Mobile Communication Systems: Part 1
Mobile Communication Systems: Part 1
Mobile Communication Systems: Part 1
Professor Z Ghassemlooy
- Mobile and Data Communications Systems, D Wong, D Britland, Pub: Artech House
- Mobile Communications, A Jagoda, M DeVillepin, Pub: J. Wiley
- Mobile Information Systems, Editor: J. Walker, Pub: Artech House
- Introduction to Digital Mobile Communications, Y Akaiwa, Pub: J. Wiley
- Mobile Communications, 2nd Ed, J Schiller, ISBN 0-321-12381-6
- Wireless Communications & Networks Stallings
- Mobile Communications Dr. J. Schiller
- 3G Wireless Demystified - Harte
-Introduction to Telecommunications - Anu Gokhale
- Mobile Communication Systems, Parsons J D and Gardiner J G, Blackie USA Halsted
Press
- Mobile Communications Engineering, Lee, William C. Y., McGraw-Hill, Inc.
- Mobile Cellular Telecommunications Systems, Lee, William C. Y., McGraw-Hill, Inc.
-Digital Communications over Fading Channels, S Alouini, J Wiley, 2005
- Optical Wireless Communicatios, Z Ghassemlooy, et al, CRC Press 2012
Websites:
- IEC Online Education
- How Stuff works
- Teracom Training Institute
- Telecom Writing Prof. Z. Ghssemlooy
Contents
Frequency Band
History Part I
Principles
Transmission Properties
Cellular Concept
Traffic Engineering
Propagation
Modulation
Performance
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Frequency Bands
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Mobile Services
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Current - 4G Systems
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Mobile Telephony Standards
Source: IEEE
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Technologies - Multimedia Messaging
Service (MMS)
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UK Mobile (Voice ) Growth
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UK Mobile Frequency Bands
Most mainstream mobile and fixed mobile operators in the UK make use of
the 700 MHz (TBA for 5G), 800 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, 1900 MHz,
2100 MHz, 2.6 GHz, 3.4 GHz and 3.5 GHz radio spectrum bands.
These frequencies do not strictly have to be technology specific. For
example, 900 MHz use to only be for 2G services but then it was made
available for 3G and operators could eventually even use it for 4G etc.
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Mobile Technology- Applications
Transport
transmission of news, road condition, weather, music via DAB
personal communication using GSM
position and tracking via GPS
local ad-hoc network with vehicles close-by to prevent
accidents, guidance system, redundancy
vehicle data (e.g., from buses, high-speed trains) can be
transmitted in advance for maintenance
Emergencies
early transmission of patient data to the hospital, current
status, first diagnosis
replacement of a fixed infrastructure in case of earthquakes,
hurricanes, fire etc.
crisis, war, ...
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Mobile Technology- Applications
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Mobile Communications - Definition
Phone Transmit
824 825 835 845 846.5 849
A band B band
A band
B band
A band
10 MHz 10 MHz
333 channels 333 channels
30kHz 30kHz
1 MHz 1.5 MHz 2.5 MHz
33 chs 50 chan 83 chs
20 MHz Guard
Base Transmit
869 870 880 890 891.5 894
A band B band
A band
B band
A band
10 MHz 10 MHz
333 channels 333 channels
30kHz 30kHz
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Mobile Comms. - System
Mobile Unit
Mobile Base Station
Mobile Switching Centre
Mobile telecommunications
switching office (MTSO)
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Mobile Comms. - Components
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MTSO Controlled Call between Mobile
Users
Steps:-
Mobile unit initialization
Mobile-originated call
Paging
Call accepted
Ongoing call Functions:-
Handoff Call blocking
Call termination
Call dropping
Calls to/from fixed and remote
mobile subscriber
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Mobile Radio Environment
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Early Mobile Systems
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Transmission Types
Simplex
f1 f1
Tx : f1
f2
Rx : f2
f2
f1
Tx : f1
Tx Rx
f2 f1 Rx : f2
Half Duplex
Tx Rx
f1 f1
Tx : f1, Rx : f1
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Transmission Types - Full Duplex
f1 f3
f1 f2 f3 f4
Tx : f1 Tx : f3
Rx : f2 f2 f4 Rx : f4
Tx Rx
Rx Tx
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Transmission - Duplex Operation
f1 f2
Rx
(f1) Antenna
Dup
Tx
M
(f2)
Tx Reception Load
Load
Tx
Dispatcher
2
Digital
Switch
Dispatcher
1
Radio waves at low frequencies can diffract (bend) around object quit
well
In high-frequency wireless communications, wave diffraction does not
take place well, therefore a deep radio shadow occurs on the un-
illuminated side of the obstruction (e.g., building, hill, truck, or even
human being)
shadow
Rx Rx
Tx
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Transm. Env. - Radio Horizon (1/2)
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Transm. Env. - Radio Horizon (2/2)
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Transmission Env. contd.
Diffraction at edges
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Transm. Env. Multipath
Dispersion
Distortion
signal at Tx
signal at receiver
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Transm. Pro. Multipath Fading
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Transm. Pro. - Delay Distortion
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Transm. Pro. - Noise & Interference
. Thermal noise
. Amplifier noise
RF
signal
Receiver RF + Noise
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Mobile Phone Technology - Future
Development
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Summary
History
Mobile technologies
Principle
Characteristics
Transmission properties
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Next Lecture
Cellular Concept
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