SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 18
Utilizing Un-Licensed Spectrum with
Power of Technologies – LTE-U & Wi-Fi
1.Introduction
Access to unlicensed spectrum has been the key to the development and
adoption of innovative wireless technologies like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and
ZigBee for providing network connectivity in a small area with limited data
rates.
Now days, data requirement of per user is exponentially and thus technology
has upgrade it’s to a new level where one can see the throughput in order of
1000s of Mbps. Two global wireless technologies named LTE and Wi-Fi are
looking to play a great role to meet up these requirements.
Wi-Fi technology using unlicensed spectrum and very mature due to its
ecosystem. On the other hand LTE technology is the leading mobile wireless
technology and broadly deployed in licensed bands and it is evolving to
operate in unlicensed band and emerging as a stronger competitor to Wi-Fi in
unlicensed band.
LTE-U is one of version of this technology developed by a group of
Organizations under name of LTE-U Forum, while License Assisted Access
(LAA) is 3GPP’s ongoing effort to standardize simultaneous operation across
licensed and unlicensed bands as part of LTE Release 13. People use the term
“LTE in unlicensed” to refer to both LTE-U and LAA collectively.
Mehndi Sadeghian, Mohit Luthra, Rahul Atri, Rahul Sharma, Preet Rekhi, Sukhvinder Malik May 8th
, 2016
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Un-Licensed Spectrum
3. Wi-Fi Technology
Overview
4. LTE-Unlicensed
5. LTE-U Deployment
Use case
6. LTE-U Eco System
and Standardization
7. Summary and Last
words
8. References
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
LTE operating in unlicensed band is anchored by a license carrier and it operates on licensed and unlicensed
bands simultaneously: licensed spectrum is used for its guaranteed availability and for transmission of control
and QoS traffic, while unlicensed spectrum is used for best-effort data and capacity requirements. This
approach provides a higher spectral efficiency, increased control, and streamlines management compared to
Wi-Fi offloading to mobile operators in order to overcome the challenge meeting the capacity requirements.
In these respects, LTE in unlicensed provides another example of the innovation unlocked by unlicensed
spectrum and big mobile operators are showing great interest as they do not need to pay for the spectrum the
most costly thing.
As a result of dominance of these two technologies, the unlicensed spectrum is becoming a battle ground. Wi-
Fi proponents want to preserve as much unlicensed spectrum as they can for Wi-Fi service, and on the other,
mobile operator want the ability to innovate to improve their customers’ experience through fast emerging
LTE-U. Now the question comes, can these two technologies co-exist? We will get to know the facts and
figures about this in the coming sections of this paper.
2.Un-Licensed Spectrum
The FCC makes spectrum available either on a licensed or unlicensed basis. Any innovator or consumer can
use unlicensed spectrum just by following technical rules - most notably, a limit on total transmission
power. Unlicensed spectrum is decentralized: there are no license payments or central control for users. This
low-regulation system lets innovators deliver millions of unlicensed offerings such as Wi-Fi hotspots; medical
equipment; industrial/logistics/inventory systems; wireless headsets etc.
2.4GHz, 3.5GHz and 5GHz are the Un-Licensed Bands. The 2.4GHz band is currently the most utilized band
shared by different wireless users such as cordless phone, ZigBee, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. Along with 2.4 GHz
band, 5GHz band is less congested.
The unlicensed 60GHz band has more abundant bandwidth, making it feasible for bandwidth-intensive
multimedia services. However, the severe oxygen absorption and atmospheric attenuation at 60 GHz band
imposes great challenges in the design of physical layer specifications and air interfaces. The frequency band
of most interest for 3GPP is the 3.5GHz and 5GHz band, which has a lot of unlicensed spectrum available
globally, much more than the 2.4GHz frequency band.
2.1 Motivation behind moving to Un-Licensed Spectrum
 Demands for mobile traffic have been increasing exponentially, and will continue to increase
dramatically for years to come.
 The supply of licensed frequency spectrum allocated to cellular operators is very limited; operators
have been feeling the crunch and heat of cost.
 An abundance of unlicensed spectrum, about 800 MHz bandwidth is free below 6 GHz.
2.2 5 GHz Un-Licensed Bands:
The 5GHz unlicensed spectrum is divided into mainly three different bands with different RF requirements.
These are the three Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure (U-NII) bands.
May 8th
, 2016 Page 2
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
These three bands are U-NII-1 (5150-5250MHz), U-NII-2 (5250-5725MHz) and U-NII-3 (5725-5850MHz).
5350-5470MHz segment in UNII-2 is restricted from usage by FCC. In addition, the 60MHz in 5590-5650MHz
are currently blocked by FCC for TDWR interference issues. U-NII-2 band has the additional requirement of
DFS (Dynamic Frequency Selection), it is recommended that U-NII-2 band can be considered for LTE-U in the
future. The following band numbering will be used for the U-NII bands.
U-NII-1: Band number 252 for U-NII-1 spectrum (5150-5250MHZ).
U-NII-2: Band numbers 253 and 254 are reserved for U-NII-2 spectrum (5250-5725MHZ) for future usage.
U-NII-3: Band number 255 for U-NII-3 spectrum (5725-5850MHZ)
Most Regulatory Areas offer a large amount of spectrum in the 5 GHz band .In Europe there is 455 MHz of
spectrum available, and 580MHz in the US. The bandwidth for each region is depicted in figure 1 and table 1.
The use of this unlicensed spectrum usually carries some regulatory requirements, such as being able to detect
if a radar system is using the band or being able to co-exist with other users of the band.
Figure 1: Spectrum Available in Different Regions
The transmission power allowed also varies depending on the part of the band, the lower portion is restricted to
indoor use, with a transmit power of 200 mW or less, while the upper part of the spectrum allows higher
transmission power, about 1 W. In some cases, like US 5.725 GHz to 5.85 GHz, there are no specific
requirements expect the transmission power. In some regulatory areas, like Europe and Japan, there is a specific
requirement for supporting Listen-Before-Talk or Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) at milliseconds scale is
required while in other regulatory areas, like US, Korea and China, there are no such requirements.
Unlicensed Bands U-NII-1 (Band
252)
5150-5250MHz
U-NII-2 (Band 253)
5250-5350MHz
U-NII-2 (Band 254)
5470-5725MHz
U-NII-3 (255) 5725-
5825MHz
EIRP Limits 17dBm/23dBm 23dBm/30dBm 23dBm/30dBm 23dBm/30dBm/
36dBm
India Indoor Indoor Not Available Indoor/Outdoor
United State /Canada Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor
(Only Canada not
in US)
Indoor/Outdoor
European Union Indoor Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Not Available
Korea Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor
Japan Indoor Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Not Available
China Indoor Indoor Not Available Indoor/Outdoor
Australia Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor
Inter-Modulation Interference
with Licensed Bands
800MHz,1.7GHz,2.
6GHz
800MHz,1.7GHz,2.
6GHz
1.8GHz,900MHz 1.9GHz,1.4GHz
Table 1:Un-Licensed bands and Their Specification
May 8h
, 2016 Page 3
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
3.Wi-Fi Technology Overview
Wi-Fi is a local area wireless computer networking technology that allows electronic devices to connect to the
network, mainly using the unlicensed 2.4 GHz UHF band (Ultra High Frequency) and 5 GHz SHF band (Super
High Frequency) from ISM frequencies. It is also known as WLAN. Wi-Fi Transmission at 5 GHz offers
higher throughput at shorter distances. At the 2.4 GHz there's an extended coverage area that can be
provided, because the signal propagates through solid objects better than the 5 GHz signals do.
Wi-Fi is supported by many applications and devices including video game consoles, home networks, PDAs,
mobile phones, major operating systems, and other types of consumer electronics. Any products that are tested
and approved as "Wi-Fi Certified" (a registered trademark) by the Wi-Fi Alliance are certified as
interoperable with each other, even if they are from different manufacturers. They use 802.11 networking
standards, which come in several flavors and characteristics. The date rates depicted in table are Physical layer
throughputs.
Standards Release Year Frequency of Operation Bandwidth Data Rate
802.11 1997 2.4 GHz 22 MHz 2 Mbps
802.11a 1999 3.7 GHz & 5 GHz 20 MHz 54 Mbps
802.11b 1999 2.4 GHz 22 MHz 11 Mbps
802.11g 2003 2.4 GHz 20 MHz 54 Mbps
802.11n 2009 2.4 GHz & 5GHz 20 MHz
40 MHz
72.2 Mbps
150 Mbps
802.11ac 2013 5 GHz 20 MHz
40 MHz
80 MHz
160 MHz
96.3 Mbps
200 Mbps
433 Mbps
867 Mbps
802.11 ad 2016 60 GHz 2.16 GHz Up to 7 Gbps
Table 2: Wi-Fi Standards
3.1 Wi-Fi Standards:
These standards works at frequencies of 2.4GHz or 5GHz and uses orthogonal frequency-division
multiplexing (OFDM), a more efficient coding technique that splits that radio signals into several sub-signals
before they reach a receiver.
IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi standards are shown in table 2. In the 802.11 protocol standards, one that came out was the
802.11, it came out in June of 1997. The frequency range was focused at 2.4 GHz, and the bandwidth was
22MHz. The stream data rate was 1 or 2 Mbps. 802.11a and b and these were released in 1999. 802.11a and
are capable of 5GHz and 3.7GHz with bandwidth of 20MHz and the data rate incensements are really high up
to 54 Mbps.
The 802.11b works on the 2.4 GHz, which is the same frequency band as the 802.11-1997 version and
bandwidth is the same, the 22 MHz, and the data rates in the original 1997 version it could only go up to 1 or 2
Mbps, but in 11b standards throughput can go up to 11 Mbps. The 802.11g was released in 2003 and it operates
at the 2.4 GHz range, uses the same 20 MHz bandwidth and the data rates would enable speed up to 54 Mbps.
More recently in 2009, the 802.11n version came out which uses the 2.4 and the 5 GHz range it could achieve
higher data rates reach up to 72.2 Mbps or you could go up to 150 Mbps based upon channel bandwidth
May 8h
, 2016 Page 4
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 5
802.11ac is one of the newest standards as of early 2013. It is yet to be widely adopted, and is still in draft form
at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), but devices that support it are already on the
market. Other 802.11 standards focus on specific applications of wireless networks, like wide area networks
(WANs) inside vehicles or technology that lets you move from one wireless network to another seamlessly.
Today each mobile, laptop, a tablet etc. device has inbuilt Wi-Fi facility which makes it widely used
technology in the world.
802.11 ac operates on 5GHz ISM band and having flexible bandwidth from 20MHz to 160MHz. As demand
for data is increasing day by day, so people are searching new technology standards that could meet the
consumer’s data demands in the unlicensed bands. IEEE is also introducing a new standard named as 802.11ad
to meet these expectations and support data rates up to 7 Gbps. The standard 802.11ad is expected to be
released in 2016. It will be using the 60GHz ISM band where there is a large bandwidth available.
Now, there's another technology called dual band, unlike ordinary Wi-Fi equipment that only supports to use
one single band at a time, dual band has the capability to transmit both on the 5 GHz and on the 2.4 GHz band
simultaneously. In other words at the 5 GHz band you could using 802.11a, 11n, 11ac, and also at the 2.4 GHz
band it could be using 11b, 11g, and 11n.
For an example, if the access point is capable of dual band services, then 2.4GHz band for email, or to surf the
web, and for the wider bandwidth. The more throughput can be provided through the 5GHz ISM band, which
can be used for streaming high definition, video and play online video games.
3.2 Wi-Fi and LTE-U Comparison:
Wi-Fi and LTE-U both operates on the un-licensed frequency and have following difference based on the
technology at physical layer listed in Table 3.
Wi-Fi LTE-U
PHY is half-duplex PHY is typically full-duplex
PHY is packet oriented – sync on each
packet
PHY operates continuously always on – sync
is interspersed
PHY provides a single channel with a
single modulation for each packet
PHY provides multiple channels
simultaneously with varying modulation
Access is by CSMA/CA , Probabilistic -
based on random back off e.g. Networks
function without frequency planning
All client access is scheduled based on
algorithms. They can do not coordinate
each other together and they have backhaul
property btw the cells
Stochastic interference Deterministic Interference.
The access points coordinate together They can do not coordinate each other
together and they have backhaul property
btw the cells.
Table 3: Wi-Fi and LTE-U Comparison
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 6
4.LTE-Unlicensed
LTE-U is a system of wireless communication designed to use unlicensed spectrum – which is open to
everyone, within certain limits – to ease the burden on big mobile carriers’ networks. LTE-U was first
introduced in Rel13 of the 3GPP standards; LTE-U is built upon the carrier aggregation capability of LTE-
Advanced.
Regular LTE is the system they use to transmit and receive information across their licensed spectrum – to
which only they have access. LTE-U uses the same technology to operate on the unlicensed spectrum, which
the carriers don’t have to spend billions of dollars to acquire with anchoring done by the licensed carrier
LTE-U is not intended to replace existing LTE connectivity, but supplement its speed and services in high-
congestion areas. A device would connect simultaneously on a typical LTE connection while acquiring
additional bandwidth through nearby LTE-U signal. Due to the regulations set by the FCC, LTE-U devices
must meet the same power limitations as the Wi-Fi devices that exist today, limiting their range to about 300
feet.
4.1 Motivation behind using LTE in Unlicensed spectrum:
The need to use LTE with unlicensed spectrum is the increase in traffic volumes and the number of mobile
broadband users globally. As mentioned previously, the 5 GHz spectrum offers a large amount of bandwidth.
With LTE technology, a number of the following could be achieved:
 Better spectrum efficiency than the current technologies in use with the 5 GHz band. Since LTE radio
technology is based on state of the art technology, it can achieve both high data rates and at the same
time high spectral efficiency, also in the unlicensed band. As well as higher capacity, LTE technology
offers better coverage, especially when combined with the use of licensed band operation.
 From the network management point of view, using the unlicensed band with LTE instead of an
alternative radio technology provides a solution that is well integrated to the operator’s existing radio
network setup, avoiding multiple solutions for network management, security or authentication. Having
only a single technology simplifies the overall network maintenance. The use of LAA is fully
transparent to the LTE core network, avoiding the need to upgrade any of the Evolved Packet Core
(EPC) elements.
4.2 Design Principle of LTE-U
Some fundamental principles and regulations are imposed to guarantee the harmonious coexistence between
LTE-U and other incumbent systems.
 The Transmission Power for LTE-U Cell
 Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Listen Before Talk (LBT) for fair sharing of Spectrum
 LTE-U in Carrier aggregation Mode
 Licensed-Assisted Access Operation/Anchored with Licensed carrier
 Enchantments in LTE air-interface
 Ensuring co-existence with existing Technologies
Transmission power for LTE-U Cell: The first issue in the use of unlicensed spectrum is the regulation of
transmission power. Such regulation is specified to manage the interference among unlicensed users. Indoor
wireless access points (APs) in business buildings, which often falls within the 5.15 − 5.35 GHz spectrum
band, the maximum transmission power is 23dBm in Europe or 24dBm in US.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 7
Outdoor, e.g. hotspot small cell, allows a maximum of 30 dBm which usually happens within the 5.47 − 5.85
GHz spectrum band. Besides the maximum transmission power, the 5.25 − 5.35 GHz and 5.47 − 5.725 GHz
spectrum has mandated (TPC) mechanisms. Transmit power control Mechanism (TPM) reduces the power of a
radio transmitter to the minimum necessary, in order to avoid interference to other users and/or extend the
battery life while maintaining the link transmission quality.
Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Listen before Talk (LBT) for fair sharing of Spectrum
Radar systems also operate on the 5 GHz unlicensed spectrum, thus the unlicensed devices may drop non-
negligible interference upon the normal radar. LTE-U devices periodically detect whether there are radar
signals and will switch the operating channel to one that is not interfering with the radar systems upon
detection. Mechanism named dynamic frequency selection (DFS) is adopted in 5.25−5.35 GHz and 5.47−5.725
GHz spectrum to avoid interference to the radar system.
Other mechanism which can be used “Listen before Talk” for fair sharing of spectrum avoiding interference to
other existing technologies, where any device wishing to use the band must listen to see if it is occupied or
not. If the band isn’t busy, the device can seize it and start transmitting. The band can only be held for a
maximum of 10 milliseconds after which it must be released and the LBT process repeated.
Clear channel assessment (CCA) mechanism is used to detect the energy level during sensing. If the energy
level is below a threshold, the channel is deemed to be clear and can be used for LTE-U transmission.
Figure 2: Listen Before Talk Mechanism for LTE-U
LTE-U in Carrier Aggregation Mode:
Carrier aggregation (CA) increases the overall bandwidth available to user equipment by enabling it to use
more than one channel, either in the same band, or within another band. Carrier Aggression is done based on
Carrier Components (CCs) and at max 5 CC can be combined and each CC can be of maximum bandwidth as
20MHz. In Carrier Aggression out of 5 CCs one CC is known as Primary Carrier while other 4 CCs are known
Secondary Carriers. It can be applied to both Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) and Time Division Duplex
(TDD) variants of LTE and it allows the combination of different carrier bandwidths in number of ways as
listed below.
 Intra band Contiguous CA
 Intra band Non Contiguous CA
 Intra band Non Contiguous CA
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 8
Intra band CA, where the carriers are contiguous and lie within the same frequency band. In this case it is
feasible for a mobile device to handle the signals using a single transceiver, providing it is able to operate
efficiently over the aggregate bandwidth. For example CC1- 2305-2310MHz, CC2- 2330-2350MHz. In this
case the duplex mode shall be same either FDD or TDD for both carrier components as both belong same band.
It can be seen in figure 3
Figure 3: Intraband Contiguous CA Figure 4: Intraband Non Contiguous CA Figures 5:Interband Non Contiguous CA
Intra-band non-contiguous carrier aggregation, in which the carriers lie within the same frequency band, but
they are not adjacent. In this case it is necessary for the mobile device to use a separate transceiver for each
carrier. For example CC1-2305-2310MHz, CC2- 2375-2395MHz.In this case also duplex mode shall be same
either FDD or TDD for both carrier components as both belong same band. Figure 4 depict the same.
Inter-band non-contiguous carrier aggregation, In this case the carriers components (CC) fall in different parts
of the radio spectrum, like CC1 700MHz and CC2 2300MHz. In this case also it is necessary for the mobile
device to use a separate transceiver for each carrier. Here it also possible that one CC1 may be FDD while
other may be TDD in this particular case mobile device need to support both duplex modes. Figure 5 shows
Inter-band non-contiguous CA.
LTE- U also operates in Carrier aggression mode, where primary carrier is always from the licensed band and
secondary carrier component can be from unlicensed band. LTE-U form has provided some band combination
where LTE-U can be used as carrier aggression mode. Band 2 (1900 PCS) Band 4 (2100 AWS-1) and Band 13
(700 c) has been chosen from the licensed band as primary carrier. These band are chosen such that the inter
modulation interface should not impact the licensed carrier.
There secondary carrier components are chosen from U-NII 1 and U-NII 3 Band. LTE-U form has defined
some band combination as shown in Table 3. This table specifies two flavors of carrier aggression.
 Inter-band Carrier Aggression
 Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band contiguous Carrier Aggression
Inter-band Carrier Aggression where primary carrier component and secondary components are from different
band e.g. B2+ B252, B2 + B255.
Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band contiguous carrier aggression where secondary carrier components are from
the same band e.g. B2+B252+B252 and B13+B255+ B255. From this combination we can see that two
secondary carrier components are from same un-licensed band.
Band 2 and Band 4 have flexibility to choose primary carrier bandwidth 5,10,15,20 MHz while Band 13 has
only 10 MHz option available. The unlicensed band is always utilized to maximum bandwidth in LTE which is
20 MHz. From the table if use max bandwidth from licensed (20) and unlicensed band (20+20) we can achieve
60 MHz bandwidth which can provide a downlink throughput 150x3= 450 Mbps in 2x2 and 300x3 =900 Mbps
roughly.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 9
Band
Combination
Licensed
Band
Un-Licensed
Band
BW (MHz) CA configuration
B13+B252+B252 B13 U-NII-1 10+20+20 Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band
contiguous DL CA w/o UL CAB13+B255+B255 B13 U-NII-3 10+20+20
B13+B252 B13 U-NII-1 10+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA
B13+B255 B13 U-NII-3 10+20
B2+B252+B252 B2 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 Inter-band + unlicensed intra-band
contiguous DL CA without UL CAB2+B255+B255 B2 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20+20
B2+B252 B2 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA
B2+B255 B2 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20
B4+B252+B252 B4 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 Inter-band + unlicensed intra-band
contiguous DL CA without UL CAB4+B255+B255 B4 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20+20
B4+B252 B4 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA
B4+B255 B4 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20
Table 4: LTE-U Carrier Aggression Band Combinations
Licensed-Assisted Access Operation/Anchored with Licensed carrier
LTE-U is designed to work in carrier aggregation mode as said and operates as secondary cell to fulfill the
capacity requirements; secondary cell is anchored by primary licensed carrier owned by operator. The UE can
only gain access to the SCells (on unlicensed bands) through the PCell(on licensed band) ,and all UE in the cell
may not get access to SCell, PCells shall select those UE based on algorithms considering radio condition, QoS
, Cell Load etc and reconfigure the UE to get access SCell. Aggregation of a primary cell, operating in licensed
spectrum to deliver control information and guaranteed Quality of Service, with a secondary cell, operating in
unlicensed spectrum to opportunistically boost data rate.
Figures 6: LTE Licensed Assisted Access Figures 7: LTE-U Carrier Aggression
The secondary cell operating in unlicensed spectrum can be configured either as downlink-only cell or contain
both uplink and downlink based on the capacity requirements. Unlicensed carriers can be integrated and
therefore take advantage of the existing LTE system deployed in licensed carriers for efficient usage as well as
system co-existence purposes. The anchor carrier can be from any bandwidth supported by LTE i.e.
1.4,3,5,10,15 or 20 MHz and un-licensed carrier shall be always 20 MHz of bandwidth.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 10
Enchantments in LTE air-interface
The fundamental and design of LTE should remain with only necessary changes while the advanced
numerology features of LTE, e.g., eNodeB-based resource allocation and scheduling, link adaptation, control
channel robustness to interference, uplink power control, are used to ensure point-to-point and system
performance, in terms of both end-to-end QoS and physical layer transmission quality.
To avoid co-existence issues and to meet requirements by regulations, it makes necessity for some
modifications to the existing LTE air interface, for the compliance to listen-before-talk (LBT) requirements and
for fair and efficient co-existence. Following potential medications shall be expected in the LTE air interface to
support the above mentioned requirements.
1. Enhancing CA mechanism to facilitate opportunistic use
As required by LBT, the transmission of both traffic data and the common channels of LTE-U should
be based on the knowledge of channel availability by instantaneous channel sensing. As it is known in
integrated LTE network, unlicensed carriers should be operated as secondary carriers (SCell-U)
associated to a licensed LTE primary carrier through carrier aggregation (CA). The activation and
deactivation of SCells defined in CA can already enable the opportunistic use of unlicensed spectrum,
which is still based on the always-on common channel transmission, continuous channel measurement
and corresponding reports in LTE Rel-11 and earlier releases. Such a restriction will be solved to some
extent by the standardization of small cell on/off in LTE Rel-12 where quick on-off switching of a cell
will be supported and during cell off period UE would quit legacy channel measurement. Of course,
further enhancements to ensure more flexibility in terms of opportunistic synchronization /measurement
scheduling of SCell shall be needed.
2. Adaptive LTE frame structure for LBT support
Two types of LBT schemes are defined by regulation known as Frame Based Equipment (FBE) and
Load Based Equipment (LBE).The differences between FBE and LBE include whether a strict frame
structure should be followed, interference avoidance mechanism, and channel occupancy time. For both
schemes, some modifications are needed to ensure the consistency between the strict frame structure
defined in existing licensed LTE layer and the opportunistic occupancy of unlicensed band, and at the
same time allow for flexible channel sensing and occupancy to offer a potentially good channel
contention capability.
3. UL transmission Support
LBT basically represents a mechanism of transmitter sensing by which each device decides its
transmission opportunities based on self-detection of channel availability. However, in LTE the UL
transmission grant and channel availability sensing are decided by the eNodeB and UE respectively.
Thus it could be even more difficult to support UL transmission with respect to the case that an eNodeB
may schedule a UE UL grant but this UE fails to get access the channel in scheduled time due to
contention. These problems should be addressed to ensure UL transmission can be supported without
change of basic scheduling mechanism in LTE.
4. Interference coordination for complex interference scenarios in unlicensed spectrum
Sensing-based channel occupancy provides a preliminary mechanism to achieve interference
coordination between co-existing operator LTE-U cells can allow efficient use of unlicensed spectrum
even in high load scenarios, in which the simple channel sensing and avoidance may not work well, so
it requires more complex algorithms to handle these scenarios.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 11
To ensure co-existence within LTE-U and Other Access Networks
Due to the non-exclusive use of unlicensed spectrum, co-existence issues shall be addressed from the beginning
of the LTE-U design in order for co-existence between LTE-U deployments. To ensure this LTE -U protocol
stack shall consider different operators LTE-U as well as different Access Networks e.g. LTE-U and Wi-Fi
systems co-existence. Some insight on the co-existence issues by LTE-U in dense deployments are listed
below.
 Coexistence between Inter-operator LTE-U Deployment
 Coexistence between Different Access Networks
Coexistence between Inter-operator LTE-U Deployment
As Un-Licensed spectrum is non-exclusive and no one is the owner of it, so any operator can use. If multiple
operators deploy LTE-U in the same unlicensed band, the lack of joint network planning may result in
geographical overlapping or even closely-located LTE-U cells and hence result in severe cross-site/operator
interference and performance degradation. It is obvious that compared with well-planned licensed LTE
deployment, user experience degrades due to the closely-located inter-operator interference.
Two scheme shall be adopted to mitigate such interference and achieve good sharing of unlicensed spectrum by
multiple operators:
Scheme #1: An agreement can be reached between multiple operators for orthogonal/exclusive use of the
unlicensed spectrum within a given region. The agreement can totally avoid inter-operator interference, with
the cost of potentially inefficient use of spectrum due to the lack of dynamic spectrum sharing. In some
countries, it could be difficult to reach such an agreement, due to the competition between operators as usually.
Even considering possibility of good cooperation between operators, such an agreement exclusive use of
unlicensed spectrum by a group of operator may still be problematic e.g. if there are six operator servicing
country and only four blocks of un-licensed are available then any of the two operator spectrum will collide.
This scheme is depicted in figure 9
Figure 8: Multi-Operator Figure 9:Co-Operative Spectrum Figure 10: Dynamic Spectrum
LTE-U Deployment Sharing among Operator Sharing among Operator
Scheme #2: Relatively dynamic schemes for shared use of unlicensed radio resources. The use of unlicensed
spectrum depends on the instantaneous/semi-static traffic load of LTE-U. Such a flexible and efficient
occupancy/release of the unlicensed carriers requires some dynamic coordination and information exchange
between operators. Despite the lack of standard backhaul between operators, monitoring of LTE transmission
over the air interface could provide potentially enough cooperation information between LTE Nodes from
different operators. This technique requires intelligence algorithms to decodes radio information and apply for
the spectrum selection. This scheme is shown in figure 10.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 12
Coexistence between Different Access Networks
Bluetooth, ZigBee and Wi-Fi technology uses un-licensed band, Bluetooth and ZigBee are mostly used in
indoor and less power applications while Wi-Fi is used for indoor& Outdoor applications. Wi-Fi is widely
deployed and popular access technology in unlicensed spectrum and it can co-exist with LTE-U. Due to the
fundamental differences in the PHY/MAC design between LTE and Wi-Fi, a direct implementation of LTE
may impact the opportunistic channel occupancy of co-channel Wi-Fi especially in some high-load cases where
the complete channel bandwidth is occupied.
Figure 11: LTE-U and Wi-Fi Coexistence
One shall consider following cases to validate the Co-existence and interference matrix:
 Case 1: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired Wi-Fi AP.
 Case 2: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired LTE-U small cell operating in DL only mode.
 Case 3: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired LTE-U small cell operating in TDD mode, where LTE UL
sub-frames are fake transmission to provide the access of paired Wi-Fi AP.
 Case 4: A LTE-U small cell is interfered by a LTE-U paired cell both cell of them are operating DL
only mode.
From the target Access Point perspective (case 1), when there is increase of traffic load, the competition for
resources from paired interfering AP would significantly deteriorate the performance of Wi-Fi. LTE small cell
performs much more robust even with high-load interfering Access Point nearby (case 2). This robustness
contribution result of link adaptation and HARQ retransmission in LTE, and other strong MAC and PHY
features of LTE. On the other hand, as the paired interfering AP, LTE-U small cell in TDD mode with fake UL
sub frames in (case 3) is seen as a similar or more friendly neighbor to Wi-Fi (compared to case 1) even
without assistance of additional transmission restriction (e.g. LBT), which means less performance degradation
of Wi-Fi is observed if the interfering AP is LTE-U rather Wi-Fi Access Point, especially in low-load cases.
In short, for operators to exploit unlicensed spectrum where is already crowded with unlicensed deployment,
LTE is a better choice to offer good performance in terms of robust self-protection, as well as less impact on
the existing competing systems. Even for less-used spectrum, LTE deployment can provide future-assured
performance with respect to the possibly subsequent deployment in the vicinity. Of course, despite the
potentially less impact of LTE to neighboring Wi-Fi, it is still preferred to adopt the co-existence mechanisms,
including TPC/DFS/LBT for LTE-U to meet the requirements imposed by regional regulations, and to achieve
more efficient co-existence between different systems.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 13
5.LTE-U Deployment use case
Due to low power transmission restriction imposed by regulations in the unlicensed spectrum, the coverage will
be relatively small. Moreover, as unlicensed spectrum is usually in higher-frequency bands compared to
licensed ones, coverage holes in the unlicensed band shall be expected in licensed and unlicensed when
deploying co-located cell. In addition, the use of unlicensed spectrum should follow regulatory restriction(s) to
reduce negative impact on nearby co-existing systems. This may result in noncontiguous/opportunistic use of
unlicensed spectrum and render the transmission of important control and common channels of LTE system in
unlicensed carriers as un-reliable. Therefore, the existing LTE system in the licensed spectrum with good
coverage jointly operating with an unlicensed carrier is the key enabler for efficient use of unlicensed spectrum.
LTE –U cell can be deployed in two ways:
 LTE & LTE-U Co-Located Deployment
 LTE & LTE-U Non-Co-Located Deployment
Operator-deployed small cells with co-located unlicensed and licensed carriers are the preferred due to low
extra cost for new sites or backhaul is shown in figure 12. In addition, inter-site aggregation between licensed
carriers and unlicensed carriers is also possible in case of non-co-located cell deployment, which requires high
speed backhaul between Macro cell and small cell, e.g. in case of optical fiber between Macro eNodeB and
remote radio head (RRH) shown in Figure 13.
Figure 12: LTE & LTE-U Co-Located Deployment Figure 13: LTE & LTE-U Non-Co-Located Deployment
As mentioned the design principle of LTE-U is the integration between unlicensed and licensed carriers both
operating LTE is the key operating mechanism. The unlicensed carriers are operated as Secondary Carriers
associated to and controlled by the existing licensed LTE Primary Carriers, thus the joint operation and flexible
offload between licensed and unlicensed carriers can be easily achieved.
Through carrier aggregation, unlicensed carriers can be well integrated within the operator’s network while
preserving the key benefits of LTE technology. For example, UE mobility is still under the control of the
licensed LTE network, while the joint scheduling between LTE and LTE-U carriers is done in the centralized
nodes for smooth load shifting and channel adaptation. Security and service QoS can also be ensured due to the
assistance of the licensed LTE network. Most important advantage of the economy of scale can be achieved
due to the reuse of basic LTE physical-layer design and numerology so that additional development and
implementation cost may be insignificant.
Figure 14: LTE & LTE-U Deployment Benefits
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 14
5.1 Advantage of LTE deployments in Un-Licensed Spectrum
Compared to the currently used technologies in the unlicensed spectrum, LTE-U can potentially provide many
benefits in terms of operator OPEX/CAPEX reduction as well as better end user experience.
 Reuse of existing infra reduce additional CAPEX/OPEX cost.
 Good end user experience and more operator revenue.
 LTE Technology, ensures highly efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compare to Wi-Fi
Reuse of existing infra reduce additional CAPEX/OPEX cost for operator
The CAPEX of LTE-U deployment shall be reduced for operators because free unlicensed spectrum and all the
existing backhaul, core network and even sites deployed for licensed LTE carriers can be reused for the
operation of unlicensed spectrum with software updates only in eNodeBs as shown in Figure 15. In addition,
LTE-U would provide more efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compared to other unlicensed technologies
which may in turn lower the efforts of operators in deploying cells to offer a given amount of traffic offload by
unlicensed spectrum.
From an operational view a common RAN across the whole network allows unified operation and management
between licensed and unlicensed spectrum, including OAM configuration, authorization, charging and RRM
management can be used as illustrated as in Figure 16. Also joint scheduling and flexible traffic offload
between both layers can be easily achieved, since the secondary component cells (LTE-U cell) could be
activated/deactivated by Primary cell (LTE cell) the network can select licensed or unlicensed layers for traffic
offload in a dynamic and OPEX-efficient way.
Figure 15: LTE, LTE-U and Wi-Fi Network Architecture Figure 16: LTE RAN Sharing for LTE-U
Good end user experience and more operator revenue
In LTE-U system, enable or disable of the unlicensed secondary carriers can be seamlessly controlled by the
network without need of manual configuration by the user. In this sense, LTE-U can enable traffic volume to
be carried on an unlicensed or licensed carrier in a transparent way from the user perspective as shown in
Figure 17. On the other hand, the existence of licensed Primary cell ensures the basic service continuity and
QoS guarantee, especially for low-latency traffic e.g. continuity of voice traffic can be guaranteed even in case
of the existence of neighboring interference in unlicensed layer.
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 15
Figure 17: Operator and user experience
From an end user point of view, efficient and convenient use of unlicensed spectrum shall eventually lead to
better service experience. With both LTE-U and Wi-Fi capabilities on the same unlicensed carrier, network can
provide more flexibility for UEs to be served by appropriate RAT based on the available access point, charging
mode, service quality, etc. As a result, the user experience improvement and transparent use of unlicensed
spectrum could provide operators more flexibility on charging strategy to get larger revenue from exploiting
unlicensed spectrum. It would in turn encourage operators to exploit unlicensed spectrum.
LTE Technology, ensures highly efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compare to Wi-Fi
The first phase LTE networks (Release 8) provide up to 150 Mbps data rate, while the latest LTE-Advanced
supports up to 300 Mbps downlink peak data rate. Although LTE capabilities are evolving continuously and
will ultimately enable higher data rates of up to 1 Gbps or even more, the next steps after 300 Mbps are support
of 450 Mbps and 600 Mbps downlink peak rates. These rates will be achieved when devices supporting more
than two aggregated LTE downlink carriers become available.
The LTE performance study found to be roughly twice the data rate of a comparable Wi-Fi network
(802.11ac).The results indicate the extra performance achievable with a single 20 MHz carrier on unlicensed
spectrum The relative capacity of the LTE network would be even higher when the offered load and number of
users is further increased, as Wi-Fi capacity will not increase further or will even go down, while the LTE
network can still reach a higher throughput.
If we consider a single access node with a large amount of traffic (a hot spot), the LTE design allows the
system to stay robust while serving a very large number of users, while the Wi-Fi access capacity would start to
drop sharply with increased traffic. The advanced features for handling the load in LTE can also be applied
when operating in the unlicensed band, ensuring high capacity when faced with a large number of users.
Specifically, better link budget, coverage and higher system throughput can be achieved by the LTE air
interface compared to Wi-Fi because better Physical and MAC layer features even in isolated deployment
scenarios, as illustrated by Figure 18, while in dense deployment LTE is expected to achieve even larger
performance advantages over Wi-Fi by its inherent interference mitigation mechanisms.
This allows fewer nodes for a given area to reach the same capacity as a Wi-Fi network. This enables a trade-
off in deployment between the total network capacity and the number of LTE nodes being deployed for the
unlicensed band. So using LTE technology in unlicensed help better utilization with higher spectral efficiency
in both co-existed and standalone deployments, a sample test result published by an OEM is shown in figure 19
when Wi-Fi node are replaced with LTE-U cells.
Figure 18: LTE-U and Wi-Fi Isolated Deployment Figure 19: Improvement in Average Throughput
With LTE-U Node Network
6.LTE-U Eco System and Standardization
The ecosystem for unlicensed wireless is vast. It involves regulatory authority operators, equipment vendors,
consumer products and millions of users. Equipment technology in unlicensed bands is varied: Wi-Fi,
Bluetooth, ZigBee .These technologies and devices have sources .Their basic principle is" Live and let Live.
“If they see interference, they Back off, if they see someone else using the resources, they wait for their turn.
With CSAT 9Carrier-Sensing Adaptive Transmission) scheduling features, LTE-U shall ensure that resources
are shared fairly. This way, Wi-Fi access points in the area shall not be starved just because LTE-U is also
operating in the same area. LTE-U has the ability to intelligently switch off transmission so that resources are
released for Wi-Fi. We can say the ecosystem of LTE technology is mature enough.
3GPP Release 13 is to include standardization for LTE operation in unlicensed band once LAA is completed.
3GPP started the work with a workshop on LTE unlicensed in June 2014, with the formal study starting in
September 2014. The ongoing study is scheduled to be completed in June 2015, as shown in Figure 19 and
shall cover the necessary mechanisms for co-existence. Once complete, the work item phase will finalize the
detailed specification, including the necessary band combinations to enable LTE operation with 5 GHz band
aggregated with another licensed frequency band.
The assumption with 3GPP work is that LTE is not operated as a standalone system on the unlicensed band but
will be used in conjunction with a Primary Cell in the licensed band. The specification work for Release 13
LTE operation in unlicensed spectrum is expected to be ready by mid-2016. Once the basis is specified, 3GPP
will define the necessary bands and band combinations to be used with the 5 GHz band, which can be done as
Release independent on top of Release 13.
Figure 19: LTE-U Standardization, 3GPP Timelines
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 16
7. Summary and Last Words
LTE “long term evolution” is proving its name and evolving continuously in Release 13 and one of the
evolution is the deployment of LTE in the 5 GHz unlicensed band. The License Assisted Access (LAA) with
LTE will allow co-existence with Wi-Fi without any specific coordination and will meet all the regulatory
requirements for 5 GHz unlicensed band operation. This is an important feature of LAA which allows its
deployment in shopping malls and corporate offices, same as Wi-Fi networks.
The interference effect on a Wi-Fi network from a LTE-U network can be an issue for LTE-U and Wi-Fi co-
existence. Now the question may come that, should we worried as a customer, No, not at all. This problem
between Wi-Fi and LTE-U is a nice problem to have. The conflict reflects the fundamental dynamism of the
wireless technologies. Technologies rise and fall based on their usefulness and subsequent adoption. We have
witnessed many wireless technologies: AMPS, 2G, GSM, HSPA+, LTE, WiMAX, Bluetooth, ZigBee, Active
RFID (433MHz, 900MHz, etc.). Each with their set of advantages and success rate. The whole point of
competition is that the organizations are trying to find out the best, sometimes it is a win and sometimes a loss.
Bring it on and we as consumers can decide what works best for us.
Successful co-existence in unlicensed bands will take work and determination. A couple of decades ago,
skeptics said CDMA was too complex to work on a wide scale. But CDMA persevered, becoming the
backbone of global 3G systems. Similarly, over time, technologists will solve spectrum sharing challenges,
including threading the needle for harmonious LTE and Wi-Fi co-existence.
However, LTE-U network can reach higher capacity than a Wi-Fi network. Especially in an environment where
the traffic density is high, LTE-U (LAA) can be option to utilize the unused band of the 5 GHz spectrum. With
the ability of LTE-U to control the type of deployment, such as in a corporate office, it is very easy to find fully
empty channels from the 5 GHz band will be relatively easy, allowing LTE to reach its full performance.
LTE for unlicensed band rely on the existing LTE core network and uses the existing LTE security and
authentication architecture, means no change in the core network elements is required. The use of LTE
unlicensed together with the licensed band operation brings a major capacity boost from the unlicensed band
while still ensuring end user quality of service, regardless of the interference situation in the unlicensed band
and cost effective solution.
The major player of Wireless industry have quoted following for LTE-U used in un-licensed spectrum. There is
broad consensus that licensed spectrum is superior; LTE-U does not reduce or dilute the need for licensed
spectrum.
FCC Chairman: “Folks, you’ve got to come together and resolve this in a broad-based standard”
Nokia Networks: “Simple methods enable fair band sharing between Wi-Fi & LTE-U. Still, better to use
separate channels”.
Israeli Association of Electronics & Software Industries (IAESI): “channel sharing based on energy
detection is bad for both 802.11 and LTE-U”.
NTT Docomo: “Coexistence with Wi-Fi needs to be carefully studied”.
Samsung Electronics: “UE will have to implement two technologies for the same spectrum; decrease the value
of current licensed spectrum? QoS? “
Broadcom: “Regional LTE-U technology bad for everybody; LTE-U must address the global market; 5 GHz
band is not green field spectrum regulatory aspects to be studied”
AT&T: “LTE-U should not negatively impact existing services; peaceful coexistence with Wi-Fi is required;
comprehensive protection assessment a must; globally inclusive; LTE-U should not have adverse impact on
future licensed spectrum allocation.”
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
May 8th
, 2016 Page 17
l
May 8th
, 2016 Page 18
May 8h
, 2016 Page 17
8. References
 3GPP TSG RAN Workshop on LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum RWS‐140020 Sophia Antipolis, France,
June 13, 2013.
 Comments of Google Inc. on LTE and Wi-Fi in Unlicensed Spectrum.
 LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum “Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Northwestern University.
 LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum: European Regulation and Co-existence Considerations.
 LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum Wikipedia.
 NTT DOCOMO’s view on LTE unlicensed Presentation.
 Wi-Fi LTE Co-existence in Unlicensed band Presentation by FLORIDA International University.
Prepared By:
LTE-U & Wi-Fi
Mehdi Sadeghian
He holds M.Sc.
Degree from the dept.
of Comp. Network in
Islamic Azad
University, 2014.
His research areas
include Wireless
Network, telecomm &
etc.
Mohit Luthra
He holds Bachelor
Degree in engineering
from MDU
University, 2010.
His area of interest
includes RF Hardware
design & dev, testing
etc.
Rahul Atri
He holds Bachelor
Degree in Engg. from
PTU University,
2010.
His area of interest
including testing and
designing the next
generations’ network
including 4G, 5G,
Wi-Fi etc.
Rahul Sharma
He holds Bachelor
Degree in Engg. from
IP University Delhi,
2011 & Pursuing
Master from USA.
His area of interest
including design the
NGN including 4G,
5G Physical Layer.
Preet Rekhi
He holds Bachelor
Degree in Engg. from
IP University Delhi,
2010.
His area of interest
including design the
NGN including 4G,
5G, IOT & etc.
Sukhvinder Malik
He holds Bachelor
Degree in engineering
from MDU
University, 2010.
His area of interest
including testing of
LTE and LTE-A
Access Nodes in Lab
and Field etc.
Disclaimer:
Authors state that this whitepaper has been compiled meticulously and to the best of their knowledge as of the date of publication. The
information contained herein the white paper is for information purposes only and is intended only to transfer knowledge about the respective
topic and not to earn any kind of profit.
Every effort has been made to ensure the information in this paper is accurate. Authors does not accept any responsibility or liability whatsoever
for any error of fact, omission,

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

The second phase of lte advanced lte-b 30-fold capacity boosting to lte
The second phase of lte advanced lte-b  30-fold capacity boosting to lteThe second phase of lte advanced lte-b  30-fold capacity boosting to lte
The second phase of lte advanced lte-b 30-fold capacity boosting to ltessk
 
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performance
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performanceStudying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performance
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performanceAmr ABDELFATTAH
 
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7Razif Touge
 
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed SpectrumTiE Bangalore
 
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1Tronic Siregar
 
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed Spectrum
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed SpectrumCoexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed Spectrum
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed SpectrumOsama Askoura
 
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608Fanny Mlinarsky
 
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015Ericsson
 
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart gridCPqD
 
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTE
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTETechnical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTE
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTESeth Buchwalter
 

Viewers also liked (12)

The second phase of lte advanced lte-b 30-fold capacity boosting to lte
The second phase of lte advanced lte-b  30-fold capacity boosting to lteThe second phase of lte advanced lte-b  30-fold capacity boosting to lte
The second phase of lte advanced lte-b 30-fold capacity boosting to lte
 
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performance
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performanceStudying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performance
Studying the Impact of LTE-U on Wi-Fi Downlink performance
 
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7
Lte u forum-lte-u_technical_report_v1.7
 
Iotlt lte m mec.ppt
Iotlt lte m mec.pptIotlt lte m mec.ppt
Iotlt lte m mec.ppt
 
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum
3GPP/GSMA technologies for LPWAN in the Licensed Spectrum
 
LTE-U
LTE-ULTE-U
LTE-U
 
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1
Coverage Analysis of LTE-M Category-M1
 
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed Spectrum
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed SpectrumCoexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed Spectrum
Coexistence of LTE-U with WiFi 802.11n at 5GHz Unlicensed Spectrum
 
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608
Fanny Mlinarsky Octo Scope White Space Broadband10608
 
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015
Ericsson License Assisted Access (LAA) January 2015
 
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid
3 lte applications for m2 m and smart grid
 
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTE
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTETechnical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTE
Technical keynote MulteFire and how it builds on LTE
 

More from Sukhvinder Singh Malik

5G New Radio Technology Throughput Calculation
5G New Radio Technology  Throughput Calculation5G New Radio Technology  Throughput Calculation
5G New Radio Technology Throughput CalculationSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata SenSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDO
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDOWANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDO
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDOSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completion
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completionOpen stack iaas overview certificate of completion
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completionSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
Cloud ran overview certificate of completion
Cloud ran overview certificate of completionCloud ran overview certificate of completion
Cloud ran overview certificate of completionSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz Frequency
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz FrequencyRadio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz Frequency
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz FrequencySukhvinder Singh Malik
 
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach Sukhvinder Singh Malik
 
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...Sukhvinder Singh Malik
 
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the air
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the airFundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the air
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the airSukhvinder Singh Malik
 
Throughput Calculation for LTE TDD and FDD System
Throughput Calculation for  LTE TDD and FDD SystemThroughput Calculation for  LTE TDD and FDD System
Throughput Calculation for LTE TDD and FDD SystemSukhvinder Singh Malik
 

More from Sukhvinder Singh Malik (17)

5G New Radio Technology Throughput Calculation
5G New Radio Technology  Throughput Calculation5G New Radio Technology  Throughput Calculation
5G New Radio Technology Throughput Calculation
 
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen
5G Transport Network Requirement for Indian Telecom By Subrata Sen
 
SON Enabled Smarted Poles
SON Enabled Smarted PolesSON Enabled Smarted Poles
SON Enabled Smarted Poles
 
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDO
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDOWANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDO
WANI Network Architecture Proposal for TRAI PDO
 
Unpacking the Internet of Things
Unpacking the Internet of Things Unpacking the Internet of Things
Unpacking the Internet of Things
 
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completion
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completionOpen stack iaas overview certificate of completion
Open stack iaas overview certificate of completion
 
Cloud ran overview certificate of completion
Cloud ran overview certificate of completionCloud ran overview certificate of completion
Cloud ran overview certificate of completion
 
Cellular Narrow Band IoT- using LTE
Cellular Narrow Band IoT- using LTE Cellular Narrow Band IoT- using LTE
Cellular Narrow Band IoT- using LTE
 
HetNet
HetNet HetNet
HetNet
 
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz Frequency
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz FrequencyRadio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz Frequency
Radio Link Analysis for 4G TD- LTE Technology at 2.3 GHz Frequency
 
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach
LTE Schedulers – A Definitive Approach
 
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...
COMPARISON OF BER AND NUMBER OF ERRORS WITH DIFFERENT MODULATION TECHNIQUES I...
 
Security In LTE Access Network
Security In LTE Access NetworkSecurity In LTE Access Network
Security In LTE Access Network
 
Radio Conformance Test
Radio Conformance TestRadio Conformance Test
Radio Conformance Test
 
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the air
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the airFundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the air
Fundamentals of cellular antenna creating magic in the air
 
Throughput Calculation for LTE TDD and FDD System
Throughput Calculation for  LTE TDD and FDD SystemThroughput Calculation for  LTE TDD and FDD System
Throughput Calculation for LTE TDD and FDD System
 
Long Term Evolution
Long Term EvolutionLong Term Evolution
Long Term Evolution
 

Recently uploaded

Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and Insights
Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and InsightsPotential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and Insights
Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and InsightsRavi Sanghani
 
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a reality
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a realityDecarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a reality
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a realityIES VE
 
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...amber724300
 
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directions
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directionsTime Series Foundation Models - current state and future directions
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directionsNathaniel Shimoni
 
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdf
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdfSo einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdf
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdfpanagenda
 
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...itnewsafrica
 
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPathCommunity
 
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Stronger
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better StrongerModern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Stronger
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Strongerpanagenda
 
Digital Tools & AI in Career Development
Digital Tools & AI in Career DevelopmentDigital Tools & AI in Career Development
Digital Tools & AI in Career DevelopmentMahmoud Rabie
 
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDF
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDFAll These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDF
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDFMichael Gough
 
A Glance At The Java Performance Toolbox
A Glance At The Java Performance ToolboxA Glance At The Java Performance Toolbox
A Glance At The Java Performance ToolboxAna-Maria Mihalceanu
 
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...Nikki Chapple
 
2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch TuesdayIvanti
 
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...itnewsafrica
 
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentEmixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentPim van der Noll
 
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24Mark Goldstein
 
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sectoritnewsafrica
 
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...Nikki Chapple
 
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...BookNet Canada
 
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyes
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyesAssure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyes
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyesThousandEyes
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and Insights
Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and InsightsPotential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and Insights
Potential of AI (Generative AI) in Business: Learnings and Insights
 
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a reality
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a realityDecarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a reality
Decarbonising Buildings: Making a net-zero built environment a reality
 
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...
JET Technology Labs White Paper for Virtualized Security and Encryption Techn...
 
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directions
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directionsTime Series Foundation Models - current state and future directions
Time Series Foundation Models - current state and future directions
 
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdf
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdfSo einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdf
So einfach geht modernes Roaming fuer Notes und Nomad.pdf
 
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...
Irene Moetsana-Moeng: Stakeholders in Cybersecurity: Collaborative Defence fo...
 
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
 
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Stronger
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better StrongerModern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Stronger
Modern Roaming for Notes and Nomad – Cheaper Faster Better Stronger
 
Digital Tools & AI in Career Development
Digital Tools & AI in Career DevelopmentDigital Tools & AI in Career Development
Digital Tools & AI in Career Development
 
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDF
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDFAll These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDF
All These Sophisticated Attacks, Can We Really Detect Them - PDF
 
A Glance At The Java Performance Toolbox
A Glance At The Java Performance ToolboxA Glance At The Java Performance Toolbox
A Glance At The Java Performance Toolbox
 
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part one: Ado...
 
2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday
 
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...
Zeshan Sattar- Assessing the skill requirements and industry expectations for...
 
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentEmixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
 
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24
Arizona Broadband Policy Past, Present, and Future Presentation 3/25/24
 
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector
4. Cobus Valentine- Cybersecurity Threats and Solutions for the Public Sector
 
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...
Microsoft 365 Copilot: How to boost your productivity with AI – Part two: Dat...
 
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC SalesData and LibraryData -...
 
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyes
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyesAssure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyes
Assure Ecommerce and Retail Operations Uptime with ThousandEyes
 

LTE and Wi-Fi in Unlicesned Spectrum

  • 1. Utilizing Un-Licensed Spectrum with Power of Technologies – LTE-U & Wi-Fi 1.Introduction Access to unlicensed spectrum has been the key to the development and adoption of innovative wireless technologies like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and ZigBee for providing network connectivity in a small area with limited data rates. Now days, data requirement of per user is exponentially and thus technology has upgrade it’s to a new level where one can see the throughput in order of 1000s of Mbps. Two global wireless technologies named LTE and Wi-Fi are looking to play a great role to meet up these requirements. Wi-Fi technology using unlicensed spectrum and very mature due to its ecosystem. On the other hand LTE technology is the leading mobile wireless technology and broadly deployed in licensed bands and it is evolving to operate in unlicensed band and emerging as a stronger competitor to Wi-Fi in unlicensed band. LTE-U is one of version of this technology developed by a group of Organizations under name of LTE-U Forum, while License Assisted Access (LAA) is 3GPP’s ongoing effort to standardize simultaneous operation across licensed and unlicensed bands as part of LTE Release 13. People use the term “LTE in unlicensed” to refer to both LTE-U and LAA collectively. Mehndi Sadeghian, Mohit Luthra, Rahul Atri, Rahul Sharma, Preet Rekhi, Sukhvinder Malik May 8th , 2016 Contents 1. Introduction 2. Un-Licensed Spectrum 3. Wi-Fi Technology Overview 4. LTE-Unlicensed 5. LTE-U Deployment Use case 6. LTE-U Eco System and Standardization 7. Summary and Last words 8. References
  • 2. LTE-U & Wi-Fi LTE operating in unlicensed band is anchored by a license carrier and it operates on licensed and unlicensed bands simultaneously: licensed spectrum is used for its guaranteed availability and for transmission of control and QoS traffic, while unlicensed spectrum is used for best-effort data and capacity requirements. This approach provides a higher spectral efficiency, increased control, and streamlines management compared to Wi-Fi offloading to mobile operators in order to overcome the challenge meeting the capacity requirements. In these respects, LTE in unlicensed provides another example of the innovation unlocked by unlicensed spectrum and big mobile operators are showing great interest as they do not need to pay for the spectrum the most costly thing. As a result of dominance of these two technologies, the unlicensed spectrum is becoming a battle ground. Wi- Fi proponents want to preserve as much unlicensed spectrum as they can for Wi-Fi service, and on the other, mobile operator want the ability to innovate to improve their customers’ experience through fast emerging LTE-U. Now the question comes, can these two technologies co-exist? We will get to know the facts and figures about this in the coming sections of this paper. 2.Un-Licensed Spectrum The FCC makes spectrum available either on a licensed or unlicensed basis. Any innovator or consumer can use unlicensed spectrum just by following technical rules - most notably, a limit on total transmission power. Unlicensed spectrum is decentralized: there are no license payments or central control for users. This low-regulation system lets innovators deliver millions of unlicensed offerings such as Wi-Fi hotspots; medical equipment; industrial/logistics/inventory systems; wireless headsets etc. 2.4GHz, 3.5GHz and 5GHz are the Un-Licensed Bands. The 2.4GHz band is currently the most utilized band shared by different wireless users such as cordless phone, ZigBee, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. Along with 2.4 GHz band, 5GHz band is less congested. The unlicensed 60GHz band has more abundant bandwidth, making it feasible for bandwidth-intensive multimedia services. However, the severe oxygen absorption and atmospheric attenuation at 60 GHz band imposes great challenges in the design of physical layer specifications and air interfaces. The frequency band of most interest for 3GPP is the 3.5GHz and 5GHz band, which has a lot of unlicensed spectrum available globally, much more than the 2.4GHz frequency band. 2.1 Motivation behind moving to Un-Licensed Spectrum  Demands for mobile traffic have been increasing exponentially, and will continue to increase dramatically for years to come.  The supply of licensed frequency spectrum allocated to cellular operators is very limited; operators have been feeling the crunch and heat of cost.  An abundance of unlicensed spectrum, about 800 MHz bandwidth is free below 6 GHz. 2.2 5 GHz Un-Licensed Bands: The 5GHz unlicensed spectrum is divided into mainly three different bands with different RF requirements. These are the three Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure (U-NII) bands. May 8th , 2016 Page 2
  • 3. LTE-U & Wi-Fi These three bands are U-NII-1 (5150-5250MHz), U-NII-2 (5250-5725MHz) and U-NII-3 (5725-5850MHz). 5350-5470MHz segment in UNII-2 is restricted from usage by FCC. In addition, the 60MHz in 5590-5650MHz are currently blocked by FCC for TDWR interference issues. U-NII-2 band has the additional requirement of DFS (Dynamic Frequency Selection), it is recommended that U-NII-2 band can be considered for LTE-U in the future. The following band numbering will be used for the U-NII bands. U-NII-1: Band number 252 for U-NII-1 spectrum (5150-5250MHZ). U-NII-2: Band numbers 253 and 254 are reserved for U-NII-2 spectrum (5250-5725MHZ) for future usage. U-NII-3: Band number 255 for U-NII-3 spectrum (5725-5850MHZ) Most Regulatory Areas offer a large amount of spectrum in the 5 GHz band .In Europe there is 455 MHz of spectrum available, and 580MHz in the US. The bandwidth for each region is depicted in figure 1 and table 1. The use of this unlicensed spectrum usually carries some regulatory requirements, such as being able to detect if a radar system is using the band or being able to co-exist with other users of the band. Figure 1: Spectrum Available in Different Regions The transmission power allowed also varies depending on the part of the band, the lower portion is restricted to indoor use, with a transmit power of 200 mW or less, while the upper part of the spectrum allows higher transmission power, about 1 W. In some cases, like US 5.725 GHz to 5.85 GHz, there are no specific requirements expect the transmission power. In some regulatory areas, like Europe and Japan, there is a specific requirement for supporting Listen-Before-Talk or Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) at milliseconds scale is required while in other regulatory areas, like US, Korea and China, there are no such requirements. Unlicensed Bands U-NII-1 (Band 252) 5150-5250MHz U-NII-2 (Band 253) 5250-5350MHz U-NII-2 (Band 254) 5470-5725MHz U-NII-3 (255) 5725- 5825MHz EIRP Limits 17dBm/23dBm 23dBm/30dBm 23dBm/30dBm 23dBm/30dBm/ 36dBm India Indoor Indoor Not Available Indoor/Outdoor United State /Canada Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor (Only Canada not in US) Indoor/Outdoor European Union Indoor Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Not Available Korea Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Japan Indoor Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Not Available China Indoor Indoor Not Available Indoor/Outdoor Australia Indoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Indoor/Outdoor Inter-Modulation Interference with Licensed Bands 800MHz,1.7GHz,2. 6GHz 800MHz,1.7GHz,2. 6GHz 1.8GHz,900MHz 1.9GHz,1.4GHz Table 1:Un-Licensed bands and Their Specification May 8h , 2016 Page 3
  • 4. LTE-U & Wi-Fi 3.Wi-Fi Technology Overview Wi-Fi is a local area wireless computer networking technology that allows electronic devices to connect to the network, mainly using the unlicensed 2.4 GHz UHF band (Ultra High Frequency) and 5 GHz SHF band (Super High Frequency) from ISM frequencies. It is also known as WLAN. Wi-Fi Transmission at 5 GHz offers higher throughput at shorter distances. At the 2.4 GHz there's an extended coverage area that can be provided, because the signal propagates through solid objects better than the 5 GHz signals do. Wi-Fi is supported by many applications and devices including video game consoles, home networks, PDAs, mobile phones, major operating systems, and other types of consumer electronics. Any products that are tested and approved as "Wi-Fi Certified" (a registered trademark) by the Wi-Fi Alliance are certified as interoperable with each other, even if they are from different manufacturers. They use 802.11 networking standards, which come in several flavors and characteristics. The date rates depicted in table are Physical layer throughputs. Standards Release Year Frequency of Operation Bandwidth Data Rate 802.11 1997 2.4 GHz 22 MHz 2 Mbps 802.11a 1999 3.7 GHz & 5 GHz 20 MHz 54 Mbps 802.11b 1999 2.4 GHz 22 MHz 11 Mbps 802.11g 2003 2.4 GHz 20 MHz 54 Mbps 802.11n 2009 2.4 GHz & 5GHz 20 MHz 40 MHz 72.2 Mbps 150 Mbps 802.11ac 2013 5 GHz 20 MHz 40 MHz 80 MHz 160 MHz 96.3 Mbps 200 Mbps 433 Mbps 867 Mbps 802.11 ad 2016 60 GHz 2.16 GHz Up to 7 Gbps Table 2: Wi-Fi Standards 3.1 Wi-Fi Standards: These standards works at frequencies of 2.4GHz or 5GHz and uses orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM), a more efficient coding technique that splits that radio signals into several sub-signals before they reach a receiver. IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi standards are shown in table 2. In the 802.11 protocol standards, one that came out was the 802.11, it came out in June of 1997. The frequency range was focused at 2.4 GHz, and the bandwidth was 22MHz. The stream data rate was 1 or 2 Mbps. 802.11a and b and these were released in 1999. 802.11a and are capable of 5GHz and 3.7GHz with bandwidth of 20MHz and the data rate incensements are really high up to 54 Mbps. The 802.11b works on the 2.4 GHz, which is the same frequency band as the 802.11-1997 version and bandwidth is the same, the 22 MHz, and the data rates in the original 1997 version it could only go up to 1 or 2 Mbps, but in 11b standards throughput can go up to 11 Mbps. The 802.11g was released in 2003 and it operates at the 2.4 GHz range, uses the same 20 MHz bandwidth and the data rates would enable speed up to 54 Mbps. More recently in 2009, the 802.11n version came out which uses the 2.4 and the 5 GHz range it could achieve higher data rates reach up to 72.2 Mbps or you could go up to 150 Mbps based upon channel bandwidth May 8h , 2016 Page 4
  • 5. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 5 802.11ac is one of the newest standards as of early 2013. It is yet to be widely adopted, and is still in draft form at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), but devices that support it are already on the market. Other 802.11 standards focus on specific applications of wireless networks, like wide area networks (WANs) inside vehicles or technology that lets you move from one wireless network to another seamlessly. Today each mobile, laptop, a tablet etc. device has inbuilt Wi-Fi facility which makes it widely used technology in the world. 802.11 ac operates on 5GHz ISM band and having flexible bandwidth from 20MHz to 160MHz. As demand for data is increasing day by day, so people are searching new technology standards that could meet the consumer’s data demands in the unlicensed bands. IEEE is also introducing a new standard named as 802.11ad to meet these expectations and support data rates up to 7 Gbps. The standard 802.11ad is expected to be released in 2016. It will be using the 60GHz ISM band where there is a large bandwidth available. Now, there's another technology called dual band, unlike ordinary Wi-Fi equipment that only supports to use one single band at a time, dual band has the capability to transmit both on the 5 GHz and on the 2.4 GHz band simultaneously. In other words at the 5 GHz band you could using 802.11a, 11n, 11ac, and also at the 2.4 GHz band it could be using 11b, 11g, and 11n. For an example, if the access point is capable of dual band services, then 2.4GHz band for email, or to surf the web, and for the wider bandwidth. The more throughput can be provided through the 5GHz ISM band, which can be used for streaming high definition, video and play online video games. 3.2 Wi-Fi and LTE-U Comparison: Wi-Fi and LTE-U both operates on the un-licensed frequency and have following difference based on the technology at physical layer listed in Table 3. Wi-Fi LTE-U PHY is half-duplex PHY is typically full-duplex PHY is packet oriented – sync on each packet PHY operates continuously always on – sync is interspersed PHY provides a single channel with a single modulation for each packet PHY provides multiple channels simultaneously with varying modulation Access is by CSMA/CA , Probabilistic - based on random back off e.g. Networks function without frequency planning All client access is scheduled based on algorithms. They can do not coordinate each other together and they have backhaul property btw the cells Stochastic interference Deterministic Interference. The access points coordinate together They can do not coordinate each other together and they have backhaul property btw the cells. Table 3: Wi-Fi and LTE-U Comparison
  • 6. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 6 4.LTE-Unlicensed LTE-U is a system of wireless communication designed to use unlicensed spectrum – which is open to everyone, within certain limits – to ease the burden on big mobile carriers’ networks. LTE-U was first introduced in Rel13 of the 3GPP standards; LTE-U is built upon the carrier aggregation capability of LTE- Advanced. Regular LTE is the system they use to transmit and receive information across their licensed spectrum – to which only they have access. LTE-U uses the same technology to operate on the unlicensed spectrum, which the carriers don’t have to spend billions of dollars to acquire with anchoring done by the licensed carrier LTE-U is not intended to replace existing LTE connectivity, but supplement its speed and services in high- congestion areas. A device would connect simultaneously on a typical LTE connection while acquiring additional bandwidth through nearby LTE-U signal. Due to the regulations set by the FCC, LTE-U devices must meet the same power limitations as the Wi-Fi devices that exist today, limiting their range to about 300 feet. 4.1 Motivation behind using LTE in Unlicensed spectrum: The need to use LTE with unlicensed spectrum is the increase in traffic volumes and the number of mobile broadband users globally. As mentioned previously, the 5 GHz spectrum offers a large amount of bandwidth. With LTE technology, a number of the following could be achieved:  Better spectrum efficiency than the current technologies in use with the 5 GHz band. Since LTE radio technology is based on state of the art technology, it can achieve both high data rates and at the same time high spectral efficiency, also in the unlicensed band. As well as higher capacity, LTE technology offers better coverage, especially when combined with the use of licensed band operation.  From the network management point of view, using the unlicensed band with LTE instead of an alternative radio technology provides a solution that is well integrated to the operator’s existing radio network setup, avoiding multiple solutions for network management, security or authentication. Having only a single technology simplifies the overall network maintenance. The use of LAA is fully transparent to the LTE core network, avoiding the need to upgrade any of the Evolved Packet Core (EPC) elements. 4.2 Design Principle of LTE-U Some fundamental principles and regulations are imposed to guarantee the harmonious coexistence between LTE-U and other incumbent systems.  The Transmission Power for LTE-U Cell  Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Listen Before Talk (LBT) for fair sharing of Spectrum  LTE-U in Carrier aggregation Mode  Licensed-Assisted Access Operation/Anchored with Licensed carrier  Enchantments in LTE air-interface  Ensuring co-existence with existing Technologies Transmission power for LTE-U Cell: The first issue in the use of unlicensed spectrum is the regulation of transmission power. Such regulation is specified to manage the interference among unlicensed users. Indoor wireless access points (APs) in business buildings, which often falls within the 5.15 − 5.35 GHz spectrum band, the maximum transmission power is 23dBm in Europe or 24dBm in US.
  • 7. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 7 Outdoor, e.g. hotspot small cell, allows a maximum of 30 dBm which usually happens within the 5.47 − 5.85 GHz spectrum band. Besides the maximum transmission power, the 5.25 − 5.35 GHz and 5.47 − 5.725 GHz spectrum has mandated (TPC) mechanisms. Transmit power control Mechanism (TPM) reduces the power of a radio transmitter to the minimum necessary, in order to avoid interference to other users and/or extend the battery life while maintaining the link transmission quality. Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Listen before Talk (LBT) for fair sharing of Spectrum Radar systems also operate on the 5 GHz unlicensed spectrum, thus the unlicensed devices may drop non- negligible interference upon the normal radar. LTE-U devices periodically detect whether there are radar signals and will switch the operating channel to one that is not interfering with the radar systems upon detection. Mechanism named dynamic frequency selection (DFS) is adopted in 5.25−5.35 GHz and 5.47−5.725 GHz spectrum to avoid interference to the radar system. Other mechanism which can be used “Listen before Talk” for fair sharing of spectrum avoiding interference to other existing technologies, where any device wishing to use the band must listen to see if it is occupied or not. If the band isn’t busy, the device can seize it and start transmitting. The band can only be held for a maximum of 10 milliseconds after which it must be released and the LBT process repeated. Clear channel assessment (CCA) mechanism is used to detect the energy level during sensing. If the energy level is below a threshold, the channel is deemed to be clear and can be used for LTE-U transmission. Figure 2: Listen Before Talk Mechanism for LTE-U LTE-U in Carrier Aggregation Mode: Carrier aggregation (CA) increases the overall bandwidth available to user equipment by enabling it to use more than one channel, either in the same band, or within another band. Carrier Aggression is done based on Carrier Components (CCs) and at max 5 CC can be combined and each CC can be of maximum bandwidth as 20MHz. In Carrier Aggression out of 5 CCs one CC is known as Primary Carrier while other 4 CCs are known Secondary Carriers. It can be applied to both Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) and Time Division Duplex (TDD) variants of LTE and it allows the combination of different carrier bandwidths in number of ways as listed below.  Intra band Contiguous CA  Intra band Non Contiguous CA  Intra band Non Contiguous CA
  • 8. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 8 Intra band CA, where the carriers are contiguous and lie within the same frequency band. In this case it is feasible for a mobile device to handle the signals using a single transceiver, providing it is able to operate efficiently over the aggregate bandwidth. For example CC1- 2305-2310MHz, CC2- 2330-2350MHz. In this case the duplex mode shall be same either FDD or TDD for both carrier components as both belong same band. It can be seen in figure 3 Figure 3: Intraband Contiguous CA Figure 4: Intraband Non Contiguous CA Figures 5:Interband Non Contiguous CA Intra-band non-contiguous carrier aggregation, in which the carriers lie within the same frequency band, but they are not adjacent. In this case it is necessary for the mobile device to use a separate transceiver for each carrier. For example CC1-2305-2310MHz, CC2- 2375-2395MHz.In this case also duplex mode shall be same either FDD or TDD for both carrier components as both belong same band. Figure 4 depict the same. Inter-band non-contiguous carrier aggregation, In this case the carriers components (CC) fall in different parts of the radio spectrum, like CC1 700MHz and CC2 2300MHz. In this case also it is necessary for the mobile device to use a separate transceiver for each carrier. Here it also possible that one CC1 may be FDD while other may be TDD in this particular case mobile device need to support both duplex modes. Figure 5 shows Inter-band non-contiguous CA. LTE- U also operates in Carrier aggression mode, where primary carrier is always from the licensed band and secondary carrier component can be from unlicensed band. LTE-U form has provided some band combination where LTE-U can be used as carrier aggression mode. Band 2 (1900 PCS) Band 4 (2100 AWS-1) and Band 13 (700 c) has been chosen from the licensed band as primary carrier. These band are chosen such that the inter modulation interface should not impact the licensed carrier. There secondary carrier components are chosen from U-NII 1 and U-NII 3 Band. LTE-U form has defined some band combination as shown in Table 3. This table specifies two flavors of carrier aggression.  Inter-band Carrier Aggression  Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band contiguous Carrier Aggression Inter-band Carrier Aggression where primary carrier component and secondary components are from different band e.g. B2+ B252, B2 + B255. Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band contiguous carrier aggression where secondary carrier components are from the same band e.g. B2+B252+B252 and B13+B255+ B255. From this combination we can see that two secondary carrier components are from same un-licensed band. Band 2 and Band 4 have flexibility to choose primary carrier bandwidth 5,10,15,20 MHz while Band 13 has only 10 MHz option available. The unlicensed band is always utilized to maximum bandwidth in LTE which is 20 MHz. From the table if use max bandwidth from licensed (20) and unlicensed band (20+20) we can achieve 60 MHz bandwidth which can provide a downlink throughput 150x3= 450 Mbps in 2x2 and 300x3 =900 Mbps roughly.
  • 9. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 9 Band Combination Licensed Band Un-Licensed Band BW (MHz) CA configuration B13+B252+B252 B13 U-NII-1 10+20+20 Inter-band + Unlicensed intra-band contiguous DL CA w/o UL CAB13+B255+B255 B13 U-NII-3 10+20+20 B13+B252 B13 U-NII-1 10+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA B13+B255 B13 U-NII-3 10+20 B2+B252+B252 B2 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 Inter-band + unlicensed intra-band contiguous DL CA without UL CAB2+B255+B255 B2 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 B2+B252 B2 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA B2+B255 B2 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20 B4+B252+B252 B4 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 Inter-band + unlicensed intra-band contiguous DL CA without UL CAB4+B255+B255 B4 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20+20 B4+B252 B4 U-NII-1 [5,10,15,20]+20 Inter-band DL CA without UL CA B4+B255 B4 U-NII-3 [5,10,15,20]+20 Table 4: LTE-U Carrier Aggression Band Combinations Licensed-Assisted Access Operation/Anchored with Licensed carrier LTE-U is designed to work in carrier aggregation mode as said and operates as secondary cell to fulfill the capacity requirements; secondary cell is anchored by primary licensed carrier owned by operator. The UE can only gain access to the SCells (on unlicensed bands) through the PCell(on licensed band) ,and all UE in the cell may not get access to SCell, PCells shall select those UE based on algorithms considering radio condition, QoS , Cell Load etc and reconfigure the UE to get access SCell. Aggregation of a primary cell, operating in licensed spectrum to deliver control information and guaranteed Quality of Service, with a secondary cell, operating in unlicensed spectrum to opportunistically boost data rate. Figures 6: LTE Licensed Assisted Access Figures 7: LTE-U Carrier Aggression The secondary cell operating in unlicensed spectrum can be configured either as downlink-only cell or contain both uplink and downlink based on the capacity requirements. Unlicensed carriers can be integrated and therefore take advantage of the existing LTE system deployed in licensed carriers for efficient usage as well as system co-existence purposes. The anchor carrier can be from any bandwidth supported by LTE i.e. 1.4,3,5,10,15 or 20 MHz and un-licensed carrier shall be always 20 MHz of bandwidth.
  • 10. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 10 Enchantments in LTE air-interface The fundamental and design of LTE should remain with only necessary changes while the advanced numerology features of LTE, e.g., eNodeB-based resource allocation and scheduling, link adaptation, control channel robustness to interference, uplink power control, are used to ensure point-to-point and system performance, in terms of both end-to-end QoS and physical layer transmission quality. To avoid co-existence issues and to meet requirements by regulations, it makes necessity for some modifications to the existing LTE air interface, for the compliance to listen-before-talk (LBT) requirements and for fair and efficient co-existence. Following potential medications shall be expected in the LTE air interface to support the above mentioned requirements. 1. Enhancing CA mechanism to facilitate opportunistic use As required by LBT, the transmission of both traffic data and the common channels of LTE-U should be based on the knowledge of channel availability by instantaneous channel sensing. As it is known in integrated LTE network, unlicensed carriers should be operated as secondary carriers (SCell-U) associated to a licensed LTE primary carrier through carrier aggregation (CA). The activation and deactivation of SCells defined in CA can already enable the opportunistic use of unlicensed spectrum, which is still based on the always-on common channel transmission, continuous channel measurement and corresponding reports in LTE Rel-11 and earlier releases. Such a restriction will be solved to some extent by the standardization of small cell on/off in LTE Rel-12 where quick on-off switching of a cell will be supported and during cell off period UE would quit legacy channel measurement. Of course, further enhancements to ensure more flexibility in terms of opportunistic synchronization /measurement scheduling of SCell shall be needed. 2. Adaptive LTE frame structure for LBT support Two types of LBT schemes are defined by regulation known as Frame Based Equipment (FBE) and Load Based Equipment (LBE).The differences between FBE and LBE include whether a strict frame structure should be followed, interference avoidance mechanism, and channel occupancy time. For both schemes, some modifications are needed to ensure the consistency between the strict frame structure defined in existing licensed LTE layer and the opportunistic occupancy of unlicensed band, and at the same time allow for flexible channel sensing and occupancy to offer a potentially good channel contention capability. 3. UL transmission Support LBT basically represents a mechanism of transmitter sensing by which each device decides its transmission opportunities based on self-detection of channel availability. However, in LTE the UL transmission grant and channel availability sensing are decided by the eNodeB and UE respectively. Thus it could be even more difficult to support UL transmission with respect to the case that an eNodeB may schedule a UE UL grant but this UE fails to get access the channel in scheduled time due to contention. These problems should be addressed to ensure UL transmission can be supported without change of basic scheduling mechanism in LTE. 4. Interference coordination for complex interference scenarios in unlicensed spectrum Sensing-based channel occupancy provides a preliminary mechanism to achieve interference coordination between co-existing operator LTE-U cells can allow efficient use of unlicensed spectrum even in high load scenarios, in which the simple channel sensing and avoidance may not work well, so it requires more complex algorithms to handle these scenarios.
  • 11. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 11 To ensure co-existence within LTE-U and Other Access Networks Due to the non-exclusive use of unlicensed spectrum, co-existence issues shall be addressed from the beginning of the LTE-U design in order for co-existence between LTE-U deployments. To ensure this LTE -U protocol stack shall consider different operators LTE-U as well as different Access Networks e.g. LTE-U and Wi-Fi systems co-existence. Some insight on the co-existence issues by LTE-U in dense deployments are listed below.  Coexistence between Inter-operator LTE-U Deployment  Coexistence between Different Access Networks Coexistence between Inter-operator LTE-U Deployment As Un-Licensed spectrum is non-exclusive and no one is the owner of it, so any operator can use. If multiple operators deploy LTE-U in the same unlicensed band, the lack of joint network planning may result in geographical overlapping or even closely-located LTE-U cells and hence result in severe cross-site/operator interference and performance degradation. It is obvious that compared with well-planned licensed LTE deployment, user experience degrades due to the closely-located inter-operator interference. Two scheme shall be adopted to mitigate such interference and achieve good sharing of unlicensed spectrum by multiple operators: Scheme #1: An agreement can be reached between multiple operators for orthogonal/exclusive use of the unlicensed spectrum within a given region. The agreement can totally avoid inter-operator interference, with the cost of potentially inefficient use of spectrum due to the lack of dynamic spectrum sharing. In some countries, it could be difficult to reach such an agreement, due to the competition between operators as usually. Even considering possibility of good cooperation between operators, such an agreement exclusive use of unlicensed spectrum by a group of operator may still be problematic e.g. if there are six operator servicing country and only four blocks of un-licensed are available then any of the two operator spectrum will collide. This scheme is depicted in figure 9 Figure 8: Multi-Operator Figure 9:Co-Operative Spectrum Figure 10: Dynamic Spectrum LTE-U Deployment Sharing among Operator Sharing among Operator Scheme #2: Relatively dynamic schemes for shared use of unlicensed radio resources. The use of unlicensed spectrum depends on the instantaneous/semi-static traffic load of LTE-U. Such a flexible and efficient occupancy/release of the unlicensed carriers requires some dynamic coordination and information exchange between operators. Despite the lack of standard backhaul between operators, monitoring of LTE transmission over the air interface could provide potentially enough cooperation information between LTE Nodes from different operators. This technique requires intelligence algorithms to decodes radio information and apply for the spectrum selection. This scheme is shown in figure 10.
  • 12. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 12 Coexistence between Different Access Networks Bluetooth, ZigBee and Wi-Fi technology uses un-licensed band, Bluetooth and ZigBee are mostly used in indoor and less power applications while Wi-Fi is used for indoor& Outdoor applications. Wi-Fi is widely deployed and popular access technology in unlicensed spectrum and it can co-exist with LTE-U. Due to the fundamental differences in the PHY/MAC design between LTE and Wi-Fi, a direct implementation of LTE may impact the opportunistic channel occupancy of co-channel Wi-Fi especially in some high-load cases where the complete channel bandwidth is occupied. Figure 11: LTE-U and Wi-Fi Coexistence One shall consider following cases to validate the Co-existence and interference matrix:  Case 1: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired Wi-Fi AP.  Case 2: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired LTE-U small cell operating in DL only mode.  Case 3: A Wi-Fi AP is interfered by a paired LTE-U small cell operating in TDD mode, where LTE UL sub-frames are fake transmission to provide the access of paired Wi-Fi AP.  Case 4: A LTE-U small cell is interfered by a LTE-U paired cell both cell of them are operating DL only mode. From the target Access Point perspective (case 1), when there is increase of traffic load, the competition for resources from paired interfering AP would significantly deteriorate the performance of Wi-Fi. LTE small cell performs much more robust even with high-load interfering Access Point nearby (case 2). This robustness contribution result of link adaptation and HARQ retransmission in LTE, and other strong MAC and PHY features of LTE. On the other hand, as the paired interfering AP, LTE-U small cell in TDD mode with fake UL sub frames in (case 3) is seen as a similar or more friendly neighbor to Wi-Fi (compared to case 1) even without assistance of additional transmission restriction (e.g. LBT), which means less performance degradation of Wi-Fi is observed if the interfering AP is LTE-U rather Wi-Fi Access Point, especially in low-load cases. In short, for operators to exploit unlicensed spectrum where is already crowded with unlicensed deployment, LTE is a better choice to offer good performance in terms of robust self-protection, as well as less impact on the existing competing systems. Even for less-used spectrum, LTE deployment can provide future-assured performance with respect to the possibly subsequent deployment in the vicinity. Of course, despite the potentially less impact of LTE to neighboring Wi-Fi, it is still preferred to adopt the co-existence mechanisms, including TPC/DFS/LBT for LTE-U to meet the requirements imposed by regional regulations, and to achieve more efficient co-existence between different systems.
  • 13. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 13 5.LTE-U Deployment use case Due to low power transmission restriction imposed by regulations in the unlicensed spectrum, the coverage will be relatively small. Moreover, as unlicensed spectrum is usually in higher-frequency bands compared to licensed ones, coverage holes in the unlicensed band shall be expected in licensed and unlicensed when deploying co-located cell. In addition, the use of unlicensed spectrum should follow regulatory restriction(s) to reduce negative impact on nearby co-existing systems. This may result in noncontiguous/opportunistic use of unlicensed spectrum and render the transmission of important control and common channels of LTE system in unlicensed carriers as un-reliable. Therefore, the existing LTE system in the licensed spectrum with good coverage jointly operating with an unlicensed carrier is the key enabler for efficient use of unlicensed spectrum. LTE –U cell can be deployed in two ways:  LTE & LTE-U Co-Located Deployment  LTE & LTE-U Non-Co-Located Deployment Operator-deployed small cells with co-located unlicensed and licensed carriers are the preferred due to low extra cost for new sites or backhaul is shown in figure 12. In addition, inter-site aggregation between licensed carriers and unlicensed carriers is also possible in case of non-co-located cell deployment, which requires high speed backhaul between Macro cell and small cell, e.g. in case of optical fiber between Macro eNodeB and remote radio head (RRH) shown in Figure 13. Figure 12: LTE & LTE-U Co-Located Deployment Figure 13: LTE & LTE-U Non-Co-Located Deployment As mentioned the design principle of LTE-U is the integration between unlicensed and licensed carriers both operating LTE is the key operating mechanism. The unlicensed carriers are operated as Secondary Carriers associated to and controlled by the existing licensed LTE Primary Carriers, thus the joint operation and flexible offload between licensed and unlicensed carriers can be easily achieved. Through carrier aggregation, unlicensed carriers can be well integrated within the operator’s network while preserving the key benefits of LTE technology. For example, UE mobility is still under the control of the licensed LTE network, while the joint scheduling between LTE and LTE-U carriers is done in the centralized nodes for smooth load shifting and channel adaptation. Security and service QoS can also be ensured due to the assistance of the licensed LTE network. Most important advantage of the economy of scale can be achieved due to the reuse of basic LTE physical-layer design and numerology so that additional development and implementation cost may be insignificant. Figure 14: LTE & LTE-U Deployment Benefits
  • 14. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 14 5.1 Advantage of LTE deployments in Un-Licensed Spectrum Compared to the currently used technologies in the unlicensed spectrum, LTE-U can potentially provide many benefits in terms of operator OPEX/CAPEX reduction as well as better end user experience.  Reuse of existing infra reduce additional CAPEX/OPEX cost.  Good end user experience and more operator revenue.  LTE Technology, ensures highly efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compare to Wi-Fi Reuse of existing infra reduce additional CAPEX/OPEX cost for operator The CAPEX of LTE-U deployment shall be reduced for operators because free unlicensed spectrum and all the existing backhaul, core network and even sites deployed for licensed LTE carriers can be reused for the operation of unlicensed spectrum with software updates only in eNodeBs as shown in Figure 15. In addition, LTE-U would provide more efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compared to other unlicensed technologies which may in turn lower the efforts of operators in deploying cells to offer a given amount of traffic offload by unlicensed spectrum. From an operational view a common RAN across the whole network allows unified operation and management between licensed and unlicensed spectrum, including OAM configuration, authorization, charging and RRM management can be used as illustrated as in Figure 16. Also joint scheduling and flexible traffic offload between both layers can be easily achieved, since the secondary component cells (LTE-U cell) could be activated/deactivated by Primary cell (LTE cell) the network can select licensed or unlicensed layers for traffic offload in a dynamic and OPEX-efficient way. Figure 15: LTE, LTE-U and Wi-Fi Network Architecture Figure 16: LTE RAN Sharing for LTE-U Good end user experience and more operator revenue In LTE-U system, enable or disable of the unlicensed secondary carriers can be seamlessly controlled by the network without need of manual configuration by the user. In this sense, LTE-U can enable traffic volume to be carried on an unlicensed or licensed carrier in a transparent way from the user perspective as shown in Figure 17. On the other hand, the existence of licensed Primary cell ensures the basic service continuity and QoS guarantee, especially for low-latency traffic e.g. continuity of voice traffic can be guaranteed even in case of the existence of neighboring interference in unlicensed layer.
  • 15. LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 15 Figure 17: Operator and user experience From an end user point of view, efficient and convenient use of unlicensed spectrum shall eventually lead to better service experience. With both LTE-U and Wi-Fi capabilities on the same unlicensed carrier, network can provide more flexibility for UEs to be served by appropriate RAT based on the available access point, charging mode, service quality, etc. As a result, the user experience improvement and transparent use of unlicensed spectrum could provide operators more flexibility on charging strategy to get larger revenue from exploiting unlicensed spectrum. It would in turn encourage operators to exploit unlicensed spectrum. LTE Technology, ensures highly efficient use of unlicensed spectrum compare to Wi-Fi The first phase LTE networks (Release 8) provide up to 150 Mbps data rate, while the latest LTE-Advanced supports up to 300 Mbps downlink peak data rate. Although LTE capabilities are evolving continuously and will ultimately enable higher data rates of up to 1 Gbps or even more, the next steps after 300 Mbps are support of 450 Mbps and 600 Mbps downlink peak rates. These rates will be achieved when devices supporting more than two aggregated LTE downlink carriers become available. The LTE performance study found to be roughly twice the data rate of a comparable Wi-Fi network (802.11ac).The results indicate the extra performance achievable with a single 20 MHz carrier on unlicensed spectrum The relative capacity of the LTE network would be even higher when the offered load and number of users is further increased, as Wi-Fi capacity will not increase further or will even go down, while the LTE network can still reach a higher throughput. If we consider a single access node with a large amount of traffic (a hot spot), the LTE design allows the system to stay robust while serving a very large number of users, while the Wi-Fi access capacity would start to drop sharply with increased traffic. The advanced features for handling the load in LTE can also be applied when operating in the unlicensed band, ensuring high capacity when faced with a large number of users. Specifically, better link budget, coverage and higher system throughput can be achieved by the LTE air interface compared to Wi-Fi because better Physical and MAC layer features even in isolated deployment scenarios, as illustrated by Figure 18, while in dense deployment LTE is expected to achieve even larger performance advantages over Wi-Fi by its inherent interference mitigation mechanisms.
  • 16. This allows fewer nodes for a given area to reach the same capacity as a Wi-Fi network. This enables a trade- off in deployment between the total network capacity and the number of LTE nodes being deployed for the unlicensed band. So using LTE technology in unlicensed help better utilization with higher spectral efficiency in both co-existed and standalone deployments, a sample test result published by an OEM is shown in figure 19 when Wi-Fi node are replaced with LTE-U cells. Figure 18: LTE-U and Wi-Fi Isolated Deployment Figure 19: Improvement in Average Throughput With LTE-U Node Network 6.LTE-U Eco System and Standardization The ecosystem for unlicensed wireless is vast. It involves regulatory authority operators, equipment vendors, consumer products and millions of users. Equipment technology in unlicensed bands is varied: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee .These technologies and devices have sources .Their basic principle is" Live and let Live. “If they see interference, they Back off, if they see someone else using the resources, they wait for their turn. With CSAT 9Carrier-Sensing Adaptive Transmission) scheduling features, LTE-U shall ensure that resources are shared fairly. This way, Wi-Fi access points in the area shall not be starved just because LTE-U is also operating in the same area. LTE-U has the ability to intelligently switch off transmission so that resources are released for Wi-Fi. We can say the ecosystem of LTE technology is mature enough. 3GPP Release 13 is to include standardization for LTE operation in unlicensed band once LAA is completed. 3GPP started the work with a workshop on LTE unlicensed in June 2014, with the formal study starting in September 2014. The ongoing study is scheduled to be completed in June 2015, as shown in Figure 19 and shall cover the necessary mechanisms for co-existence. Once complete, the work item phase will finalize the detailed specification, including the necessary band combinations to enable LTE operation with 5 GHz band aggregated with another licensed frequency band. The assumption with 3GPP work is that LTE is not operated as a standalone system on the unlicensed band but will be used in conjunction with a Primary Cell in the licensed band. The specification work for Release 13 LTE operation in unlicensed spectrum is expected to be ready by mid-2016. Once the basis is specified, 3GPP will define the necessary bands and band combinations to be used with the 5 GHz band, which can be done as Release independent on top of Release 13. Figure 19: LTE-U Standardization, 3GPP Timelines LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 16
  • 17. 7. Summary and Last Words LTE “long term evolution” is proving its name and evolving continuously in Release 13 and one of the evolution is the deployment of LTE in the 5 GHz unlicensed band. The License Assisted Access (LAA) with LTE will allow co-existence with Wi-Fi without any specific coordination and will meet all the regulatory requirements for 5 GHz unlicensed band operation. This is an important feature of LAA which allows its deployment in shopping malls and corporate offices, same as Wi-Fi networks. The interference effect on a Wi-Fi network from a LTE-U network can be an issue for LTE-U and Wi-Fi co- existence. Now the question may come that, should we worried as a customer, No, not at all. This problem between Wi-Fi and LTE-U is a nice problem to have. The conflict reflects the fundamental dynamism of the wireless technologies. Technologies rise and fall based on their usefulness and subsequent adoption. We have witnessed many wireless technologies: AMPS, 2G, GSM, HSPA+, LTE, WiMAX, Bluetooth, ZigBee, Active RFID (433MHz, 900MHz, etc.). Each with their set of advantages and success rate. The whole point of competition is that the organizations are trying to find out the best, sometimes it is a win and sometimes a loss. Bring it on and we as consumers can decide what works best for us. Successful co-existence in unlicensed bands will take work and determination. A couple of decades ago, skeptics said CDMA was too complex to work on a wide scale. But CDMA persevered, becoming the backbone of global 3G systems. Similarly, over time, technologists will solve spectrum sharing challenges, including threading the needle for harmonious LTE and Wi-Fi co-existence. However, LTE-U network can reach higher capacity than a Wi-Fi network. Especially in an environment where the traffic density is high, LTE-U (LAA) can be option to utilize the unused band of the 5 GHz spectrum. With the ability of LTE-U to control the type of deployment, such as in a corporate office, it is very easy to find fully empty channels from the 5 GHz band will be relatively easy, allowing LTE to reach its full performance. LTE for unlicensed band rely on the existing LTE core network and uses the existing LTE security and authentication architecture, means no change in the core network elements is required. The use of LTE unlicensed together with the licensed band operation brings a major capacity boost from the unlicensed band while still ensuring end user quality of service, regardless of the interference situation in the unlicensed band and cost effective solution. The major player of Wireless industry have quoted following for LTE-U used in un-licensed spectrum. There is broad consensus that licensed spectrum is superior; LTE-U does not reduce or dilute the need for licensed spectrum. FCC Chairman: “Folks, you’ve got to come together and resolve this in a broad-based standard” Nokia Networks: “Simple methods enable fair band sharing between Wi-Fi & LTE-U. Still, better to use separate channels”. Israeli Association of Electronics & Software Industries (IAESI): “channel sharing based on energy detection is bad for both 802.11 and LTE-U”. NTT Docomo: “Coexistence with Wi-Fi needs to be carefully studied”. Samsung Electronics: “UE will have to implement two technologies for the same spectrum; decrease the value of current licensed spectrum? QoS? “ Broadcom: “Regional LTE-U technology bad for everybody; LTE-U must address the global market; 5 GHz band is not green field spectrum regulatory aspects to be studied” AT&T: “LTE-U should not negatively impact existing services; peaceful coexistence with Wi-Fi is required; comprehensive protection assessment a must; globally inclusive; LTE-U should not have adverse impact on future licensed spectrum allocation.” LTE-U & Wi-Fi May 8th , 2016 Page 17
  • 18. l May 8th , 2016 Page 18 May 8h , 2016 Page 17 8. References  3GPP TSG RAN Workshop on LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum RWS‐140020 Sophia Antipolis, France, June 13, 2013.  Comments of Google Inc. on LTE and Wi-Fi in Unlicensed Spectrum.  LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum “Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Northwestern University.  LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum: European Regulation and Co-existence Considerations.  LTE in Unlicensed Spectrum Wikipedia.  NTT DOCOMO’s view on LTE unlicensed Presentation.  Wi-Fi LTE Co-existence in Unlicensed band Presentation by FLORIDA International University. Prepared By: LTE-U & Wi-Fi Mehdi Sadeghian He holds M.Sc. Degree from the dept. of Comp. Network in Islamic Azad University, 2014. His research areas include Wireless Network, telecomm & etc. Mohit Luthra He holds Bachelor Degree in engineering from MDU University, 2010. His area of interest includes RF Hardware design & dev, testing etc. Rahul Atri He holds Bachelor Degree in Engg. from PTU University, 2010. His area of interest including testing and designing the next generations’ network including 4G, 5G, Wi-Fi etc. Rahul Sharma He holds Bachelor Degree in Engg. from IP University Delhi, 2011 & Pursuing Master from USA. His area of interest including design the NGN including 4G, 5G Physical Layer. Preet Rekhi He holds Bachelor Degree in Engg. from IP University Delhi, 2010. His area of interest including design the NGN including 4G, 5G, IOT & etc. Sukhvinder Malik He holds Bachelor Degree in engineering from MDU University, 2010. His area of interest including testing of LTE and LTE-A Access Nodes in Lab and Field etc. Disclaimer: Authors state that this whitepaper has been compiled meticulously and to the best of their knowledge as of the date of publication. The information contained herein the white paper is for information purposes only and is intended only to transfer knowledge about the respective topic and not to earn any kind of profit. Every effort has been made to ensure the information in this paper is accurate. Authors does not accept any responsibility or liability whatsoever for any error of fact, omission,