Multiple port antenna systems are implemented for the following reasons. Improved transmission reliability Greater coverage or range Reduced UE power consumption increased transmission throughput. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 5 uses two antenna ports.
Multiple port antenna systems are implemented for the following reasons. Improved transmission reliability Greater coverage or range Reduced UE power consumption increased transmission throughput. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 5 uses two antenna ports.
Multiple port antenna systems are implemented for the following reasons. Improved transmission reliability Greater coverage or range Reduced UE power consumption increased transmission throughput. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 5 uses two antenna ports.
Multiple port antenna systems are implemented for the following reasons. Improved transmission reliability Greater coverage or range Reduced UE power consumption increased transmission throughput. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 5 uses two antenna ports.
The document discusses multiple antenna systems used in LTE including SIMO, MISO and MIMO. It provides improved transmission reliability, greater coverage/range, reduced UE power consumption and increased transmission throughput.
The document discusses three types of multiple antenna systems - Single Input Multiple Output (SIMO), Multiple Input Single Output (MISO) and Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO).
A SIMO receiver uses techniques like switched diversity, equal gain combining and maximum ratio combining to compute the best received signal from multiple spatially separated antenna ports.
TM5117AEN03GLA1
MIMO for LTE
1 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 2 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 3 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 4 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 5 LTE Physical Layer services assume multiple port antenna systems are used. Multiple port antenna systems are implemented for the following reasons: Improved transmission reliability Greater coverage or range Reduced UE power consumption Increased transmission throughput Multiple port antenna systems include the following: Single Input Multiple Output (SIMO) Multiple Input Single Output (MISO) Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 6 In a SIMO configuration the transmitter (usually the UE) has one transmitter and the receiver (the eNodeB) has two physically separated antenna ports. The receiver picks up multiple versions of the same signal but separated spatially. SIMO receivers use the following techniques to compute the best received signal. Switched Diversity In Switched Diversity, the input with the best signal is chosen as the best source. The best signal may be based on Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) or Bit Error Rate (BER). Switched diversity is the most simple and inexpensive SIMO technique. Equal Gain Combining Equal Gain Combining is a summation of all available received signals. Maximum Ratio Combining In Maximum Ratio Combining (MRC), each received signal has compensation applied to it before being combined to produce a composite single signal. This technique is particularly effective where the signal undergoes deep fading. Because fading probably occurs at different frequencies on each antenna port, the reliability of the radio link is increased. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 7 A MISO (eNodeB) transmitter has two or more physically separated antenna ports, while the MISO (UE) receiver has one antenna. Each Tx port transmits the same information bits. In addition to data signals, reference signals are also transmitted via both antenna ports. The normal reference signal pattern is sent via the first antenna port and the diversity reference signal pattern via the second antenna port.
In Space-Time Transmit Diversity (STTD) the same data is transmitted simultaneously over both Tx ports. On each port, the channel-coded data is processed in blocks of four bits, then the bits are time reversed and complex conjugated. The physical separation of the antenna ports provides the space diversity, and the time difference derived from the bit-reversing process provides the time diversity. These features together make the decoding process in the receiver more reliable.
TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 8 MIMO systems contain multiple antenna ports at both the transmitter and receiver. The MIMO transmitter transmits signals using time, frequency, and space diversity. The MIMO receiver recovers the data across multiple receiving antenna ports.
TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 9 Space-Time Coding (STC) provides diversity gain to combat the effects of unwanted multipath propagation. Similar to STTD, time delayed and coded versions of the same signal are sent from the same transmitter antenna. The codes that are used are mainly: trellis and block (less complex) codes. This improves the SNR for cell edge performance. Spatial Multiplexing (SM) With Spatial Multiplexing, unique (different) data streams are transmitted over different antenna ports. Spatial multiplexing can double (2x2 MIMO) or quadruple (4x4 MIMO) capacity and throughput. This technique gives higher capacity when RF conditions are favorable and users are closer to the eNodeB. The graphic shows spatial multiplexing with a 2x2 MIMO configuration. The receiver can identify the transmitting antenna port for each received signal
TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 10 MIMO supports single user MIMO and multi-user MIMO. Single User MIMO improves the performance for a UE (via space time coding), or increases the throughput for a UE (using spatial multiplexing). TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 11 In multi-user MIMO, the data for different users is multiplexed onto a single time- frequency resource, so the capacity of the cell can increase in terms of users without increasing the system bandwidth.
Switching between SU-MIMO and MU-MIMO is supported on a per UE basis. The use of codes and reference signals not only allows the receiver to differentiate between antenna streams and users, but also allows accurate channel estimation TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 12 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 13 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 14 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 15 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 16 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 17 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 18 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 19 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 20 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 21 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 22 MIMO supports both open loop and closed loop control. Open loop MIMO transceivers adjust their transmission based on received (reference signal) measurements. This assumes no rapid feedback technique is available from the UE receiver back to the eNodeB transmitter. Unfortunately, in open loop operation, the transmitter receives no feedback regarding antenna port operation or signal strength in the forward direction. Closed loop MIMO supports a feedback loop describing eNodeB transmitter operation and UE recommendations. Both the eNodeB and UE contain a codebook which describes possible RF parameters, for example, the phase shift between antenna ports. In closed loop MIMO, the UE describes eNodeB transmitter operation by returning an index into the shared codebook.
Closed loop operation uses the following steps. 1. The eNodeB transmits a DL pilot channel as a reference signal on all antenna ports. 2. he UE evaluates various codebook options that specify the RF parameters. 3. The UE transmits its recommendations in the form of a codebook index to the eNodeB. 4. The eNodeB adjusts its DL transmission to the UE based on the recommended parameters. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 23 In case of open loop spatial multiplex two cases have to be distinguished. If the transmitted rank indication (TRI) = 1 the transmission mode corresponds to transmit diversity. If TRI >1 large delay CDD is used. The number of layers is 2, 3 or 4.
In case of closed loop spatial multiplexing feedback from the UE it is used. The UE feedbacks values of the RI = Rank Indicator and PMI = Precoding Matrix Indicator. In case of 2 antenna ports the codebook consists of 2 matrices, in case of 4 antenna ports there are 16 entries. A restriction may be signaled so that only a subset thereof can be used.
TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 24 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 25 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 26 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 27 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 28 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 29 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 30 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 31 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 32 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 33 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 34 Release 10 has enhanced the reference signal design with user specific reference symbols for signal demodulation and common reference symbols for feedback purposes in downlink and more orthogonal reference signal structure in uplink. The enhanced design enables better performance when the number of antenna branches is high. Downlink MIMO has already been included in LTE Release 8. The LTE Release 8 codebook and reference symbol design was found to be quite optimum for two and four transmit antennas (2x2, 2x4 and 4x4 antenna configurations), but the channel state information feedback from UE to eNB could have been more accurate. This limitation is overcome by the new reference symbol design of Release 10, which is also more effective when the number of transmit antennas is higher. Based on the studies and numerous contributions in 3GPP, it can be safely concluded that the higher the number of antennas, the higher is the gain that Release 10 MIMO provides in downlink. With two eNB and two UE antennas, Release 10 downlink MIMO provides no improvements over release 8 in SU-MIMO mode but small performance improvements have been gained in MU-MIMO mode. In most cases it is best to operate two TX antenna eNBs in Release 8 SU-MIMO mode. When eNB has four transmit antennas, Release 10 downlink MIMO gain is more than 20% over Release 8 and with eight transmit antennas a bit higher. Reference symbol overhead effects on system performance are significant with four and eight transmit antennas. Therefore the selection of MIMO operating modes and system parameters for both Release 8 and 10 UE is a critical network optimization task.
TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 35 An important point worth remembering is that the network should also support Release 8 and 9 UE which does not benefit from the Release 10 enhancements. The capacity gain from Release 10 downlink MIMO enhancements could even be negative since new reference symbols create overhead for all UE. However, these overheads can be decreased by decreasing the Release 8 and 9 specific reference symbols, but this would prevent non-LTE-A UE to operate in MIMO mode and thus lower their data rates. Additionally, there would be negative effects on common control channel performance. Consequently, the timing of the introduction of the new features and the configuration of the system parameters are essential for an optimum performance of the LTE network.
CSI - For downlink channel sounding / Sparse, low overhead (configurable) CSI = PMI(precoding matrix indicator) + RI(rank indicator) + CQI (channel quality indicator) DM - UE-specific DM-RS, which is precoded, makes it possible to apply non- codebook-based precoding (precoding based on CSI feedback and/or UL sounding)- UE-specific DM-RS will enable application of enhanced multi-user beamformingsuch as zero forcing (ZF) for, e.g., 4-by-2 MIMO - DM RS pattern for higher numbers of layers is extended for 2-layer format for transmission mode 8 in Rel-9 //CDM between RS of two layers// E.g. for 4 antenna ports: TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 36 Uplink MIMO provides significantly higher peak rates and improved spectrum efficiency in uplink direction. SU-MIMO provides mainly increased data rates in lightly loaded networks for high-end multi-transmitter UE, whereas MU-MIMO can offer significant improvement of spectrum efficiency even with single transmitter UE. This can boost network capacity at low costs The LTE-A system can operate in both SU and MU-MIMO modes at the same time using dynamic user specific MIMO transmission configuration. TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 37 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 38 TM5117AEN03GLA1 MIMO for LTE 39 Physical Multicast Channel (PMCH) is used instead of PDSCH. Special RS pattern with higher density in frequency domain supports longer delay spread from multi-cell transmission.
Multimedia Broadcast Single Frequency Network(MBSFN) mode of operation is supported by EUTRAN to enable efficient multicell transmission of EMBMS services