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UMTS/UTRAN

Introduction

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 1


Introduction to UMTS
Table of contents

1. Introduction

2. Services Provided

3. UMTS system description

4. WCDMA for UMTS

5. UTRAN (Release 1999)

Appendix
Related Documentation
Abbreviations and acronyms

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1.

Introduction

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1.Introduction
Definition

Universal
Mobile
Telecommunication
System
“UMTS is o ne o f the m a jo r ne w third g e ne ra tio n m o bile
c o m m unic a tio ns s y s te m s be ing d e ve lo p e d within the
fra m e wo rk whic h ha s be e n d e fine d by the ITU a nd kno wn a s
IMT-2 0 0 0 ”

UMTS Forum
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 4
1. Introduction

1.1 Context

1.2 Standardization

1.3 UMTS goals

1.4 UMTS technical overview

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 5


1.Introduction/1.1 Context
Past mobile systems (1)

First Generation (1G)

In the early 80’s, analog systems


e.g Radiocom 2000, C-Netz…

Service:
speech

Limitations of 1G:
•poor spectrum efficiency
•expensive and heavy user equipment
•mobility only in a small area
•no security of communications

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1.Introduction/1.1 Context
Past mobile systems (2)

Second Generation (2G)


In the early 90’s, digital systems
Europe : GSM
US : IS-95 (also called cdmaOne), IS-136 (TDMA system)
Japan : PDC

Services: Speech and low data rate


Limitations of 2G:
• Congestion
more than 300 million wireless subscribers worldwide -->need to increase system
capacity

• Limited mobility around the world -->need for a global standardisation

• Limited offer of services


more than 200 million internet users--> Need for new multimedia services and
applications (video telephony, e-commerce...)

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1.Introduction/1.1 Context
Technical solutions

Two types of solutions were possible :

• enhancement of 2G system --> 2,5G


low cost but short term
e.g.: HSCSD, GPRS, EDGE for GSM evolution

• design of a complete new standard --> 3G


high cost, long term, but great amount of new potential services
e.g: UMTS

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1.Introduction/1.1 Context
GSM evolution (1)

HSCSD (High Speed Circuit Switched Data)


Principle: to enhance channel coding scheme and to bundle GSM time
slots on a circuit-switched basis.
Performance: up to 115,2 kbps
Already implemented but not all operators/manufacturers have made this
choice.

GPRS (General Packet Radio Service)


Principle: to enhance channel coding scheme and to bundle GSM time
slots on a packet-switched basis (the allocation of time slots is performed
dynamically at the initialisation and during the connection)
Performance: up to 171,2 kbps

1999/2000 : deployment phase


2002 : service offers for most operators
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1.Introduction/1.1 Context
GSM evolution (2)

EDGE (Enhancement Data rates for GSM evolution)

Principle: new modulation scheme (8PSK instead of GMSK)

Performance: up to 384 kbps

Implementation is yet to come (foreseen for 2003)

EDGE might be a good alternative to 3G systems in certain areas or for


operators who do not have 3G licences, although the 3G brings more in
terms of new multimedia services.

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1.Introduction/1.1 Context
Let’s take some examples!

Downloading a map (50 A 2 1/2 minutes MP3 music


KBytes) file (2.4 MBytes)

GSM 42 s GSM 34 mn
GPRS 8s GPRS 7 mn
EDGE 3 s EDGE 128 s
UMTS 0.2 s UMTS 10 s

Downloading a Word document Audio and Video


(500 KBytes) streaming
GSM 7 mn Streaming with all
GPRS 82 s technologies
EDGE 27 s except with GSM
UMTS 2s

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1.Introduction

1.1 Context

1.2 Standardization

1.3 UMTS Goals

1.4 UMTS technical overview

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
IMT-2000: definition

IMT-2000 is a framework for third generation mobile systems (3G) which is


scheduled to start service worldwide around the year 2000 subject to
market considerations.

IMT-2000 should use the frequencies around 2 GHz all over the world.

IMT-2000 is defined by a set of interdependent ITU Recommendations*.

IMT-2000 main requirements are :


- wide range of high quality services
- capability for multimedia applications
- worldwide roaming capability
- compatibility of services within IMT-2000 and with the fixed networks

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
IMT-2000: main participants

Europe: ETSI

Japan: ARIB

USA: TIA, T1

South Korea: TTA

China: CWTS

ITU: International
Telecommunication Union

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
IMT-2000: terrestrial
radio interfaces
IMT-MC (Multi Carrier)
IMT-TC (Time Code) IMT-SC (Single Carrier)
CDMA2000
TD-CDMA TDMA Single Carrier
FDD MC
UMTS TDD UWC-136
EDGE/ERAN

IMT-DS (Direct Spread) IMT-FT (Frequency Time)


W-CDMA TDMA Multi-Carrier
UMTS FDD DECT
Radio/Network
Connection

Evolved GSM Evolved IS-41


Core Network Core Network

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
2G terrestrial radio interfaces

China :

GSM
US & Canada : (87%)
Western Europe: CDMA
(13%)

GSM GSM
(12%) (100%)
CDMA
(49%)
TDMA Japan:
(39%)

PDC
(64%) CDMA
(36%)
Rest of the World :

GSM
(41%) CDMA
(35%) TDMA 1999 Market Share:
(24%)
GSM 48 %
CDMA 28 %
TDMA 15 %
PDC 9%

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
3G terrestrial radio interfaces

China :

GSM
US & Canada : (87%)
Western Europe: UMTS CDMA
(13%)
CDM
GSM A
GSM
(12%) (100%) 2000
EDGE CDMA UMTS
(49%)
CDM TDMA Japan:
A (39%)
EDGE
2000 PDC
(64%) CDMA
UMTS
(36%)
Rest of the World : CDM
A
GSM 2000
(41%) CDMA UMTS
UMTS (35%) TDMA IMT2000
1999 Market Share:
CDM
(24%)
A EDGE GSM
UMTS 48 %
2000 CDMA 28 %
CDM
UMTS TDMA 15A%
EDGE
PDC 9%
2000

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
3GPP: joint organization
for UMTS standardization
Affiliated organizations:
ETSI (Europe) ARIB/TTC (Japan)
T1 (USA) TTA (South Korea)
CWTS (China)
Other members involved: manufacturers and operators
System Specification:
Access Network
WCDMA (UTRA FDD)
TD-CDMA (UTRA TDD)
Core Network
Evolved GSM
All-IP
Releases defined for the system specifications:
- Release 99 (called R3 as well)
- Release R4 and R5 (previously known as Release 2000 or R’00)

In the following material we will only refer to UMTS R99.

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
3GPP: TSG organization

Project Co-ordination Group


(PCG)

TSG CN TSG RAN TSG SA TSG T TSG GERAN


Core Network Radio Access Networks Service and System Terminals GSM EDGE
Aspects Radio Access Network

CN WG1 T WG1
Mobility Management, RAN WG1 SA WG1 Mobile Terminal GERAN WG1
Call Control, Radio layer 1 Services Conformance Testing Radio Aspects
Session Management specification

RAN WG2 T WG2


CN WG2 Radio Layer 2 & SA WG2 Mobile terminal GERAN WG2
CAMEL Radio Layer 3 RR Architecture services & capabilities Protocol Aspects
specification

T WG3
CN WG3 RAN WG3
SA WG3 Smart Card GERAN WG3
Interworking with Iub, Iur, Iu specification &
Security Application aspects Terminal Testing
External Networks UTRAN O&M requirements

CN WG4 RAN WG4


SA WG4
MAP/GTP /BCH/SS Radio performance &
CODEC
Protocol aspects

CN WG5
OSA SA WG5
Open Service Access Telecom Management

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
3GPP specifications

Series_Id Series_description
21. Requirements
22. Service Aspects
23. Technical Realization
24. Signaling Protocols (UE to network)
25. UTRA aspects
26. CODECs
27. Data
28. (reserved)
29. Signaling Protocols (intra-fixed network)
30. Program management
31. User Identity Module
32. O&M
33. Security Aspects ecs .htm
ecs /s p
34. Test specification
p. o rg /sp
35. Security algorithms w w . 3gp
http:/ /w

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1.Introduction/1.2 Standardization
UMTS Roadmap

EDGE UMTS R5
Commercial
introduction

UMTS R99 UMTS R99


Field Trials commercial
System
GPRS
implementation

2001 2002 2003 2004

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1.Introduction

1.1 Context

1.2 Standardization

1.3 UMTS Goals

1.4 UMTS technical overview

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1.Introduction/1.3 UMTS goals
Why UMTS?

“UMTS will be a m o bile c o m m unic a tio n s y s te m tha t o ffe rs s ig nific a nt us e r


be ne fits inc lud ing hig h-q ua lity wire le s s m ultim e d ia s e rvic e s to a c o nv e rg e nt
ne two rk o f fix e d , c e llula r a nd s a te llite c o m p o ne nts . ”

It will d e liv e r info rm a tio n d ire c tly to us e rs a nd p ro v id e the m with a c c e s s to


ne w a nd inno v a tiv e s e rv ic e s a nd a p p lic a tio ns .

It will o ffe r m o bile p e rs o na liz e d c o m m unic a tio ns to the m a s s m a rke t


re g a rd le s s o f lo c a tio n, ne two rk a nd te rm ina l us e d . ”

UMTS Forum 1997

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1.Introduction/1.3 UMTS goals
UMTS vision

Zone 4: Global
Satellite

Zone 3: Suburban Zone 2: Urban


Zone 1: In-Building

Pico-Cell
Micro-Cell
Macro-Cell

MSS
GSM UTRA/ FDD UTRA/ TDD

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1.Introduction

1.1 Context

1.2 Standardization

1.3 UMTS Goals

1.4 UMTS technical overview

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1.Introduction/1.4 UMTS technical overview
UMTS general architecture

CS networks PS networks Core network (CN)


(PSTN, ISDN..) (Internet…) it provides support for the network
features and telecommunication
services. It is connected to external
CN CS networks or PS networks.

Iu Radio Access network (RAN)


it comprises roughly the functions
RAN specific to the access technique.
3 different RANs are foreseen:
Uu •UTRAN (UMTS Terrestrial RAN)
UE •MSS (Mobile Satellite component)
•BRAN (Broadband RAN)
CN Core Network
RAN Radio Access Network
UE User Equipment
User Equipment (UE)
It is the mobile phone.
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1.Introduction/1.4 UMTS technical overview
UMTS Cellular System

UMTS consists of a set of hierarchical cells, but the multiple access


technique is completely different from GSM.

GSM UMTS
Users are separated in frequency Users are separated with codes
(FDMA) and in time (TDMA) (CDMA)

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1.Introduction/1.4 UMTS technical overview
UMTS duplex modes

5 MHz channel
FDD mode
f1 Up link
Code and Frequency
f2 Do wnlink
orthogonality

5 MHz channel
TDD mode
... Up link & Do wnlink ...
15TS
Code and Time
orthogonality

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1.Introduction/1.4 UMTS technical overview
UMTS Frequency allocations

2110 2170 2200


FDD MSS
1900 1920 1980 2010 2025

TDD FDD MSS TDD

Uplink Downlink

FDD: Frequency Division Duplex


TDD: Time Division Duplex
MSS: Mobile Satellite System

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 29


1.Introduction
QUIZ! (1)

Mark the following answers to the questions A to E by True or False.

A. What are the limits of 2G systems like GSM?


1/ No security of communications
2/ No dynamical allocation of radio resources
3/ Mobility only in a small area
4/ Heavy mobile phones
5/ Limited offer of data services

B. EDGE...
1/ is an evolution of GSM
2/ is sometimes considered as a 3G system
3/ is based on a new modulation scheme
4/ is supposed to reach a bit rate about 40 times greater than the GSM one

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1.Introduction
QUIZ! (2)

C. Which of these radio interfaces belongs to IMT-2000?

1/ CDMA One 2/ UMTS FDD 3/ UMTS TDD 4/ CDMA 2000 5/ EDGE

D. What is the organisation responsible for UMTS standardization?

1/ 3GPP 2/ 3GPP2 3/ ETSI 4/ ARIB 5/ CWTS

E. What is the bandwidth of a CDMA carrier in UMTS?

1/ 200 kHz 2/ 1 MHz 3/ 5 MHz

F. Are the following statements about UTMS duplex modes True or False?

1/ FDD is similar to the GSM duplex mode

2/ TDD use the same frequencies as FDD

3/ FDD is better suited for asymmetric traffic

4/ TDD will come later


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2.

Services provided

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 32


2. Services provided

2.1 UMTS service principles

2.2 UMTS Bearer services

2.3 Tele-services

2.4 UMTS Terminals

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
What is a service?

TE/MT UTRAN CN CN TE
E.g speech, Node Gateway
file transfer, Teleservice
emails...
UMTS Bearer Service External Bearer
Service

E.g data Radio Access Bearer Service CN Bearer


(RAB) Service
transfer at
9,6 kbps, in Radio Bearer Iu Bearer Backbone
transparent Service Service Bearer Service
mode, ... ...
with turbocode
Radio Physical Physical
... Bearer Service
Bearer Service

Uu Iu

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
Tele-services and
Bearer services
Teleservices
Speech, emergency calls
“Instinctive” service
SMS
Email
Internet Access Basic services

Mobile e-commerce
Video Postcards
Information and location
Enhanced services
based services

New applications New services to be provided


by service providers (third party)

UMTS Bearer services


Large toolkit for all kinds of services

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
Third party: service provider

Tele-services will not be standardised so as to differentiate between


operators and providers of applications.
UMTS offer new opportunity for content and service providers

Today’s 1:1 customer-operator relationship


Tomorrow’s situation?

Contracted Content providers


Operator
Contracted Service providers

Contracted Service providers

Operator

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
Virtual Home Environment (VHE)

The Virtual Home Environment (VHE) is an important portability concept of


the 3G mobile systems.

• it enables end users to bring with them their Personal Service


Environment (PSE) whilst roaming between networks,

• and also being independent of terminal used.

• "same look and feel" wherever you are

The PSE is defined in terms of one or more User Profiles (list of


subscriptions, associated preferences, terminal interface preferences, …)

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
Service Architecture

Tele-services Service Layer


(terminal equipment functions,
Operator transmission capabilities)

Standardized
interfaces

Service Capability Features

Service Capability Servers GSM/GPRS/UMTS CAMEL MExE SAT

Bearer Services Network Layer

Fixed
VHE concept is based on the standard mechanisms of Service Capability
Servers which allow Service Capability Features. The latter are carried
through standard interfaces in order to support Tele-services adapted to
the Service Capabilities of the network and user equipment.

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2. Services provided/2.1 UMTS service principles
Let’s Look for the nearest
restaurant
Choose your preferences:
- type of restaurant: Fre nc h
- type of payment: c re d it c a rd
...
Restaurant Paul Bocuse
69660 Collonges-au-Mont-d'or

This service is built from the following service capability features:


call set-up & authorisation (CAMEL for services in roaming after
authentication phase with SAT),
Map display on the phone : SAT and MExE
Call the restaurant by Push Service : MExE
Reservation with VISA card number : secured transaction with MExE
Billing of the service : CAMEL

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2. Services provided

2.1 UMTS service principles

2.2 UMTS Bearer services

2.3 Tele-services

2.4 UMTS Terminals

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2. Services provided/2.2 UMTS Bearer Services
Bearer services characterization

Bearer services are characterized by a set of end-to-end characteristics


with requirements on QoS, always considered point-to-point.
Bearer services provide the capability for information transfer between
access points and involve only low layer functions.

Each bearer service is characterized by its requirements:

• transfer information: connection oriented or connectionless, traffic


type (guaranteed/constant bit rate, non guaranteed/variable…), traffic
characteristics (uni-directional, bi-directional, multicast…), priority
• quality characteristics: maximum transfer delay, delay variation, bit
error ratio, data rate.

This set of requirements are called QoS parameters.


Example : several active radio bearer services can be handled
simultaneously by the same terminal equipment. Page 41
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U
2. Services provided/2.2 UMTS Bearer Services
Bearer QoS requirements

• negotiable: QoS offer on demand

• provide a wide range of QoS levels

• dynamic behaviour: It shall be possible to negotiate (re-negotiate) the


characteristics of a bearer service at session or connection establishment
(during an on going session or connection).

• support of asymmetric nature between uplink and downlink

• supply of bearer services without wasting resources on the radio and


network interfaces.

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2. Services provided/2.2 UMTS Bearer Services
Bearer Supported bit rates

The only limiting factor for satisfying application requirements shall be the
cumulative bit rate per mobile termination at a given instant in each radio
environment:
•At least 144 kbps in rural outdoor radio environment (with a
maximum speed of 500 km/h)
•At least 384 kbps in urban or suburban outdoor radio
environments (with a maximum speed of 120 km/h)
•At least 2048 kbps in indoor or low range outdoor radio
environment (with a maximum speed of 10 km/h)

Theses performances decrease:


- when the speed of the user increases
- when the load of the network increases

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2. Services provided

2.1 UMTS service principles

2.2 UMTS Bearer services

2.3 Tele-services

2.4 UMTS Terminals

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2. Services provided/2.3 Tele-services
Typology

Always-on Media Fun


• Games (Hangman, Poker, Quiz, …)
Directories • Screen Saver
• Yellow/White Pages • Ring Tone
• Inte rna tio na l Dire c to rie s •
Mobile Office • Operator Services
Horoscope
• Voice (!) • Biorhythm
• E-mail
• Agenda Music
• IntraNet/InterNet • Downloading of
• Corporate Applications Transportation music files or
• Database Access • Flight/train Schedule video clips
• reservation News
(general/specific)
• International/National News Location services
Vertical • Local News • Traffic Conditions
• Sport News • Itineraries
application • Weather • Nearest Restaurant,
• Traffic Management • Lottery Results Cinema, Chemist,
• Automation • Finance News Parking;, ATM ...
• Mobile branches • Stock Quotes
• Health • Exchange Rates
M-commerce
Non physical
• on-line Banking
• Ticketing Physical
• Auction • on-line shopping
• Gambling • on-line food
• Best Price
• e-Book

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2. Services provided/2.3 Tele-services
QoS classes

4 classes have been identified:


conversational
• AMR speech service
+ • Video telephony -
– CS: H324
– PS: H323
streaming Data
Delay
Integrity
sensitive interactive sensitive
• Web-browsing
• location based services
- background +
• e-mail delivery
• SMS ...

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2. Services provided/2.3 Tele-services
Performance

QoS of teleservices depends not only on UMTS network, but also on


applications, terminals and external networks.
From a user’s perspective it is more relevant to speak of delay rather than
bit rate:

Error Conversational Streaming audio Voice messaging


Fax
tolerant voice and video and video

E-mail arrival
Error Telnet, FTP, still image, E-commerce,
WWW browsing notification
intolerant interactive games paging

Conversational Streaming Interactive Background


delay <<1 sec delay<1 sec delay <10 sec delay >10 sec

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2. Services provided/2.3 Tele-services
Defining charging principles

• How will billing be performed: by time? by volume? by number of


connections?

• If billing is performed by volume, what will be an easy way to explain to


the customer what a “1 Mbyte of data” is?

• What will happen in case of handover between GSM and UMTS?

• What about roaming? Prepaid services?

• QoS depends directly on the load of the network. A trade-off must be


found between users. Customers who pay more might have higher priority
or better QoS (depending of the operator’s strategies). Billing for a given
service might depend on the QoS.

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2. Services provided/2.3 Teleservices
Location based services

Teleservices will depend on the strategy and on the imagination of


operators and content providers.

The key point is likely to be a fast access to information and an appropriate


filtering of the user location data.
the UMTS killer application is likely be a location based service

Example of location based services : look for an hotel, consult yellow


pages, get local traffic situation or weather report,...

Limitation: location information could be a risk for privacy.

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2. Services provided

2.1 UMTS service principles

2.2 UMTS Bearer services

2.3 Tele-services

2.4 UMTS Terminals

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2. Services provided/2.4 UMTS terminals
User Equipement (UE)

UICC
Cu
interface USIM1

USIM2
GSM
access

SIM

Mobile
Equipment
GSM/GPR
(ME) S terminal

User Equipment (UE)

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2. Services provided/2.4 UMTS terminals
Range of terminals

There will be a wide range of terminals depending of the type of application


(speech, video, games, dual...), the mode (UMTS/GSM, UMTS/DECT...)

Integrated approach: Distributed approach:


1 handset able to perform all 1 handset for voice & WAP, or voice only
functions. Most of the concept and a Bluetooth connection to other
phones today. devices (headset, camera...).
Automotive / Telematics PS
G Domestic

New interfaces
Data / IT

E-Commerce
Consumer Electronics

Image Games Audio

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2. Services provided
QUIZ!

A. True or False? The tele-services...

1/ are used for example to make a call, to access yellow pages, on-line banking...

2/ are mapped on bearer services

3/ will be standardized by 3GPP

B. True of False? The VHE...

1/ is a portability concept of 3G mobile systems

2/ will enable to keep the same environment when roaming between mobile and fixed networks

3/ will be adapted to the terminal capabilities

4/ will use proprietary interfaces

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2. Services provided
QUIZ!

C. True or False? A bearer service can support for one user:

1/ 2 Mbps at a speed of 120 km/h

2/ 2 Mbps in a high loaded cell

3/ 2 Mbps at 3 km away from the base station

4/ Asymmetric traffic

5/ Variable traffic

D. True or False? Location based services...

1/ are services only available in some areas (city centers...)

2/ are services related to the location of the user

3/ can locate the mobile phone with an accuracy of about 50 m

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2. Services provided
QUIZ!

E. True or False? A UICC (UMTS integrated Circuit Card)...

1/ has the same size as a GSM SIM card

2/ can not be used in a GSM terminal

3/ can be used in an UMTS terminal and provide access to GSM network

4/ is linked with the UMTS terminal via a proprietary interface

5/ may provide access to UMTS networks of different operators

F. UMTS services have been announced to come later than initially scheduled because of non
availability of UMTS terminals in volume: can you find some reasons which makes it quite
complex to design UMTS terminals?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 55


3.

UMTS System Description

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 56


3. UMTS System Description
3 views of the system

Logical architecture Protocol architecture

Pro to c o l
Entitie s
s ta c ks

Be a re rs

Call scenario

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 57


3. UMTS System Description

Pro to c o l
Entitie s
s ta c ks

3.1 Logical architecture


Be a re rs

3.2 Protocol architecture

3.3 Call scenario

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 58


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture
UMTS logical Architecture

Core Network
CN CS-Service PS-Service
Domain Domain

Iu-CS Iu-PS

IU Iu-reference
Iu-PS Iu-CS

point
RNS RNS
Iur
RNC RNC

UTRA Iub Iub Iub Iub


N Node_B
Node B Node B Node B Node B

UU Uu-reference
point

UE

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 59


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture
CN logical architecture

UMTS Core Network for Release 99


2G/3G 2G/3G PLMN
MSC GMSC PS TN / IS DN

A
GSM BSS
BSC
EIR HLR AuC VHE
Gb

Iu (CS)
UTRAN
2G/3G IP Ba c kbo ne 2G/3G Ex te rna l
RNC Iu (PS) SGSN GGSN IP Ne two rk

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 60


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture UTRAN logical
Architecture
RNS RNS
Iur
RNC RNC

Iub Iub Iub Iub

Node_B
Node B Node B Node B Node B

RNC
It is the intelligent part of the UTRAN:
- radio resource management (code allocation, congestion control, admission
control)
- radio mobility management
- macro-diversity handling (soft HO)
- control of Node-Bs
Node-B
A Node-B can be composed of several cells and performs:
- radio transmission handling
- macro-diversity handling (softer HO)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 61


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture Soft Handover (1)

Core Network

Iu Iu

Iur
S RNC1 D
S RNC2

Iub Iub Iub Iub

NodeB1 NodeB2 NodeB3 NodeB4

1 2 3 4 5
6

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 62


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture Soft Handover (2)

The role of an RNC (Serving or Drift) is on a per connection basis between


a UE and the UTRAN:
Serving RNC: provide Iu UE-CN connection

Drift RNC: supports Serving RNC by providing radio resources

The recombination of the signal is performed in Serving RNC (in Node B for
softer HO) and in UE using a RAKE receiver.

Soft HO is highly recommended in UMTS system: about 30 to 40% of


mobiles are in macro-diversity mode in IS-95.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 63


3. UMTS System Descript./3.1 UMTS logical
architecture UMTS logical Interfaces

Open Interfaces
The functional split for the UMTS components (UE, Node-B, RNC...) are
clearly specified, but the internal architecture and implementation issues
are left open (it is up to the manufacturer).

However all the interfaces (Cu, Uu, Iub, Iur, Iu-CS, Iu-Ps) have been
defined in such a detailed level that the equipment at the endpoints can be
from different manufacturers.

“Open Interfaces” aim at motivating competition between manufacturers.

Physical implementation of Iu interfaces


Each Iu Interface may be implemented on any physical connection using
any transport technology.

ATM will be provided in the R99 release and IP is foreseen in further


releases
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 64
3. UMTS System Description

Pro to c o l
Entitie s
s ta c ks

3.1 Logical architecture


Be a re rs

3.2 Protocol architecture

3.3 Call scenario

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 65


3. UMTS System Descri./3.2 UMTS protocol
architecture Access stratum and
Non Access Stratum

No n-Ac c e s s Stra tum (NAS)

Radio Radio Iu Iu
Protocols Protocols Protocols Protocols
(1) (1) (2) (2)

Ac c e s s Stra tum
(AS)
UE UTRAN CN
Uu Iu
SAP

Interchanges between entities is applied on a peer-to-peer principle.

Each entity provides services to entities of upper layers through Service


Access Points (SAP).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 66


3. UMTS System Descri./3.2 UMTS protocol
architecture Non Access Stratum

CS traffic
CM/MM
CS traffic PS traffic

CM/MM SM/GMM
Iu Protocols
NAS
AS Uu Iu-
MSC
Radio Iu CS
Radio Protocols
Protocols Protocols
PS traffic
SM/GMM
UE UTRAN

Iu Protocols
Iu-PS

SGSN

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 67


3. UMTS System Descri./3.2 UMTS protocol
architecture Access Stratum: radio
protocols
4. Us e r a uthe ntic a tio n (NAS s ig na lling )
2 . We b bro ws ing (fro m /to Iu-PS)
3 . Lo c a l
we a the r
1 . Sp e e c h (fro m /to Iu-CS)
fo re c a s t
1 2 4 3
(SMS
Ce ll
NO N ACCESS STRATUM(NAS) Bro a d c a s t
ACCESSSTRATUM(AS) )

RRC 5 . Initia l a c c e s s (RRC Co nne c tio n Es ta blis hm e nt) RRC

PDCP BMC PDCP BMC

RLC RLC

Co
ntr
MAC MAC

Us

ol
pla
er

ne
Iu Iu

pla
ne
protocols protocols
Phys Phys
UE Uu Node B Iub RNC

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 68


3. UMTS System Descri./3.2 UMTS protocol
architecture Access Stratum: Iu
protocols
Iub Iu-CS MSC
Node-B RNC RANAP
NBAP
RNSAP Iur
Iu-PS SGSN
RNC

The same general Control User Plane


Radio
protocol model is applied Plane
for all Iu interfaces: Network Application Data
Layer Protocol Stream(s)

Transport Network Transport Network Transport Network


Transport User Plane Control Plane User Plane
Application Protocol: ALCAP
Network
- NBAP for Iub
Layer
Signaling Signaling Data
- RNSAP for Iur Bearer(s) Bearer(s) Bearer(s)

- RANAP for Iu-CS Physical Layer


and Iu-PS

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 69


3. UMTS System Description

Pro to c o l
Entitie s
s ta c ks

3.1 Logical architecture


Be a re rs

3.2 Protocol architecture

3.3 Call scenario

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 70


3. UMTS System Description/3.3 Call Scenario
Radio Access Bearer (RAB)

UMTS Bearers
CN-CS
A
R
B
R
B
A
UTRAN UMTS Bearer
UMTS Bearer
UE R
AB
R
A
B
UMTS bearer
services CN-PS

Radio Bearers Iu Bearers

RABs (mapped on Radio & Iu Bearers)


“The RAB provides confidential transport of signaling and user data
between UE and CN with the appropriate QoS”.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 71
3. UMTS System Description/3.3 Call Scenario
Establishment of a call

Inside the UTRAN

No more distinction between CS and PS part: all data are mapped on RAB.

But the RAB characteristics (delay, bit rate…) may not be the same for CS
and PS part.

UTRAN has the total freedom to configure the radio bearers according to
the required RAB attributes (ie QoS).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 72


3. UMTS System Description/3.3 Call Scenario
Example : CS call establishment

UE Uu UTRAN Iu CN

Connection to UTRAN
(RRC Connection establishment)

Request for service


(RRC) (RANAP)

Authentication and Ciphering / Integrity

Setup

Establishment of Resources (RAB + Radio Bearer)

Alert and Connect

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 73


3. UMTS System Description
QUIZ!

A. Put the correct words in the spaces on the figure below

CS networks
... ... ... ...
(PSTN, ISDN)

...

... ... PS networks


... ... ... ...
(internet)

... ...

... ...

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 74


3. UMTS System Description
Quiz!

B. Which of the following statements concerning the soft(er) handover is true of false?
1/ a soft(er) HO consists of two or more simultaneous radio links between the UE and the
UTRAN

2/ a soft HO is under the control of the Drift RNC

3/ a softer HO is performed by Node-B

C. Where is performed the radio mobility management?


1/ in the CN 2/ at the RNC 3/ at the Node-B

D. According to the norm, can the RNC from a given


manufacturer be compatible with:
1/ the CN of another manufacturer?

2/ the RNC of another manufacturer?

3/ the Node-B of another manufacturer?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 75


4.

WCDMA for UMTS

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 76


4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 77


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.1 Context
From military to civil modern
radio-communications
Early 70’s
CDMA developed for military field for its great qualities of privacy (low
probability interception, interference rejection)

1996
CDMA commercial launch in the US
This system called IS-95 or cdmaOne was developed by Qualcomm and
has reached 50 million subscribers worldwide

2000
IMT-2000 has selected three CDMA radio interfaces:
- WCDMA (UTRA FDD)
- TD-CDMA (UTRA TDD)
- CDMA 2000

In the following material we will only refer to WCDMA (UTRA FDD)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 78


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.1 Context
Why CDMA?

CDMA is very attractive:

• Better spectrum efficiency than 2G systems

• Suitable for all type of services (circuit, packet) and for multi-services

• Enhanced privacy

• Evolutionary (linked with progress in signal processing field)

BUT:

• Complex system: not easy to configure and to manage

• Unstable in case of congestion

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 79


4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 80


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.2 Spread Spectrum Modulation
A code as a shell
against noise

Noise

Spreading Radio channel Despreading

Transmitter Receiver
The letter ‘A’ represents the signal to transmit over the radio interface.

At the transmitter the height (ie the power) of ‘A’ is spread, while a color (i.e
a code) is added to ‘A’.

At the receiver ‘A’ can be retrieved with knowledge of the code, even if the
power of the received signal is below the power of noise due to the radio
channel.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 81
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.2 Spread Spectrum
Modulation Spectrum spreading

P P P P
Radio channel No is e
le v e l

f f f f
Spreading De-spreading
At the transmitter the signal is multiplied by a code which spreads the
signal over a wide bandwidth while decreasing the power (per unit of
spectrum).

At the receiver it is possible to retrieve the wanted signal by multiplying the


received signal by the same code: you get a peak of correlation, while the
noise level due to the radio channel remains the same, because this is not
correlated with the code.

The spectrum spreading permits transmission of a signal below the noise


level and makes the signal very hard to detect.

Spectrum spreading makes CDMA very secure.


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 82
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.2 Spread Spectrum
Modulation Transmission Chain

Air Interface
NB-Signal WB-Signal WB-Signal NB-Signal

Data Data
Modulator Demodulator

Code sequence Code Sequence

The narrowband data signal is multiplied bit per bit by a code sequence: it
is known as “chipping”.

The chip rate of this code sequence is much higher than the bit rate of the
data signal: it produces a wideband signal, also called spread signal.

At the receiver the same code sequence in phase should be used to


retrieve the original data signal.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 83


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.2 Spread Spectrum
Modulation Spreading factor

Signal 1 0 0 (bits)
Spreading 1111 0000 0000 (chips)
Code 0101 0101 0101
Tx signal 0101 1010 1010
Radio channel
Rx signal 0101 1010 1010
Code 0101 0101 0101
Despreading 1111 0000 0000
Signal 1 0 0

(In this case, each bit of the signal is spread over 4 chips. The spreading
factor is 4)

Spreading makes CDMA adequate for services with variable bit rates.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 84


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.2 Spread Spectrum
Modulation Processing Gain

W 
Processing Gain = 10 Log 10 
 Rb 
Processing
Gain

De-spreading

f
W Rb

The Processing Gain is the gain you have at the receiver by the
despreading of the signal (peak of correlation). It enables transmission of
the signal below the noise level.

A high bit rate signal needs more power to cross the noise level by de-
spreading.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 85


4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 86
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple
Access One-cell reuse

The area is divided into cells, but the entire


bandwidth is reused in each cell (frequency reuse
of one)

> Inter-cell interference

> Cell orthogonality is achieved by codes

The entire bandwidth is used by each user at the


same time

> Intra-cell interference

> User orthogonality is achieved by codes

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 87


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple
Access Multiple access (1)

Spreading 1

Spreading1
Transmitter 1 Radio Channel

Spreading 2 Receiver

The receiver aims at receiving Transmitter 1 only.


Transmitter 2

All the users transmit on the same 5 MHz carrier at the same time and
interfere with each over.

At the receiver the users can be separated by means of (quasi-)orthogonal


codes.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 88
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple Access
Multiple access (2)

Spreading 1

Spreading1
Transmitter 1 Radio Channel

Spreading 2 Receiver

The receiver aims at receiving Transmitter 1 only.


Transmitter 2

If a user transmits with a very high power, it will be impossible for the
receiver to decode the wanted signal (despite use of quasi-orthogonal
codes)

CDMA is unstable by nature and requires accurate power control.


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 89
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

Spreading:
Channelization and scrambling

cch1
air
interface
Mo d ula to r
cch 2 cscrambling

cch 3

The channelization code (or spreading code) is signal-specific: the code


length is chosen according to the bit rate of the signal.
The scrambling code is equipment-specific.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 90


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple Access
Channelization codes
(spreading codes)
C ch,4,0 =(1,1,1,1)

C ch,2,0 = (1,1)

C ch,4,1 = (1,1,-1,-1)
The code tree is shared by several
C ch,1,0 = (1) users (usually one code tree per
C ch,4,2 = (1,-1,1,-1) cell)
C ch,2,1 = (1,-1)

C ch,4,3 = (1,-1,-1,1)

SF = 1 SF = 2 SF = 4 SF = 8

The channelization codes are OVSF (Orthogonal Variable Spreading Factor)


codes:
• their length is equal to the spreading factor of the signal: they can match
variable bit rates on a frame-by-frame basis.
• orthogonality enables to separate physical channels:
UL: separation of physical channels from the same terminal
DL: separation of physical channels to different users within one cell

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 91


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

Scrambling codes
The scrambling codes provide separation between equipment:
• UL: separation of terminals
No need for code planning (millions of codes!)
There are 214 long and 214 short scrambling codes in uplink

• DL: separation of cells


Need for code planning between cells (but trivial task)
There are only long scrambling codes in downlink
(512 to limit the code identification during cell search procedure)

The long scrambling codes are truncated to the 10 ms frame length.

Only one DL scrambling code should be used within a cell.


Another scrambling code may be introduced in one cell if necessary
(example : shortage of channelization code), but orthogonality between
users will be degraded.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 92
4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 93
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake Receiver principle (1)

In a CDMA system there is a single carrier which contains all user signals.

Decoding of all these signals by one receiver is only a question of signal


processing capacity.

A Rake receiver is capable to decode several signals simultaneously in the


so called “fingers” and to combine them in order to improve the quality of
the signal or to get several services at the same time.

A Rake receiver is implemented in mobile phones and in base stations.

A Rake receiver can provide:


- multi-service (via handling of multiple physical channels that are carrying
the services)
- soft handover
- path diversity

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 94


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake receiver principle (2)
Delay Adjustment

Multi-code
signal
1 st
Fing e r Delay 1 Data 1
Code Sequence 1

2 nd
Fing e r Delay 2
Code Sequence 2
Data 2
3 rd
Fing e r Delay 3
Code Sequence 2 or 3

The components of the multi-code signal are demodulated in parallel each


in one “finger” of the Rake Receiver.

The outputs of the fingers:


• can provide independent data signals
• can be combined to provide a better data signal(s)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 95


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake receiver
and multi-service

Spreading 1 Despreading 1

Radio Channel
Spreading 2
Despreading 2

Transmitter Multimedia receiver

As a first approach, we can say:


One service, one code! (*)

>> Which codes make it possible to


separate the two signals at the receiver?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 96


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake Receiver
and soft handover

Spreading 1

Despreading 1&2
Base station 1 Radio Channel

Spreading 2 Mobile phone

Base Station 2 >> Which codes make it possible to


separate the two signals at the
receiver?
Soft handover is possible, because the two mobile stations use the same
frequency band. The mobile phone need only one transmission chain to
decode both simultaneously.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 97


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake Receiver
and path diversity (1)
Natural obstacles (buildings, hills…) cause reflections, diffractions and
scattering and consequently multipath propagation.

The delay dispersion depends on the environment and is typically:

• 1 µs (300 m) in urban areas


• 20 µs (6000 m) in hilly areas

The delay dispersion should be compared with the chip duration 0,26 µs
(78 m) of the CDMA system.

If the delay dispersion is greater than the chip duration, the multipath
components of the signal can be separated by a Rake Receiver.

In this case, CDMA can take advantage of multipath propagation.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 98


4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.4 Rake Receiver
Rake Receiver
and path diversity (2)
Direct path
Spreading Despreading

Reflected path
Transmitter Receiver
Dispersion <Chip duration
>> Which codes make it
The Rake Receiver cannot provide path diversity. possible to separate the two
signals at the receiver?

Direct path
Spreading Despreading

Reflected path
Transmitter Receiver
Dispersion > Chip duration
The Rake Receiver can provide path diversity to improve the quality of the signal.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 99


4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 100
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.5 Power Control
Why Power Control?

MS2

MS1
Node
B

Near-Far Problem
on the uplink way an overpowered mobile phone near the base station can
jam any other mobile phones far from the base station.

> Need for very efficient and very fast Power Control on UL

> Power Control is also used in DL to reduce interference and


consequently to increase the system capacity.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 101
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.5 Power Control
Open Loop

Open loop power control

1
1
Node Node
B B
2 2

If UE receives a STRONG DL signal, If UE receives a weak DL


then UE will speak low. signal,
then UE will speak LOUD.
Problem:
fading is not correlated on UL and DL due to separation of UL and DL band.

Open loop Power Control is inaccurate.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 102
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.5 Power Control
Closed Loop

Closed loop power control

”Power down” SIR estimation

SIR ”Power down”


Node estimation
SIR B ”Power up” SIR
RNC target estimation
SIR ”Power ...”
estimation
...

The Node-B controls the power of the UE (and vice versa) by performing a
SIR estimation (inner loop).

The RNC controls parameters of the SIR estimation (outer loop).

This SIR estimation is performed each 0,66 ms (1500 Hz command rate).

Closed loop Power Control is very fast.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 103
4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 104
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.6 Soft Handover
Soft Handover (1)

RNC

Node
B
Node
B Node
B

Soft Softer HO
HO
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 105
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.6 Soft Handover
Soft Handover (2)

Why do we need soft HO?


Imagine that a UE penetrates from one cell deeply into an adjacent cell:
> it may cause near-far problem
> hard HO is not a good solution, because of the need for the hysteresis
mechanism

Additional resources due to soft HO:


- Additional rake receiver in Node-B
- Additional Rake Fingers in UE
- Additional transmission links between Node-Bs and RNCs

Soft HO provides Diversity (also called Macro-Diversity), but requires


more network resource.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 106
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.6 Soft Handover
Soft Handover (3)

Soft Handover execution:


Soft Handover is executed by means of the following procedures
• Radio Link Addition (FDD soft-add);
• Radio Link Removal (FDD soft-drop);
• Combined Radio Link Addition and Removal.
The cell to be added to the active set needs to have information
forwarded by the RNC:
• Connection parameters (coding scheme, layer 2 information, …)
• UE ID and uplink scrambling code,
• Timing information from UE
The UE needs to get the following information
• Channelization & scrambling codes to be used
• Relative timing information (Timing offset based on CPICH synchro)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 107
4. WCDMA for UMTS

4.1 Context

4.2 Spread Spectrum modulation

4.3 Code Division Multiple Access

4.4 Rake Receiver

4.5 Power Control

4.6 Soft Handover

4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 108
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.7 Typical coverage and capacity
values
Radio dimensioning process: What’s
new?
Market perspective
Mobile data market forecast
Marketing inputs

Multi-service environment
Voice+data
Variable bit rate
Different QoS
Asymmetric traffic

New radio technology


W-CDMA Capacity

Coverage Quality

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 109
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.7 Typical coverage and capacity
values
Concentric coverage

The coverage is determined by the uplink range, because the transmission


power of the terminal is much lower than that of the base station.
R1
R2
R3 UE Transmit Power
21 dBm (126 mW)
24 dBm (251 mW)

Service Speech Packet data Packet data


in suburban area 12 kbps 144 kbps 384 kbps

Cell radius
R1 ≈ 3 km R2 ≈ 2 km R3 ≈ 1,5 km
(uplink limited)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 110
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values
Ways of improving coverage

AMR speech Codec


it enables to switch to a lower bit rate if the mobile is moving out of the cell
coverage area: it is a trade-off between quality and coverage.
Multipath diversity
it consists of combining the different paths of a signal (due to reflections,
diffractions or scattering) by using a Rake Receiver.
Multipath diversity is very efficient with W-CDMA.
Soft(er) handover
the transmission from the mobile is received by two or more base stations.
Receive antenna diversity
the base station collects the signal on two uncorrelated branches. It can be
obtained by space or polarization diversity.
Base stations algorithms
e.g. accuracy of SIR estimation in power control process

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 111
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

Soft capacity
The capacity is determined by the downlink direction, because:
- better receiver techniques can be used in the base station than in the
mobile station (but requiring more CPU power).
- the downlink capacity is expected to be more important than the uplink
capacity because of asymmetric traffic.

The downlink capacity has two limitations:


- the amount of interference in the air interface
Adjacent cells share part of the same interference: there is an additional
capacity in a cell, if the number of users in the neighboring cells is smaller.
- the loss of code orthogonality
The downlink codes originate from a single point and can be synchronized.
But, after transmission over multipath channel, part of orthogonality is lost.

It is a soft capacity, because it is not limited by the hardware equipment.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 112
4. WCDMA for UMTS/ 4.7 Typical coverage and capacity values

Parameters influencing capacity


The capacity depends on:
- the radio environment (rural, suburban, indoor)
- the terminal speeds
- the distribution of the terminals
- the load of the cell: trade-off capacity/coverage (breathing cells)

High loaded cell High loaded cell


High DL interference level Low DL interference level
DL data throughput 660 kbps DL data throughput 1440 kbps
(per carrier per sector) (per carrier per sector)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 113
4. WCDMA for UMTS
QUIZ!

A. True or False? Spreading...

1/ consists of increasing the power while decreasing the frequency bandwidth

2/ allows to transmit a signal with a S/N (Signal-to-Noise ratio) smaller than one

3/ enables to retrieve the coded signal at the receiver by using the same code in phase

4/ is used in FDMA system

B. Signal 1 has a bit rate of 12 kbps and a coding rate of 1/3, signal 2 has a bit rate of 384 kbps
and a coding rate of 1/2:

1/ Which spreading factor should be chosen for each of these signals?

2/ What is the processing gain for each of these signals?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 114
4. WCDMA for UMTS
QUIZ!

C. True of false? WCDMA...

1/ is also called UMTS FDD or UTRA FDD

2/ uses a 1 MHz bandwidth carrier

3/ has a chip rate of 3,84 Mchips/s

D. How many carriers are there per operator for WCDMA?

1/ 124 carriers 2/ 62 carriers 3/ 1 to 3 according to the country

E. True or false? A Rake Receiver

1/ can separate simultaneously two signals only if their codes are perfectly orthogonal

2/ can separate simultaneously several signals of 2 different WCDMA carriers

3/ can take advantage of multipath propagation

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 115
4. WCDMA for UMTS
QUIZ!

F. True or false? In WCDMA, power control


1/ is used in uplink and in downlink

2/ is crucial in downlink because of near-far problem

3/ is composed of the open loop and the closed loop

4/ may be performed each WCDMA time slot (1500 Hz command rate)

G. True or false? Soft handover...


1/ is highly desirable in WCDMA

2/ require use of more frequencies

3/ require use of more power in uplink

4/ require additional signal processing equipment such as Rake Receiver

5/ require additional transmission links

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 116
5.

UMTS Terrestrial
Radio Access Network
(FDD mode, Release 1999)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 117
5. UTRAN
UTRAN role and principles

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1 Uu Iub
UE Node B RNC CN

• To transfer traffic and control channels between UE and CN


- Common handling of packet-switched and circuit-switched data
- Protection of the user data on the air interface (providing of ciphering)
- Independence from the applied transport technology on the Iu interface
• To manage the radio mobility of the user
Full control of UE radio mobility with the use of the Iur interface which makes it
possible to perform soft HO even with 2 cells/Node-Bs belonging to different RNCs.
• To make efficient use of limited radio resources
Support of WCDMA specific Radio Resource Management (RRM) algorithms.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 118
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
UE Node B RNC
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 119
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport
channels
Situation

UE UTRAN CN CN UE
Node Gateway
Teleservice

UMTS Bearer Service External Bearer


Service
Radio Access Bearer Service CN Bearer
(RAB) Service

Radio Bearer Iu Bearer Backbone


Service Service Bearer Service
... ...

Radio Physical Physical


Bearer Service
Bearer Service

Uu Iu

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 120
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Radio Bearers, logical and transport
channels
Control plane User plane

Web browsing
NAS signalling
Telephony
SMS Cell
speech
RRC Broadcast

RRC connection Us e r p la ne
Sig na lling Ra d io
Ra d io establishment
Be a re rs PDCP BMCBe a re rs

RLC
Co ntro l Tra ffic
Lo g ic a l Lo g ic a l ...
Cha nne l Cha nne ls
s MAC MAC

Tra ns p o rt Cha nne ls Tra ns p o rt Cha nne ls


(Iur)/Iub/Uu
Phys. Phys.
UTRAN UE
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 121
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport
channels
Radio Bearers
Signalling Radio Bearers (SRB)
SRBs can carry:
- layer 3 signalling (e.g. RRC connection establishment)
- NAS signalling (e.g location update)
There can be up to 4 SRBs per RRC connection (one UE has one RRC
connection when connected to the UTRAN).

User Plane Radio Bearers


RABs are mapped on user plane RBs.
One RAB can be divided on RAB sub-flows and each sub-flow is mapped on
one user plane RB.
e.g the AMR codec encodes/decodes speech into/from three sub-flows; each
sub-flow can have its own channel coding.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 122
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport
channels
Logical Channels (1)

Control Channels (CCH)


Broadcast Control Channel (BCCH)

Paging Control Channel (PCCH)

Common Control Channel (CCCH)


UTRAN
Dedicated Control Channel (DCCH)

Traffic Channels (TCH)


Dedicated Traffic Channel (DTCH)

Common Traffic Channel (CTCH)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 123
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport
channels Logical Channels (2)

UL ( )
/ Wha t typ e of inform a tion ?
DL ( )
BCCH System control information
e.g cell identity, uplink interference level
PCCH Paging information
e.g CN originated call when the network does not know the
location cell of the UE
CCCH Control information
e.g initial access (RRC connection request), cell update
D CCH Control information (but the UE must have a RRC connection)
e.g radio bearer setup, measurement reports, HO
D TCH Traffic information dedicated to one UE
e.g speech, fax, web browsing
CTCH Traffic information to all or a group of UEs
e.g SMS-Cell Broadcast

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 124
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport
channels Why Transport Channels?

A transport channel offers a flexible pattern to arrange information on any


service-specific rate, delay or coding before mapping it on a physical
channel:

• it provides flexibility in traffic variation

• it enables multiplexing of transport channels on the same physical channel

Transport channels provide an efficient and fast flexibility in radio


resource management.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 125
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Structure of a Transport Channel (1)

Transport Block: basic Transport Format (TF): it may be changed every TTI.
unit exchanged over Each TF must belong to the Transport Format Set (TFS) of
transport channels. the transport channel

168

360 bits 168 168 168

360 168 168 168


10 ms 10 ms 10 ms 10 ms

Time Transmission
Interval (TTI): periodicity >> The system delivers one Transport Block Set to the
at which a Transport Block physical layer every TTI: what is the delivery bit rate of the
Set is transferred by the transport blocks to the physical layer during the first TTI?
physical layer on the radio
interface
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 126
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Structure of a Transport Channel (2)

Transport Format (TF)


• Semi-static part (can be changed, but long process)
Transmission Time Interval (TTI),
Coding scheme...
• Dynamic part (may be changed easily)
Size of transport block,
Number of transport blocks per TTI

Transport Format Set (TFS)


It is the set of allowed Transport Formats for a transport channel, which is
assigned by RRC protocol entity to MAC protocol entity.
MAC chooses TF among TFS.
MAC may choose another TF every TTI without interchanging with RRC
protocol (fast radio resource control).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 127
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Example

576 bits

576 576

576 576 576

576 576 576


40 ms
Sta tic Pa rt
TTI ?
1. Complete the table
Coding scheme Turbo coding, coding rate= 1/ 3
CRC 16 bits
2. What is the delivery
bit rate of the transport
D yna m ic Pa rt blocks to the physical
Transport Block Size ? layer during the first
Transport Block Size Set 576*B (B= 0,1,2,3,4) TTI?

3. How many Transport Format(s) may be chosen for this transport channel?
4. Can you imagine why the transfer has been interrupted during the third TTI?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 128
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Transport Channels

Common Channels
Broadcast Channel (BCH)

Paging Channel (PCH)

Forward Access Channel (FACH)


UTRAN
Downlink Shared Channel (DSCH)

Random Access Channel (RACH)

Common Packet Channel (CPCH)

Dedicated Channels
Dedicated Channel (DCH)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 129
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Common Transport Channels (1)

BCH: Broadcast Channel


A downlink transport channel that is used to carry BCCH. The BCH is
always transmitted with high power over the entire cell with a low fixed bit
rate.

>> The BCH is the only transport channel with a single transport format (no
flexibility). Can you explain why?

PCH: Paging Channel


A downlink transport channel that is used to carry PCCH. It is always
transmitted over the entire cell.

>> Is it possible to carry all types of information on the PCH?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 130
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Common Transport Channels (2)

FACH: Forward Access Channel


A downlink transport channel that is used to carry control information. It may also
carry short users packets. The FACH is transmitted over the entire cell or over only
a part of the cell using beam-forming antennas. The FACH uses open loop power
control (slow power control).

>> In which case is it interesting to use beam-forming antennas? would it also be


relevant to implement this feature for PCH?

RACH: Random Access Channel


An uplink transport channel that is used to carry control information from the mobile
especially at the initial access. It may also carry short user packets. The RACH is
always received from the entire cell and is characterized by a limited size data field,
a collision risk and by the use of open loop power control (slow power control).

>> Why is it interesting to carry short user packets on RACH in spite of limited data
field and collision risk (instead of using a dedicated channel)?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 131
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

Common Transport Channels (3)

DSCH: Downlink Shared Channel


A downlink transport channel shared by several UEs to carry dedicated
control or user information. When a UE is using the DSCH, it always has
an associated DCH, which provides power control.

CPCH: Common Packet Channel


An uplink transport channel that is used to carry long user data packets
and control packets. It is a contention based random access channel. It is
always associated with a dedicated channel on the downlink, which
provides power control.

⇒ Tra ns fe r o f s ig na lling a nd tra ffic o n a s ha re d ba s is

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 132
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Dedicated Transport Channels

DCH: Dedicated Channel


A downlink or uplink transport channel that is used to carry user or control
information. It is characterized by features such as fast rate change (on a
frame-by-frame basis), fast power control, use of beam-forming and
support of soft HO.

> > Two fe a ture s a re o nly a p p lie d o n DCH: c a n y o u g ue s s whic h?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 133
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Mapping
Logical⇔Transport Channels

Control Logical Channels Traffic Logical Channels

BCCH PCCH CCCH DCCH DTCH CTCH

BCH PCH RACH FACH DSCH CPCH DCH

Common Transport Channels Dedicated


Transport
Channels
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 134
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

Mapping
Logical ⇔ Transport Channels
Control Logical Channels Traffic Logical Channels

BCCH PCCH CCCH DCCH DTCH CTCH

BCH PCH RACH FACH DSCH CPCH DCH

Common Transport Channels Dedicated


Transport
Channels
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 135
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels
Complete the gaps!

(1 ) … c ha nne ls
are defined by what type of information (e.g user data, signalling, system
information...) is transported over the radio interface.

(2 ) … c ha nne ls
are defined by how and with what characteristics (e.g type of coding,
required transfer delay, required BER... ) data are transferred over the radio
interface.

(3 ) … c ha nne ls
are defined by the mechanisms (e.g frequency, code, power, framing...) with
which the data are transferred over the physical resources of the air-
interface.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 136
5. UTRAN/5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

Complete the table!

Tra ffic Log ica l Tra nsp ort


cla ss Cha nne l Ch a nn el
Sig na lling
1. … - BCCH BCH, FACH
2. … - PCCH PCH
3. … - CCCH UL: RACH, DL: FACH
4. … - DCCH RACH, DCH

Use r inform a tion


3 UL: 3 coordinated DCHs
5. … Conversational
DTCHs DL: 3 coordinated DCHs
6. … Interactive DTCH UL: RACH, DL: FACH
UL: CPCH, DCH
7. … Interactive DTCH
DL: DSCH,DCH
UL: CPCH, DCH
8. … Streaming DTCH
DL: DSCH,DCH
UL: CPCH, DCH
9. … Background DTCH
DL: DSCH,DCH
10. … Background CTCH FACH

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 137
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
UE Node B RNC
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 138
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Radio protocol stack

Control plane User plane


Non Access Stratum
Be a re rs (c a lle d
Access Stratum RAB in us e r p la ne )
control
Layer 3 RRC
PDCP
PDCP SAP

control
control

Layer 2/PDCP
Layer 2/BMC BMC
control
control

Ra d io Be a re rs

Layer 2/RLC RLC RLC


RLC RLC
RLC RLC
RLC RLC
Lo g ic a l Cha nne ls
Layer 2/MAC MAC
Tra ns p o rt Cha nne ls
Layer 1 PHY
Phy s ic a l Cha nne ls

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 139
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Radio Resource Control (RRC)

Call management
Be a re rs

Layer 3
Radio mobility management
RRC
Measurement control and reporting
control
control
control

control
Ra d io Be a re rs Outer loop power control
control
(c o ntro l p la ne )

PDCP
BMC
RLC

MAC

PHY

RRC is the brain of the radio interface protocol stack.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 140
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
PDCP and BMC protocols

PDCP (Packet Data Convergence Protocol)


- in the user plane, only for services from the PS domain
- it contains compression methods
In R99 only a header compression method is mentioned (RFC2507).
Why is header compression valuable?
e.g a combined RTP/UDP/IP headers is at least 60 bytes for IPv6, when IP
voice service header can be about 20 bytes or less.

BMC (Broadcast/Multicast Services)


- in the user plane
- to adapt broadcast and multicast services from NAS on the radio interface
In R99 the only service using this protocol is SMS Cell Broadcast Service
(directly taken from GSM).
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 141
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Radio Link Control (RLC)

Segmentation
Ra d io Be a re rs Ra d io Be a re rs
(c o ntro l p la ne ) (us e r p la ne ) Buffering
Data transfer with 3
Layer 2/ RLC RLC
upper part RLC
RLC RLC configuration modes:
RLC RLCRLC
- Transparent (TM)
Co ntro l Tra ffic
Lo g ic a l Lo g ic a l - Unacknowledged (UM)
Cha nne ls Cha nne ls
- Acknowledged (AM)
Ciphering

RLC provides segmentation and (in AM mode) reliable data transfer.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 142
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Medium Access Control (MAC)

Co ntro l Tra ffic


Lo g ic a l Lo g ic a l Basic data transfer
Cha nne ls Cha nne ls
Multiplexing of logical channels
Layer 2/
lower part MAC Priority handling/Scheduling
(TFC selection)
Tra ns p o rt
Cha nne ls
Reporting of measurements
(c o m m o n a nd
Ciphering
d e d ic a te d )

MAC can switch a common channel into a dedicated channel if higher bit rate
is required (on request of L3-level).

MAC can change dynamically Transport Format (bit rate…) of each transport
channel on a frame basis (each 10 ms) without interchanging with L3-level.

MAC provides flexible data transfer.


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 143
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
TFC selection in MAC protocol

Several transport channels can be time-coordinated to MAC


be multiplexed on a CCTrCH before mapping on one
physical channel (or more if necessary). TFC selection
Transport Format (TF)
e.g. DCH1 = {244}
DCH2 = {0 ; 148} Transport Format Set (TFS) DCH1 DCH2 DCH3
DCH3 = {0 ; 148}
Transport Format Combination (TFC)
TrCH multiplexing
TFCS = { {244 ; 0 ; 0} , {244 ; 148 ; 0} , {244 ; 0 ; 148} }
Transport Format Combination Set (TFCS) CCTrCH

MAC selects TFC inside TFCS. Physical channel


Mapping
There is one TFCS per CCTrCH.
L1
>> Why is the combination {244 ; 148 ; 148} not possible? Physical Channel(s)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 144
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
The Physical Layer

Co m m o n De d ic a te d
Tra ns p o rt Tra ns p o rt Multiplexing of transport ch.
Cha nne ls Cha nne ls
Spreading/modulation
Layer 1 Physical layer
RF processing
Power control
Co m m o n De d ic a te d
Phy s ic a l Phy s ic a l Measurements
Cha nne ls Cha nne ls
Air Interface

The physical layer provides multiplexing and radio frequency processing


with a CDMA method.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 145
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Exercise: MAC protocol (1)

BCCH PCCH BCCH CCCH CTCH DCCH DTCH DTCH

MAC
Control

MAC-d

MAC-b MAC-c/sh

BCH PCH FACH FACH RACH CPCH DSCH DSCH DCH DCH
Iur or local
Look at this figure and answer the questions on the following pages.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 146
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Exercise: MAC protocol (2)

1. On which logical/transport channels will be mapped:


- system information broadcasting
- paging
- telephony speech
- internet browsing at a high bit rate
- internet browsing at a low bit rate
Can you imagine a situation where the UE will use 2 DTCHs (or more) at the same time?

2. Guess the meaning of “MAC-b” “MAC-c/sh” and “MAC-d”.

3. Why is there one MAC-d entity on the UE side and several MAC-d entities on the UTRAN
side?

4. What is the link between MAC-c/sh and MAC-d for?

5. What are the 4 main functions of MAC protocol?

6. MAC can multiplex logical channels only if they require the same QoS: true or false?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 147
5. UTRAN/5.2 Radio Protocols
Exercise: MAC protocol (3)

7. RNTI (Radio Network Temporary Identity) is an UE identity assigned by UTRAN, when the
UE is connected to the UTRAN . The parameter RNTI is included in the header of each
transport blocks in MAC-c/sh, but not in MAC-d : can you explain the reason?

8. The system can also multiplex transport channels: where does that take place?

9. What is the name of the channel on which several time-coordinated transport channels can
be multiplexed?

10. Which entity is responsible for TFC selection? TFCS allocation?

11. Is it possible to multiplex 2 FACHs (or more)? 2 DCHs (or more)? a FACH and a DCH?

12. Will the physical channel configuration be changed (e.g modification of spreading factor)
when MAC selects a new TFC inside TFCS?

13. MAC makes measurement reports to RRC: why is it necessary?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 148
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
UE Node B RNC
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signaling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 149
5. UTRAN/ 5.3 Iu protocols
General model

The same general protocol model is applied for all Iu interfaces:

Radio Control User Plane


Plane 1. What is the
Network Application Data purpose of the
Layer Protocol Stream(s) separation between
the Radio Network
Transport Network Transport Network Transport Network Layer and the
Transport User Plane Control Plane User Plane
Transport Network
Network ALCAP Layer?
Layer
Signaling Signaling Data 2. Why is ALCAP
Bearer(s) Bearer(s) Bearer(s) protocol
necessary?
Physical Layer

Application Protocols: - NBAP for Iub interface


- RNSAP for Iur interface
- RANAP for Iu-CS and Iu-PS interfaces

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 150
5. UTRAN/ 5.3 Iu protocols
Iub protocols

Ra d io Link RRC Co nne c tio n


Es ta blis hm e nt RABs * Es ta blis hm e nt*
NAS s ig na lling *

RNC
Control Plane User Plane
Radio
Network Frame
NBAP Protocols
Layer (IubFP)
Transport Network Transport Network Transport Network User
User Plane Control Plane Plane
Transport
ALCAP
Network
Layer AAL5 AAL5 AAL2

ATM

Physical Layer

* a t this s ta g e the s e d a ta s tre a m s ha v e be e n m a p p e d o n


Node B
tra ns p o rt c ha nne ls by MAC p ro to c o l

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 151
5. UTRAN/ 5.3 Iu protocols
Iur protocols
Es ta blis hm e nt o f RRC Co nne c tio n
a n a d d itio na l ra d io RABs * Es ta blis hm e nt*
link to a n UE NAS s ig na lling *
(fo r s o ft HO )
SRNC
Control Plane User Plane
Radio
Network Frame
RNSAP Protocols
Layer (Iur FP)
Transport Network Transport Network Transport Network User
User Plane Control Plane Plane
Transport
ALCAP
Network ...
Layer AAL5 AAL5 AAL2

ATM

Physical Layer

* a t this s ta g e the s e d a ta s tre a m s ha v e be e n m a p p e d o n


DRNC
tra ns p o rt c ha nne ls by MAC p ro to c o l

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 152
5. UTRAN/ 5.3 Iu protocols
UTRAN protocols:
general recap
RRC PDCPBMC RRC PDCPBMC
RLC RLC
Uu Iub
MAC MAC
SRNC Soft combining
Soft(er) combining NBAP ALCAP Iub-FP NBAP ALCAP Iub-FP Iur-FP ALCAPRNSAP
Softer
combining ... ... ... ... ... ...
Phy. Phy. AAL5 AAL5 AAL2 AAL5 AAL5 AAL2 AAL2 AAL5 AAL5
(air) (air) ATM/Physical layer ATM/Physical layer

UE Node-B Iur
RRC PDCPBMC
RLC
Radio Protocols
DRNC MAC
NBAP ALCAP Iub-FP Iur-FP ALCAPRNSAP
Iu Protocols (Radio Network Layer) ... ... ... ...
AAL5 AAL5 AAL2 AAL2 AAL5 AAL5
Iu protocols (Transport Network Layer) ATM/Physical layer

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 153
5. UTRAN

5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels ?


?
5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 154
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE identifiers

2 types of UE identification on the radio interface:

• NAS identifiers
- IMSI: International Mobile Subscriber Identity
- TMSI: Temporary Mobile Station Identity
They are used in the initial access CCCH message

• UTRAN identifier
- RNTI: Radio Network Temporary Identity
This is allocated by the UTRAN for each UE in connected mode and used
for inband identification in common transport channels (e.g FACH). The
RNTI is not used outside the UTRAN.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 155
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE states (1)

out of coverage RRC Connection Release

UE UE UE

detached in idle mode in connected


mode

“just after switch on” process


Including Ce ll s e a rc h p ro c e d ure RRC Connection Establishment

Why is the idle mode necessary?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 156
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE states (2)

out of coverage RRC Connection Release

RRC Connection Establishment procedure UE UE


UE
in connected
detached in idle mode mode

“just after switch on” process RRC Connection Establishment

CCCH 1 - UE in idle mode,


RNC
- a Common Control Channel (CCCH) is
used to initiate the procedure

CCCH
RNC
DCCH 2 - Setup of a Dedicated Control Channel
(DCCH)

DCCH RNC 3 - UE in connected mode


- The DCCH is used during the whole
time of the RRC connection to carry
Which type of transport channel are used
signalling dedicated to this particular UE
to carry CCCH? DCCH?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 157
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE states (3)

Cell_DCH state UEin connected


Signalling and traffic data Cell DCH mode
UE
dedicated to the UE (mapped
on DCCH and DTCH in id le Cell PCH
respectively) are carried on
DCH transport channel
m o de Cell FACH

URA PCH
Cell_FACH state
Signalling and traffic data
dedicated to the UE (mapped Cell_DCH ⇒Cell_FACH
on DCCH and DTCH No traffic UL/DL at expiry of timer 1
respectively) are carried on
RACH (uplink) and FACH
Cell_FACH ⇒Cell_DCH
(downlink) transport channels
Traffic volume UL/DL too large

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 158
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE states (4)

Cell_PCH state
No transmission of signalling and UEin connected
Cell DCH
traffic data dedicated to the UE (no mode
UE
DCCH and no DTCH)
in id le Cell PCH
But the RRC connection is still
active (UTRAN keeps RNTI for UE) m o de Cell FACH
and UE location at a cell level.
URA PCH
- a DCCH (and possibly a DTCH)
can be reestablished very quickly
(this procedure is initiated by
sending a paging signal PCH) Cell_FACH ⇒Cell_PCH
No traffic UL/DL at expiry of timer 2
URA_PCH state Cell_PCH ⇒ Cell_FACH ⇒URA_PCH
Very similar to cell_PCH state Too many cell reselections

UTRAN keeps the location of the UE at Cell/URA_PCH ⇒ Cell_FACH


the URA level (set of UMTS cells) Incoming DL or UL traffic
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 159
5. UTRAN/5.4 UE identifiers and UE states
UE identifiers and UE states:
complete the table!

CN UTRAN
UE Sta te s
UE Id e ntifie rs UE Loca tion UE Id e ntifie r UE Loca tion
id le m od e IMSI, TMSI LA, RA

ce ll_DCH

ce ll_FACH
conn e cte d
m ode
ce ll_PCH

URA_PCH

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 160
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
UE Node B RNC
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signaling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management


© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 161
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
List of basic signaling procedures

A. Broadcast of system information

B. Paging
B1. Paging Type 1 (in idle mode or in cell_PCH or in URA_PCH states)
B2. Paging Type 2 (in cell_FACH or cell_DCH states)

C. RRC Connection
C1. RRC Connection Establishment (to cell_FACH and to cell_DCH states)
C2. RRC Connection Release (in cell_DCH states)

D. Radio Link establishment

E. Direct Transfer

F. Control of RAB, RB, Transport Channel and Physical Channel


F1. RAB Establishment
F2. Physical Channel Reconfiguration

G. Soft HO (Radio Link Addition)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 162
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
How to read call scenario diagrams

Logical channel
Name of the message
Transport channel

UE RNC

1. RRC Co nne c tio n Re q ue s t (CCCH:RACH)


RRC RRC
Initial UE identity, Establishment cause, Initial
UE capability
Network entity

Protocol entity
Parameters of the message

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 163
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
A. System Information Broadcasting
(1)
The broadcast system information:
- may come from CN, RNC or Node-B.
- contains static parameters (Cell identity, supported PLMN types...) and
dynamic parameters (UL interference level...).
- is arranged in System Information Blocks (SIB), which group together
elements of the same nature.
- can be carried on BCH which is transmitted permanently over the entire
cell.

>> Do you think the UE needs to read all the SIBs each time a broadcast is
repeated?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 164
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
A. System Information
Broadcasting (2)
UE Node-B RNC CN
Sy s te m Info rm a tio n
Up d a te Re q ue s t
NBAP NBAP
Master/Segment Info
Block(s), BCCH
modification time

Sy s te m Info rm a tio n
Up d a te Re s p o ns e
NBAP NBAP
Sy s te m Info rm a tio n (BCCH:BCH)
RRC RRC
Master/Segment Info Block(s)

Sy s te m Info rm a tio n (BCCH:BCH)


RRC RRC
Master/Segment Info Block(s)
>> Why does RRC protocol
Sy s te m Info rm a tio n (BCCH:BCH)
RRC
Master/Segment Info Block(s)
RRC terminate at Node-B for BCH
(not at RNC)?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 165
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
B. Paging

Paging is typically used at core network-originated call.

UE in idle mode
The network will page the UE in LA (CS domain) or RA (PS domain)

UE is in connected mode
The network will page the UE:
- in the cell (in cell_PCH, cell_FACH, cell_DCH states)
- in the URA (in URA_PCH state)

Pa g ing Ty p e 1 : mapped on PCCH/PCH


Pa g ing Ty p e 2 : mapped on DCCH/FACH or DCCH/DCH
>> Can you guess which Paging Type will be use in idle mode? in cell_PCH
state? in cell_FACH state? in cell_DCH state? in URA_PCH state?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 166
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
B1. Paging Type 1

UE 1 UE 2 Node-B Node-B RNC 1 RNC 2 CN


1 2

1 . Pa g ing
RANAP RANAP
CN Domain Indicator, UE
identity, Paging cause

1 . Pa g ing
RANAP RANAP
Idem

2 . Pa g ing Ty p e 1 (PCCH:PCH)
RRC RRC

2 . Pa g ing Ty p e 1 (PCCH:PCH)
RRC RRC

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 167
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
B2. Paging Type 2

UE Node-B SRNC CN

1 . Pa g ing
RANAP RANAP
CN Domain Indicator, UE
identity, Paging cause

2 . Pa g ing Ty p e 2 (DCCH:FACH or
DCH)
RRC RRC

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 168
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
C. RRC connection

RRC connection is established at the initial access


(after cell search procedure when the UE is camping on a cell).

After RRC connection establishment:


- UE will switch from idle mode to cell_FACH or cell_DCH states.
- UE will have a signalling link with UTRAN (on DCCH)

UE needs to establish a RRC connection prior to making :


- voice call
- location update
- measurement reporting
...

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 169
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
C1. RRC Connection Establishment

UE Node-B RNC

1. RRC Co nne c tio n Re q ue s t (CCCH:RACH)


RRC RRC
Initial UE identity, Establishment cause, Initial UE capability
2. Allocate RNTI, Select
Level 1 and Level 2
parameters (e.g. TFCS,
scrambling code)
3. Radio Link Establishment (see Pro c e d ure
D)

4. RRC Co nne c tio n Se tup (CCCH:FACH)


RRC RRC
Initial UE identity, RNTI, capability update requirement, TFS, TFCS, frequency, UL
scrambling code, power control info

5. RRC Co nne c tio n Se tup Co m p le te (DCCH:RACH or DCH)


RRC RRC
Integrity information, ciphering information

>> Can the UE send user information (e.g voice call) after completing this stage?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 170
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
C2. RRC Connection Release
(in cell_DCH state)
UE Node-B Node-B DRNC SRNC CN
of DRNC of SRNC 1 . Iu Re le a s e
Co m m a nd
RANAP RANAP
Cause
2 . Iu Re le a s e
Co m p le te
RANAP RANAP
-

3. ALCAP Iu Bearer Release

4. RRC Co nne c tio n Re le a s e (DCCH:DCH )


RRC RRC
Cause

5. RRC Co nne c tio n Re le a s e Co m p le te (DCCH:DCH )


RRC RRC
-
6. Radio Link Deletion

7. Radio Link Deletion

8. Radio Link Deletion

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 171
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
D. Radio Link (RL) Establishment
for a DCH
Node-B RNC

Ra d io Link Se tup Re q ue s t
NBAP NBAP
Cell id, TFS, TFCS, frequency, UL scrambling
code, power control info
Start RX

ALCAP Iub Data Transport Bearer Setup

Ra d io Link Se tup Re s p o ns e
NBAP NBAP
Signalling link termination, transport layer
addressing info

Do wnlink s y nc hro nis a tio n


Iub-FP Iub-FP
Up link s y nc hro nis a tio n
Iub-FP Iub-FP

Start TX

>> Are NBAP, ALCAP and RRC messages carried on the same transport bearers on Iub?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 172
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
E. Direct Transfer

The mechanism to transfer signalling from higher layers (NAS signaling)


through messages of RRC protocol is called Dire c t Tra ns fe r.
UE Node-B SRNC CN

1. Dire c t Tra ns fe r
RANAP RANAP
CN Domain Indicator,
2 . Do wnlink Dire c t Tra ns fe r NAS PDU
(DCCH:FACH or DCH)
RRC RRC
NAS message
>> Can you mention some
examples of use of
Dire c t Tra ns fe r?
1 ’. Up link Dire c t Tra ns fe r
(DCCH:RACH or DCH)
RRC RRC
CN node indicator, NAS message

2’. Dire c t Tra ns fe r


RANAP RANAP
CN Domain Indicator,
NAS PDU
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 173
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
F. Control of RAB, RB, Transport
and Physical Channels
These procedures take place after RRC connection establishment: the UE
is either on cell_FACH or cell_DCH state.

A RAB is mapped on one or more RB(s).

A RB establishment consists of:


- performing admission control (see RRM: Radio Resource Management)
- setting parameters describing RB processing in layer 2 (e.g TFS, TFCS)
and in layer 1 (codes, power control)

RAB and RB can be reconfigured during an active connection.


The transport channels and physical channels parameters are included in
the RB but can also be reconfigured separately with transport and physical
channel dedicated procedures (Tra ns p o rt Cha nne l Re c o nfig ura tio n and
Phy s ic a l Cha nne l Re c o nfig ura tio n).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 174
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
F1. RAB Establishment

UE Node-B RNC CN
1. RAB As s ig nm e nt
Re q ue s t
RANAP RANAP
RAB parameters, User plane
mode, Transport Address, Iu
Transport association
2. ALCAP Iu Data Transport Bearer Setup
3. Radio Link
Establishment
(see Pro c e d ure D)

4. RB Se tup (DCCH:FACH or DCH )


RRC RRC
TFS, TFCS...

5. RB Se tup Co m p le te (DCCH:RACH or DCH )


RRC RRC
- 6. RAB As s ig nm e nt
Re s p o ns e
RANAP RANAP
-

>> Can the UE send user information (e.g voice call) after completing this stage?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 175
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
F2. Physical Channel
Reconfiguration
UE Node-B DRNC SRNC
of DRNC
1. RL Re c o nfig . Pre p a re
NBAP NBAP
DL scrambling code
2. RL Re c o nfig . Re a d y
NBAP NBAP
-
3.
RNSAP RNSAP
DL scrambling
code
4.
RNSAP RNSAP

5. RL Re c o nfig . Co m m it
NBAP NBAP

6. Phy s ic a l Cha nne l Re c o nfig ura tio n (DCCH:DCH )


RRC RRC
DL scrambling code
7. Phy s ic a l Cha nne l Re c o nfig ura tio n Co m p le te (DCCH:DCH )
RRC RRC
-
>> What is the difference between NBAP and RNSAP?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 176
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
G. Soft HO
(Radio Link Addition)
UE Node-B DRNC SRNC
of DRNC
1. Decision to setup
new RL

2 . RL Se tup Re q ue s t
RNSAP RNSAP
-

3. Radio Link Establishment


(see Pro c e d ure D)

4. ALCAP Iur Data Transport Bearer Setup


5 . RL Se tup Re s p o ns e
RNSAP RNSAP
-

6. Ac tiv e Se t Up d a te (DCCH:DCH )
RRC RRC
-

7. Ac tive Se t Up d a te Co m p le te (DCCH:DCH )
RRC RRC
-

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 177
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signaling procedures
EXERCICE

Please complete the procedure diagrams on the following


slides by using the elementary procedure previously
described

Duration :
10 minutes

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 178
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signalling procedures
Location Update
Find the missing procedure names!
UE Node-B RNC CN
UE d e ta c he d

0. “Just after switch on” process


UE in id le m o d e
1. ...
UE in c o nne c te d m o d e

2. ...
MM: Lo c a tio n Up d a ting Re q ue s t
MM: Authe ntic a tio n Re q ue s t
MM: Authe ntic a tio n Re s p o ns e

3. Security procedures

4. ...
MM: Lo c a tio n Up d a ting Ac c e p t

5. ...
UE in id le m o d e

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 179
5. UTRAN/5.5 Signalling procedures
Mobile terminated call
Find the missing procedure names!
UE Node-B RNC CN

0. “Just after switch on” process

1. ...

2. ...

3. ...
RR: Pa g ing Re s p o ns e
MM: Authe ntic a tio n Re q ue s t
MM: Authe ntic a tio n Re s p o ns e

4. Security procedures

5. ...
CC: Se tup
CC: Ca ll Co nfirm

6. ...
7. ...
CC: Ale rting
CC: Co nne c t
CC: Co nne c t Ac kno wle d g e

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 180
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channelsUE Node B RNC

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 181
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Physical Layer Process

Transport Channels

Convolutional coding,
Channel Coding Turbo coding
10 ms frame duration
Radio Frame Segmentation 15 time slots

Transport Channel Multiplexing CCtrCH

Physical Channel Mapping DPDCH, DPCCH, PRACH...

Channelization codes
Spreading
Scrambling codes

Layer 1
Modulation QPSK

Physical Channels
spread over 5 MHz bandwidth

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 182
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Radio Frame Structure


1 Radio Frame : = 15 Time Slots

10ms

….
1 Time slot : = N bits
(according to the bit rate after channel coding)
0.6666 ms

..
1 Bit : = M chips
(M is equal to the spreading factor)

The bit rate may be changed for each frame (10 ms).

Fast power control may be performed for each time slot (0,666 ms).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 183
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Transport Channel Multiplexing

DCH 1 DCH 2

Channel Coding Channel Coding

Transport Channel Multiplexing

CCTrCH

Physical Channel Mapping

One Physical Channel (or more if necessary)

Two transport channels can be mapped onto the same physical channel
(for one user).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 184
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Physical channels

Phy s ic a l c ha nne ls
are defined by the mechanisms (e.g frequency, code, power, framing...) with which
the data are transferred over the physical resources of the air-interface.

• Physical channels are defined mainly by:


- a specific carrier frequency
- a scrambling code
- a channelization code
- start & stop instants (giving a time duration, measured in integer multiples
of chips)

• Physical channels are sent continuously on the air interface between start
and stop instants.

• Physical channels are separated by means of quasi-orthogonal codes (2


physical channels shall not have the same channelization code / scrambling
code combination).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 185
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Uplink Physical Channels

Common Channels

Physical Random Access Channel (PRACH)


Associated with
Transport Channels
Physical Common Packet Channel (PCPCH)

Node
B
Dedicated Channels

Dedicated Physical Data Channel (DPDCH) Associated with


Transport Channels

Dedicated Physical Control Channel (DPCCH) NOT associated with


Transport Channels

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 186
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g. Uplink DPDCH/DPCCH

Data
DPDCH Ndata bits

Pilot TFCI FBI TPC


DPCCH Npilot bits NTFCI bits NFBI bits NTPC bits

Tslot = 2560 chips, 10*2k bits (k=0..6)

1 Radio Frame Slot #0 Slot #1 Slot #i Slot #14

T = 10 ms

DPDCH carries the dedicated data generated at layer 2 (ie the Dedicated
Transport Channel DCH). f

DPCCH carries the dedicated signalling of the physical layer, which is


required to convey DPDCH. DPCCH is not visible above the physical layer,
it is not carried by any transport channels.

Under long scrambling code.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 187
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g. Uplink PRACH

When attempting to access the network, the mobile has no dedicated code
yet and must choose randomly a code in a set of codes.
Collisions may occur between two mobiles.
radio frame: 10 ms radio frame: 10 ms

5120 chips A mobile can only begin to


transmit at a certain access slot
#0 #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 #11 #12 #13 #14
(slotted ALOHA).
Access slot #0 Random Access Transmission

Access slot #1 Random Access Transmission 15 access slots have been


defined (nothing to do with the
Access slot #7 Random Access Transmission time slots of the radio frame!).
Access slot #8 Random Access Transmission

Access slot #14

The PRACH has a Random Access Transmission to limit risk of collision.


It is based on a Slotted ALOHA approach with fast acquisition indication.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 188
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Downlink Physical Channels

Common Channels

Primary Common Control Physical Channel (P-CCPCH)

Secondary Common Control Physical Channel (S-CCPCH)


Associated with
Transport Channels
Physical Downlink Shared Channel (PDSCH)

Synchronisation Channel (SCH)


Node
B Common Pilot Channel (CPICH)
NOT associated with
Page Indicator Channel (PICH) Transport Channels

Acquisition Indication Channel (AICH)

Dedicated Channels
Dedicated Physical Data Channel (DPDCH) Associated with
Transport Channels
Dedicated Physical Control Channel (DPCCH)
NOT associated with
Transport Channels

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 189
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g. Downlink DPDCH/DPCCH

DPDCH DPCCH DPDCH DPCCH


Data1 TPC TFCI Data2 Pilot
N data1 bits N TPC bits N TFCI bits N data2 bits N pilot bits

Tslot= 2560 chips, 10*2k bits (k=0..7)

Slot #0 Slot #1 Slot #i Slot #14

One radio frame, Tf = 10 ms

Similar to uplink, but DPDCH and DPCCH are time-multiplexed.


The SF may range from 256 to 8.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 190
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g. Downlink PCCPCH

256 chips
Data
( Tx OFF)
18 bits
Tslot = 2560 chips , 20 bits

Slot #0 Slot #1 Slot #i Slot #14

1 radio frame: Tf = 10 ms

The Primary CCPCH carries the BCH, which provides system- and cell-
specific information (e.g set of uplink scrambling codes)
The P-CCPCH is a fixed rate (30 kbps, SF=256) DL physical channel, which
provide a timing reference for all physical channels (directly for DL,
indirectly for UL).
CCPCH is scrambled under the Primary Scrambling code.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 191
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g. CPICH (pilot)

Pre-defined symbol sequence

Tslot = 2560 chips , 20 bits = 10 symbols

Slot #0 Slot #1 Slot #i Slot #14

1 radio frame: Tf = 10 ms

CPICH (or Pilot or Beacon)


The pilot carries a pre-defined symbol sequence at a fixed rate (SF=256).
It is a re fe re nc e :
- to aid the channel estimation at the terminal (time or phase reference)
- to perform handover measurements and cell selection/reselection (power
reference)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 192
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
e.g SCH and
the cell search procedure
Slot #0 Slot #1 Slot #14

Primary
SCH acp acp acp

Secondary i,0 i,1 i,14


SCH acs acs acs

256 chips

2560 chips

One 10 ms SCH radio frame

SCH (Synchronisation Channel)


It can be detected by the UE just after switch on, as the SCH consist of a
256 modulated code sequence which is the same for every cell in the
system.
It is used by the UE in the cell search procedure to get the (downlink)
scrambling code of the cell.
After c e ll s e a rc h p ro c e d ure , the terminal can read system and cell- specific
BCH information.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 193
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Mapping
Transport⇔Physical Channels
P-CCPCH Primary Common Control Physical Channel
BCH
S-CCPH Secondary Common Control Physical Channel
PCH

FACH
PRACH Physical Random Access Channel
RACH
PCPCH Physical Common Packet Channel
CPCH
PDSCH Physical Downlink Shared Channel
DSCH
DPDCH Dedicated Physical Data Channel
DCH

Physical channels not mapped on transport channels:


DPCCH Dedicated Physical Control Channel (uplink and downlink)
SCH Synchronisation Channel
CPICH Common Pilot Channel
PICH Page Indicator Channel
AICH Acquisition Indication Channel

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 194
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Example 1: UL 64 kbps data (1)

In this example, a RB (Radio Bearer) is mapped (in RLC) on DTCH which is


mapped (in MAC) on DCH.

The DCH has the TFS (Transport Format Set):


Transport block size 640 bits
Transport block set size 4*640 bits
CRC 16 bits
Coding Turbo coding, coding rate = 1/3
TTI 40 ms

#4 640 640 640 640

#3 640 640 640 640

#2 640 640 640 640

#1 640 640 640 640

40 ms
This example can be applied for ISDN service.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 195
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Example 1: UL 64 kbps data (2)

#1 #4
Transport block 640 640
CRC CRC
CRC attachment #1 #4
640 16 640 16
TrBk concatenation 2624
Turbo coding R=1/3
7872
Tail
Tail bit attachment
7872 12
1st interleaving What is the radio
7884 frame length? Can you
Radio frame segmentation #1 #4
deduce the spreading
1971 1971
Rate matching factor (SF)?
#1 #4
1971+N 1971+N
RM1 RM4

To TrCh Multiplexing (see further)


Extracted from 3GPP 25.944
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 196
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Example 2: UL 3,4 kbps data (1)

In this example, a SRB (Signalling Radio Bearer) is mapped (in RLC) on


DCCH which is mapped (in MAC) on DCH.

The DCH has the TFS (Transport Format Set):


Transport block size 148 bits
Transport block set size 0, 148 bits
CRC 16 bits
Coding CC, coding rate = 1/3
TTI 40 ms

148 148 148

40 ms

>> Assuming that RLC and MAC overhead in a transport block is 12 bits,
can you determine the bit rate of this SRB?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 197
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
Example 2: UL 3,4 kbps data (2)

Transport block
148 CRC
CRC attachment
148 16
TrBks (B =0,1)

TrBks concatenation
164
Tail
Tail bit attachment
164*B 8*B
Convolutional Coding, What is the radio
CR = 1/3 516*B frame length? Can
1st interleaving you deduce the
516*B
Radio frame Segmentation
spreading factor?
#1 #2 #3 #4
129*B 129*B 129*B 129*B
Rate matching
#1 #2 #3 #4
129*B +NRM1 129*B +NRM2 129*B +NRM3 129*B +NRM4

Extracted from 3GPP 25.944 To TrCh Multiplexing (see further)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 198
5. UTRAN/5.6 The Physical Layer
UL TrCH multiplexing
of 64 kbps and 3,4 kbps data
UL 64 kbps data UL 3,4 kbps data
#1 #2 #3 #4 #1 #2 #3 #4
TrCH multiplexing
#1 #1 #2 #2 #3 #3 #4 #4

2nd interleaving
Physical channel mapping
?? kbps DPDCH
CFN=4N CFN=4N+1 CFN=4N+2 CFN=4N+3

15 kbps DPCCH CFN=4N CFN=4N+1 CFN=4N+2 CFN=4N+3

>> On which physical channel are the UL 64 kbps data and the UL 3,4 kbps
data? what is the spreading factor mapped? what is the DPDCH bit rate?

>> What is carried on DPCCH ?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 199
5. UTRAN

no
5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels yes

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility Management

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 200
5. UTRAN/5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)
RRM purposes

RRM is a set of algorithms to manage radio resources:

• Maximise the amount of radio resources available


Power control algorithms
Handover algorithms
• Allocation of radio resources
Which type of transport channel, transport format should be chosen
to meet QoS requirements?

• Admission Control
In which conditions can a new user be admitted?

• Load Control (congestion control)


What should be done to avoid congestion?

In RRM all layers are involved under RRC control.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 201
5. UTRAN/5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)
RRM functions

UE dedicated functions, implemented in SRNC and Node B:


Selection of radio bearer parameters according to RAB
requirements
Closed loop power control
Handover control
RRC states management according to UE traffic volume
DL dynamic scheduling on DCH
UTRAN dedicated functions, implemented in CRNC:
Radio admission control
Code allocation
Radio load control
Open loop power control

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 202
5. UTRAN/5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)
Transport channel allocation
strategies
UL / DL
RACH /FACH
Co m m o n low setup time, but Short packets
continuous transmission not Bursty traffic to be
c ha nne ls maintained sent immediately
no soft HO and no fast PC

CPCH /DSCH Medium packets


Sha re d
no guarantee of delay Bursty and delay-
c ha nne ls no soft HO, but fast PC insensitive traffic

Long packets
DCH /DCH
Constant and variable
De d ic a te d bit rate can be changed bit rate traffic with low
during transmission (TFS) delay requirement
c ha nne ls (LCD)
soft HO and fast PC
High bit rate
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 203
5. UTRAN/5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)
Admission and Load Control

Both procedures are handled by CRNC. They are estimated separately for
uplink and downlink directions.
Admission Control
This algorithm is executed when a radio bearer is to be setup or modified. It is
based on:
•Power transmission criteria (noise increase in UL, transmit capacity in
DL)
•Number of active users in the frequency band (code management)
And performed according to:
•The type of required QoS
•The current system load
Load Control (Congestion Control)
This algorithm ensures that the system is not overloaded and remains stable.
In case of congestion some actions can be taken.
But overload situations should normally be exceptional.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 204
5. UTRAN

Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
UE Node B RNC

5.1 From Radio Bearers to transport channels

5.2 Radio Protocols

5.3 Iu Protocols

5.4 UE identifiers and UE states

5.5 Signalling procedures

5.6 The Physical Layer (on the air interface)

5.7 Radio Resource Management (RRM)

5.8 Mobility management

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 205
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
General description (1/2)

The mobility management enables a user to have access to the subscribed


services on the whole coverage of the usual network and possibly visited
networks. It is performed as long as the UE remains switched on. It needs a
lot of radio and network resources.

• UE in idle mode (network mobility)


Wherever the UE is located in the network coverage:
- the UE should have an access point to the network in the uplink
>> Cell reselection mechanisms
- the network should be able to reach the UE in the downlink (paging)
>> Location Area (LA) / Routing Area (RA) update mechanisms

• UE in connected mode (radio mobility management)


A connection to the UTRAN (RRC connection) has been established: this
connection should remain, when the UE moves from one cell to another.
>> Handover (HO) or cell update mechanisms

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 206
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
General description (2/2)

• UE in idle mode UE UTRAN


This mode is entered after “just after
Detached
switch on” process.
The UE location is:
“Just after switch on” process
- known by the CN at LA or RA level
- not known by the UTRAN
Idle
mode
• UE in connected mode
This mode is entered after RRC RRC connection establishment
connection establishment.
The UE location is: Connected
- known by the CN at a LA or RA level mode
(furthermore the MSC or the SGSN Uu
knows the SRNC of the UE)
- known by the UTRAN at a cell or URA
level.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 207
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
UE in idle mode (1/2)

When moving across the network,


the UE may have to perform a cell
reselection, if the initial cell on which
it is camped is no longer available or
is no longer the best suited.

? The cell reselection consists of a


selection of candidate cells and a
ranking of these cells according to
radio criteria.

The cell reselection is performed autonomously by the UE, but the network
can influence it by changing the radio parameters used in radio criteria.

These radio parameters are transmitted in the Broadcast Channel (BCH).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 208
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
UE in idle mode (2/2)

VLR ... ... SGSN

Location Area HLR Routing Area


VLR SGSN
(LA) (RA)

When camping on a cell, the terminal must register its LA and/or its RA.
When the terminal moves across the network, it must update its LA (RA) which is
stored in VLR (SGSN) in the Core Network.
LA (RA) Update is performed periodically or when entering a new LA (RA).

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 209
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
UE in connected mode (1/3)

MM mechanisms Effect during the call

Cell_DCH hard HO very short cut


soft HO no cut
Cell_FACH hard HO very short cut
cell update suspended
Cell_PCH cell update suspended

URA_PCH URA update suspended

Cell update (URA update) consists of updating the MS location information


stored in the SRNC.
A UTRA originated paging message will therefore be sent only in this cell
(this URA) and not in a whole LA or RA.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 210
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
UE in connected mode (2/3)

Soft HO
•inter-cell (softer HO, managed by Node-B)

•inter Node-B

•inter-RNC (SRNS relocation)


Hard HO cell 1 cell 2
•intra CDMA-carrier
not recommended for dedicated channels,
but necessary for common channels for which soft HO is not applied
•inter CDMA-carrier
one operator can have two CDMA carriers or more
between two different operators
•inter-mode
FDD-TDD (not provided in R99)
•inter-system
UMTS-GSM: necessary to provide continuous coverage
UMTS-CDMA2000 (in the US?)
Cell reselection
•Inter-system : UMTS/GPRS (inter/intra carrier, inter/intra RNC)
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 211
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
UE in connected mode (3/3)

A hard handover consists of forwarding a call on another channel which is


running on a different carrier.
The terminal must make measurements on other
frequencies (FFD, GSM or TDD frequencies) whilst
holding the on-going connection : UTRA GSM
cell cell
- Dual receiver
•simple handover operation, but expensive receiver
- Compressed mode (or slotted mode)
•simple receiver, but complicated handover operation
•the information is compressed time periodically (a few ms), in order to
perform measurements on the other frequencies without losing data

Downlink

10ms Compressed Idle


frame frame period

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 212
5. UTRAN/5.8 Mobility management
Exercise

1. The c e ll re s e le c tio n is easier than the initia l c e ll s e le c tio n (performed just


after switch on): can you find the reason?

2. What is the difference between the c e ll re s e le c tio n and the c e ll up d a te


(performed in cell_PCH state)?

3. If there were no LA/RA update mechanisms, what would happen?

4. Is it better to have small or large LA?

5. Why is soft HO not provided in cell_FACH state?

6. In which case is it be better for the network to move a UE


to URA_PCH state rather than to cell_PCH state?

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 213
Appendix

• “Just after switch on” process


• AMR codec
•NBAP elementary procedures
•RANAP elementary procedures

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 214
Appendix/”Just after switch on” process
PLMN selection

PLMN selection 1 After switch on, the UE:


- scans the entire frequency bandwidths of UTRAN
Lis t o f Se le c te d FDD and GSM (c e ll s e a rc h p ro c e d ure for UTRAN
a va ila ble 1 2 PLMN FDD )
PLMNs
- monitors the broadcast channels (BCCH for
UTRAN FDD) to get the PLMN identifiers.
UE
Cell selection
s witc he Hence the UE can establish a list of PLMNs which
d on are available in its location.

2 In the list of available PLMNs, the UE selects:


Attachment - the HPLMN (Home PLMN) if it is available
- otherwise another PLMN (national or
international) according to priority rules possibly
stored in the USIM

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 215
Appendix/”Just after switch on” process
Attachment procedure

PLMN selection 3 In the selected PLMN, the UE:


- selects the best cell according to radio criteria
- initiates attachment procedure on the selected
cell
4 During the attachment procedure (called IMS Ia tta c h
for CS domain, G PRS a tta c h for PS domain), the UE
5 Cell selection indicates its presence to the PLMN for the purpose of
using services:
Atta c h-
Atta c h- - authentication procedure
4 m e nt
m e nt 3 re s ult - storage of subscriber data from the HLR in the VLR
re q ue s t (or in the SGSN for PS domain)
- allocation of the TMSI (P-TMSI for PS domain)
Attachment
5 The result of the procedure is notified to the UE:

Ind ic a tio n o f s e rvic e - if successful, the UE can access services


to the UE - if it fails, the UE can only perform emergency
calls
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 216
Appendix/AMR codec
AMR codec (for CS domain)

Cla ss Cla ss Cla ss


AMR m od e Source cod in g b it- ra te
A B C

AMR_12.20 12.20 kbit/ s (GSM EFR) 81 103 60


AMR_10.20 10.20 kbit/ s 65 99 40
AMR_7.95 7.95 kbit/ s 75 84 0
AMR_7.40 7.40 kbit/ s (IS-641) 61 87 0
AMR_6.70 6.70 kbit/ s (PDC-EFR) 58 76 0
AMR_5.90 5.90 kbit/ s 55 63 0
AMR_5.15 5.15 kbit/ s 49 54 0
AMR_4.75 4.75 kbit/ s 42 53 0

The AMR (Adaptative Multirate) speech codec:


- offers 8 AMR modes between 4,75 kbits/s and 12,2 kbits/s
- is capable of switching its bit rate every 20 ms upon command of the RNC
- is located in the UE and in the transcoder (which is located in the CN)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 217
Appendix/NBAP elementary procedures
NBAP elementary procedures

NBAP Functions (see 3GPP 25.433)


•Cell Configuration Management. This function gives the CRNC the possibility to manage the cell configuration
information in a Node B.
•Common Transport Channel Management. This function gives the CRNC the possibility to manage the
configuration of Common Transport Channels in a Node B.
•System Information Management. This function gives the CRNC the ability to manage the scheduling of System
Information to be broadcast in a cell.
•Resource Event Management. This function gives the Node B the ability to inform the CRNC about the status of
Node B resources.
•Configuration Alignment. This function gives the CRNC and the Node B the possibility to verify that both nodes
has the same information on the configuration of the radio resources.
•Measurements on Common Resources. This function allows the CRNC to initiate measurements in the Node B. The
function also allows the Node B to report the result of the measurements.
•Radio Link Supervision. This function allows the CRNC to report failures and restorations of a Radio Link.
•Compressed Mode Control [FDD]. This function allows the CRNC to control the usage of compressed mode in a
Node B.
•Measurements on Dedicated Resources. This function allows the CRNC to initiate measurements in the NodeB. The
function also allows the NodeB to report the result of the measurements.
•DL Power Drifting Correction (FDD). This function allows the CRNC to adjust the DL power level of one or more
Radio Links in order to avoid DL power drifting between the Radio Links.

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 218
Appendix/RANAP elementary procedures
RANAP elementary procedures

RANAP Functions (some of them (see 3GPP 25.413))


•Relocating serving RNC. This function enables to change the serving RNC functionality as well as the related Iu
resources (RAB(s) and Signalling connection) from one RNC to another.
•Overall RAB management. This function is responsible for setting up, modifying and releasing RABs.
•Release of all Iu connection resources. This function is used to explicitly release all resources related to one Iu
connection.
•SRNS context forwarding function. This function is responsible for transferring SRNS context from the RNC to the
CN for intersystem forward handover in case of packet forwarding.
•Controlling overload in the Iu interface. This function allows adjusting the load in the Iu interface.
•Sending the UE Common ID (permanent NAS UE identity) to the RNC. This function makes the RNC aware of the
UE's Common ID.
•Paging the user. This function provides the CN for capability to page the UE.
•Transport of NAS information between UE and CN. This function has three sub-classes:
•Controlling the security mode in the UTRAN. This function is used to send the security keys (ciphering and
integrity protection) to the UTRAN, and setting the operation mode for security functions.
•Controlling location reporting. This function allows the CN to operate the mode in which the UTRAN reports the
location of the UE.
•Data volume reporting function. This function is responsible for reporting unsuccessfully transmitted DL data
volume over UTRAN for specific RABs.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 219
Appendix/RSNAP elementary procedures
RSNAP elementary procedures

RSNAP Functions (some of them (see 3GPP 25.423))


•Radio Link Management. This function allows the SRNC to manage radio links using dedicated resources in a
DRNS;
•Physical Channel Reconfiguration. This function allows the DRNC to reallocate the physical channel resources for
a Radio Link;
•Radio Link Supervision. This function allows the DRNC to report failures and restorations of a Radio Link;
•Compressed Mode Control [FDD]. This function allows the SRNC to control the usage of compressed mode within
a DRNS;
•Measurements on Dedicated Resources. This function allows the SRNC to initiate measurements on dedicated
resources in the DRNS. The function also allows the DRNC to report the result of the measurements;
•DL Power Drifting Correction [FDD]. This function allows the SRNC to adjust the DL power level of one or more
Radio Links in order to avoid DL power drifting between the Radio Links;
•CCCH Signalling Transfer. This function allows the SRNC and DRNC to pass information between the UE and the
SRNC on a CCCH controlled by the DRNS;
•Paging. This function allows the SRNC to page a UE in a URA or a cell in the DRNS;
•Common Transport Channel Resources Management. This function allows the SRNC to utilise Common Transport
Channel Resources within the DRNS (excluding DSCH resources for FDD);
•Relocation Execution. This function allows the SRNC to finalise a Relocation previously prepared via other
interfaces.
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 220
Related Documentation

Abbreviations and Acronyms

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 221
Related documentation

English
- WCDMA for UMTS, Harri Holma and Antti Toskala, Wiley 2000,
ISBN 0 471 72051 8

- UMTS Mobile communications for the future, Wiley 2001,


ISBN 0 471 49829 7

- Alcatel Telecommunications Review, 1st Quarter 2001 (“Find your way with 3G”)

- 3GPP specifications: ftp://ftp.3gpp.org/Specs/

Francais
- UMTS les réseaux mobiles de troisième génération, Editions Eyrolles 2001 (translation of
“WCDMA for UMTS” )

- UMTS les origines, l'architecture, la norme, Pierre Lescuyer, Editions Dunod 2001,
ISBN 2 10 005195 4

- Revue des Télécommunications d’Alcatel , 1er trimestre 2001 (entièrement consacrée à


la 3G)

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 222
Abbreviations and Acronyms (1)

AAL ATM Adaptation Layer CCCH Common Control Channel


ACELP Algebraic Code Excited Linear Prediction CCTrCH Coded Composite Transport Channel
ADN Abbreviated Dialling Number CDMA Code Division Multiple Access
ALCAP Access Link Control Application Part CDR Call Detail Record
AMR Adaptive Multi Rate CN Core Network
ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode CPCH Common Packet Channel
BCCH Broadcast Control Channel CRNC Controlling RNC
BCH Broadcast Channel CS Circuit Switched
BHCA Busy Hour Call Attempts CTCH Common Traffic Channel
BER Bit Error Rate DCA Dynamic channel Allocation
BLER Block Error Rate DCCH Dedicated Control Channel
BMC Broadcast / Multicast Control DCH Dedicated Channel
BM-IWF Broadcast Multicast InterWorking DHO Diversity HandOver
Function DHT Diversity HandOver Trunk
BSC Base Station Controller DRAC Dynamic Resource Allocation Control
BSS Base Station (sub)System DRNC Drift RNC
BTS Base Transceiver Station DS Direct Sequence
CAMEL Customized Application for Mobile DSCH Downlink Shared Channel
Enhanced Logic DTCH Dedicated Traffic Channel
CC Call Control
© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 223
Abbreviations and Acronyms (2)

EDGE Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
ERAN EDGE Radio Access Network (all-IP) IMEI International Mobile Equipment Identity
FACH Forward Access Channel IMSI International Mobile Subscriber Identity
FBI FeedBack Information IP Internet Protocol
FDD Frequency Division Duplex IR Incremental Redundancy
FDD-DS FDD-Direct Sequence (FDD1) ISDN Integrated Services Digital Network
FDD-MC FDD-Multiple Carrier (FDD2) L1,L2,L3 Layer 1, Layer 2, Layer 3
FER Frame Error Rate LA Location Area
FP Frame Protocol LCS Location Services
FTP File Transfer Protocol LLC Logical Link Control
GERAN GSM/EDGE Radio Access Network LQC Link Quality Control
GGSN Gateway GPRS Support Node M3UA SS7 MTP3 User Adaptation layer
GPRS General Packet Radio Service MAC Medium Access Control
GSM Global System for Mobile Communications MBS Multi-standard Base Station
GSN GPRS Support Node (ie SGSN or GGSN) MC Multiple Carrier
GTP GPRS Tunneling Protocol MExE Mobile Execution Environment
GTP-U GPRS Tunneling Protocol-User Plane MM Mobility Management
HO HandOver MSC Mobile-services Switching Center
HPLMN Home PLM MSP Multiple Subscriber Profile

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 224
Abbreviations and Acronyms (3)

MTP3 Message Transfer Part (broadband) PS Packet Switched


MTP-3B Message Transfer Part level 3 QOS Quality Of Service
NAS Non Access Stratum QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
NBAP Node-B Application Part RA Routing Area
ODMA Opportunity Driven Multiple Access RAB Radio Access Bearer
OSA Open service Architecture RACH Random Access Channel
OTDOA-IPDL Observed Time Difference of Arrival RAN Radio Access Network
Idle Period Downlink RANAP RAN Application Part
OVSF Orthogonal Variable Spreading Factor RB Radio Bearer
PCCH Paging Control Channel RL Radio Link
PCH Paging Channel RLC Radio Link Control
PDA Personal Digital Assistant RNC Radio Network Controller
PDC Personal Digital Cellular (2G Japan) RNS Radio Network Sub-System
PDP Packet Data Protocol RNSAP RNS Application Part
PDU Protocol Data Unit RNTI Radio Network Temporary Identity
PLMN Public Land Mobile Network RRC Radio Resource Control
PRACH Physical Random Access Channel RRM Radio Resource Management

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 225
Abbreviations and Acronyms (4)

SAP Service Access Point TF Transport Format


SAT SIM Application Toolkit TFC Transport Format Combination
SDU Service Data Unit TFCI Transport Format Combination Indicator
SF Spreading Factor TFCS Transport Format Combination Set
SGSN Serving GPRS Support Node TFS Transport Format Set
SHO Soft HandOver TMSI Temporary Mobile Station Identity
SIR Signal to Interference Ratio TPC Transmission Power Control
SMS Short Message Service UDP User Datagram Protocol
SPU Signaling Processing Unit UICC UMTS Integrated Circuit Card
SRNC Serving RNC UMTS Universal Mobile Telecommunication
SSCOP Service Specific Connection Oriented System
Protocol USIM UMTS Subscriber Identity Card
SSCP Signaling Connection Control Part USSD Unstructured Supplementary Service
STM Synchronous Transfer Mode Data
TC Transcoder URA UTRAN Registration Area
TCP Transport Control Protocol URAN UMTS Radio Access Network (ETSI)
TD-CDMA Time Division & CDMA Universal Radio Access Network (3GPP)
TDD Time Division Duplex USB Universal Serial Bus
TDMA Time Division Multiple Access UTRAN UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 226
Abbreviations and Acronyms (5)

VC Virtual Channel
VHE Virtual Home Environment
VoIP Voice over IP
VP Virtual Path
WAP Wireless Application Protocol
W-CDMA Wideband Code Division Multiple
Access
WIM WAP Identity Module

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 227
Abbreviations and Acronyms
(Standard Organizations)

3GPP 3rd Generation Partnership Project (WCDMA)


3GPP2 3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (cdma2000)
3GIP 3rd Generation partnership for Internet Protocol
ANSI American National Standard Institute (USA)
ARIB Association of Radio Industries and Business (Japan)
CWTS China Wireless Telecommunication Standard group
ETSI European Telecommunication Standard Institute
IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
IMT International Mobile Telecommunication
ITU International Telecommunication Union
T1 Committee T1 telecommunication of the ANSI (USA)
TIA Telecommunication Industry Association (USA)
TTA Telecommunication Technology Association (Korea)
TTC Telecommunication Technology Committee (Japan)
UWCC Universal Wireless Communications Committee
W3C World Wide Web Consortium

© Alcatel University - 8AS 90171 0004 VT ZZA Ed. E.A.U Page 228

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