CDMA
CDMA
STG(03)13 r1
12 Oct 2003
Source: Subject:
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1 Introduction
SEAMCAT (Spectrum Engineering Advanced Monte Carlo Analysis Tool) is a generic radio compatibility analysis software tool developed within the frame of the CEPT Working Group Spectrum Engineering (SE). It quantifies the interference level in scenarios involving victim and interfering radio systems, by taking into account the statistical nature of received signals. An important goal of SEAMCAT is to address any interference scenario irrespective of the type of radio systems involved. However, the current version of SEAMCAT does not support the analysis of interference scenarios involving CDMA networks, which build the basis for future 3G public mobile networks. Therefore, the SEAMCAT Technical Group (STG) decided in its first meeting on 10-11 July 2003, to upgrade SEAMCAT with CDMA simulation capability. In addition, the basic principals regarding modeling the CDMA transmit power control (TPC) in SEMCAT were agreed and the companies interested in this subject were invited to make contributions before the next STG meeting. The aim of this document is to provide a description of necessary CDMA power control algorithms to be included in SEAMCAT.
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users positions (both victim and interfering), locations (e.g. indoor or outdoor), speeds, and services. It also accounts for stochastic fading between transmitters and receivers. The system power levels can be calculated based on a distribution of users which are randomly placed, reflecting reality. Assessing many distributions lends insight into the statistical characteristics of the interference effects, as defined by power rises and drop calls.
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procedures take into account different errors occurred in the power control loop (see Section 5).
3 Deployment Scenarios
Only the macro-cellular environment is considered in this document. Cell sites are laid out in a hexagonal grid. Sites with omni-directional antennas are placed in the middle of the cells as depicted in Fig. 1 and sites with tri-sector antennas are placed at the edge of the cells, where each site covers three cells. Fig. 2 shows one of these cell sites (small hexagons in dashed lines)1. The inter-site distance (ICD) is D. The cell radius R is equal to D 3 in the omniantenna case and is equal to D 3 in the tri-sector antenna case. Both suburban scenario and urban scenario can be modeled with this cell configuration. The scenarios differ only in propagation conditions and in the cell radius. A wrap around cluster is used to reduce the number of cells required in the simulations and consequently to enable faster simulation run times. The number of cell sites in the cluster is assumed to be 19 (19 cells in the case of omnia-antenna and 57 cells in the case of tri-sector antenna), which appears to be appropriate for SEAMCAT simulation purposes, however the center cell site only is used to calculate the effects of interference, In spite of this fact, it is essential to consider the intra-system interference caused by other cells in the cluster for an accurate modeling of power control. I.e. the precise transmit power of all active mobile stations in the wrap-around cluster has to be calculated in the uplink power control loop. The implementation of cell wrap-around is presented in Appendix B.
1 Note that the arrows in Fig 2 demonstrate the antenna orientation of each cell.
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Inter-site distance D
4 Path-loss Model
The propagation pathloss used in this document is taken from [1] for 1900 MHz. This model is applicable for suburban and urban areas outside the high-rise core where buildings are of nearly uniform heights.
PL = 40 1 4 10 3 Dhb log( d ) 18 log( Dhb ) + 21 log( f ) + 80
EQ 1
where,
Dhb = the base station antenna height above the average rooftop in meters f = the carrier frequency in MHz d = the distance between the mobile and the base station in kilometers.
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Note that this pathloss model is an exemplary one and every other model, e.g. the one currently applied in SEAMCAT, can be used instead of it. A log-normally distributed shadowing (Log F) with standard deviation of shadowing dB (LogF = shadowing randn ) is added to pathloss of EQ 1 to model fading effect.
PL _ fading = PL + LogF
EQ 2
Mobile station antenna gain is denoted by GMS and base station antenna gain denoted by GBS (for both omni antenna and sector antenna). The received power PRX at either the mobile or base station in relation to the transmit power PTX is given by
PRX = PTX max (PL _ fading G MS G BS , MCL )
EQ 3
where MCL is the minimum coupling loss, defined as the minimum distance loss including antenna gain measured between antenna connectors.
inaccuracies in the C/I estimates transmit power control signaling errors delay in the transmit power control loop
Links level simulations take these errors into account and reflect their impacts on the link quality figures in the look up tables to be input to the power control module of SEAMCAT. Therefore, we assume a simple C/I based fast closed-loop TPC of traffic channels for uplink in the following.
Local-mean Signal-to-interference power ratio in the uplink, (C/I)UL, is calculated by multiplying the received signal power S by the processing gain G, and dividing the result by the total interference power Itotal
G S C = I UL I total
EQ 4
with
I total = (1 ) I int ra + I int er + I out + N EQ 5
Iintra is the intra-cell interference power, i.e. the interference generated by those mobile stations served by the same base station as the considered mobile station. Iinter is the inter-cell interference power from other radio cells. Iout is the interference power coming from the interfering system. N is thermal noise (as well as spurious interference) contained in the receiver bandwidth, W, and is an interference reduction factor due to the use of interference mitigation signal processing techniques in the uplink, e.g. Multi User Detection. No such interference mitigation technique is assumed in these considerations, therefore = 0. Assuming a mobile station power control range in the order of MS_PC_Range dB; the minimum TX power is therefore max_MS_Pw_Tx MS_PC_Range dBm.
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To determine the number of active mobile stations Act_MS in the network: 1. Set up: I. Average traffic load in terms of a predefined number of users per cluster: N_UL II. standard deviation of log-normal shadowing shadowing III. voice activity factor Act_Factor IV. target maximum noise rise over the thermal noise in the network _target V. target C/I (Eb/N0_target) to fulfill service requirement depending on configuration and mobility (provided by link level simulations) VI. maximum transmit power of mobile station max_MS_Pw_Tx VII. power control range MS_PC_Rang: VIII. In the case that the CDMA uplink is the victim link, add the received power from the interfering system to the thermal noise power 2. For each snapshot: I. put down uniformly mobile stations at pseudo-random locations across the network and distribute speed among them II. Add a new mobile station in the set of active users in the network
compute average path-loss from the mobile station to the base station of each cell by (EQ 1) generate a log-normal pseudo-random value to add to each of the path losses to model shadow fading (EQ 2)
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perform a pseudo-random weighted coin-toss to determine voice activity, where 1 occurs with probability Act_Factor compute required received power at the base station to meet Eb/N0_target, given interference from pre-existing mobiles and other sources (EQ 4 and EQ 5) compute required transmit power of the mobile station (EQ 3) adjust the required transmit powers of the all existing mobile stations perturbed by addition of the new mobile station continue the adjustment until the convergence of power control loop is achieved. A convergence criterion could be that the variation of two consecutive transmit powers of each mobile station is within a predefined threshold. compare the number of active mobile stations, Act_MS, with N_UL if Act_MS N_UL terminate the addition of a new mobile station in the network else measure the average noise rise over the thermal noise and compare it with the target noise rise limit _target o if _target is reached, terminate the addition of a new mobile station in the network o else add a new mobile station and go to step II 5.4.2 Outage calculation
Two conditions are counted as outage. 1. A mobile station, which is not able to transmit the required amount of power to meet the received Eb/N0_target due to maximum power limitations. This mobile is counted as part of the specified traffic load N_UL. However, the mobile is assumed to be transmitting no power. 2. In the case of Act_MS < N_UL, no more mobile stations can be added to the set of active users because of noise rise limits. In this event, N_UL - Act_MS outages are counted.
5.4.3 Simulation output
When the CDMA uplink is the victim link, a similar analysis is performed with and without the interference from the interfering link. Outage probability with and without the interference source is reported.
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When the CDMA uplink is the interfering link, the total received power at the receiver in the victim link, due to the transmit power of all the active mobile stations in the three cells of the center cell site of the CDMA cluster, adjusted for spectral masks, etc., is counted as the interfering power in the victim link. It is not necessary to keep track of outages in this case, unless the victim link is also a CDMA system.
6 Reference
1. 3GPP TR25.942 v6.0.0, 3 2. 3GPP2 TSG-C.R1002, 3
Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Radio Access Networks; RF System Scenarios (Release 6)
rd
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Methodology
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Hexagonal layout, BS in the middle of the cell D (km) 0.755 D (km) 19 with wrap around technique _target (dB) (typical values 3dB for suburban and 6dB for urban)
MCL (dB) GMS GBS shadowing (dB) Dhb (m) f (MHz) d (km) PL (dB) PL_fading (dB) PTX (dB) PRX (dB) > SANPSHOTmin > PC_STEPmin perfect PC considered in link level simulations 0 (dB) Eb/N0 target not reached due to lack of TX power OR for Act_MS < N_UL, noise rise limit is reached
The base station with the strongest signal is selected as the serving base station
NF (dB) (typical value 5dB) W (MHz) (4.096 MHz / 1.25 MHz) -174.0 (dBm/Hz) (assuming T=290 K)
MS_Pw_Tx (dBm) MS_PC_Range (dB) MS_Pw_Tx - MS_PC_Range (dBm) Random and Uniform across the cells
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i, j = i 2 + j 2 + i j
A toroidal surface is chosen because it can be easily formed from a rhombus by joining the opposing edges. We propose to use i , j = 19 (i=3 and j=2) for SEAMCAT. To illustrate the
cyclic nature of the wrap-around cell structure, the cluster of 19 cells is repeated 8 times at rhombus lattice vertices as shown in Figure B-1. Note that the original cell cluster remains in the center while the 8 clusters evenly surround this center set. From the figure, it is clear that by first cutting along the blue lines to obtain a rhombus and then joining the opposing edges of the rhombus a toroid can be formed. Furthermore, since the toroid is a continuous surface, there are an infinite number of rhombus lattice vertices but only a select few have been shown to illustrate the cyclic nature. In the wrap-around model considered, the signal or interference from any mobile station to a given cell is treated as if that mobile station is in the first 2 rings of neighboring cells. The distance from any mobile station to any base station can be obtained as follows: Define a coordinate system such that the center of cell 1 is at (0,0). The path distance and angle used to compute the path loss and antenna gain of a mobile station at (x,y) to a base station at (a,b) is the minimum of the following: a. b. c. d. e. f. g. Distance between (x,y) and (a,b); Distance between (x,y) and (a + 3D / 3 , b + 4 D); Distance between (x,y) and (a 3D / 3 , b 4 D); Distance between (x,y) and (a + 4.5 D / 3 , b 7 D / 2); Distance between (x,y) and (a 4.5D / 3 , b + 7 D / 2); Distance between (x,y) and (a + 7.5D / 3 , b + D / 2); Distance between (x,y) and (a 7.5D / 3 , b D / 2) ,
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Figure B-1 Wrap-around with 9 clusters of 19 cells showing the toroidal nature of the wrap-around surface.
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