The document discusses key elements of wireless communication systems including base stations, control channels, forward and reverse channels, handoff, mobile stations, and more. It then provides details on how cellular telephone systems work including dividing geographic regions into cells and reusing frequencies/channels at different cell locations to maximize capacity. Key aspects covered include mobile stations communicating with base stations, the mobile switching center coordinating calls between cells, and the use of handoff to allow calls to continue seamlessly when users move between cells.
Examples of wireless communication systems, paging systems, cordless telephone systems, cellular telephone systems,evolution of mobile phone, MSC, MTSO, PSTN, Mobile communication, wireless link, subscriber,
Examples of wireless communication systemsveeravanithaD
This document discusses different wireless communication systems including paging systems, cordless telephone systems, and cellular telephone systems. Paging systems send brief numeric, alphanumeric or voice messages to subscribers and use base stations to transmit pages over radio carriers. Cordless telephone systems allow wireless communication within a limited range of a base station connected to a landline. Cellular systems provide wireless coverage over a large geographic area using a network of base stations and a mobile switching center to handoff calls between cells and connect to the public switched telephone network.
Introduction to Cellular Mobile System,
Performance criteria,
uniqueness of mobile radio environment,
operation of cellular systems,
Hexagonal shaped cells,
Analog Cellular systems.
Digital Cellular systems
Mobile communication - GSM/CDMA/WIMAX TechnologiesAman Abhishek
Mobile communication allows communication without a physical connection and flexibility to move anywhere during communication. It uses technologies like GSM and CDMA. Mobile communication has become one of the fastest growing industries. A mobile handset allows making and receiving calls over radio links while moving. It contains components like a battery, SIM card and antenna. A SIM card identifies the subscriber to the network. In mobile communication, a cell is the smallest area, subscribers pay for use, and base stations connect mobile units to switching centers. As users move, handoffs transfer calls between base stations to maintain connectivity.
This document provides an overview of cellular networks. It discusses key concepts like cells, base stations, frequency reuse, and multiple access methods. It describes how location of mobile devices is managed through location updating and paging. It also covers handoff which allows active calls to continue seamlessly as users move between different cells.
1) Cellular systems divide geographic coverage areas into small cells served by low-powered transmitters rather than using high-powered transmitters, in order to accommodate many users over a large area with limited frequency spectrum.
2) Within each cell there are forward and reverse voice channels for call transmission and forward and reverse control channels for call setup and control signaling that are monitored by mobile devices.
3) To make a call, a mobile searches for the control channel with the strongest signal and monitors it. When a call request is made, the mobile station ID is sent to determine the cell location and an unused voice channel pair is assigned for the call.
Cellular networks use multiple low-power transmitters that divide coverage areas into cells served by individual antennas and base stations. Adjacent cells are assigned different frequencies to avoid interference. As capacity demands increase, networks address this through techniques like frequency borrowing, cell splitting, and adding microcells. Digital cellular systems like GSM use TDMA to allow dynamic channel sharing between users. GSM networks feature a mobile station that communicates through the base station subsystem and network subsystem, which includes HLR, VLR, and MSC databases to manage authentication, location tracking, and call routing.
Cellular systems allow mobile users to communicate wirelessly using a network of base stations and switches. A mobile station communicates with the nearest base station, which connects to a mobile switching center. The switching center routes calls between mobile stations and the public switched telephone network. Coverage areas are divided into cells served by individual base stations to allow frequency reuse that improves system capacity.
Examples of wireless communication systems, paging systems, cordless telephone systems, cellular telephone systems,evolution of mobile phone, MSC, MTSO, PSTN, Mobile communication, wireless link, subscriber,
Examples of wireless communication systemsveeravanithaD
This document discusses different wireless communication systems including paging systems, cordless telephone systems, and cellular telephone systems. Paging systems send brief numeric, alphanumeric or voice messages to subscribers and use base stations to transmit pages over radio carriers. Cordless telephone systems allow wireless communication within a limited range of a base station connected to a landline. Cellular systems provide wireless coverage over a large geographic area using a network of base stations and a mobile switching center to handoff calls between cells and connect to the public switched telephone network.
Introduction to Cellular Mobile System,
Performance criteria,
uniqueness of mobile radio environment,
operation of cellular systems,
Hexagonal shaped cells,
Analog Cellular systems.
Digital Cellular systems
Mobile communication - GSM/CDMA/WIMAX TechnologiesAman Abhishek
Mobile communication allows communication without a physical connection and flexibility to move anywhere during communication. It uses technologies like GSM and CDMA. Mobile communication has become one of the fastest growing industries. A mobile handset allows making and receiving calls over radio links while moving. It contains components like a battery, SIM card and antenna. A SIM card identifies the subscriber to the network. In mobile communication, a cell is the smallest area, subscribers pay for use, and base stations connect mobile units to switching centers. As users move, handoffs transfer calls between base stations to maintain connectivity.
This document provides an overview of cellular networks. It discusses key concepts like cells, base stations, frequency reuse, and multiple access methods. It describes how location of mobile devices is managed through location updating and paging. It also covers handoff which allows active calls to continue seamlessly as users move between different cells.
1) Cellular systems divide geographic coverage areas into small cells served by low-powered transmitters rather than using high-powered transmitters, in order to accommodate many users over a large area with limited frequency spectrum.
2) Within each cell there are forward and reverse voice channels for call transmission and forward and reverse control channels for call setup and control signaling that are monitored by mobile devices.
3) To make a call, a mobile searches for the control channel with the strongest signal and monitors it. When a call request is made, the mobile station ID is sent to determine the cell location and an unused voice channel pair is assigned for the call.
Cellular networks use multiple low-power transmitters that divide coverage areas into cells served by individual antennas and base stations. Adjacent cells are assigned different frequencies to avoid interference. As capacity demands increase, networks address this through techniques like frequency borrowing, cell splitting, and adding microcells. Digital cellular systems like GSM use TDMA to allow dynamic channel sharing between users. GSM networks feature a mobile station that communicates through the base station subsystem and network subsystem, which includes HLR, VLR, and MSC databases to manage authentication, location tracking, and call routing.
Cellular systems allow mobile users to communicate wirelessly using a network of base stations and switches. A mobile station communicates with the nearest base station, which connects to a mobile switching center. The switching center routes calls between mobile stations and the public switched telephone network. Coverage areas are divided into cells served by individual base stations to allow frequency reuse that improves system capacity.
The document defines cellular radio systems as radio communication networks divided into small geographic areas called cells. Each cell contains a low-power transmitter/receiver base station that can communicate with mobile units within its cell. As a mobile unit moves between cells, it automatically switches to the nearest base station. The mobile telephone switching office coordinates calls between cells and landline networks. Key components include mobile units, base stations, and the switching office. Channels include control channels for signaling and voice channels for calls.
1. The document discusses various topics related to mobile communication and networks including definitions of key terms like base station, control channel, and handoff.
2. It explains concepts like frequency reuse, which allows the same set of frequencies to be reused in different cells by limiting each cell's coverage area.
3. Channel assignment strategies and handoff strategies are covered, distinguishing between fixed and dynamic channel assignment and soft and hard handoffs.
4. Propagation models are summarized, including free space propagation models which predict signal strength over large transmitter-receiver distances with clear line of sight.
The document provides an overview of basic telecommunications systems and concepts. It describes how early communication methods used visual signals like smoke signals. A basic telecom system consists of a transmitter that converts information to a signal, a transmission medium that carries the signal, and a receiver that converts the signal back to usable information. Common types of multiplexing that allow multiple signals to share a channel are frequency-division, time-division, and code-division multiple access. Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM) is an accepted standard for digital cellular networks consisting of switching systems, base station systems, and mobile handsets.
This document provides information about cellular networks and cellular technology. It discusses how cellular networks work using a network of cells with radio signals and base stations to allow communication between mobile devices. It also describes some key aspects of cellular networks including frequency reuse, multiple access methods like FDMA and TDMA, signal encoding, handovers between cells, and provides an example of cellular networks using mobile phone networks.
Cellular phones allow users to make calls from mobile devices by connecting to nearby transmitter towers through radio signals. The document discusses the history and evolution of cellular phones from early analog models weighing 2 pounds that offered 30 minutes of talk time to modern digital cellular networks that support data services in addition to calls. It also describes key components of cellular networks like base stations, switching centers, and databases that help cellular providers manage subscriber identities and locations to route calls and support roaming.
Radio communication was invented in the late 19th century by Nikola Tesla and Guglielmo Marconi. The first commercial cellular network launched in 1979. Cellular networks have since advanced from 1G analog to 2G digital to 3G and 4G networks that provide high-speed data. Cellular networks use techniques like frequency division multiple access, time division multiple access, and code division multiple access to allow many users to share the available radio spectrum. The network is made up of cells with base stations that hand off calls as users move between cells.
1) GSM is a cellular network standard developed in 1991 that is widely used in Europe and Asia. It uses FDMA to separate frequencies and TDMA to divide each frequency into time slots to allow multiple calls over the same frequency.
2) The GSM architecture consists of mobile stations, a base station subsystem to connect to mobile devices, and a network subsystem to switch calls. Each component has several elements like the BTS, BSC, MSC, HLR, and VLR.
3) Frequency reuse allows a limited number of frequencies to service many users by dividing a region into cells and assigning each a unique set of frequencies to avoid interference between cells.
05. EEE 439 Communication Systems II - Cellular Communications.pdfjilanur93
The document discusses various topics related to cellular networks including:
- The history of cellular networks from 1G to 5G technologies.
- Components of cellular networks including mobile stations, base stations, switches, and databases for tracking user locations.
- Concepts like cells, frequency reuse, and handoffs which allow cellular networks to efficiently use limited radio spectrum and maintain connectivity as users move.
- Models for radio propagation including free space path loss which predicts signal strength over distance in line-of-sight conditions.
In 3 sentences or less, this summary outlines some of the key technological developments in cellular networks and fundamental concepts that have enabled their widespread adoption and use.
DYNAMIC CHANNEL ALLOCATION SCHEME TO HANDLE HANDOFF IN WIRELESS MOBILE NETWORKcscpconf
The rapid growth in the demand for mobile communications has led to an intense research effort to achieve an efficient use of the scarce spectrum allocated for cellular communications. In this paper, the authors devise a new scheme DCAS (Dynamic Channel Allocation Scheme) for call admission control. In this new scheme, the number of guard channel(s) is adjusted automatically based on the average handoff blocking rate measured in the past certain period of time. The handoff blocking rate is controlled under the designated threshold and the new call blocking rate is minimized. The performance evaluation of the DCAS is done through simulation of nodes. The result shows that the DCAS scheme outperforms the Static Channel Allocation Scheme by controlling a hard constraint on the handoff rejection probability. The proposed scheme achieves the optimal performance by maximizing the resource utilization and adapts itself to changing traffic conditions automatically.
Cellular networks divide geographic areas into smaller cells to increase capacity and reuse frequencies. Each cell has a base station that transmits and receives from mobile devices within its cell. As mobile devices move between cells during calls, the network performs handovers to transfer the call seamlessly between base stations. Common cellular technologies include GSM, CDMA, and LTE that use techniques like FDMA, TDMA, and CDMA to allow frequency reuse and multiple access across cells.
Today's cellular telephone systems operate by dividing geographic areas into cells served by base stations. Each cell is assigned certain radio frequencies that are reused in non-neighboring cells to increase coverage and capacity. When a mobile user moves between cells, the call is handed off from one base station to another through a mobile switching center to avoid disconnection. Modern cellular networks use digital technologies like CDMA, TDMA and FDMA to provide voice, text, and data services to users through cellular infrastructure.
Chapter 1 AI is used in Customer Relationship Management (CRM):.pptxfilembarketema
Certainly! Here are some examples of how AI is used in Customer Relationship Management (CRM):
Chatbots: AI-powered chatbots are used in CRM systems to provide automated customer support and assistance. Chatbots can handle a wide range of customer inquiries, answer frequently asked questions, and provide relevant information in real-time. They can engage in natural language conversations, understand customer intent, and provide personalized recommendations or solutions.
Sentiment Analysis: AI algorithms can analyze customer interactions, such as emails, social media posts, and chat transcripts, to determine customer sentiment and emotions. Sentiment analysis helps CRM systems understand customer satisfaction levels, identify potential issues or concerns, and take proactive measures to address them.
Personalization: AI enables CRM systems to deliver personalized experiences to customers. By analyzing customer data, purchase history, browsing behavior, and preferences, AI algorithms can generate personalized product recommendations, targeted marketing campaigns, and customized offers to enhance customer engagement and satisfaction.
Lead Scoring and Qualification: AI can assist in lead scoring and qualification processes. By analyzing historical data and customer behavior patterns, AI algorithms can predict the likelihood of a lead converting into a customer. This helps sales teams prioritize their efforts and allocate resources effectively to high-potential leads, improving conversion rates and sales efficiency.
Predictive Analytics: AI algorithms can analyze customer data and historical patterns to make predictions about customer behavior, such as likelihood to churn or cross-sell/up-sell opportunities. These predictions help CRM systems identify the most effective strategies for customer retention and revenue growth.
Voice and Speech Analytics: AI-powered voice and speech analytics tools can analyze customer calls and extract valuable insights. These tools can identify keywords, sentiment, and speech patterns to understand customer needs, identify common issues, and provide feedback for agent training and process improvement.
Social Media Monitoring: AI algorithms can monitor social media platforms to track brand mentions, customer feedback, and sentiment. This helps CRM systems identify customer concerns, engage in social listening, and respond promptly to customer queries or complaints, improving overall customer satisfaction and brand reputation.
Customer Segmentation: AI can assist in segmenting customers based on various criteria, such as demographics, purchase history, interests, and behavior. This enables CRM systems to tailor marketing campaigns, promotions, and communication strategies to specific customer segments, improving targeting and response rates.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) Prediction: This helps CRM
Cellular networks divide geographic areas into cells served by low-power base stations to reuse frequencies. Adjacent cells are assigned different frequencies to avoid interference. As capacity demands increase, networks employ techniques like frequency borrowing, cell splitting, cell sectoring, and microcells. Cellular standards like GSM use TDMA to allow multiple users per cell by dividing the air interface into time slots. CDMA spreads user data over a wide bandwidth using unique codes and allows soft handoff between cells. Third generation networks support high-speed data and multimedia services.
This summary provides an overview of the history and technology of mobile, cellular, and personal communications systems:
Mobile radio systems evolved from two-way radios used by public services to cellular networks that enabled widespread mobile phone use. Cellular networks overcome issues with conventional mobile networks by reusing frequencies in adjacent hexagonal cells controlled by base stations and switching offices. Personal communications systems (PCS) operate in different frequency bands than early cellular networks and use digital technologies like TDMA and CDMA to further improve spectrum efficiency. These advances have enabled mobile networks to support additional features and the growth of wireless communication.
Mobile telecommunication systems use cellular networks with multiple low-power base stations that divide coverage areas into cells. Each cell is served by a base station transmitting frequencies allocated to that cell. Neighboring cells use different frequencies to avoid interference. This allows frequency reuse for higher network capacity. Mobile devices connect to the nearest base station and can handover connections between base stations as they move between cells. The GSM system implements this cellular concept and provides voice calls, data services, and supplementary services through its radio subsystem, network switching subsystem, and operations subsystem.
This document provides an overview of wireless networks and communication systems. It discusses digital and analog communications, examples of wireless systems, and the differences between wireless and wired networks. It also covers wireless system architecture, multiple access techniques, the evolution of cellular networks from 1G to 4G, and various wireless technologies like WLANs, Bluetooth, ad hoc networks, and more. Key concepts around cellular concepts and the components of communication systems are also summarized.
This document provides an overview of the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS), including its history, implementation, network structure, channel structure, voice processing, cell structure, and the evolution to Narrowband AMPS (N-AMPS). AMPS was the first cellular standard and launched commercial service in the United States in 1979. It uses analog transmission in the 800-900 MHz band with 30 kHz channels. AMPS employs frequency division multiple access and separate forward and reverse channels to enable multiple simultaneous calls.
This document discusses the concepts and evolution of cellular telephone technology. It begins by describing early mobile telephone systems from the 1940s-1960s that used single carrier frequencies and required operators. It then discusses the development of cellular concepts in the 1960s-1980s using frequency reuse to allow multiple simultaneous calls by dividing geographic areas into hexagonal cells and assigning different frequency sets to different cells. Key aspects covered include frequency reuse, interference reduction through cell splitting and sectoring, and roaming and handoffs as users move between cells.
Cellular communication has evolved from early radio experiments to modern cellular networks that allow communication anywhere. Key developments include the invention of radio telegraphy in the late 19th century, the first commercial cellular network launching in 1979, and the introduction of digital cellular technologies and standards like GSM. Cellular networks operate by dividing coverage areas into cells served by base stations. Frequency reuse allows limited radio spectrum to be used efficiently across many cells. Cell phones connect to the network by registering with base stations and being assigned radio resources as needed to make and receive calls.
Mobile phones establish a connection with the nearest base transceiver station (BTS) when powered on by scanning for control channels and registering. To make a call, the phone sends an access request to the BTS which assigns a voice channel. Receiving a call involves the BTS paging the phone on the control channel. Frequency reuse and adaptive power control allow more efficient use of available frequencies and minimize interference between cells.
This document provides an overview of noise in amplitude modulation systems. It discusses the noise calculation and signal-to-noise ratio for various AM systems, including double sideband suppressed carrier (DSB-SC), single sideband suppressed carrier (SSB-SC), and AM with envelope detection. It describes the components and operation of a basic AM receiver, including RF amplification, mixing, intermediate frequency filtering and amplification, and demodulation. It also explains the advantages of the superheterodyne receiver principle for gain, filtering, and multiplexing of different carrier frequencies.
This document provides information about the course "ANALOG COMMUNICATION" including the course code, instructor details, course contents which are divided into 5 units covering topics like introduction to communication systems, amplitude modulation, angle modulation, transmitters and receivers, and noise in analog communication. It lists the textbooks recommended for different units. One of the units is about noise in analog communication which is further divided into two parts - part 1 covering topics like introduction to noise, sources of noise (external and internal), classification of noise, thermal noise calculations, signal to noise ratio, noise figure and cascaded amplifiers etc.
More Related Content
Similar to Elements of wireless communication_2nd unit.pptx
The document defines cellular radio systems as radio communication networks divided into small geographic areas called cells. Each cell contains a low-power transmitter/receiver base station that can communicate with mobile units within its cell. As a mobile unit moves between cells, it automatically switches to the nearest base station. The mobile telephone switching office coordinates calls between cells and landline networks. Key components include mobile units, base stations, and the switching office. Channels include control channels for signaling and voice channels for calls.
1. The document discusses various topics related to mobile communication and networks including definitions of key terms like base station, control channel, and handoff.
2. It explains concepts like frequency reuse, which allows the same set of frequencies to be reused in different cells by limiting each cell's coverage area.
3. Channel assignment strategies and handoff strategies are covered, distinguishing between fixed and dynamic channel assignment and soft and hard handoffs.
4. Propagation models are summarized, including free space propagation models which predict signal strength over large transmitter-receiver distances with clear line of sight.
The document provides an overview of basic telecommunications systems and concepts. It describes how early communication methods used visual signals like smoke signals. A basic telecom system consists of a transmitter that converts information to a signal, a transmission medium that carries the signal, and a receiver that converts the signal back to usable information. Common types of multiplexing that allow multiple signals to share a channel are frequency-division, time-division, and code-division multiple access. Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM) is an accepted standard for digital cellular networks consisting of switching systems, base station systems, and mobile handsets.
This document provides information about cellular networks and cellular technology. It discusses how cellular networks work using a network of cells with radio signals and base stations to allow communication between mobile devices. It also describes some key aspects of cellular networks including frequency reuse, multiple access methods like FDMA and TDMA, signal encoding, handovers between cells, and provides an example of cellular networks using mobile phone networks.
Cellular phones allow users to make calls from mobile devices by connecting to nearby transmitter towers through radio signals. The document discusses the history and evolution of cellular phones from early analog models weighing 2 pounds that offered 30 minutes of talk time to modern digital cellular networks that support data services in addition to calls. It also describes key components of cellular networks like base stations, switching centers, and databases that help cellular providers manage subscriber identities and locations to route calls and support roaming.
Radio communication was invented in the late 19th century by Nikola Tesla and Guglielmo Marconi. The first commercial cellular network launched in 1979. Cellular networks have since advanced from 1G analog to 2G digital to 3G and 4G networks that provide high-speed data. Cellular networks use techniques like frequency division multiple access, time division multiple access, and code division multiple access to allow many users to share the available radio spectrum. The network is made up of cells with base stations that hand off calls as users move between cells.
1) GSM is a cellular network standard developed in 1991 that is widely used in Europe and Asia. It uses FDMA to separate frequencies and TDMA to divide each frequency into time slots to allow multiple calls over the same frequency.
2) The GSM architecture consists of mobile stations, a base station subsystem to connect to mobile devices, and a network subsystem to switch calls. Each component has several elements like the BTS, BSC, MSC, HLR, and VLR.
3) Frequency reuse allows a limited number of frequencies to service many users by dividing a region into cells and assigning each a unique set of frequencies to avoid interference between cells.
05. EEE 439 Communication Systems II - Cellular Communications.pdfjilanur93
The document discusses various topics related to cellular networks including:
- The history of cellular networks from 1G to 5G technologies.
- Components of cellular networks including mobile stations, base stations, switches, and databases for tracking user locations.
- Concepts like cells, frequency reuse, and handoffs which allow cellular networks to efficiently use limited radio spectrum and maintain connectivity as users move.
- Models for radio propagation including free space path loss which predicts signal strength over distance in line-of-sight conditions.
In 3 sentences or less, this summary outlines some of the key technological developments in cellular networks and fundamental concepts that have enabled their widespread adoption and use.
DYNAMIC CHANNEL ALLOCATION SCHEME TO HANDLE HANDOFF IN WIRELESS MOBILE NETWORKcscpconf
The rapid growth in the demand for mobile communications has led to an intense research effort to achieve an efficient use of the scarce spectrum allocated for cellular communications. In this paper, the authors devise a new scheme DCAS (Dynamic Channel Allocation Scheme) for call admission control. In this new scheme, the number of guard channel(s) is adjusted automatically based on the average handoff blocking rate measured in the past certain period of time. The handoff blocking rate is controlled under the designated threshold and the new call blocking rate is minimized. The performance evaluation of the DCAS is done through simulation of nodes. The result shows that the DCAS scheme outperforms the Static Channel Allocation Scheme by controlling a hard constraint on the handoff rejection probability. The proposed scheme achieves the optimal performance by maximizing the resource utilization and adapts itself to changing traffic conditions automatically.
Cellular networks divide geographic areas into smaller cells to increase capacity and reuse frequencies. Each cell has a base station that transmits and receives from mobile devices within its cell. As mobile devices move between cells during calls, the network performs handovers to transfer the call seamlessly between base stations. Common cellular technologies include GSM, CDMA, and LTE that use techniques like FDMA, TDMA, and CDMA to allow frequency reuse and multiple access across cells.
Today's cellular telephone systems operate by dividing geographic areas into cells served by base stations. Each cell is assigned certain radio frequencies that are reused in non-neighboring cells to increase coverage and capacity. When a mobile user moves between cells, the call is handed off from one base station to another through a mobile switching center to avoid disconnection. Modern cellular networks use digital technologies like CDMA, TDMA and FDMA to provide voice, text, and data services to users through cellular infrastructure.
Chapter 1 AI is used in Customer Relationship Management (CRM):.pptxfilembarketema
Certainly! Here are some examples of how AI is used in Customer Relationship Management (CRM):
Chatbots: AI-powered chatbots are used in CRM systems to provide automated customer support and assistance. Chatbots can handle a wide range of customer inquiries, answer frequently asked questions, and provide relevant information in real-time. They can engage in natural language conversations, understand customer intent, and provide personalized recommendations or solutions.
Sentiment Analysis: AI algorithms can analyze customer interactions, such as emails, social media posts, and chat transcripts, to determine customer sentiment and emotions. Sentiment analysis helps CRM systems understand customer satisfaction levels, identify potential issues or concerns, and take proactive measures to address them.
Personalization: AI enables CRM systems to deliver personalized experiences to customers. By analyzing customer data, purchase history, browsing behavior, and preferences, AI algorithms can generate personalized product recommendations, targeted marketing campaigns, and customized offers to enhance customer engagement and satisfaction.
Lead Scoring and Qualification: AI can assist in lead scoring and qualification processes. By analyzing historical data and customer behavior patterns, AI algorithms can predict the likelihood of a lead converting into a customer. This helps sales teams prioritize their efforts and allocate resources effectively to high-potential leads, improving conversion rates and sales efficiency.
Predictive Analytics: AI algorithms can analyze customer data and historical patterns to make predictions about customer behavior, such as likelihood to churn or cross-sell/up-sell opportunities. These predictions help CRM systems identify the most effective strategies for customer retention and revenue growth.
Voice and Speech Analytics: AI-powered voice and speech analytics tools can analyze customer calls and extract valuable insights. These tools can identify keywords, sentiment, and speech patterns to understand customer needs, identify common issues, and provide feedback for agent training and process improvement.
Social Media Monitoring: AI algorithms can monitor social media platforms to track brand mentions, customer feedback, and sentiment. This helps CRM systems identify customer concerns, engage in social listening, and respond promptly to customer queries or complaints, improving overall customer satisfaction and brand reputation.
Customer Segmentation: AI can assist in segmenting customers based on various criteria, such as demographics, purchase history, interests, and behavior. This enables CRM systems to tailor marketing campaigns, promotions, and communication strategies to specific customer segments, improving targeting and response rates.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) Prediction: This helps CRM
Cellular networks divide geographic areas into cells served by low-power base stations to reuse frequencies. Adjacent cells are assigned different frequencies to avoid interference. As capacity demands increase, networks employ techniques like frequency borrowing, cell splitting, cell sectoring, and microcells. Cellular standards like GSM use TDMA to allow multiple users per cell by dividing the air interface into time slots. CDMA spreads user data over a wide bandwidth using unique codes and allows soft handoff between cells. Third generation networks support high-speed data and multimedia services.
This summary provides an overview of the history and technology of mobile, cellular, and personal communications systems:
Mobile radio systems evolved from two-way radios used by public services to cellular networks that enabled widespread mobile phone use. Cellular networks overcome issues with conventional mobile networks by reusing frequencies in adjacent hexagonal cells controlled by base stations and switching offices. Personal communications systems (PCS) operate in different frequency bands than early cellular networks and use digital technologies like TDMA and CDMA to further improve spectrum efficiency. These advances have enabled mobile networks to support additional features and the growth of wireless communication.
Mobile telecommunication systems use cellular networks with multiple low-power base stations that divide coverage areas into cells. Each cell is served by a base station transmitting frequencies allocated to that cell. Neighboring cells use different frequencies to avoid interference. This allows frequency reuse for higher network capacity. Mobile devices connect to the nearest base station and can handover connections between base stations as they move between cells. The GSM system implements this cellular concept and provides voice calls, data services, and supplementary services through its radio subsystem, network switching subsystem, and operations subsystem.
This document provides an overview of wireless networks and communication systems. It discusses digital and analog communications, examples of wireless systems, and the differences between wireless and wired networks. It also covers wireless system architecture, multiple access techniques, the evolution of cellular networks from 1G to 4G, and various wireless technologies like WLANs, Bluetooth, ad hoc networks, and more. Key concepts around cellular concepts and the components of communication systems are also summarized.
This document provides an overview of the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS), including its history, implementation, network structure, channel structure, voice processing, cell structure, and the evolution to Narrowband AMPS (N-AMPS). AMPS was the first cellular standard and launched commercial service in the United States in 1979. It uses analog transmission in the 800-900 MHz band with 30 kHz channels. AMPS employs frequency division multiple access and separate forward and reverse channels to enable multiple simultaneous calls.
This document discusses the concepts and evolution of cellular telephone technology. It begins by describing early mobile telephone systems from the 1940s-1960s that used single carrier frequencies and required operators. It then discusses the development of cellular concepts in the 1960s-1980s using frequency reuse to allow multiple simultaneous calls by dividing geographic areas into hexagonal cells and assigning different frequency sets to different cells. Key aspects covered include frequency reuse, interference reduction through cell splitting and sectoring, and roaming and handoffs as users move between cells.
Cellular communication has evolved from early radio experiments to modern cellular networks that allow communication anywhere. Key developments include the invention of radio telegraphy in the late 19th century, the first commercial cellular network launching in 1979, and the introduction of digital cellular technologies and standards like GSM. Cellular networks operate by dividing coverage areas into cells served by base stations. Frequency reuse allows limited radio spectrum to be used efficiently across many cells. Cell phones connect to the network by registering with base stations and being assigned radio resources as needed to make and receive calls.
Mobile phones establish a connection with the nearest base transceiver station (BTS) when powered on by scanning for control channels and registering. To make a call, the phone sends an access request to the BTS which assigns a voice channel. Receiving a call involves the BTS paging the phone on the control channel. Frequency reuse and adaptive power control allow more efficient use of available frequencies and minimize interference between cells.
Similar to Elements of wireless communication_2nd unit.pptx (20)
This document provides an overview of noise in amplitude modulation systems. It discusses the noise calculation and signal-to-noise ratio for various AM systems, including double sideband suppressed carrier (DSB-SC), single sideband suppressed carrier (SSB-SC), and AM with envelope detection. It describes the components and operation of a basic AM receiver, including RF amplification, mixing, intermediate frequency filtering and amplification, and demodulation. It also explains the advantages of the superheterodyne receiver principle for gain, filtering, and multiplexing of different carrier frequencies.
This document provides information about the course "ANALOG COMMUNICATION" including the course code, instructor details, course contents which are divided into 5 units covering topics like introduction to communication systems, amplitude modulation, angle modulation, transmitters and receivers, and noise in analog communication. It lists the textbooks recommended for different units. One of the units is about noise in analog communication which is further divided into two parts - part 1 covering topics like introduction to noise, sources of noise (external and internal), classification of noise, thermal noise calculations, signal to noise ratio, noise figure and cascaded amplifiers etc.
This document describes the contents of a course on digital system design. The course covers topics like Boolean algebra, minimization techniques, combinational and sequential circuits, and finite state machines. It lists the course code, instructor details, textbook references, and outlines the topics to be covered in each of the 5 units of the course. These include Boolean algebra, minimization techniques like Karnaugh maps, combinational circuits, sequential circuits, and digital logic families.
This document provides an overview of a digital system design course, including its units and textbooks. The first unit covers Boolean algebra and minimization techniques. Boolean algebra is defined using variables that can have two values, like true/false or 1/0 in digital systems. Boolean functions use operators like AND, OR, and NOT to manipulate variables. Truth tables and identities like De Morgan's law are discussed. Common logic gates like AND, OR, NOT, NAND, and NOR are also introduced, which implement Boolean functions in digital circuits.
This document provides information about the Digital System Design course offered at Government Engineering College Raipur. The course code is B000313(028) and it is a 4 credit course taught over 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week. The course aims to teach students to design, analyze, and interpret combinational and sequential circuits. It covers topics like Boolean algebra, minimization techniques, combinational circuits, sequential circuits, and digital logic families. The document lists 5 expected learning outcomes and provides a brief overview of the topics to be covered in each of the 5 units. It also mentions the relevant textbooks.
Introduction to communication system part 2Unit-I Part 2.pptxAshishChandrakar12
This document contains information about a course on communication systems including:
1) The course contains 5 units covering topics like introduction to communication systems, amplitude modulation, angle modulation, transmitters and receivers, and noise in analog communication.
2) Textbook references are provided for each unit from authors like Taub and Schilling, George F Kennedy, Simon Haykin, and R P Singh.
3) Additional reference books are also listed including works by Proakis and B.P. Lathi.
4) Unit 1 is further described covering topics like classification of signals, Fourier transforms, signal bandwidth, distortionless transmission, Parseval's theorem, and introduction to convolution and correlation of signals.
5
Introduction of communication system_Unit-I Part 2.pptxAshishChandrakar12
This document discusses various types of signals that are commonly used in communication systems. It covers topics such as:
1) Signals can be classified based on properties like continuity, amplitude quantization, periodicity, causality, symmetry, and length. Common types include continuous-time/discrete-time, analog/digital, periodic/aperiodic, causal/non-causal, even/odd, and finite/infinite length signals.
2) Operations like time-shifting, scaling, and inversion are useful for analyzing and manipulating signals.
3) Key concepts for characterizing signal strength include energy, power, and norms. Energy signals have finite energy while power signals have finite non-zero power
This document discusses various propagation models used in wireless communications. It begins by introducing the free space propagation model and 2-ray ground reflection model. It then describes the key propagation mechanisms of reflection, diffraction, and scattering. Reflection from smooth surfaces and conductors is explained. Fresnel zone geometry and knife edge diffraction models are used to analyze diffraction. Buildings can help diffraction by providing some gain, with the amount of diffracted energy dependent on factors like height and frequency. Propagation effects must be considered for accurate wireless system design and performance prediction.
This document discusses digital modulation techniques used in modern mobile communication systems. It explains that digital modulation translates digital data into analog signals and provides advantages over analog transmission like greater noise immunity and easier multiplexing. Key factors that influence the choice of digital modulation scheme are low bit error rates, performance in fading environments, minimum bandwidth usage, and cost-effective implementation. Modulation techniques are evaluated based on their power efficiency and bandwidth efficiency. Power efficiency is defined as preserving signal fidelity at low signal-to-noise ratios, while bandwidth efficiency is utilizing the allocated bandwidth to maximize data throughput.
This document provides an overview of wireless communications. It begins by defining wireless communication as transmitting and receiving voice and data using electromagnetic waves without physical connections. It then discusses the advantages of wireless communication such as mobility and lower installation costs compared to wired systems. The document outlines several challenges in wireless communications including efficient hardware, spectrum usage, and maintaining quality of service over unreliable links. It also describes different multiple access techniques used in wireless systems such as FDMA, TDMA, and CDMA to allow sharing of limited radio spectrum among users. Common existing wireless systems like cellular networks, Bluetooth, and WiFi are also summarized.
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
2. Elements of wireless communication
Base Station : A fixed station in a mobile radio system used for radio communication with
mobile stations. BS are located at the center or on the edge of a coverage region and
consist of radio channels and transmitter and receiver antennas mounted on a tower.
Control Channel : Radio channels used for transmission of call setup, call request, call initiation, and other
beacon or control purposes.
Forward Channel : Radio channel used for transmission of information from the BS to the mobile.
Handoff : The process of transferring a Mobile Station from one channel or BS to another.
Mobile Station : A station in the cellular radio service intended for use while in motion at unspecified
locations. Mobile stations may be hand-held personal units (portables) or installed in
vehicles (mobiles).
MSC : Switching centre which coordinates the routing of calls in a large service area. In a cellular
radio system, the MSC connects the cellular base stations and the mobiles to the PSTN. An
MSC is also called a mobile telephone switching office (MTSO).
Page : A brief message which is broadcast over the entire service area, usually in a simulcast
fashion by many base stations at the same time.
Reverse Channel : Radio channel used for transmission of information from the mobile to base station.
Roamer : A mobile station which operates in a service area (market) other than that from which
service has been subscribed.
Subscriber : A user who pays subscription charges for using a mobile communications system.
Transceiver : A device capable of simultaneously transmitting and receiving radio signals.
3. Cellular Telephone systems
Reuse channels to maximize capacity
Geographic region divided into cells
Frequencies/timeslots/codes reused at spatially separated locations
Base stations/Mobile Telephone Switching Offices (MTSOs) coordinate handoff and control functions
It provides a wireless connection to the PSTN for any user location within the radio range of the system.
Cellular systems accommodate a large number of users over a large geographic area, within a limited frequency
spectrum.
High capacity is achieved by limiting the coverage of each BS transmitter to a small geographic area called a cell so
that the same radio channels may be reused by another base station located some distance away.
A sophisticated switching technique called a handoff enables a call to proceed uninterrupted when the user moves from
one cell to another.
4. Cellular Telephone systems
Provide connection to the PSTN for any user location within the radio
range of the system.
Characteristic
– Large number of users
– Large Geographic area
– Limited frequency spectrum
– Reuse of the radio frequency by the concept of “cell’’.
• Basic cellular system: mobile stations, base stations, and mobile
switching center.
5. Each base station is allocated a portion of the total number of channels available to the entire
system,
Nearby base stations are assigned different groups of channels so that all the available channels
are assigned to a relatively small number of neighboring base stations.
The interference between base stations (and the mobile users under their control) is minimized.
By systematically spacing base stations and their channel groups throughout a market, the
available channels are distributed throughout the geographic region and may be reused as many
times as necessary, so long as the interference between co-channel stations is kept below
acceptable levels.
As the demand for service increases (i.e., as more channels are needed within a particular market),
the number of base stations may be increased (along with a corresponding decrease in transmitter
power to avoid added interference), thereby providing additional radio capacity with no additional
increase in radio spectrum.
Principle: A fixed number of channels serve an arbitrarily large number of subscribers by reusing
the channels throughout the coverage region. Furthermore, the cellular concept allows every piece
of subscriber equipment within a country or continent to be manufactured with the same set of
channels, so that any mobile may be used anywhere within the region.
6. Each mobile communicates via radio with one of the base stations and may be
handed off to any number of base stations throughout the duration of a call.
The mobile station contains a transceiver, an antenna, and control circuitry, and
may be mounted in a vehicle or used as a portable hand-held unit.
The base stations consist of several transmitters and receivers which
simultaneously handle full duplex communications and generally have towers
which support several transmitting and receiving antennas.
The base station serves as a bridge between all mobile users in the cell and
connects the simultaneous mobile calls via telephone lines or microwave links to
the MSC.
The MSC coordinates the activities of all of the base stations and connects the
entire cellular system to the PSTN. A typical MSC handles 100,000 cellular
subscribers and 5,000 simultaneous conversations at a time, and accommodates
all billing and system maintenance functions, as well. In large cities, several
MSCs are used by a single carrier.
7. Communication between the base station and
mobiles is defined by the standard common
air interface (CAI)
– Forward voice channel (FVC): voice transmission from base station to mobile
– Reverse voice channel (RVC): voice transmission from mobile to base station
– Forward control channels (FCC): initiating mobile call from base station to mobile
– Reverse control channel (RCC): initiating mobile call from mobile to base station
8. Communication between BS & mobiles - common air
interface (CAI)
The two channels responsible for initiating mobile calls are the forward control channels (FCC) and reverse control
channels (RCC). Control channels are often called setup channels because they are only involved in setting up a call and
moving it to an unused voice channel.
Control channels transmit and receive data messages that carry call initiation and service requests, and are monitored by
mobiles when they do not have a call in progress.
Forward control channels also serve as beacons which continually broadcast all of the traffic requests for all mobiles in
the system
supervisory and data messages are sent in a number of ways to facilitate automatic channel changes and handoff
instructions for the mobiles before and during a call.
In a certain bandwidth, part of that bandwidth is used for control applications and the remainder of the bandwidth is used
for traffic which is useful for actually sending the data.
So if a base station needs to communicate with a mobile, there could be a downlink or the forward channel which carries
the traffic which is actually userr voice or data. But to ensure that this traffic channel works perfectly, we need to set it up
using a control channel. This is also a forward channel.
The mobile station must also communicate by setting up a channel using a control channel called reverse control channel.
This is called the uplink and once the channel is set up, user communicate the data using a traffic channel called the
uplink traffic channel or the reverse link.
9. How a cellular telephone call is made
The control channels are defined and standardized over the entire geographic area covered and typically make up about 5% of the
total number of channels available in the system (the other 95% are dedicated to voice and data traffic for the end-users).
When a cellular phone is turned on, but is not yet engaged in a call, it first scans the group of forward control channels to
determine the one with the strongest signal, and then monitors that control channel until the signal drops below a usable level.
It also scans the control channels in search of the strongest base station signal.
Since the control channels are standardized and are identical throughout different markets within the country or continent, every
phone, scans the same channels while idle.
When a telephone call is placed to a mobile user, the MSC dispatches the request to all base stations in the cellular system.
The mobile identification number which is a characteristic of that mobile station is being broadcast. It is unique to that mobile.
This number may not be the same as the phone number. It‟s another code.
The mobile receives the MIN as a paging message over the FCC sent by the base station which it monitors, and responds by
identifying itself over the RCC.
The base station relays the acknowledgment sent by the mobile and informs the MSC of the handshake. Then, the MSC instructs
the base station to move the call to an unused voice channel within the cell (typically, between ten to sixty voice channels and just
one control channel are used in each cell's base station).
At this point the base station signals the mobile to change frequencies to an unused forward and reverse voice channel pair, at
which point another data message (called an alert) is transmitted over the forward voice channel to instruct the mobile telephone to
ring, thereby instructing the mobile user to answer the phone.
Figure shows the sequence of events involved with connecting a call to a mobile user in a cellular telephone system. All of these
events occur within a few seconds and are not noticeable by the user.
10. Scans group of FCC to find strongest signal & strongest base station signal
Phone turned
ON, not
engaged in
call
Monitors that
CC until signal
drops below
usable level
11. Timing diagram to illustrate how call to mobile user by a landline subscriber is established
MSC Receives call
from PSTN.
Sends the
requested
MIN to all BS
Verifies that the
mobile has a valid
MIN, ESN pair
Instructs BS to
move call to unused
voice channel pair
within the cell
Connects the
mobile with the
calling party on
PSTN
Base
Station
FCC Transmits page
(MIN) for specified
user
Signals mobile to
change frequencies
to unused FVC &
RVC,
RCC Receives MIN, ESN,
Station Class Mark
and informs MSC of
handshake
FVC data msg(alert) to
instruct mobile to
ring
Begin voice
transmission
RVC Begin voice
reception
Mobile FCC Receives page and
matches the MIN
with its own MIN
Receives data msgs
to move to specified
voice channel
RCC Acknowledges
receipt of MIN &
sends ESN & station
class Mark
FVC Begin voice
reception
RVC Begin voice
transmission
12. Timing diagram to illustrate how call initiated by a mobile is established
MSC Receives a call
initiation request
from base station &
verifies the mobile
has valid MIN, ESN
pair
Instructs FCC of
originating BS to move
mobile to a pair of voice
channels
Connects the mobile
with the called party
on PSTN
Base
Station
FCC Page for called mobile,
instructing it to move to
voice channel
RCC Receives a call initiation
request , MIN, ESN, &
telephone no. of called party,
SCM
FVC Begin voice
transmission
RVC Begin voice reception
Mobile FCC Receives page &
matches MIN with its
own MIN, and receives
instruction to move to
voice channel
RCC Sends a call initiation request
along with its MIN, ESN, &
telephone no. of called party,
SCM
FVC Begin voice reception
RVC Begin voice
transmission
13. Roaming
This allows subscribers to operate in service areas other than the one from which service is subscribed.
When a mobile enters a city or geographic area that is different from its home service area, it is registered as
a roamer in the new service area.
This is accomplished over the FCC, since each roamer is camped on to a FCC at all times. Every several
minutes, the MSC issues a global command over each FCC in the system, asking for all mobiles which are
previously unregistered to report their MIN and ESN over the RCC.
New unregistered mobiles in the system periodically report back their subscriber information upon receiving
the registration request, and the MSC then uses the MIN/ESN data to request billing status from the home
location register (HLR) for each roaming mobile.
If a particular roamer has roaming authorization for billing purposes, the MSC registers the subscriber as a
valid roamer.
Once registered, roaming mobiles are allowed to receive and place calls from that area, and billing is routed
automatically to the subscriber's home service provider.
14. Frequency Reuse : the Need
Fixed telephone networks run wires to every household
Suppose we would like to give every household in Raipur a voice bandwidth
so they can talk. So we need to give about 4 KHz of spectrum but the number
of households in Raipur is about 5 million.
5million households * 4KHz spectrum is 20GHz of bandwidth.
Clearly impractical,
No other service is possible using radio transmission. If we have to provide
additional data, allow users to check their emails over the phone,
downloads stock codes and cricket commentary, we are out of business.
Most of the spectrum will remain unused most of the time.
If there is a phone line connection, adaptive reallocation is not possible. So
clearly there is a need to do frequency reuse.
15. Frequency Reuse
Cellular radio systems rely on intelligent allocation and reuse of channels throughout the
coverage area.
Each base station is allocated a group of radio channels to be used within the small
geographic area which is defined as a cell.
So it is not just a frequency but a frequency band.
Neighboring base stations are given different channel allocation from each other to avoid
interference.
The biggest problem with frequency reuse is manmade noise or interference. If we reuse
the same frequency for transmitting data at a distance, we will definitely get some stray
interfering signals. Since they are exactly in the same band and we cannot use a filter to
filter it out because data is also in the same band.
Performance cannot be improved by simply increasing the signal to noise ratio. If we
increase signal strength to beat the noise, it will also create more interference for
neighbouring cell because the frequency is being reused. Cellular networks must have an
efficient power control mechanism. GSM phone monitors the transmit power level 800
times/ sec.
16. Frequency Reuse
The base station antennas are designed to achieve the desired coverage within the particular cell.
By limiting the coverage area to within the boundaries of a cell, the same group of channels may be
used to cover different cells that are separated from one another by distances large enough to keep
interference levels within tolerable limits.
However the farther we put the co-channel cell, the less frequently we reuse the frequency, the less
capacity we can have. so that is the tradeoff between how much capacity we can pack in in terms of
closely putting the reuse factors and then we reuse the frequency as and when it is desired.
The design process of selecting and allocating channel groups for all of the cellular base stations within
a system is called frequency reuse or frequency planning.
In concept of cellular frequency reuse, cells labeled with the same letter use the same group of
channels. The frequency reuse plan is overlaid upon a map to indicate where different frequency
channels are used.
The hexagonal shape and non-overlapping cell shown in Figure is conceptual and is a simplistic model
of the radio coverage for each base station, but it has been universally adopted since the hexagon
permits easy and manageable analysis of a cellular system.
The actual radio coverage of a cell is known as the footprint and is determined from field measurements
or propagation prediction models.
real footprint is amorphous in nature, a regular cell shape is needed for systematic system design and
adaptation for future growth.
17. The entire space is filled by adding more hexagonal cells. This is a cluster of 7 cells, each
one represented by a different color and each color represents a different frequency band.
The user of adjacent cells are not interfering because they are using different frequency
bands and are not going to interfere. And this cluster is replicated all over the geographical
area.
The distance between this two blues is the same as light green with this light green . So the
reuse distance is the same.
It is interesting to note that we cannot have any random number of cells in the cluster.
Again note that the distance between the green cells here are the co-channel cells. It is the
same between any cluster. No frequency band is being discriminated. All frequency bands
are going to suffer through the same co-channel interference levels.
18. Questions?
Why should the distance be same?
Suppose user take a cell, rotate it and keep it, then certain cells will have more distance and certain cells will
have less distance. Certain group of cells will have poor quality of service because of interference because
distance will attenuate the radiations coming from a co-channel cell. If the distance is fixed and pre-calculated,
then we know how much interference we are dealing with. Therefore, the distance should be same to guarantee a
certain level of affordable co-channel interference.
If we have this cluster size smaller, say a cluster of 4, then the reuse distance will go down and the capacity will
go up. Therefore, there is tradeoff between the co channel interference and the reuse distance. So cells with the
same color in this diagram reflect same frequencies. In this example we have used a reuse factor of 1/7.
When we switch on a mobile phone and we want to initiate a call which frequency do we choose?
Suppose mobile phone is in this light green cell and it is switched on, it has only a set of frequencies with which
it can communicate to this base station. The mobile has a possibility to use any of the frequencies in all the cells.
But which particular reverse channel will it use will be dictated by the base station and eventually through the
mobile switching center. But the base station in this region would communicate using a frequency band
represented by green and tomorrow if the MS wishes to move to the purple cell or to the orange cell; it will
choose the frequency sub-band depending upon the channels available, the frequencies available and allocated.
suppose a base station can only support these green frequencies while the mobile station moves from green to
the purple cell, a handover will take place not only to the base station but a new channel will be given which is
nothing but a new frequency. all the light green cells form the co-channel cells. Similarly all the purple cells are
co-channel cells and will interfere
19. Cell Shape
a base station which will radiate.now if it is in omnidirectional radiation, we would have a
circular cell.it‟s ideal.in reality we would not like to have it for several reasons.
I would like to do system planning and cover my entire area of interest using circular cells. I
can do so but the problem with putting circular cells for coverage is that user are left with
these empty spaces where I cannot predict any coverage. It‟s clearly a bad modeling as a
mobile system service provided I must be able to give 99.99 % coverage if not 100 %.
Clearly, triangle is a poor approximation of a circle. So in order to maintain close contact
with reality I come up with another cell shape called the square cell.it also has a property to
cover the entire geographical region without leaving open spaces. It also approximates the
circle but in a poor manner.
So in a quest to come up with a cell shape which approximates the circular ideal shape but is
not completely counter intuitive, we go to the next possible shape which is the hexagonal
cell.
20. Hexagon has largest area inside circle compared to square and triangle
Using a hexagonal geometry, fewest numbers of cells can cover the entire geographical
region as opposed to square cell or a triangle cell
In practice, the shape of each cell depends on the transmitter radiation pattern and
terrain topography
For most theoretical treatment, hexagonal model of cells is adopted because they are
shapes that approximates a circle.
So let‟s stick with hexagonal cells and user will find it in most textbooks and research
papers that they are using hexagonal cells.
21. A cell must be designed to serve the weakest mobiles within the footprint, and these are
typically located at the edge of the cell. For a given distance between the center of a polygon
and its farthest perimeter points, the hexagon has the largest area of the three.
Thus, by using the hexagon geometry the fewest number of cells can cover a geographic
region, and the hexagon closely approximates a circular radiation pattern which would occur
for an omni-directional base station antenna and free space propagation.
When using hexagons to model coverage areas, base station transmitters are depicted as either
being in the center of the cell (center-excited cells) or on three of the six cell vertices (edge-
excited cells).
Normally, omni-directional antennas are used in center-excited cells and sectored directional
antennas are used in corner-excited cells. Practical considerations usually do not allow base
stations to be placed exactly as they appear in the hexagonal lausert.
22. When taking u-v axis, we don‟t have to count fractional amounts of hexagons as we go along
any axis. The u-v axis is separated by 60 degrees.
We would like to count hexagons after what is a reuse distance. we would like to quantify that
number in terms of the cell radius.
So the cell radius R is the same as the length of a side of a hexagon. I would like to count the
distance in terms of the cell radius. How many units are there? How many radii do I move
from one cell to other? So it will be a normalized unit. If I would like to measure the distance
between two co-channel cells D, I want to quote it in terms of this number R which is the cell
radius and the length of the side of a cell.
23. N is number of cells in a cluster. The value for N is a function of how much interference a mobile
or base station can tolerate while maintaining a sufficient quality of communications. From a
design viewpoint, the smallest possible value of N is desirable in order to maximize capacity over
a given coverage area (i.e.. to maximize C ). The frequency reuse factor of a cellular system is
given by 1/N, since each cell within a cluster is only assigned 1/N of the total available channels
in the system.
Due to the fact that the hexagonal geometry has exactly six equidistant neighbors and that the
lines joining the centers of any cell and each of its neighbors are separated by multiples of 60
degrees, there are only certain cluster sizes and cell lauserts which are possible.
In order to connect without gaps between adjacent cells — the geometry of hexagons is such that
the number of cells per cluster, N, can only have values which satisfy equation
𝑁 = 𝑖2
+ 𝑖𝑗 + 𝑗2
, where i and j are non-negative integers.
To find the nearest co-channel neighbors of a particular cell, (1) move i cells along any chain of
hexagons and then (2) turn 60 degrees counter-clockwise and move / cells. E.g. for i = 3 and j = 2
(example, N = 19).
D is distance between co-channel cells in adjacent cluster=squareroot (N)
24.
25.
26.
27. Cell Capacity & Reuse
Consider a cellular system having total of S duplex channels. If each cell is
allocated a group of k channels (k <S), and if the S channels are divided among N
cells into unique and disjoint channel groups where each have the same number of
channels, the total number of available radio channels can be expressed as S = kN
The N cells which collectively use the complete set of available frequencies is
called a cluster. If a cluster is replicated M times within the system, the total
number of duplex channels C, can be used as a measure of capacity and is given C
= MkN = MS
the capacity of a cellular system is directly proportional to the number of times a
cluster is replicated in a fixed service area. The factor N is called the cluster size
and is typically equal to 4, 7, or 12.
If the cluster size N is reduced while the cell size is kept constant, more clusters are
required to cover a given area and hence more capacity (a larger value of C) is
achieved. i.e. N M and hence C
Conversely, a small cluster size (N less, higher capacity) indicates that co-channel
cells are located much closer together hence large co-channel interference and low
QoS i.e. Quality of service.
28. If a total of 30 MHz of bandwidth is allocated to a particular FDD cellular telephone system
which uses two 25 kHz simplex channels to provide full duplex voice and control channels,
compute the number of channels available per cell if a system uses (a) 4-cell reuse, (b) 7-cell
reuse (c) 12-cell reuse. If 1 MHz of the allocated spectrum is dedicated to control channels,
determine an equitable distribution of control channels and voice channels in each cell for each
of the three systems
ans: Total bandwidth =33 MHz, Channel bandwidth = 25 khz x 2 simplex channels = 50
kHz/duplex channel, Total available channels = 30,000/50 = 600 channels
(a) For N= 4, total number of channels available per cell = 600/4 = 150 channels. (b) For
N=7, total number of channels available per cell = 600/7 = 85 channels. (c) For N = 12, total
number of channels available per cell = 600/12 = 50 channels.
29. A 1 MHz spectrum for control channels implies that there are 1000/50 = 20 control
channels out of the 600 channels available. To evenly distribute the control and voice
channels, simply allocate the same number of channels in each cell wherever possible.
Here, the 600 channels must be evenly distributed to each cell within the cluster.
(a) For N = 4, (600-20)/4 =145 voice channels per cell. and 5 control channels In
practice, however, each cell only needs a single control channel (the control channels
have a greater reuse distance than the voice channels). Thus, one control channel and
145 voice channels would be assigned to each cell.
(b) For N = 7, (600-20)/7=82 voice channels per cell, 4 cells with 3 control channels
and 82voice channels, 3 cells with 2 control channels and 82 voice channels could be
allocated. In practice, however, each cell would have one control channel, four cells-
4vould have 81 voice channels, and three cells would have 82 voice channels.
(c) For N = 12, we can have 8 cells with 2 control channels and 48 voice channels, and
4 cells with 1 control channel and 49 voice channels each. In an actual system, each cell
would have 1 control channel, 8 cells would have 48 voice channels, and 4 cells would
have 49 voice channels.
30. Traffic Theory
how many calls can be handled,
how many users can we support,
how many calls will get blocked,
how many calls will get delayed etc.
all these are questions which will ultimately relate to the quality of service
31. Definitions
Set up time: time required to allocate a radio channel to a requesting user.
there is a finite time that will lapse from the start of a request to user being actually granted the call.
the total number of users is much larger than the total available channels at any time since we believe that not
everybody is going to talk at the same time. However, if someone request for a call to be setup, we give one
of the available channel and for the entire duration of the time the user gets to use the channel. After the call
is over, the channel is returned to the channel pool. this is the notion of trunking, a trunk which has several
channels. It‟s a pool of channels which the users can request for and use if available.
Blocked Call: A call that cannot be completed at the time of request due to congestion (lost call). Lost
call is lost revenue.
It means that sometimes when user make a request user may not be granted a channel. user may be blocked
or user may have to wait. So they are two parameters. user may have a probability of blockage and a certain
duration of wait before user actually get to use the channel. both this things are probabilistic and we have to
estimate the time user have to wait or what is the probability of blocking that will take place.
holding time. : average duration of a typical call.
This holding time can be regulated by increasing or decreasing the cost per minute. So the mobile companies
can actually play around with this holding time by changing the tariff. Today, usually the tariff is going down
because of competition. So holding time is actually increasing.
32. Request Rate: It is the average number of calls per unit time usually represented by lambda
So the units could be number of calls per hour. Typically in an office environment, it could be 5 calls an hour. From
home environment, it could be 2 calls an hour. If it is a call center, there may be 35 calls an hour or more. So
lambda changes from circumstances to circumstances.
Traffic intensity: is defined as the measure of channel utilization time. It is measured in Erlangs.
Load: It is actually the traffic intensity across the entire radio system.
A channel kept busy for 1 hour is defined as having a load of one Erlang.
Grade Of Service (GoS) : A measure of congestion which is specified as a probability.
It depends on many things. it should depend on the number of users who were trying to make a call and how long
they hold the call once they get connected.
So there are two kinds of probabilities
one is the probability of a call being blocked. if the service provider has designed his system for a higher
probability of call blocking. However the design of the system for very stringent call blocking probability will
require them to reserve too many channels.
The other probability is the probability of a call being delayed beyond a certain amount of time. If it is beyond a
certain amount of time, the user will also lose patience and probably give up trying to make the call. It is bad
business strategy. So we have two kinds of charts and associated formulae.
One is called the Erlang B formula and the associated Erlang B chart and the Erlang C formula and Erlang C chart
which tells us directly and quickly what are the probabilities, the number of channels available and the load.
The Probability of call being Blocked (Erlang B).
The probability of call being delayed beyond a certain amount of time (Erlang C).
33. Trunking
The concept of trunking allows a large number of users to share the relatively small number of
channels in a cell by providing access to each user, on demand, from a pool of available channels. In
a trunked radio system, each user is allocated a channel on a per call basis, and upon termination of
the call, the previously occupied channel is immediately returned to the pool of available channels.
Trunking exploits the statistical behavior of users so that a fixed number of channels or circuits may
accommodate a large, random user community.
In a trunked mobile radio system, when a particular user requests service and all of the radio
channels are already in use, the user is blocked, or denied access to the system. In some systems, a
queue may be used to hold the requesting users until a channel becomes available.
One Erlang represents the amount of traffic intensity carried by a channel that is completely
occupied (i.e. 1 call-hour per hour or 1 call-minute per minute). For example, a radio channel that is
occupied for thirty minutes during an hour carries 0.5 Erlangs of traffic.
The grade of service (GOS) is a measure of the ability of a user to access a trunked system during
the busiest hour.
The grade of service is a benchmark used to define the desired performance of a particular trunked
system by specifying a desired likelihood of a user obtaining channel access given a specific
number of channels available in the system. It is the wireless designer's job to estimate the
maximum required capacity and to allocate the proper number of channels in order to meet the GoS.
GOS is typically given as the likelihood that a call is blocked, or the likelihood of a call
experiencing a delay greater than a certain queuing time
34. GoS
The traffic intensity offered by each user is equal to the call request rate multiplied by
the holding time. That is, each user generates a traffic intensity of Au Erlangs given by
Au= Traffic per user= lambda * H
where H is the average duration of a call and lambda is the average number of call requests
per unit time.
For a system containing U users and an unspecified number of channels, the total
offered traffic intensity A, is given as
A=Au U
In a C channel trunked system, if the traffic is equally distributed among the channels,
then the traffic intensity per channel,Ac, is given as
Ac= traffic intensity per channel= U Au/C
35. There are two types of trunked systems which are commonly used.
The first type offers no queuing for call requests. That is, for every user who requests service, it is assumed
there is no setup time and the user is given immediate access to a channel if one is available. If no channels are
available, the requesting user is blocked without access and is free to try again later. This type of trunking is
called blocked calls cleared and assumes that calls arrive as determined by' a Poisson distribution.
Furthermore, it is assumed that there are an infinite number of users as well as the following:
(a) there are memoryless arrivals of requests, implying that all users, including blocked users, may request a
channel at any time;
(b) the probability of a user occupying a channel is exponentially distributed, so that longer calls are less likely
to occur as described by an exponential distribution; and
(c) there are a finite number of channels available in the trunking pool. This is known as an M/M/m queue, and
leads to the derivation of the Erlang B formula (also known as the blocked calls cleared formula).
The Erlang B formula determines the probability that a call is blocked and is a measure of the GOS for a
trunked system which provides no queuing for blocked calls. The Erlang B formula is derived in Appendix A
and is given by
where C is the number of trunked channels offered by a trunked radio system and A is the total offered traffic.
36.
37. The second kind of trunked system is one in which a queue is provided to hold calls which
are blocked. If a channel is not available immediately, the call request may be delayed until a
channel becomes available. This type of trunking is called Blocked Calls Delayed, and its
measure of GOS is defined as the probability that a call is blocked after waiting a specific
length of time in the queue.
To find the GOS, it is first necessary to find the likelihood that a call is initially denied
access to the system. The likelihood of a call not having immediate access to a channel is
determined by the Erlang C formula
38. The Erlang C chart showing probability of
delay Vs traffic intensity
39. Traffic Theory
Average no of MSs requesting service (request/time)
Average arrival rate= ʎ
Average time for which MS requires service
Average Hold time= T
Offered load a= ʎ T (Erlangs)
E.g, In a cell with 100 MSs on an average 30 requests are generated during an hour
(3600 sec) with average hold time T=360 seconds (6 minutes)
Then arrival rate ʎ= 30/3600 request/sec.
A channel kept busy for one hour is defined as one Erlang
Offered load
40. Average arrival rate during a short interval t is given by ʎt .
Assuming Poison Distribution of service request the probability P(n,t) for n
calls to arrive in an interval of length t is given by
Assuming µ to be the service rate, probability of each call to terminate during
interval t is given by µ t.
Thus probability of given call requires service of each time t or less is given by
42. Efficiency is being defined as the traffic which is non-blocked and divided by the capacity.
Clearly it is how many calls that I can handle divided by the theoretical limit of the number of
calls that is possible to handle. It is nothing but Erlangs into the portion of non-routed traffic
divided by the number of trunks.
word trunks signifies a cluster of channels. The trunking theory essentially realize that the
number of users is much larger than the total number of channels available in the trunk. So trunk
is a bunch of channels..
43. TRAFFIC THEORY (Example 1)
Consider a cell with S=2 channels , 100 mobile stations , Generating on an average 30 requests/hour ,
Average holding timeT=360 seconds (6 minutes)
Load a= (30 × 6)/60 = 3 Erlangs
Blocking Probability B(S , a)=0.53
Total number of rerouted calls =30 × 0.53=16
Efficiency =3(1-0.53)/2=0.7
3 Erlangs is the traffic being generated in this small cell but a very ambitious kind of an environment with 100 users
requesting30 calls per hour.
So if we put these numbers where S =2 and a =3 in Erlang B formula, the blocking probability obtained is 0.53. So
more than half the calls will be blocked.
if 100 people are generating 30 calls an hour but there only two channels and the key factor is each call lasts only 6
minutes, then probabilistically just over a little half the calls are being blocked. So whatever calls are being blocked
will have to be rerouted. So the total number of rerouted calls is 30 per hour times 0.53= 16 calls per hour have to be
rerouted.
Efficiency is a load *( 1- the blocking probability) divided by the total number of channels available which is equal to
0.7.
So in this 2 channel cell, we still have an efficiency of 0.7. this is not economically viable. Nobody will accept this
kind of a service. Please remember to take this efficiency from 0.7 to 0.8, it will require user to have some more
additional channels. To take it from 0.8 to 0.9, it will require user to do a much more effort. For taking it from 0.9 to
0.99, it will take user a lot more effort. So taking to that closer to 100% efficiency requires a lot of effort.
46. Channel assignment strategy
A scheme for increasing capacity and minimizing interference is required
Channel assignment strategies can be classified as either fixed or dynamic.
The choice of channel assignment strategy impacts the performance of the system, how
a call is managed when a mobile user is hand off from one cell to another cell
47. Channel assignment strategy
Fixed & dynamic
Fixed channel assignment strategy- each cell is allocated a predetermined set of voice channels. Any call attempt
within the cell can only be served by the unused channels in that particular cell.
If all the channels in that cell are occupied, the call is blocked and the subscriber does not receive service.
Borrowing strategy- a cell is allowed to borrow channels from a neighboring cell if all of its own channels are
already occupied. The mobile switching center (MSC) supervises such borrowing procedures and ensures that
the borrowing of a channel does not disrupt or interfere with any of the calls in progress in the donor cell.
48. Dynamic channel assignment strategy
Voice channels are not allocated to different cells permanently. Each time a call request is made, the serving base
station requests a channel from the MSC.
The switch then allocates a channel to the requested cell following an algorithm that takes into account
the likelihood of future blocking within the cell,
the frequency of use of the candidate channel,
the reuse distance of the channel,
and other cost functions.
To ensure the minimum QoS, the MSC only allocates a given frequency if that frequency is not presently in use in
the cell or any other cell which falls within the minimum restricted distance of frequency reuse to avoid co-channel
interference.
Dynamic channel assignment reduce the likelihood of blocking, which increases the trunking capacity of the
system, since all the available channels in a market are accessible to all of the cells.
Dynamic channel assignment strategies require the MSC to collect real-time data on channel occupancy, traffic
distribution, and radio signal strength indications (RSSI) of all channels on a continuous basis.
This increases the storage and computational load on the system but provides the advantage of increased channel
utilization and decreased probability of a blocked call.
49. Handoff strategies
When a mobile moves into a different cell while a conversation is in progress, the MSC automatically
transfers the call to a new channel belonging to the new base station.
This handoff operation involves identifying a new base station, and allocation of the voice and control
channels associated with the new base station.
Handoffs must be performed successfully and as infrequently as possible, and be imperceptible to the users.
In order to meet these requirements, system designers must specify an optimum signal level at which to
initiate a handoff.
Once a particular signal level is specified as the minimum usable signal for acceptable voice quality at the
base station receiver (normally taken as between —90 dBm and —100 dBm), a slightly stronger signal level
is used as a threshold at which a handoff is made.
This margin is given by ∆= 𝑃𝑟 ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑑𝑜𝑓𝑓 − 𝑃𝑟 𝑚𝑖𝑛𝑖𝑚𝑢𝑚 𝑢𝑠𝑎𝑏𝑙𝑒 cannot be too large or too small.
If ∆ is too large, unnecessary handoffs which burden the MSC may occur, and if ∆ is too small, there may be
insufficient time to complete a handoff before a call is lost due to weak signal conditions. Therefore, ∆ is
chosen carefully to meet these conflicting requirements.
52. Figure (a)demonstrates the case where a handoff is not made and the signal drops below the minimum
acceptable level to keep the channel active.
This dropped call event can happen when there is an excessive delay by the MSC in assigning a handoff, or
when the threshold ∆ is set too small for the handoff time in the system.
Excessive delays may occur during high traffic conditions due to computational loading at the MSC or due
to the fact that no channels are available on any of the nearby base stations (thus forcing the MSC to wait
until a channel in a nearby cell becomes free).
53. Hand off is made when the received signal at the BS falls below a pre-specified threshold.
In deciding when to handoff, it is important to ensure that the drop in the measured signal level is not due to
momentary fading and that the mobile is actually moving away from the serving base station.
In order to ensure this, the base station monitors the signal level for a certain period of time before a handoff is
initiated. This running average measurement of signal strength should be optimized so that unnecessary handoffs
are avoided, while ensuring that necessary handoffs are completed before a call is terminated due to poor signal
level.
The length of time needed to decide if a handoff is necessary depends on the speed at which the vehicle is moving.
If the slope of the short-term average received signal level in a given time interval is steep, the handoff should be
made quickly.
Information about the vehicle speed, which can be useful in handoff decisions, can also be computed from the
statistics of the received short-term fading signal at the base station.
54. The time over which a call may be maintained within a cell, without handoff, is called the dwell time.
The dwell time of a particular user is governed by a number of factors, which include propagation, interference,
distance between the subscriber and the base station, and other time varying effects.
Even when a mobile user is stationary, ambient motion in the vicinity of the base station and the mobile can produce
fading, thus even a stationary subscriber may have a random and finite dwell time.
Analysis indicates that the statistics of dwell time vary greatly, depending on the speed of the user and the type of
radio coverage. For example, in mature cells which provide coverage for vehicular highway users, most users tend
to have a relatively constant speed and travel along fixed and well-defined paths with good radio coverage.
In such instances, the dwell time for an arbitrary user is a random variable with a distribution that is highly
concentrated about the mean dwell time. On the other hand, for users in dense, cluttered microcell environments,
there is typically a large variation of dwell time about the mean, and the dwell times are typically shorter than the
cell geometry would otherwise suggest.
It is apparent that the statistics of dwell time are important in the practical design of handoff algorithms
55. HANDOFF STRATEGIES
In the first generation Analog cellular system the signal strength measurement are made by BS
and are supervised by the MSC.
Each base station constantly monitors the signal strengths of all of its reverse voice channels to
determine the relative location of each mobile user with respect to the base station tower.
In addition to measuring the RSSI of calls in progress within the cell, a spare receiver in each
base station, called the locator receiver, is used to determine signal strengths of mobile users
which are in neighboring cells.
The locator receiver is controlled by the MSC and is used to monitor the signal strength of users
in neighboring cells which appear to be in need of handoff and reports all RSSI values to the
MSC.
Based on the locator receiver signal strength information from each base station, the MSC
decides if a handoff is necessary or not.
56. In the second generation systems that use TDMA technology , Mobile Assisted HandOff MAHO are used.
In MAHO every MS measures the received power from the surrounding BS and continually report these values to
the serving BS.
Handoff is initiated when the power received from the base station of a neighboring cell begins to exceed the power
received from the current base station by a certain level or for a certain period of time.
The MAHO method enables the call to be handed over between base stations at a much faster rate than in first
generation analog systems since the handoff measurements are made by each mobile, and the MSC no longer
constantly monitors signal strengths.
MAHO is particularly suited for microcellular environments where handoffs are more frequent.
During the course of a call, if a mobile moves from one cellular system to a different cellular system controlled by a
different MSC, an intersystem handoff becomes necessary
An MSC engages in an intersystem handoff when a mobile signal becomes weak in a given cell and the MSC cannot
find another cell within its system to which it can transfer the call in progress.
There are many issues that must be addressed when implementing an intersystem handoff. For instance, a local call
may become a long-distance call as the mobile moves out of its home system and becomes a roamer in a
neighboring system.
Also, compatibility between the two MSCs must be determined before implementing an intersystem handoff.
57. Prioritizing Handoffs
One method for giving priority to handoffs is called the guard channel concept, whereby a fraction
of the total available channels in a cell is reserved exclusively for handoff requests from ongoing
calls which may be handed off into the cell.
This method has the disadvantage of reducing the total carried traffic, as fewer channels are
allocated to originating calls.
Guard channels, however, offer efficient spectrum utilization when dynamic channel assignment
strategies, which minimize the number of required guard channels by efficient demand based
allocation, are used.
Queuing of handoff requests is another method to decrease the probability of forced termination of a
call due to lack of available channels.
There is a tradeoff between the decrease in probability of forced termination and total carried traffic.
Queuing of handoffs is possible due to the fact that there is a finite time interval between the time
the received signal level drops below the handoff threshold and the time the call is terminated due to
insufficient signal level.
The delay time and size of the queue is determined from the traffic pattern of the particular service
area.
It should be noted that queuing does not guarantee a zero probability of forced termination, since
large delays will cause the received signal level to drop below the minimum required level to
maintain communication and hence lead to forced termination.
58. Practical Handoff Considerations
Many handoff strategies prioritize handoff requests over call initiation requests when allocating unused
channels in a cell site.
Several schemes have been devised to handle the simultaneous traffic of high speed and low speed users
while minimizing the handoff intervention from the MSC.
By using different antenna heights (often on the same building or tower) and different power levels, it is
possible to provide "large" and "small" cells which are co-located at a single location. This technique is
called the umbrella cell approach and is used to provide large area coverage to high speed users while
providing small area coverage to users traveling at low speeds.
Figure illustrates an umbrella cell which is co-located with some smaller microcells. The umbrella cell
approach ensures that the number of handoffs is minimized for high speed users and provides additional
microcell channels for pedestrian users. The speed of each user may be estimated by the base station or
MSC by evaluating how rapidly the short term average signal strength on the RVC changes over time, or
more sophisticated algorithms may be used to evaluate and partition users [LiCS3]. If a high speed user in
the large umbrella cell is approaching the base station, and its velocity is rapidly decreasing, the base
station may decide to hand the user into the co-located microcell, without MSC intervention.
59. Another practical handoff problem in microcell systems is known as cell dragging. Cell
dragging results from pedestrian users that provide a very strong signal to the base
station. Such a situation occurs in an urban environment when there is a line-of-sight
(LOS) radio path between the subscriber and the base station.
As the user travels away from the base station at a very slow speed, the average signal
strength does not decay rapidly. Even when the user has traveled well beyond the
designed range of the cell, the received signal at the base station may be above the
handoff threshold, thus a handoff may not be made.
This creates a potential interference and traffic management problem, since the user has
meanwhile traveled deep within a neighboring cell. To solve the cell dragging problem,
handoff thresholds and radio coverage parameters must be adjusted carefully
60. SOFT HANDOFF
CDMA spread spectrum cellular system provides a unique hand off capability.
Unlike channelized wireless systems that assign radio channels during a handoff (called hard
handoff) the spread spectrum Ms share the same channel in every cell.
The term handoff here implies that a different Bs handles the radio communication task
By simultaneously evaluating the received signals from a single subscriber at several
neighboring base stations, the MSC may actually decide which version of the user's signal is
best at any moment in time. This technique exploits macroscopic space diversity provided by
the different physical locations of the base stations and allows the MSC to make a "soft"
decision as to which version of the user's signal to pass along to the PSTN at any instance
The ability to select between the instantaneous received signal from different BS is called soft
Hand off.
61. Interference and System Capacity
Sources of interference include another mobile in the same cell, a call in progress in a neighboring
cell, other base stations operating in the same frequency band, or any noncellular system which
inadvertently leaks energy into the cellular frequency band.
Interference on voice channels causes cross talk, where the subscriber hears interference in the
background due to an undesired transmission. On control channels, interference leads to missed
and blocked calls due to errors in the digital signaling.
Interference is more severe in urban areas, due to the greater HF noise floor and the large number
of base stations and mobiles. Interference has been recognized as a major bottleneck in increasing
capacity and is often responsible for dropped calls.
The two major types of system-generated cellular interference are co-channel interference and
adjacent channel interference. Even though interfering signals are often generated 'within the
cellular system, they are difficult to control in practice (due to random propagation effects). Even
more difficult to control is interference due to out-of-band users, which arises without warning due
to front end overload of subscriber equipment or intermittent intermodulation products.
In practice, the transmitters from competing cellular carriers are often a significant source of out-
of-band interference, since competitors often locate their base stations in close proximity to one
another in order to provide comparable coverage to customers.
62. Co-channel Interference
The interference between signals from cells that use the same set of frequencies(co-channel cells) is called co-
channel interference. Unlike thermal noise which can be overcome by increasing the signal-to noise ratio
(SNR), co-channel interference cannot be combated by increasing the carrier power of a transmitter This is
because an increase in carrier transmit power increases the interference to neighboring co-channel cells.
To reduce co-channel interference, co-channel cells must be physically separated by a minimum distance to
provide sufficient isolation due to propagation. When the size of each cell is approximately the same, and the
base stations transmit the same power, the co-channel interference ratio is independent of the transmitted
power and becomes a function of the radius of the cell (R) and the distance between centers of the nearest co-
channel cells (D).
By increasing the ratio of D/R, the spatial separation between co-channel cells relative to the coverage distance
of a cell is increased. Thus interference is reduced from improved isolation of HF energy from the co-channel
cell. The parameter Q, called the co-channel reuse ratio, is related to the cluster size. For a hexagonal geometry
A small value of Q provides larger capacity since the cluster size N is small, whereas a large value of Q
improves the transmission quality, due to a smaller level of co-channel interference. A trade-off must be made
between these two objectives in actual cellular design.
63. Adjacent Channel Interference
Interference resulting from signals which are adjacent in frequency to the desired signal is called adjacent
channel interference. Adjacent channel interference results from imperfect receiver filters which allow
nearby frequencies to leak into the passband.
The problem can be particularly serious if an adjacent channel user is transmitting in very close range to a
subscriber's receiver, while the receiver attempts to receive a base station on the desired channel. This is
referred to as the near-far effect, where a nearby transmitter (which may or may not be of the same type as
that used by the cellular system) captures the receiver of the subscriber. Alternatively, the near-far effect
occurs when a mobile close to a base station transmits on a channel close to one being used by a weak
mobile. The base station may have difficulty in discriminating the desired mobile user from the "bleedover"
caused by the close adjacent channel mobile.
Adjacent channel interference can be minimized through careful filtering and channel assignments. Since
each cell is given only a fraction of the available channels, a cell need not be assigned channels which are
all adjacent in frequency. By keeping the frequency separation between each channel in a given cell as
large as possible, the adjacent channel interference may be reduced considerably. Thus instead of assigning
channels which form a contiguous band of frequencies within a particular cell, channels are allocated such
that the frequency separation between channels in a given cell is maximized.
By sequentially assigning successive channels in the frequency band to different cells, many channel
allocation schemes are able to separate adjacent channels in a cell by as many as N channel bandwidths,
where N is the cluster size. Some channel allocation schemes also prevent a secondary source of adjacent
channel interference by avoiding the use of adjacent channels in neighboring cell sites.
64. Power Control for Reducing Interference
In practical cellular radio and personal communication systems the power levels
transmitted by every subscriber unit are under constant control by the serving base
stations.
This is done to ensure that each mobile transmits the smallest power necessary to
maintain a good quality link on the reverse channel. Power control not only helps
prolong battery life for the subscriber unit, but also dramatically reduces the reverse
channel S/I in the system.
Power control is especially important for emerging CDMA spread spectrum systems
that allow every user in every cell to share the same radio channel.
65. Improving Capacity In Cellular Systems
As the demand for service increases, system designers have to provide more channels per unit
coverage area. Techniques such as cell splitting, sectoring, and coverage zone approaches are used in
practice to expand the capacity of cellular systems.
Cell splitting allows an orderly growth of the cellular system.
Sectoring uses directional antennas to further control the interference and frequency reuse of
channels.
The zone microcell concept distributes the coverage of a cell and extends the cell boundary to hard-
to-reach places.
While cell splitting increases the number of base stations in order to increase capacity, sectoring and
zone microcells rely on base station antenna placements to improve capacity by reducing co-channel
interference. Cell splitting and zone microcell techniques do not suffer the trunking inefficiencies
experienced by sectored cells, and enable the base station to oversee all handoff chores related to the
microcells, thus reducing the computational load at the MSC.
66. cell splitting
It is the process of subdividing congested cells into smaller cells
all of them have their own base stations.
these base stations are not so high. the antennas are shorter and they also transmit less power.
smaller cells, are also closer in terms of reuse distance, so we must correspondingly reduce the transmit
power. also as we increase the base station‟s height, we radiate to a longer distance. so we
correspondingly have to reduce the height of the antennas.
splitting the cell reduces the cell size, thus more number of cells have to be used.
more number of cells implies more number of clusters, more number of clusters implies more
number of channels because number of channels per cell is fixed and ultimately it leads to a higher
capacity.
Cell splitting allows a system to grow by replacing large cells with smaller cells, while not upsetting
the channel allocation scheme required to maintain the minimum co-channel reuse ratio Q between
co-channel cells.
cell splitting achieves capacity improvement by essentially rescaling the system. By decreasing the
cell radius R and keeping the co-channel reuse ratio D/R unchanged, cell splitting increases the
number of' channels per unit area
67. • As the demand was not so high, there were big cells, so large cell
in low density areas.
• smaller cells would imply greater capacity.
• cells are split to add channels with no new spectrum usage. we
have not requested for any additional bandwidth. the frequency is
being reused. The reuse pattern is the same.
• depending on the traffic pattern, the smaller cells may be
activated or deactivated in order to efficiently use cell resources.
• frequency planning requires a lot of effort and resource allocation
once it has been done, we cannot keep changing the frequency
reuse pattern but the demand keeps on growing at different places
at different rates. so cell splitting is a useful way to grow and
ensure more number of users can actually be accommodated
68. Sectoring
Another way to increase capacity is to keep the cell radius R unchanged and seek methods to
decrease the D/R ratio.
In this approach, capacity improvement is achieved by reducing the number of cells in a cluster and
thus increasing the frequency reuse. However, in order to do this, it is necessary to reduce the
relative interference without decreasing the transmit power.
The technique for decreasing co-channel interference and thus increasing system capacity by using
directional antennas is called sectoring. The co-channel interference in a cellular system may be
decreased by replacing a single omni-directional antenna at the base station by several directional
antennas, each radiating within a specified sector.
By using directional antennas, a given cell will transmit to and receive from only a fraction of the
available co-channel cells. Thus CCI is reduced
The factor by which the co-channel interference is reduced depends on the amount of sectoring used.
A cell is normally partitioned into three 120 degree sectors, 4 90 degree or six 60° sectors as shown
in Figure
When sectoring is employed, the channels used in a particular cell are broken down into sectored
groups and are used only within a particular sector, as illustrated in Figure.
69. Problems
increase in the number of antennas at each base station. they are expensive.
they have to be maintained. they consume power.
there is a decrease in the trunking efficiency. clearly when we subdivide a
cell into sectors and we are not asking for extra bandwidth, we are cutting
the pool in to smaller sub sections and each sector is using a part of the pie.
So individual trunking efficiency goes down.
then we have the additional problem of increased number of hand offs. each
sector is being treated separately and when user move from one sector to
another, user have to be handed off.
good news is many modern base stations support sectoring and the related
hand off without the help of the mobile switching centre. so sectoring can be
handled locally
70. Microcell zone
in microcell zone we first divide a cell into microcells or zones. we are not doing any cell
splitting. we are conceptually dividing a cell firstly into 3 or more sub zones called microcells.
each microcell or zone is connected to the same base station by using either a fiber optic link or
a microwave link.
we have conceptually divided a cell into zones but we have not put a single base station in
every zone. otherwise it would become cell splitting. We only have one base station.
each zone now uses a directional antenna. it‟s a concept borrowed from the sectoring part. as a
mobile travels from one zone to another, it retains the same channel because we were all the
time communicating with only one base station.
every zone is communicating with one common base station. so the channel assignment is
done by the base station and it retains the channel and the mobile subscriber doesn‟t have to
hand off when going from one zone to another zone. the base station simply switches the
channel to the next zone site.