Advancements Towards 4G: A Seminar Report
Advancements Towards 4G: A Seminar Report
Advancements Towards 4G: A Seminar Report
A SEMINAR REPORT
BACHELOR OF TECHNOLOGY
In
COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
NOVEMBER 2013
ABSTRACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CH.
TITLE
PAGE NO.
NO.
LIST OF TABLES
LIST OF FIGURES
iii
iv
1.
INTRODUCTION
01
2.
HISTORY
02
3.
VISION OF 4G
06
3.1. Objectives of 4G
07
08
3.3. Developments
09
4.
KEY 4G TECHNOLOGIES
11
11
4.2. OFDMA
12
13
14
14
1
4.4. IPV6
15
4.5. VoIP
16
4.5.1. Functionality
17
18
5.
QUALITY OF SERVICE
20
6.
COMPTING TECHNOLOGIES
21
7.
6.1. UMB
21
22
23
BENFITS
25
8.
9.
25
25
26
APPLICATIONS
27
27
28
CONCLUSION
29
REFERENCES
30
2
LIST OF TABLES
2.1 Wireless System Evolution
LIST OF FIGURES
4
07
24
1. INTRODUCTION
standard for 3G. Other companies have made prototype systems calling those 4G.
While it is possible that some currently demonstrated technologies may become part
of 4G, until the 4G standard or standards have been defined, it is impossible for any
company currently to provide with any certainty wireless solutions that could be
called 4G cellular networks that would conform to the eventual international
standards for 4G. These confusing statements around "existing" 4G have served to
confuse investors and analysts about the wireless industry.
2. HISTORY
The history and evolution of mobile service from the 1G (first generation) to
fourth generation are discussed in this section. Table 1 presents a short history of
mobile telephone technologies. This process began with the designs in the 1970s
that have become known as 1G. The earliest systems were implemented based on
analog technology and the basic cellular structure of mobile communication. Many
fundamental problems were solved by these early systems.
Numerous incompatible analog systems were placed in service around
the world during the 1980s.The 2G (second generation) systems designed in the
1980s were still used mainly for voice applications but were based on digital
technology, including digital signal processing techniques. These 2G systems
provided circuit-switched data communication services at a low speed. The
competitive rush to design and implement digital systems led again to a variety of
different and incompatible standards such as GSM (global system mobile),
mainly in Europe; TDMA (time division multiple access) (IS-54/IS-136) in the
U.S.; PDC (personal digital cellular) in Japan; and CDMA (code division multiple
access) (IS-95), another U.S. system. These systems operate nationwide or
internationally and are today's mainstream systems, although the data rate for users
in these system is very limited. During the 1990s, two organizations worked to
define
the
next,
or
3G,
incompatibilities and become a truly global system. The 3G system would have
higher quality voice channels, as well as broadband data capabilities, up to
2
Mbps.
differences, and this decade will see the introduction of two mobile standards for
3G. In addition, China is on the verge of implementing a third 3G system. An
interim step is being taken between 2G and 3G, the 2.5G. It is basically an
enhancement of the two major 2G technologies to provide increased capacity on the
2G RF (radio frequency) channels and to introduce higher throughput for data
service, up to 384 kbps. A very important aspect of 2.5G is that the data channels
are optimized for packet data, which introduces access to
the Internet from mobile devices, whether telephone, PDA (personal digital
assistant), or laptop. However, the demand for higher access speed multimedia
communication in today's society, which greatly depends on computer
communication in digital format, seems unlimited. According to the historical
indication of a generation revolution occurring once a decade, the present appears
to be the right time to begin the research on a 4G mobile communication system.
Table2.1.ShortHistory
of MobileTelephone
Technologies
Legend:
1xRTT = 2.5G CDMA data service up to 384 kbps
AMPS = advanced mobile phone service
CDMA = code division multiple access
EDGE = enhanced data for global evolution
FDMA = frequency division multiple access
GPRS = general packet radio system
GSM = global system for mobile
NMT = Nordic mobile telephone
PDC = personal digital cellular
PSTN = public switched telephone network
TACS = total access communications system
TDMA = time division multiple access
4
3. VISION OF 4G
This new generation of wireless is intended to complement and
replace
the
communication,
4G will have broader bandwidth, higher data rate, and smoother and
quicker handoff and will focus on ensuring seamless service across a multitude of
wireless systems and networks. The key concept is integrating the 4G capabilities
with all of the existing mobile technologies through advanced technologies.
Application adaptability and being highly dynamic are the main features of 4G
services of interest to users.
These features mean services can be delivered and be available to the personal
preference of different users and support the users' traffic, air interfaces, radio
environment, and quality of service. Connection with the network applications can
be transferred into various forms and levels correctly and efficiently. The dominant
methods of access to this pool of information will
PDA,
and
laptop
to
seamlessly
access
the
be
the
mobile
telephone,
platform to cellular 3G and 3G systems to WLL (wireless local loop) and FWA
(fixed wireless access) to WLAN (wireless local area network) and PAN (personal
area network),all with IP as the integrating mechanism. With 4G, a range of new
services and models will be
Available. These services and models need to be further examined for their
interface with the design of 4G systems. Figures 2 and 3 demonstrate the
key elements and the seamless connectivity of the networks.
3.1. Objectives of 4G
4G is being developed to accommodate the quality of service (QoS)
and rate requirements set by forthcoming applications like wireless broadband
8
(MMS),
video chat,
mobile TV,
A nominal data rate of 100 Mbit/s while the client physically moves at high speeds
relative to the station, and 1 Gbit/s while client and station are in relatively fixed
positions as defined by the ITU-R,
A data rate of at least 100 Mbit/s between any two points in the world,
High quality of service for next generation multimedia support (real time audio, high
speed data, HDTV video content, mobile TV, etc.)
Interoperability
with
they
characteristic
of
so-called
"4G"
networks
such
as
LTE
is
Internet, with higher level services such as voice, video, and messaging,
built on top of this. In 2004, the 3GPP proposed this as the future of UMTS
and began feasibility studies into the so-called All IP
9
3.3. Developments
10
Dig web, an Irish fixed and wireless broadband company, has announced that
they have received a mobile communications license from the Irish Telecoms
regulator, ComReg. This service will be issued the mobile code 088 in Ireland and
will be used for the provision of 4G Mobile communications.
4. KEY 4G TECHNOLOGIES
12
As the wireless standards evolved, the access techniques used also exhibited
increase in efficiency, capacity and scalability. The first generation
wireless standards used plain TDMA and FDMA. In the wireless channels,
TDMA proved to be less efficient in handling the high data rate channels as it
requires large guard periods to alleviate the multipath impact. Similarly, FDMA
consumed more bandwidth for guard to avoid inter carrier interference. So in
second generation systems, one set of standard used the combination of
FDMA
and TDMA and the other set introduced a new access scheme called
CDMA. Usage of CDMA increased the system capacity and also placed a soft limit
on it rather than the hard limit. Data rate is also increased as this access
scheme is efficient enough to handle the multipath channel. This enabled the
third generation systems to used CDMA as the access scheme IS- 2000, UMTS,
HSXPA, 1xEV-DO, TD-CDMA and TD-SCDMA. The only issue with
CDMA is that it suffers from poor spectrum flexibility and scalability.
Recently, new access schemes like Orthogonal FDMA (OFDMA), Single
Carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA), Interleaved FDMA and Multi-carrier code division
multiple access
(MC-CDMA) are gaining more importance for the next generation systems. WiMax
is using OFDMA in the downlink and in the uplink. For the next generation UMTS,
OFDMA is being considered for the downlink. By contrast, IFDMA is being
considered for the uplink since OFDMA contributes more to the PAPR related
issues and results in nonlinear operation of amplifiers. IFDMA provides less
power fluctuation and thus avoids amplifier issues. Similarly, MCCDMA is in the proposal for the IEEE 802.20 standard. These access schemes offer
the same efficiencies as older technologies like CDMA. Apart from this, scalability
and higher data rates can be achieved.
The other important advantage of the above mentioned access techniques is that
they
13
Require less complexity for equalization at the receiver. This is an added advantage
especially in the MIMO environments since the spatial multiplexing transmission of
MIMO systems inherently requires high complexity equalization at the receiver.
In addition to improvements in these multiplexing systems,
improved modulation techniques are being used. Whereas earlier standards
largely used Phase-shift keying, more efficient systems such as 64QAM are being
proposed for use with the 3GPP Long Term
Evolution standards.
conditions,
14
multiple access
(TDMA)
or
time-domain
statistical multiplexing,
i.e.
Flexibility of
deployment
across
various
frequency
bands
with
little
Interferences
within
the
cell
are
averaged
by
using
allocation
with
cyclic permutations.
15
Enables Single Frequency Network coverage, where coverage problem exists and
gives excellent coverage.
Offers Frequency diversity by spreading the carriers all over the used spectrum.
Using the cell capacity to the utmost by adaptively using the highest modulation a
user can use, this is allowed by the gain added when less carriers are allocated (up to
18dB gain for 23 carrier allocation instead of 1587 carriers), therefore gaining in
overall cell capacity.
bandwidth
efficiency (more bits per second per hertz of bandwidth) and link reliability or
diversity (reduced fading). Because of these properties,
MIMO is a current theme of international wireless research.
16
at
precoding
all of the
receive
antenna
and
precoding
is
used.
Note
that
transmitter.
Spatial multiplexing requires MIMO antenna configuration. In spatial
multiplexing, a high rate signal is split into multiple lower rate streams and each
stream is transmitted from a different transmit antenna in the same frequency
channel. If these signals arrive at the receiver antenna array with sufficiently
different spatial signatures, the receiver can separate these streams, creating parallel
channels for free. Spatial multiplexing is a very powerful technique for increasing
channel capacity at higher Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR). The maximum
number of spatial streams is limited by the lesser in the number of antennas at the
transmitter or receiver. Spatial multiplexing can be used with or without transmit
channel knowledge.
Diversity coding techniques are used when there is no channel knowledge
at the transmitter. In diversity methods a single stream (unlike multiple
streams in spatial multiplexing) is transmitted, but the signal is coded using
17
techniques
called
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) is an Internet Layer protocol for packetswitched internetworks.
The
(IETF)
has
designated IPv6 as the successor of IPv4, the first and still dominant version of
the Internet Protocol, for general use on the Internet.
IPv6 has a much larger address space than IPv4, which allows flexibility in
allocating addresses and routing traffic. The extended address length eliminates the
need to use network address translation to avoid address exhaustion, and also
simplifies aspects of address assignment and renumbering when changing
Internet connectivity providers.
The very large IPv6 address space supports 2128 (about 3.41038)
addresses, or approximately 51028 (roughly 295) addresses for each of the roughly
6.5 billion (6.5109) people alive today. In a different perspective, this is 252
addresses for every observable star in the known universe more than ten billion
billion billion times as many addresses as IPv4 supported.
18
While these numbers are impressive, it was not the intent of the designers of
the IPv6 address
addresses.
Rather,
space
the
to
assure
geographical
saturation
with
usable
is
also
referred
to
as
IP
VoIP providers
may
be
viewed
as commercial
realizations of
the
experimental Network Voice Protocol (1973) invented for the ARPANET providers.
Some cost savings are due to using a single network to carry voice and
data, especially where users have underused network capacity that can carry
VoIP at no additional cost. VoIP-to-VoIP phone calls are sometimes free, while
VoIP calls connecting to public switched telephone networks
19
4.5.1. Functionality
VoIP can facilitate tasks and provide services that may be more difficult to
implement or more expensive using the PSTN. Examples include:
The ability to transmit more than one telephone call over the same
broadband connection. This can make VoIP a simple way to add an extra
telephone line to a home or office.
Conference calling, call forwarding, automatic redial, and caller ID; zeroor near- zero-cost features that traditional telecommunication companies
(telcos) normally charge extra for.
Integration
including
with
other
services
available
over
the
Internet,
Advanced
Telephony
features
such
as
call
routing,
screen
pops, and IVR implementations are easier and cheaper to implement and
integrate. The fact that the phone call is on the same data network as
a user's PC opens a new door to possibilities.
using
software
on
detectors.
etc.)
are
instead
computing devices. While the concept of SDR is not new, the rapidly evolving
capabilities of digital electronics are making practical many processes that
were once only theoretically possible.
A basic SDR may consist of a computer (PC) equipped with a sound card,
or other analog-to-digital converter, preceded by some form of RF front end.
21
Significant amounts of signal processing are handed over to the general purpose
processor, rather than done using special-purpose hardware. Such a design produces
a radio that can receive and transmit a different
form
of
radio
protocol
The ideal scheme is, due to the actual technology progress limits, not
completely realizable, however.
22
5.QUALITY OF SERVICE
Traffic generated by the different services will not onlyincrease traffic loads
on the networks, but will also require different quality of service (QoS)
requirements (e.g., cell loss rate, delay, and jitter) for different streams (e.g.,
video, voice, data).
23
One of the most difficult problems that are to be solved, when it comes to IP
mobility, is how to insure the constant QoS level during the handover.
However, the mobile terminal can not receive IP packets while the
process of handover is finished. This time is called the handover latency.
Mobile IPv6 have been proposed to reduce the handover latency and the
number of lost packets.
routers to secure the special QoS for specific packet series with marked
priority.
6.COMPETING TECHNOLOGIES
24
the
applications
CDMA2000
mobile
phone
standard
for
next
architecture.
To
support
ubiquitous
and
universal
access, UMB supports inter- technology hand-offs and seamless operation with
existing CDMA2000 1X and 1xEV-DO systems. UMB offers high-speed data:
Peak download and upload speeds of 288 Mbps and 75 Mbps, respectively, in a
mobile environment with a 20 MHz bandwidth. It also supports increased VoIP
Capacity: Up to 1000 simultaneous Voice over IP (VoIP) users within a single
sector, 20 MHz of bandwidth .
To provide compatibility with the systems it replaces, UMB supports
handoffs with other
technologies
including
existing
CDMA2000
1X
and
25
UMTS, the LTE air interface is a completely new systems based on OFDMA in
the downlink and SC-FDMA (DFTS-FDMA) in the uplink that efficiently
supports multi-antenna techologies (MIMO). The architecture that will result from
this work is called EPS (Evolved Packet System) and comprises E-UTRAN
(Evolved UTRAN) on the access side and EPC (Evolved Packet Core) on the core
side.
While 3GPP Release 8 has yet to be ratified as a standard, much of the
standard will be oriented around upgrading UMTS to a so-called fourth generation
mobile communications technology, essentially a wireless broadband Internet system
with voice and other services built on top.
Peak download rates of 326.4 Mbit/s for 4x4 antennas, 172.8 Mbit/s for 2x2
antennas for every 20 MHz of spectrum.
5 different terminal classes have been defined from a voice centric class up to
a high end terminal that supports the peak data rates. All terminal will be able
to process 20 MHz bandwidth.
At least 200 active users in every 5 MHz cell. (i.e., 200 active data clients)
Increased spectrum flexibility, with spectrum slices as small as 1.5 MHz (and
as large as 20 MHz) supported (W-CDMA requires 5 MHz slices, leading to
some problems with roll-outs of the technology in countries where 5 MHz is a
commonly allocated amount of spectrum, and is frequently already in use with
legacy standards such as 2G GSM and cdmaOne.) Limiting sizes to 5
MHz also limited the amount of bandwidth per handset
WiMAX refers to broadband wireless networks that are based on the IEEE
802.16 standard, which ensures compatibility and interoperability between
broadband wireless access equipment. 802.16e is a new version of 802.16 standard
(WiMAX) which aims at a data speed of 1Gbps. It is also backward compatible
with existing WiMAX radios. It is based
on OFDMand MIMOantennatechnologies.
WiMAX services competitively yet profitably. By selecting the right DSP for
their MAS-enabled mobile WiMAX products, systems designers can
differentiate their products (Figure 3.13). That ability is a major asset in a
market as crowded and competitive as WiMAX, where features and
performance are must-haves for standing out from the pack and justifying a
price premium
7.BENEFITS
Higher bandwidths.
Higher revenue.
Users:
Access to broadband multimedia services with lower cost and where mostly needed.
Inter-network roaming.
30
8.APPLICATIONS
Virtual Presence: This means that 4G provides user services at all times, even if the
user is off-site.
Virtual navigation: 4G provides users with virtual navigation through which a user
can access a database of the streets, buildings etc.
4G wireless systems are expected to deliver efficient multimedia services at very high
data rates.
Basically there are two types of video services: bursting and streaming video services.
Streaming is performed when a user requires real-time video services, in which the
server delivers data continuously at a playback rate.
Bursting is basically file downloading using a buffer and this is done at the highest
data rate taking advantage of the whole available bandwidth.
A flat rate based on subscribed services, call durations, and transferred data volume is
usually enough in many situations.
With the increase of service varieties in 4G systems, more comprehensive billing and
accounting systems are needed.
32
9.CONCLUSION
As the history of mobile communications shows,attempts have been made to
reduce a number of technologies to a single global standard. Projected 4G systems
offer this promise of a standard that can be
embraced worldwide through its key concept of integration. Future wireless
networks will need to support diverse IP multimedia applications to allow sharing
of resources among multiple users. There must be a low complexity of
implementation and an efficient means of negotiation between the end users and
the wireless infrastructure. The fourth generation promises to fulfill the goal of
33
REFERENCES
34
Web Links
1. Wikipedia-
Title:
4G
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4G
2. IEEE http://www.ieee.org
3. International Telecommunications Union
http://www.itu.org
4. 3GPP
Partnership
project
http://www.3gpp.org
5. 3GPP2
Partnership
project
http://www.3gpp2.org
35