 2003.
- Operates in the same band as IEEE 802.11b.
- Offers three non-overlapping channels.
- Bit rate up to 54Mbps using OFDM.
- Offers backward compatibility with IEEE 802.11b.
- Interoperability is not yet guaranteed.
23ETSI Standards
ETSI European Telecommunication Standards
Institution
24ETSI HIPERLAN1
- HIPERLAN High Performance LAN.
- Band of operation 5.15 5.30 GHZ.
- Bit rate up to 20Mbps using FSK and GMSK
modulation. - Offers five non-overlapping channels
Center frequency (MHz) Carrier number
5 176,468 0 0
5 199,997 4 1
5 223,526 8 2
5 247,056 2 3
5 270,585 6 4
25ETSI HIPERLAN2
- Standards first draft in 2001.
- Band of operation
- - lower band 5.15 5.35 GHz.
- - upper band 5.470 5.725 GHz.
- Channel spacing 20MHz.
- Bit rate up to 54Mbps using OFDM.
-
26Channeling Scheme
fc Band Channel
5180 Lower 36
5200 Lower 40
5220 Lower 44
5240 Lower 48
5260 Lower 52
5280 Lower 56
5300 Lower 60
5320 Lower 64
5500 Upper 100
5520 Upper 104
5540 Upper 108
5560 Upper 112
5580 Upper 116
5600 Upper 120
5620 Upper 124
5640 Upper 128
5660 Upper 132
5680 Upper 136
5700 Upper 140
27Wi-Fi
- Wi-Fi Wireless Fidelity.
- WECA Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance.
- WECA issues the Wi-Fi Certificate for
interoperability and general performance of Radio
LAN products. - Wi-Fi certifies IEEE compliant standards
(802.11a, 802.11b).
28Market Implementations Case Studies
29International Vendors
- Among the global vendors of Radio LAN products
- Cisco Aironet, Lucent Technolgies, Nortel, 3Com,
Intel, Linksys, Intermec, Proxim, D-Link. - They offer WLAN product including Access Points,
Wireless Client Cards, Wireless Bridges, antennas
etc. - WLAN products are assessed according to their
roaming capabilities, load balancing and radio
features. - Calypso Wireless Inc. offers a video phone which
operates on cellular networks as well as IEEE
802.11 Hot-Spots. - opportunities to integrate wireless
access solutions
30Carriers offer remote access service from
Hot-Spots
- ATT will begin offering remote wireless access
to its virtual private network services from more
than 2,000 access points in at least 20 countries
in the fourth quarter. - ATT will adopt the readily available wireless
Wi-Fi services form GRIC Inc. - MCI (formerly WorldCom Inc.) will be also
offering Wi-Fi VPN services, as well as
wireless Internet access to its customers next
fall through a deal with Wayport Inc.
31Example ATT connects Hot-Spots to Corporate
Networks via VPNs.
Corporate Network
World Wide Web
Hot-Spot
VPN
Server
Wireless Access
VPN Virtual Private Network
32Public Access Hot Spots
- Swisscom founded a new subsidiary Swisscom
Eurospot for the purpose of installing hot spots
across the continent. - IEEE 802.11b hot spots will be installed in
railway stations, airports, restaurants,
libraries, etc. - Swisscom Eurospot has developed an innovative
billing system to be used with this service
prepaid cards, user accounts.
33McDonalds goes wireless!
- McDonalds signed an agreement to deploy Wi-Fi
service to 140 stores in Singapore. - A spokeswoman for McDonald's Australia said the
company plans to offer Wi-Fi access in all 725
McDonald's in that country. - Starbucks have already established Hot-Spots in
their Cafes.
34Power Limitations
35FCC
- In the 2.4GHz band
- max TX power 30dBm (1W).
- max EIRP (point-to-multipoint) 36dBm (4W).
- max EIRP (point-to-point)
-
-
TX Power (dBm) EIRP (dBm)
30 36
29 38
28 40
20 56
36FCC
(cont )
- In the 5.2 GHz band
- max TX power 17dBm (50mW).
- max EIRP 23dBm (200mW).
- Only indoor operation is permitted.
- In the 5.3 GHz band
- max TX power 24dBm (250mW).
- max EIRP 30dBm (1W).
37FCC
(cont )
- In the 5.8 GHz band
- max TX power 30dBm (1W).
- max EIRP (point-to-multipoint) 36dBm (4W).
- max EIRP (point-to-point) No Limits!
- FCC restricts the use of antennas to only a
unique set of antennas. - Reference Rules
- FCC Wireless Regulations 15.407 and 15.247.
38Example FCC Regulation
39Europe
- In the 2.4 GHz band
- max transmit power 50mW (17dBm).
- max EIRP 100mW (20dBm).
- In the 5 GHz bands
- max EIRP 30dBm (1W).
40China
- in the 2.4 GHz band
- maximum EIRP is 10mW.
Japan
- in the 2.4 GHz band
- maximum EIRP 10mW/MHz (10dBm/MHz).
- In a 22MHz channel, maximum EIRP 220mW
(23.4dBm). - in the 5 GHz bands
- maximum EIRP 10mW/MHz (10dBm/MHz).
- In a 20MHz channel, maximum EIRP 200mW
(23dBm).
41TRC Regulations
- The following regulations are currently adopted
in Jordan - Maximum permissible EIRP is 20dBm (100mW) in the
2.4GHz band. - Maximum EIRP in the 5GHz band is 23dBm (200mW).
- Spectrum Licensing is needed for Radio LANs.
- Only indoor confined building coverage is
permitted. - Outdoor connectivity is permitted on
case-by-case basis.
42TRC Regulations
(cont )
- Licensing Fees
- 1. For Home / Small Office Use1, licensing fees
are 15 JDs paid only once. - 2. Otherwise, licensing fees are 15 JDs / Access
Point, paid annually. - 3. In the case a wireless outdoor bridging link
is approved by TRC, licensing fees shall be
calculated according to the approved Spectrum
Tariffs. - 4. Licensing Application fee for the first time
is 5 JDs. - 5. Renewal of Licensing application fee is 5 JDs.
1. A Radio LAN system employing only one Access
Point, or one peer-to-peer (Ad Hoc) network.
43TRC Regulations
(cont )
- Storage and Exhibition
- Merchants and shop owners are allowed to import
Radio LAN products for the purpose of storing /
exhibiting them. - A shop owner may go through licensing procedures
on behalf of the end-user (buyer).
See Licensing Guidelines
See Storage/Exhibition forms
44Why license?
Licensing Radio LANs is meant to be a procedural
measure to control the random manner of Radio LAN
dispersal. Why control Radio LAN
dispersal? Spectrum assignments for Radio LANs,
3G and BWA are not stable yet. In developed
country, it is relatively acceptable to replace
old systems with new ones. In developing
countries, it is NOT! How will licensing achieve
this goal? - Licensing will comprise a formal way
to assure that no excessive power is emitted in
the spectrum bands. - Licensing will help
identify the users and the location of uses of
Radio LANs.
45Why Confine to a Building?
- Because of current restrictions imposed by JTCs
monopoly. - Datacomm services shall be only offered by JTC
until the end of 2004. - To restrict the outdoor propagation of power.
This should be considered as a precautionary
procedure.
46Scaling Up Wireless Access
47Wireless MANs
48What are WMANs?
- WMAN Wireless Metropolitan Area Network.
- They are meant to provide wireless access for
large residential areas. - They are designed to provide Broadband Wireless
Access (BWA) services. - BWA offers integrated high-speed links
supporting data, voice and video communication.
49(No Transcript)
50Proprietary BWA Solutions
- Companies such as Proxim, Aperto Networks,
Alvarion, IP Wireless, provide proprietary Fixed
BWA solutions. - Solutions are offered in the bands 2.5 GHz,
3.5GHz and 5.8 GHz (license-exempt in USA). - FBWA solutions are Line of Sight and Near Line
of Sight technologies. - There is a need to standardize BWA solutions to
assure interoperability.
51WMAN Standards
52IEEE 802.16
- IEEE 802.16 is WMAN standard offering BWA
services. - Completed in 10/2001, published in 4/2002.
- The standard addresses the frequency band 10
66 GHz, with focus on the 23- 43 GHz band. - It comprises a Last Mile solution. It is a
suitable cost-effective solution to replace
copper and fiber last mile connections. - Utilizes 20 to 28 MHz channels, with data rates
up to 134Mbps.
53IEEE 802.16
(cont )
- IEEE 802.16 employs a multi-cellular structure.
- Full duplex a hybrid TDD/FDD duplexing scheme.
- Standards physical layer offers adaptive
modulation according to the links status. - The standard represents an excellent alternative
for current wired local loops deployed in data
communication services.
54IEEE 802.16a
- IEEE 802.11a is an amendment to the original
standard. - Completed in 11/2002, approved in 1/2003.
- 802.16a came to address the following
- 1. BWA Services in the 2 11 GHz band.
- 2. the standard tackles the Non-Line-of-Sight
applications.
55IEEE 802.16a
(cont )
- IEEE 802.16a offers 20 28 MHz channels, at a
link speed up to 134Mbps. - Three air-interfaces are defined
- 1. WMAN-SC2 single carrier modulation
format. - 2. WMAN-OFDM TDMA access scheme.
- 3. WMAN-OFDM OFDMA access scheme.
56Bit Rate Shifting in 802.16a
Bit rate shifting is achieved using adaptive
modulation. When you are near to the BS, you are
offered high speed, when youre far, reliability
decreases, hence youre offered lower speed.
57Proposed Spectrum Assignments for 802.116
- IEEE 802.16 is a Point-to-Multipoint technology,
hence spectrum assignments are being considered
in the LMDS / MMDS frequency plans.
58(No Transcript)
59802.16 VS 802.11
802.16 802.11
Cell Coverage Up to few blocks Typical max range 200250m
Service Area Scales up to city-wide coverage Campus wide
Spectrum 10 66 GHz (802.16) 2 11 GHz (802.16a) 2.4 GHz (802.11b) 5 GHz (802.11a)
Bit rate Up to 134 Mbps Up to 54Mbps
60802.16 VS 802.11
(cont )
802.16 802.11
Duplexity Full-duplex Simplex (CSMA/CA)
Users Provides broadband wireless access for buildings Provides wireless access for mobile users
Mobility will eventually evolve to support mobile users Supports mobility and inter-cell roaming
61802.16 VS 802.11
(cont )
802.16 802.11
Connectivity Connects to UMTS, ATM core networks Connects to wired Ethernet backbones
Cost High initial investment requirements Low initial cost. Low running cost.
62802.16 VS 802.11
(cont )
802.16 802.11
Target Market Public. Provides high-speed connection to meet business demands Private. To address mobility requirement in an organization
Service Provider ISP, Telecom companies Local to the organization
63WiMAX
- WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave
Access, based in San Diego. - The WiMAX alliance includes Intel, Airspan
Networks, Alvarion, Aperto Networks, Ensemble
Communications, Fujitsu Microelectronics, America
Inc., Nokia, Proxim, Wi-LAN Inc. - The WIMAX alliance is dedicating its efforts to
back the 802.16 standard in order to start
shipping products by the end of 2004.
64ETSI HIPER ACESS
- First draft in 2001.
- operates in the band 40.5 43.5 GHz.
- Offers connectivity solutions to residential
areas at speeds up to 25 Mbps. - Designed to integrate into UMTS, IP and ATM core
networks.
65ETSI HIPER LINK
- Standard still underway.
- Spectrum allocation _at_ the 17 GHz band.
- Offers short-range very high-speed wireless
links between HIPERLANs or HIPER ACESS networks. - Bit rate up to 155Mbps.
- range up to 150m.
66Jordanian Market
- With the expiry of the JTC monopoly by the end
of 2004, Data Communications service providers
will start considering wireless solutions to
replace wired local loops. - The demand for WLAN implementations will also
witness an increase. Hotels, hospitals,
universities, airports, companies having large
warehouses hangars, will all seriously consider
it. - As 802.16a addresses the 2 11 GHz band, more
careful planning is required when approving
outdoor / bridging wireless links in the 2.4 and
5 GHz bands.
67Towards The Future
68Third Generation
- Future communication systems will provide
integrated voice, video and data services in one
service bundle. - Networks will tend to converge into one unified
infrastructure. Internet, web services, voice
services, and packet data services together. - Focus on mobility, high-speed links and
reliability issues. - Numerous technologies have evolved to help
migrate current 2G systems to 3G systems.
69ITU Standards
- ITU took on the role of standardizing 3G
technologies. - IMT-2000 International Mobile Service.
- It is the ITUs umbrella name
for 3G. - 3GPP Third Generation Partnership Projects.
- National and regional standards
bodies are collaborating in 3G projects. -
70IMT-2000 Standards
- IMT-SC (Single Carrier) Enhanced Data GSM
Environment. - IMT-MC (Multi Carrier) CDMA CDMA2000, evolution
of IS-95 CDMA (cdmaOne). - IMT-DS (Direct Spread) W-CDMA UMTS
- Wideband CDMA Universal Mobile Telecom System.
- IMT-TC (Time Code CDMA) including TD-SCDMA
(Time Division Synchronous CDMA). - IMT-FT (FDMA/TDMA) based on DECT legacy.
71Wireless Networks Convergence
723G Services Vs. Radio LAN Services
- Radio LANs are not equipped to cover wide areas.
3G services are scalable to cover very wide
areas. - Radio LAN technology may support pedestrian
mobility but with low performance. 3G service are
mobile services at speeds up to vehicular speeds. - Radio LANs are a nearest point services. 3G
are an everywhere services. - Initial investment in Radio LAN public access
systems is very low compared to 3G systems.
However, tending to extend Radio LAN coverage to
3G coverage limits will be very costly. - Radio LANs offer data rate which are up to 26
times those offered by 3G ! -