3GPP TR 36.942
3GPP TR 36.942
3GPP TR 36.942
0 (2012-06)
Technical Report
The present document has been developed within the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP TM) and may be further elaborated for the purposes of 3GPP.
The present document has not been subject to any approval process by the 3GPP Organizational Partners and shall not be implemented.
This Specification is provided for future development work within 3GPP only. The Organizational Partners accept no liability for any use of this Specification.
Specifications and reports for implementation of the 3GPP TM system should be obtained via the 3GPP Organizational Partners' Publications Offices.
Release 100T 2 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Keywords
LTE, Radio
3GPP
Postal address
Internet
http://www.3gpp.org
Copyright Notification
© 2012, 3GPP Organizational Partners (ARIB, ATIS, CCSA, ETSI, TTA, TTC).
All rights reserved.
UMTS™ is a Trade Mark of ETSI registered for the benefit of its members
3GPP™ is a Trade Mark of ETSI registered for the benefit of its Members and of the 3GPP Organizational Partners
LTE™ is a Trade Mark of ETSI currently being registered for the benefit of its Members and of the 3GPP Organizational Partners
GSM® and the GSM logo are registered and owned by the GSM Association
3GPP
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Contents
Foreword ......................................................................................................................................................6
1 Scope ..................................................................................................................................................7
2 References ..........................................................................................................................................7
3 Definitions, symbols and abbreviations ...............................................................................................8
3.1 Definitions ...................................................................................................................................................8
3.2 Symbols .......................................................................................................................................................8
3.3 Abbreviations...............................................................................................................................................8
4 General assumptions ...........................................................................................................................9
4.1 Interference scenarios................................................................................................................................. 10
4.2 Antenna Models ......................................................................................................................................... 10
4.2.1 BS antennas .......................................................................................................................................... 10
4.2.1.1 BS antenna radiation pattern ............................................................................................................ 10
4.2.1.2 BS antenna heights and antenna gains for macro cells ...................................................................... 11
4.2.2 UE antenna ........................................................................................................................................... 11
4.2.3 MIMO antenna Characteristics .............................................................................................................. 11
4.3 Cell definitions........................................................................................................................................... 11
4.4 Cell layouts ................................................................................................................................................ 12
4.4.1 Single operator cell layouts ................................................................................................................... 12
4.4.1.1 Macro cellular deployment .............................................................................................................. 12
4.4.2 Multi operator / Multi layer cell layouts ................................................................................................ 12
4.4.2.1 Uncoordinated macro cellular deployment ....................................................................................... 12
4.4.2.2 Coordinated macro cellular deployment ........................................................................................... 13
4.5 Propagation conditions and channel models ................................................................................................ 14
4.5.1 Received signal..................................................................................................................................... 14
4.5.2 Macro cell propagation model – Urban Area ......................................................................................... 14
4.5.3 Macro cell propagation model – Rural Area .......................................................................................... 15
4.6 Base-station model ..................................................................................................................................... 15
4.7 UE model................................................................................................................................................... 17
4.8 RRM models .............................................................................................................................................. 18
4.8.1 Measurement models ............................................................................................................................ 18
4.8.2 Modelling of the functions .................................................................................................................... 18
4.9 Link level simulation assumptions .............................................................................................................. 18
4.10 System simulation assumptions .................................................................................................................. 18
4.10.1 System loading ..................................................................................................................................... 18
5 Methodology description................................................................................................................... 18
5.1 Methodology for co-existence simulations .................................................................................................. 18
5.1.1 Simulation assumptions for co-existence simulations............................................................................. 18
5.1.1.1 Scheduler ........................................................................................................................................ 18
5.1.1.2 Simulated services ........................................................................................................................... 19
5.1.1.3 ACIR value and granularity ............................................................................................................. 19
5.1.1.4.1 Uplink Asymmetrical Bandwidths ACIR (Aggressor with larger bandwidth)............................... 19
5.1.1.4.2 Uplink Asymmetrical Bandwidths ACIR (Aggressor with smaller bandwidth) ............................ 22
5.1.1.4 Frequency re-use and interference mitigation schemes for E-UTRA ................................................. 22
5.1.1.5 CQI estimation ................................................................................................................................ 23
5.1.1.6 Power control modelling for E-UTRA and 3.84 Mcps TDD UTRA .................................................. 23
5.1.1.7 SIR target requirements for simulated services ................................................................................. 23
5.1.1.8 Number of required snapshots.......................................................................................................... 23
5.1.1.9 Simulation output ............................................................................................................................ 23
5.1.2 Simulation description .......................................................................................................................... 24
5.1.2.1 Downlink E-UTRA interferer UTRA victim .................................................................................... 24
5.1.2.2 Downlink E-UTRA interferer E-UTRA victim ................................................................................. 24
5.1.2.3 Uplink E-UTRA interferer UTRA victim ......................................................................................... 25
5.1.2.4 Uplink E-UTRA interferer E-UTRA victim ..................................................................................... 25
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Annex B (informative): Smart Antenna Model for UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD.................................. 103
B.1 Description .............................................................................................................................................. 103
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Foreword
This Technical Report has been produced by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
The contents of the present document are subject to continuing work within the TSG and may change following formal
TSG approval. Should the TSG modify the contents of the present document, it will be re-released by the TSG with an
identifying change of release date and an increase in version number as follows:
Version x.y.z
where:
y the second digit is incremented for all changes of substance, i.e. technical enhancements, corrections, updates,
etc.
z the third digit is incremented when editorial only changes have been incorporated in the document.
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1 Scope
During the E-UTRA standards development, the physical layer parameters will be decided using system scenarios,
together with implementation issues, reflecting the environments that E-UTRA will be designed to operate in.
2 References
The following documents contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute provisions of the present
document.
• References are either specific (identified by date of publication, edition number, version number, etc.) or
non-specific.
• For a non-specific reference, the latest version applies. In the case of a reference to a 3GPP document (including
a GSM document), a non-specific reference implicitly refers to the latest version of that document in the same
Release as the present document.
[1] 3GPP TR 25.896, “Feasibility Study for Enhanced Uplink for UTRA FDD”
[2] 3GPP TR 25.816, “UMTS 900 MHz Work Item Technical Report”
[5] 3GPP TR 30.03, “Selection procedures for the choice of radio transmission technologies of the
UMTS”
[6] R4-051146, “Some operators’ requirements for prioritization of performance requirements work in
RAN WG4”, RAN4#37
[8] 3GPP TR 25.895, ”Analysis of higher chip rates for UTRA TDD evolution.”
[10] R4-070084, “Coexistence Simulation Results for 5MHz E-UTRA -> UTRA FDD Uplink with
Revised Simulation Assumptions”, RAN4#42
[11] R4-070034, “Additional simulation results on 5 MHz LTE to WCDMA FDD UL co-existence
studies”, RAN4#42
[12] R4-070262, “Simulation results on 5 MHz LTE to WCDMA FDD UL co-existence studies with
revised simulation assumptions”, RAN4#42
[14] R4-061288, “Downlink LTE 900 (Rural Macro) with Downlink GSM900 (Rural Macro) Co-
existence Simulation Results”, RAN4#41
[16] R4-061304, “LTE 900 - GSM 900 Uplink Simulation Results”, RAN4#41
[17] R4-070390, “LTE 900 - GSM 900 Uplink Simulation Results”, RAN4#42bis
[19] 3GPP TS 36.104, ”Base Station (BS) radio transmission and reception”
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[20] 3GPP TS 25.104, ”Base Station (BS) radio transmission and reception (FDD)”
[23] “International Telecommunications Union Radio Regulations”, Edition 2004, Volume 1 – Articles,
ITU, December 2004.
[24] “Adjacent Band Compatibility between UMTS and Other Services in the 2 GHz Band”, ERC
Report 65, Menton, May 1999, revised in Helsinki, November 1999.
[25] “Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)”, Federal Communications Commission.
[26] R4-070337, "Impact of second adjacent channel ACLR/ACS on ACIR" (Nokia Siemens
Networks).
[28] R4-070264, "Proposal on LTE ACLR requirements for Node B" (NTT DoCoMo).
[29] Recommendation ITU-R M.1580-1, “Generic unwanted emission characteristics of base stations
using the terrestrial radio interfaces of IMT-2000”.
[30] Report ITU-R M.2039, “Characteristics of terrestrial IMT-2000 systems for frequency
sharing/interference analyses”.
[31] ETSI EN 301 908-3 V2.2.1 (2003-10), “Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum
Matters (ERM); Base Stations (BS), Repeaters and User Equipment (UE) for IMT-2000 Third-
Generation cellular networks; Part 3: Harmonized EN for IMT-2000, CDMA Direct Spread
(UTRA FDD) (BS) covering essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R&TTE Directive”.
3.1 Definitions
3.2 Symbols
3.3 Abbreviations
For the purposes of the present document, the following abbreviations apply:
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MC Monte-Carlo
MCL Minimum Coupling Loss
MCS Modulation and Coding Scheme
PC Power Control
PSD Power Spectral Density
RX Receiver
TDD Time Division Duplex
TX Transmitter
UE User Equipment
UL Uplink
4 General assumptions
The present document discusses system scenarios for E-UTRA operation primarily with respect to the radio
transmission and reception including the RRM aspects. To develop the E-UTRA standard, all the relevant scenarios
need to be considered for the various aspects of operation and the most critical cases identified. The process may then
be iterated to arrive at final parameters that meet both service and implementation requirements.
The E-UTRA system is intended to be operated in the same frequency bands specified for UTRA. In order to limit the
number of frequency bands to be simulated in the various simulation scenarios a mapping of frequency bands to two
simulation frequencies (900 MHz and 2000 MHz) is applied. When using the macro cell propagation model of
TR25.942 [3], the frequency contributes to the path loss by 21*log10(f). The maximum path loss difference between the
lowest/highest frequencies per E-UTRA frequency band and corresponding simulation frequency is shown in tables 4.1
and 4.2.
Table 4.1: Simulation frequencies for FDD mode E-UTRA frequency bands
UL frequencies DL frequencies
Simulation Path loss difference (dB)
E-UTRA (MHz) (MHz)
frequency
Band lowest UL highest DL
lowest highest lowest highest (MHz)
frequency frequency
1 1920 1980 2110 2170 2000 0.37 0.74
2 1850 1910 1930 1990 2000 0.71 0.05
3 1710 1785 1805 1880 2000 1.43 0.56
4 1710 1755 2110 2155 2000 1.43 0.68
5 824 849 869 894 900 0.80 0.06
6 830 840 875 885 900 0.74 0.15
7 2500 2570 2620 2690 2000 2.04 2.70
8 880 915 925 960 900 0.20 0.59
9 1749.9 1784.9 1844.9 1879.9 2000 1.22 0.56
10 1710 1770 2110 2170 2000 1.43 0.74
11 1427.9 1452.9 1475.9 1500.9 2000 3.07 2.62
Table 4.2: Simulation frequencies for TDD mode E-UTRA frequency bands
UL/DL
Simulation
E-UTRA frequencies Path loss difference (dB)
(MHz) frequency
band
(MHz)
lowest highest lowest frequency highest frequency
33 1900 1920 2000 0.47 0.37
34 2010 2025 2000 0.05 0.11
35 1850 1910 2000 0.71 0.42
36 1930 1990 2000 0.32 0.05
37 1910 1930 2000 0.42 0.32
38 2570 2620 2000 2.29 2.46
It can be observed that the difference of path loss between simulation frequency and operating frequency (except bands
7, 11 and 38) is in the worst case less than 0.8 dB for the downlink and less the 1,5 dB for the uplink. Hence the
mapping of operating frequency to simulation frequency will provide valid results.
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The validity of simulations performed at 2 GHz for the 2.6 GHz bands 7 and 38 was already analyzed in TR 25.810.
Considering the expected higher antenna gain in the 2.6 GHz band the difference in path loss is in the order of 1 dB
what is comparable to the other frequency bands.
4.2.1 BS antennas
θ 2
A (θ ) =− min 12 , Am where − 180 ≤ θ ≤ 180 ,
θ 3dB
θ 3dB is the 3dB beam width which corresponds to 65 degrees, and Am = 20dB is the maximum attenuation
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-5
-10
Gain - dB
-15
-20
-25
-180 -150 -120 -90 -60 -30 0 30 60 90 120 150 180
Horizontal Angle - Degrees
4.2.2 UE antenna
For UE antennas, a omni-directional radiation pattern with antenna gain 0dBi is assumed [2], [3], [4].
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For each environment a propagation model is used to evaluate the propagation pathloss due to the distance. Propagation
models are adopted from [3] and [4] and presented in the following clauses.
With the above definition, the received power in downlink and uplink can be expressed as [3]:
where:
where:
Dhb is the base station antenna height in metres, measured from the average rooftop level
Considering a carrier frequency of 900MHz and a base station antenna height of 15 metres above average rooftop level,
the propagation model is given by the following formula [4]:
Considering a carrier frequency of 2000MHz and a base station antenna height of 15 metres above average rooftop level,
the propagation model is given by the following formula:
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where:
After L is calculated, log-normally distributed shadowing (LogF) with standard deviation of 10dB should be added [2],
[3]. A Shadowing correlation factor of 0.5 for the shadowing between sites (regardless aggressing or victim system) and
of 1 between sectors of the same site shall be used The pathloss is given by the following formula:
Pathloss_macro = L + LogF
NOTE 1: L shall in no circumstances be less than free space loss. This model is valid for NLOS case only and
describes worse case propagation
NOTE 2: The pathloss model is valid for a range of Dhb from 0 to 50 metres.
NOTE 3: This model is designed mainly for distance from few hundred meters to kilometres. This model is not
very accurate for short distances.
NOTE 4: The mean building height is equal to the sum of mobile antenna height (1,5m) and Δh m = 10,5m [5].
NOTE 5: Some downlink simulations in this TR were performed without shadowing correlation, however it was
reported this has a negligible impact on the simulation results.
L (R)= 69.55 +26.16log 10 (f)–13.82log 10 (Hb)+[44.9-6.55log 10 (Hb)]log(R) – 4.78(Log 10 (f))2+18.33 log 10 (f) -40.94
where:
Considering a carrier frequency of 900MHz and a base station antenna height of 45 meters above ground the
propagation model is given by the following formula:
where:
After L is calculated, log-normally distributed shadowing (LogF) with standard deviation of 10dB should be added [2],
[3]. A Shadowing correlation factor of 0.5 for the shadowing between sites (regardless aggressing or victim system) and
of 1 between sectors of the same site shall be used. The pathloss is given by the following formula:
Pathloss_macro = L + LogF
NOTE 1: L shall in no circumstances be less than free space loss. This model is valid for NLOS case only and
describes worse case propagation
NOTE 2: This model is designed mainly for distance from few hundred meters to kilometres. This model is not
very accurate for short distances.
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Reference UTRA FDD base station parameters are given in Table 4.5.
Reference base station parameters for UTRA 1.28Mcps TDD are given in Table 4.5a.
Reference UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD base station parameters are given in Table 4.5b.
Reference E-UTRA FDD and E-UTRA TDD base station parameters are given in Table 4.6.
Table 4.6: E-UTRA FDD and E-UTRA TDD reference base station parameters
Reference base station parameters for E-UTRA TDD (LCR TDD frame structure based) are given in Table 4.6a.
Table 4.6a: Reference base station for E-UTRA TDD (LCR TDD frame structure based)
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4.7 UE model
This chapter covers the fundamental UE properties e.g. output power, dynamic range, noise floor etc.
Reference UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD parameters are given in Table 4.7a
Reference UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD UE parameters are given in Table 4.7b.
Reference E-UTRA FDD and E-UTRA TDD UE parameters are given in Table 4.8.
Reference E-UTRA TDD UE (LCR TDD frame structure based) parameters are given in Table 4.8a.
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Table 4.8a: Reference UE for EUTRA TDD (LCR TDD frame structure based)
5 Methodology description
This chapter describes the methods used for various study items e.g. deterministic analysis for BS-BS interference,
Monte-Carlo simulations and dynamic type of simulations for RRM.
5.1.1.1 Scheduler
For initial E-UTRA coexistence simulations Round Robin scheduler shall be used.
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For the 5 MHz TDD UTRA victim using 3.84 Mcps TDD, Enhanced Uplink providing data service shall be used where
1 UE shall occupy 1 Resource Unit (code x timeslot). Here the number of UE per timeslot is set to 3 UEs/timeslot.
For uplink it is assumed that the ACIR is dominated by the UE ACLR. The ACLR model is described in table 5.1 and
table 5.2
Table 5.1: ACLR model for 5MHz E-UTRA interferer and UTRA victim, 4 RBs per UE
Location of aggressor Adjacent to victim channel at least 4 RBs away from channel
4RBs (bandwidth = 4*375 edge edge
kHz)
ACLR dBc/3.84MHz 30 + X 43+X
X serves as the step size for simulations, X = … -10, -5, 0, 5, 10… dB
Table 5.2: ACLR model for E-UTRA interferer and 10MHz E-UTRA victim
Note: This ACLR models are agreed for the purpose of co-existence simulations. ACLR/ACS requirements
need to be discussed separately.
Where, BAggressor and BVictim are the E-UTRA aggressor and victim bandwidths respectively.
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30 + X 43 + X
Victim UE
16 RB 16 RB 16 RB
ACLR
30 + X 43 + X
Interfering UE
UE1 UE2 UE3
Victim UE
16 RB 16 RB 16 RB
ACLR
In Table 5.2, the aggressor UE that is non adjacent to the victim UE, the victim UE will experience an interference due
to an ACLR of 43 + X – F ACLR . For the case where the aggressor UE is adjacent to the victim UEs, consider the
scenarios in Figure 5.1, 5.2 and 5.3, where a 20 MHz E-UTRA aggressor is adjacent to 3 victim UEs of 5 MHz, 10
MHz and 15 MHz E-UTRA systems respectively.
In Figure 5.1, all the UEs in the 5 MHz E-UTRA system will be affected by an ACLR of 30 + X - F ACLR . For the 10
MHz E-UTRA victims in Figure 5.2, two UEs will be affected by an ACLR of 30 + X - F ACLR whilst 1 UE will be
affected by a less severe ACLR of 43 + X- F ACLR . In the 15 MHz E-UTRA victim as shown in Figure 5.3, the UE next
to the band edge will be affected by an ACLR of 30 + X - F ACLR whilst the UE farthest from the band edge will be
affected by an ACLR of 43 + X - F ACLR . The victim UE of the 15 MHz E-UTRA occupying the centre RB (2nd from
band edge) is affected by 1/3 ACLR of 30 + X - F ACLR and 2/3 ACLR of 43 + X - F ACLR . This gives an ACLR of 34 +
X - F ACLR .
Using a similar approach for 15 MHz, 10 MHz and 5 MHz aggressor with a victim of smaller system bandwidth, the
ACLR affecting each of the 3 victim UEs can be determined. This is summarised in Table 5.2A. Here the value Y is
defined for victim UE, where ACLR = Y + X - F ACLR . UE1 is the UE adjacent to the aggressor, UE2 is located at the
centre and UE3 is furthest away from the aggressor.
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30 + X 43 + X
Interfering UE
Victim UE
UE1 UE2 UE3
ACLR
16 RB 16 RB 16 RB
The victims in 10 MHz system under a 20 MHz aggressor experience slightly worse interference than the victims in 15
MHz system under a 20 MHz aggressor and therefore, we only need to consider the worst of the two cases. Hence,
from Table 5.2A, the total number of asymmetrical bandwidth coexistences can be reduced to 3 scenarios and they are
summarised in Table 5.2B. The performance of the other scenarios can be derived from these 3 base scenarios by
factoring in the FACLR factor in the ACLR.
An additional factor will be required to cater for the differences in UE transmit powers, which are dependent upon the
power control scheme used in Table 5.3. Given the power control scheme, a UE with higher bandwidth will transmit at
higher overall power (note: max UE transmit power remains the same). Thus, an aggressor with higher transmit power
than the aggressor in the base scenario needs to increase its ACLR. On the other hand, for an interference limited
environment, a victim with higher transmit power can overcome higher level of interference and hence demands a
relaxed ACLR from its aggressor. The differences in transmit powers are given in the power control factor, P ACLR and
it is dependent upon the CLx-ile of the aggressors and victims. P ACLR is given as:
P ACLR (dB) = (CLx-ile BaseAggressor - CLx-ile Aggressor ) + (CLx-ile Victim - CLx-ile BaseVictim )
Where, CLx-ile BaseAggressor and CLx-ile BaseVictim are the CLx-ile used by the aggressor and the victim respectively in the
base scenario in Table 5.2B. CLx-ile Aggressor and CLx-ile Victim are the CLx-ile of the aggressor and victim of interest
respectively. For example, using Power Control Set 1, for the scenario 10 MHz (aggressor) to 5 MHz (victim), CLx-
ile Aggressor = 112 and CLx-ile Victim = 115 dB. The base scenario used is Scenario 2 of Table 5.2B (20 MHz (aggressor) to
10 MHz (victim)). Hence, in this example, CLx-ile BaseAggressor = 109 dB and CLx-ile BaseVictim = 112 dB. Therefore,
PACLR = (109 – 112) + (115 – 112) = 0 dB.
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Interfering UE
Victim UE
ACLR
30 + X 43 + X 43 + X 43 + X
4 RB 4 RB 4 RB UE1 UE2
20 MHz E-UTRA
5 MHz E-UTRA
The ACLR of the aggressor is likely to be larger than 43 + X dB after the 2nd ACLR and hence it is reasonable to
assume that the Y value of the normalised ACLR in Table 5.2C onto victim UE1 is close to 30 dB. This is similar to
the symmetrical bandwidth coexistence scenario where the first UE is affected by an ACLR of 30 + X dB. For victim
UE2 and UE3, the ACLR 43 + X is unrealistic. For scenario where the aggressor bandwidth is much smaller than the
victim bandwidth, the ACLR into UE2 and UE3 is going to be much larger than 43 + X. For example for 1.6 MHz E-
UTRA aggressor and 20 MHz E-UTRA victim, the interference into UE2 and UE3 is caused by the 13th ACLR (of 1.6
MHz aggressor) and above and this will likely be lower than the noise floor of the victim UE. Hence, the interference
experienced by UE2 and UE3 from an aggressor with a smaller bandwidth will not be worse than that from an aggressor
with a symmetrical bandwidth. Therefore, the ACLR value for coexistence between E-UTRA systems with
symmetrical bandwidth is sufficient for coexistence where the aggressor bandwidth is smaller than that of the victim.
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5.1.1.6 Power control modelling for E-UTRA and 3.84 Mcps TDD UTRA
No power control in downlink, fixed power per frequency resource block is assumed.
The following power control equation shall be used for the initial uplink (for E-UTRA and 3.84 Mcps TDD UTRA
employing Enhanced UL) coexistence simulations:
CL
γ
Pt = Pmax × min 1, max Rmin ,
CLx −ile
where P max is the maximum transmit power, R min is the minimum power reduction ratio to prevent UEs with good
channels to transmit at very low power level, CL is the path coupling loss defined as max{path loss-G_Tx-G_Rx,
MCL}, where path loss is propagation loss plus shadowfading, G_TX is the transmitter antenna gain in the direction of
the receiver, G_RX is the receiver antenna gain in the direction of the transmitter and CL x-ile is the x-percentile CL value.
With this power control equation, the x percent of UEs that have the highest coupling loss will transmit at P max . Finally,
0<γ<=1 is the balancing factor for UEs with bad channel and UEs with good channel:
The parameter sets for power control are specified in table 5.3.
Further discussion and alignment concerning power control algorithms may be required after initial simulation results
and further inputs from RAN WG1 are available
In the downlink, UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD shall use HSDPA since most 3.84Mcps TDD deployments service data traffic.
A shifted and truncated Shannon bound curves described in Annex A.3 shall be used.
In the uplink, UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD shall use Enhanced UL with data traffic. The shifted and truncated Shannon
bound curve used for E-UTRA uplink in Annex A.1 shall be used.
For E-UTRA TDD (LCR TDD frame structure based) shifted and truncated Shannon bound curves as specified in
Annex A.4 shall be used.
All the generated statistics (e.g. bitrates) are instantaneous distributions on sub frame basis, not on a per-session basis.
I.e. the instantaneous bit rates need to be averaged in order to obtain the session average UE throughput.
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Simulation results for UTRA FDD as victim shall be presented in terms of capacity reduction vs. ACIR. Capacity is
defined by the number of satisfied speech users.
Simulation results for UTRA 3,84 Mcps TDD as victim shall be presented in terms of throughput reduction in percent
relative to the reference throughput without external interference vs. ACIR
In the following sections the principle downlink simulation flows are described, taking the current simulation
assumptions into account.
For TDD simulations, both TDD networks (aggressor and victim) are synchronised together and have a common
downlink/uplink resource allocation.
2. Collect statistics.
The UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD victim are synchronised and uses HSDPA service. The simulation procedure shall be the
same as that in Section 5.1.2.2 (Downlink E-UTRA interferer E-UTRA victim). Here, the CQI value in Step 2 (of
Section 5.1.2.2) shall be calculated based on per resource unit (timeslot × code) instead of per resource block.
1. Distribute terminals randomly throughout the system area such that to each cell within the HO margin of 3 dB
the same number K of users is allocated.
2. Calculate DL CQI for each UE. The CQI value per resource block is equal to C(RB)/I(RB), where:
• I(RB) = sum over all other cells (power of resource block * max (pathloss-G_Tx-G_Rx, MCL)) + sum
over all other system cells (interference power into this resource block including ACIR) + N
• Note: in case of the 5 MHz and 10 MHz E-UTRA victim case, the BS ACLR (ACIR) is modelled as
flat, i.e. the same ACIR is used for all RB.
Select the next UE to be scheduled based on the scheduling metric (i.e. randomly for
Round Robin).
4. Calculate actual intra/inter system interference to get the actual C/I and bit rates for each UE.
• Use the actual C/I to throughput mapping (Annex A) to determine the obtained throughput for the UE.
• Note: the actual C/I value of a scheduled RB is equal to the CQI value calculated in step 2.
5. Collect statistics.
3GPP
Release 100T 25 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
1. Distribute terminals randomly throughout the system area such that to each cell within the HO margin of 3 dB
the same number K of users is allocated.
Select the next UE to be scheduled based on the scheduling metric (i.e. randomly for
Round Robin)
Pick 4 RB among the “not scheduled” ones and mark it as “scheduled”
CL
γ
Set UE transmit power to Pt = Pmax × min
1, max R ,
min
CLx −ile
3 Run UTRA snapshot simulator procedure [3]. All E-UTRA terminals are considered as a source of other system
interference (Iother). Iother = sum over all other system terminals (interference power into UTRA bandwidth
including ACIR).
4 Collect statistics.
For UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD victim using Enhanced Uplink, the system TDD victim shall be synchronised and
simulation procedure shall be the same as that in Section 5.1.2.4 (Uplink E-UTRA interferer E-UTRA victim).
1. Distribute terminals randomly throughout the system area such that to each cell within the HO margin of 3 dB
the same number K of users is allocated.
Select the next UE to be scheduled based on the scheduling metric (i.e. randomly for
Round Robin)
Pick 8 RB among the “not scheduled” ones and mark it as “scheduled”
CL
γ
Set UE transmit power to Pt = Pmax × min
1, max Rmin ,
CLx −ile
3. Calculate actual intra/inter system interference to get the actual C/(I+N) and bit rates for each UE.
• Use the actual C/(I+N) to throughput mapping as specified in Annex A to determine the obtained
throughput for the UE.
4. Collect statistics.
3GPP
Release 100T 26 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
6 System scenarios
This chapter contains the system scenarios defined based upon the models described above designed for the interference
studies, RRM studies etc
For high priority simulation scenarios, it was decided to simulate scenarios with the following priority:
7 Results
3GPP
Release 100T 27 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
ACIR Nokia Siemens Huawai Motorola Ericsson Lucent DoCoMo Qualcom average
(dB) (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- m (R4- d
060375) 060379) 060448) 060461) 060592) 061134) 060967) 070036
25 7,5 % 11,30 % 4,78 % 17,5 % 8% 6,7 % 12,6 % 10,18 % 9,82 %
30 3,2 % 5,40 % 1,43 % 7% 3% 2,3 % 5,7 % 3,84 % 3,98 %
35 1,8 % 2,51 % 0,16 % 2,5 % 1,2 % 0,7 % 2,2 % 1,31 % 1,55 %
40 0,8 % 1,07 % 0,08 % 1% 0,5 % 0,1 % 0,7 % 0,39 % 0,58 %
45 0,5 % 0% 0,5 % 0,4 % 0,35 %
20,00
18,00
UTRA DL capacity loss (%)
2,00
0,00
25 30 35 40 45
ACIR
Simulation results for average E-UTRA downlink throughput loss are presented in table 7.2 and figure 7.2. Simulation
results for 5% CDF throughput E-UTRA throughput loss are presented in table 7.3 and figure 7.3.
3GPP
Release 100T 28 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
16,00
average E-UTRA DL throughput loss (%)
14,00
12,00 Siemens (R4-060748)
Huaw ei (R4-061003)
10,00 Motorola (R4-060462)
Ericsson (R4-061071)
8,00
DoCoMo (R4-060967)
2,00
0,00
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
ACIR Siemens Huawei Motorola Ericsson DoCoMo Lucent Qualcomm (5% CDF)
(dB) (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- averaged
060749) 061003) 061071) 060967) 061134) 061342)
15 58,3 % 100 % 58,61 % 99,99 % 79,23 %
20 35,08 % 66,86 % 22,64 % 30,91 % 28,3 % 36,75 % 27,50 % 36,76 %
25 20,15 % 17,76 % 2,52 % 14,14 % 13,4 % 17,41 % 13,00 % 14,23 %
30 11,62 % 6,18 % 0,84 % 6,11 % 5,8 % 7,03 % 5,60 % 6,26 %
35 5,56 % 2,64 % 0,28 % 2,24 % 2,4 % 2,57 % 2,10 % 2,62 %
40 1,92 % 2,24 % 0,01 % 0,95 % 0,8 % 0,78 % 0,70 % 1,12 %
45 0,53 % 0,23 % 0,27 % 0,34 %
50 0,12 % 0,07 % 0% 0,06 %
3GPP
Release 100T 29 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
100,00
5% CDF E-UTRA DL throughput loss (%
90,00
80,00
Siemens (R4-060749)
70,00 Huaw ei (R4-061003)
60,00 Motorola
Ericsson (R4-061071)
50,00
DoCoMo (R4-060967)
40,00 Lucent (R4-061134)
Simulation results are presented in table 7.3a and figure 7.3a for power control parameter set 1 and in table 7.3b and
figure 7.3b for E-UTRA power control parameter set 2 respectively. E-UTRA power control parameter sets are
specified in section 5.1.1.6.
Table 7.3a: UTRA FDD uplink capacity loss for E-UTRA power control set 1
ACIR NTT Motorola Ericsson Panasonic Siemens Qualcomm Alcatel- Nokia PC set 1
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- Lucent (R4- averaged
(dB) (R4- 061230) 061319) 061197) 061303) 070036) (R4- 070235)
061145) 070096)
-15
-10 100 % 100%
-5 75,80 % 100,00 % 78,90 % 100,00 82,00 % 87,34 %
%
0 39,50 % 20,30 % 42,90 % 17,50 % 35,29 % 49,00 % 45,30 % 29,00 % 34,85 %
5 12,60 % 5,90 % 13,60 % 6,60 % 12,37 % 14,20 % 14,40 % 13,00 % 11,58 %
10 3,3 % 2% 4,3 % 1,1 % 3,35 % 4,9 % 4,4 % 6,0 % 3,67 %
15 1,4 % 1,11 % 1,8 % 1,3 % 3,0 % 1,72 %
20 0,32 % 0,4 % 0,36 %
3GPP
Release 100T 30 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
120,00
Motorola (R4-061230)
80,00 Ericsson (R4-061319)
Panasonic (R4-061197)
60,00 Siemens (R4-061303)
Qualcomm (R4-070036)
Alcatel-Lucent (R4-070096)
40,00
Nokia (R4-070235)
PC set 1 averaged
20,00
0,00
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15
ACIR offset
Figure 7.3a: UTRA FDD uplink capacity loss for E-UTRA power control set 1
Table 7.3b: UTRA FDD uplink capacity loss for E-UTRA power control set 2
ACIR NTT Motorola Ericsson Panasonic Siemens Qualcomm Alcatel- Nokia PC set 2
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- Lucent (R4- averaged
(dB) (R4- 061230) 061319 061197) 061303) 070036) (R4- 070235)
061145) 070096)
-15 100,00 % 89,10 % 57,00 % 82,03 %
-10 22,90 % 13,90 % 34,30 % 21,50 % 23,11 % 30,90 % 34,80 % 20,00 % 25,18 %
-5 7,50 % 4,40 % 10,90 % 5,20 % 7,46 % 9,80 % 8,80 % 8,00 % 7,76 %
0 2,40 % 1,10 % 3,40 % 1,92 % 2,34 % 3,30 % 3,00 % 4,00 % 2,68 %
5 0,80 % 0,40 % 1,10 % 0,72 % 0,86 % 1,20 % 0,90 % 1,00 % 0,87 %
10 0,3 % 0,3 % 0,21 % 0,27 % 0,2 % 0,3 % 0,26 %
15 0,1 % 0,09 % 0% 0,2 % 0,10%
20 0,04 % 0% 0,02 %
3GPP
Release 100T 31 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
120,00
Motorola (R4-061230)
80,00 Ericsson (R4-061319
Panasonic (R4-061197)
60,00 Siemens (R4-061303)
Qualcomm (R4-070036)
Alcatel-Lucent (R4-070096)
40,00
Nokia (R4-070235)
PC set 2 averaged
20,00
0,00
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15
ACIR offset
Figure 7.3b: UTRA FDD uplink capacity loss for E-UTRA power control set 2
Simulation results for average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss are presented in table 7.3c and figure 7.3c for power
control parameter set 1 and in table 7.3d and figure 7.3d for E-UTRA power control parameter set 2 respectively.
Simulation results for 5% CDF throughput E-UTRA throughput loss are presented in table 7.3e and figure 7.3e for
power control parameter set 1 and in table 7.3f and figure 7.3f for E-UTRA power control parameter set 2 respectively.
E-UTRA power control parameter sets are specified in section 5.1.1.6.
Table 7.3c: Average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 1
ACIR NTT Motorola Siemens Ericsson Panason Fujitsu Nokia Qualcom Alcatel- PC set 1
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- ic (R4- (R4- (R4- m (R4- Lucent averaged
(dB) (R4- 061231) 061349) 061319 061197) 061259) 061306) 061343) (R4-
061146) 070096)
-15 19,00 % 18,03 % 18,10 % 18,80 % 16,40 % 17,32 % 17,94 %
-10 10,20 % 9,40 % 9,9 % 9,60 % 11,26 % 10,10 % 9,60 % 10,30 % 9,55 % 9,99 %
-5 5,00 % 4,50 % 4,67 % 4,70 % 5,41 % 4,90 % 5,10 % 5,00 % 4,69 % 4,89 %
0 2,30 % 1,90 % 1,98 % 2,00 % 2,47 % 2,20 % 2,50 % 2,10 % 2,08 % 2,17 %
5 1,00 % 0,80 % 0,66 % 0,80 % 1,02 % 0,90 % 1,10 % 0,90 % 0,84 % 0,89 %
10 0,40 % 0,30 % 0,20 % 0,39 % 0,30 % 0,40 % 0,40 % 0,31 % 0,34 %
15 0,10 % 0,00 % 0,14 % 0,11 % 0,09 %
20 0,05 % 0,04 % 0,05 %
3GPP
Release 100T 32 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
20,00
average E-UTRA UL throughput loss (%)
18,00
NTT DoCoMo (R4-061146)
16,00
Motorola (R4-061231)
14,00 Siemens (R4-061349)
Figure 7.3c: Average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 1
Table 7.3d: Average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 2
ACIR NTT Motorola Siemens Ericsson Panason Fujitsu Nokia Qualcom Alcatel- PC set 2
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- ic (R4- (R4- (R4- m (R4- Lucent averaged
(dB) (R4- 061231) 061349) 061319 061197) 061259) 061306) 061343) (R4-
061146) 070096)
-15 14,20 % 12,9 % 12,50 % 15,10 % 11,20 % 13,12 % 13,17 %
-10 7,10 % 6,40 % 6,62 % 6,10 % 7,09 % 7,60 % 6,00 % 7,00 % 6,68 % 6,73 %
-5 3,20 % 2,80 % 2,97 % 2,70 % 3,14 % 3,50 % 2,90 % 3,00 % 3,03 % 3,03 %
0 1,30 % 1,10 % 1,07 % 1,10 % 1,30 % 1,50 % 1,30 % 1,30 % 1,25 % 1,25 %
5 0,50 % 0,50 % 0,11 % 0,40 % 0,49 % 0,60 % 0,60 % 0,50 % 0,47 % 0,46 %
10 0,20 % 0,20 % 0,10 % 0,17 % 0,20 % 0,20 % 0,20 % 0,17 % 0,18 %
15 0,10 % 0,00 % 0,06 % 0,06 % 0,06 %
20 0,02 % 0,02 % 0,02 %
16,00
average E-UTRA UL throughput loss (%)
14,00
NTT DoCoMo (R4-061146)
Figure 7.3d: Average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 2
3GPP
Release 100T 33 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Table 7.3e: 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 1
ACIR NTT Motorola Siemens Ericsson Panason Fujitsu Nokia Qualcom Alcatel- PC set 1
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- ic (R4- (R4- (R4- m (R4- Lucent (5%
(dB) (R4- 061231) 061349) 061319 061197) 061259) 061306) 061343) (R4- CDF)
061146) 070096) averaged
-15 42,20 % 28,86 % 41,40 % 37,80 % 47,00 % 38,51 % 39,30 %
-10 17,50 % 15,80 % 10,32 % 17,90 % 29,95 % 17,60 % 21,00 % 17,00 % 15,25 % 18,04 %
-5 6,90 % 5,60 % 1,7 % 6,50 % 9,91 % 6,90 % 6,10 % 6,40 % 5,78 % 6,20 %
0 2,00 % 1,10 % 0,11 % 2,80 % 2,58 % 2,10 % 2,20 % 2,10 % 1,80 % 1,87 %
5 0,60 % 0,50 % 0,01 % 1,20 % 0,58 % 0,50 % 0,50 % 0,80 % 0,57 % 0,58 %
10 0,20 % 0,06 % 0,20 % 0.13 % 0,10 % 0,30 % 0,30 % 0,17 % 0,19 %
15 0,10 % 0,00 % 0,03 % 0,04 % 0,04 %
20 0,01 % 0,02 % 0,02 %
50,00
5% CDF E-UTRA UL throughput loss (%
45,00
NTT DoCoMo (R4-061146)
40,00
Motorola (R4-061231)
35,00 Siemens (R4-061349)
Figure 7.3e: 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 1
Table 7.3f: 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 2
ACIR NTT Motorola Siemens Ericsson Panason Fujitsu Nokia Qualcom Alcatel- PC set 2
offset DoCoMo (R4- (R4- (R4- ic (R4- (R4- (R4- m (R4- Lucent (5%
(dB) (R4- 061231) 061349) 061319 061197) 061259) 061306) 061343) (R4- CDF)
061146) 070096) averaged
-15 34,40 % 34,11 % 30,70 % 32,60 % 29,30 % 29,16 % 31,71 %
-10 15,30 % 11,80 % 17,19 % 13,10 % 18,52 % 14,30 % 13,40 % 15,10 % 12,09 % 14,53 %
-5 5,80 % 4,40 % 5,05 % 4,70 % 5,68 % 5,20 % 7,20 % 5,60 % 4,50 % 5,35 %
0 1,70 % 1,30 % 1,62 % 1,10 % 1,14 % 1,40 % 2,20 % 1,80 % 1,19 % 1,49 %
5 0,70 % 0,40 % 0,08 % 0,40 % 0,24 % 0,30 % 0,50 % 0,60 % 0,40 % 0,40 %
10 0,20 % 0,10 % 0,20 % 0,09 % 0,05 % 0,10 % 0,09 % 0,14 %
15 0,00 % 0,00 % 0,02 % 0,00 % 0,01 %
20 0,01 % 0,00 % 0,01 %
3GPP
Release 100T 34 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
35,00
5% CDF E-UTRA UL throughput loss (%
0,00
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20
ACIR offset
Figure 7.3f: 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink throughput loss for power control set 2
7.1.2.1 ACIR downlink 5MHz E-UTRA interferer – UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for average UTRA 3,84Mcps TDD downlink throughput loss are presented in table 7.4 and figure 7.4.
Simulation results for 5% CDF UTRA 3,84Mcps TDD downlink throughput loss are presented in table 7.5 and figure
7.5.
3GPP
Release 100T 35 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
14
average UTRA TDD throughput loss (%)
12
10
8 IP Wireless (R4-060813)
Ericsson (R4-061071)
6
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
3GPP
Release 100T 36 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
70
5%CDF UTRA TDD throughput loss (%)
60
50
40 IP Wireless (R4-060813)
Ericsson (R4-061071)
30
20
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
7.1.2.2 ACIR downlink 10MHz E-UTRA interferer – 10MHz E-UTRA TDD victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for average E-UTRA TDD downlink throughput loss are presented in table 7.6 and figure 7.6.
Simulation results for 5% CDF E-UTRA TDD downlink throughput loss are presented in table 7.7 and figure 7.7.
3GPP
Release 100T 37 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
14
12
E-UTRA DL throughput loss (%
10
8 IP Wireless (R4-060813)
Ericsson (R4-061071)
6
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
3GPP
Release 100T 38 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
70
60
E-UTRA DL throughput loss (%
50
40
IP Wireless (R4-060813)
Ericsson (R4-061071)
30
20
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
7.1.2.3 ACIR downlink 1.6 MHz E-UTRA interferer – UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Aggressor system: 1.6 MHz E-UTRA (LCR TDD frame structure based) using 4 RB, BS output power 35dBm
and 43dBm
Victim system: UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD using smart antennas as specified in Annex B
Simulation results are presented in figure 7.8, figure 7.8a, figure 7.9 and figure 7.9a. Co-existence requirements derived
from these results require smart antennas at the UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD system.
3GPP
Release 100T 39 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Figure 7.8: Capacity loss of UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD DL with 1.6MHz E-UTRA DL aggressor, 35dBm BS
output power, coordinated deployment
Figure 7.8a: Capacity loss of UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD DL with 1.6MHz E-UTRA DL aggressor, 43dBm BS
output power, coordinated deployment
3GPP
Release 100T 40 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Figure 7.9: Capacity loss of UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD DL with 1.6MHz E-UTRA DL aggressor, 35dBm BS
output power, uncoordinated deployment
Figure 7.9a: Capacity loss of UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD DL with 1.6MHz E-UTRA DL aggressor, 43dBm
BS output power, uncoordinated deployment
3GPP
Release 100T 41 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
7.1.2.4 ACIR uplink 5MHz E-UTRA interferer – UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for UTRA 3,84Mcps TDD uplink throughput loss are presented in table 7.8 (Power Control
Parameter Set 1) and table 7.9 (Power Control Parameter Set 2). The results are also plotted in figure 7.10 (Average
Throughput Loss) and figure 7.11 (5% CDF Throughput Loss).
Editors Note: Results where presented at RAN4#41 but need to be verified. Blank tables and figure titles are included
here to keep consistent numbering.
Table 7.8: UTRA 3,84 Mcps TDD uplink throughput loss (average & 5% CDF) for Parameter Set 1
Table 7.9: UTRA 3,84 Mcps TDD uplink throughput loss (average & 5% CDF) for Parameter Set 2
3GPP
Release 100T 42 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
18
16
Average UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
14
12
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR (ACLR=30+X) (dB)
Figure 7.10: average UTRA 3,84 Mcps TDD uplink throughput loss
60
5% CDF UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
50
40
30
20
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR (ACLR=30+X) (dB)
Figure 7.11: 5% CDF UTRA 3,84 Mcps TDD uplink throughput loss
3GPP
Release 100T 43 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
7.1.2.5 ACIR uplink 10MHz E-UTRA interferer – 10MHz E-UTRA TDD victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for average E-UTRA TDD uplink throughput loss are presented in table 7.10 (Power Control
Parameter Set 1) and table 7.11 (Power Control Parameter Set 2). The results are also plotted in figure 7.12 (average
throughput loss) and figure 7.13 (5% CDF throughput loss).
Table 7.10: E-UTRA TDD uplink throughput loss (average & 5% CDF) – Parameter Set 1
Table 7.11: E-UTRA TDD uplink throughput loss (average & 5% CDF) – Parameter Set 2
3GPP
Release 100T 44 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
20
18
Average E-UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
16
14
12
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR (ACLR=30+X) (dB)
3GPP
Release 100T 45 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
45
40
5% CDF E-UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
35
30
25
20
15
10
0
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR (ACLR=30+X) (dB)
7.1.2.6 ACIR uplink 10MHz E-UTRA interferer – 10MHz E-UTRA TDD victim (LCR
frame structure based)
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Link level performance is specified in Annex A.4. Simulation results for average E-UTRA uplink throughput loss are
presented in figure 7.14. Simulation results for 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink throughput loss are presented in figure 7.15.
3GPP
Release 100T 46 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
7.1.2.7 ACIR downlink 10MHz E-UTRA interferer – 10MHz E-UTRA TDD victim (LCR
frame structure based)
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
3GPP
Release 100T 47 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Link level performance is specified in Annex A.4. Simulation results for average E-UTRA downlink throughput loss
are presented in figure 7.16. Simulation results for 5% CDF E-UTRA downlink throughput loss are presented in figure
7.17.
Figure 7.16: average E-UTRA TDD downlink throughput loss, uncoordinated deployment
3GPP
Release 100T 48 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Figure 7.17: 5% CDF E-UTRA TDD downlink throughput loss, coordinated and uncoordinated
deployment
3GPP
Release 100T 49 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
80,00
70,00
60,00
GSM DL outage (%)
50,00
40,00 Siemens (R4-061288)
30,00
20,00
10,00
0,00
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACIR
An analytical investigation of E-UTRA-GSM downlink coexistence is provided in [15]. In the [2] the aggressing UTRA
influence on GSM is modelled as constant ACIR over the whole GSM system bandwidth. The UTRA system load is
according to [2], i.e. 5% outage.
For an E-UTRA system the interference generated to the GSM system can be modelled in the same way. Thus for a 5
MHz E-UTRA system the interference to the adjacent channel can be considered to be constant over the whole 5 MHz
adjacent carrier. The other component of the ACIR in this case is the ACS of a GSM MS. In [2] this has been assumed
to be significantly larger than the ACLR of the UTRA system and thus the main contribution to the ACIR is the ACLR.
For coexistence with an E-UTRA aggressor and a UTRA victim the ACLR for EUTRA should be of the same order as
for UTRA. In [2] the ACLR for UTRA is assumed to be 50 dB.
Table 7.13: ACIR limit for 5% outage degradation in the GSM system for relevant system scenarios.
Numbers from [2]
3GPP
Release 100T 50 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
The ACIR values obtained in [2] for which 5% outage degradation occurs are listed in Table 7.13.
The difference between a UTRA and E-UTRA system is that for coexistence studies the E-UTRA system is assumed to
use full power. However since the UTRA system has a reasonably high outage it will also use close to maximum power
and the difference between E-UTRA and UTRA should only be a few dB.
In summary: For E-UTRA requirements on ACLR for the eNodeB similar to the requirements on UTRA, i.e. around 50
dB, the performance degradation on a GSM system is less than 5% outage degradation. This is also confirmed by the
simulation results in figure 7.19. Thus the present coexistence scenario is not more constraining than the E-UTRA to E-
UTRA and E-UTRA to UTRA scenarios considered so far and need not be considered when setting E-UTRA
requirements.
In addition there are a number of factors that make the assumptions above slightly pessimistic:
• The interference in the neighboring channel has been assumed to be flat. In practical systems however it
falls off, which makes the GSM carriers distant from the E-UTRA carrier less interfered. This will
reduce the outage degradation.
• The E-UTRA system has been assumed to transmit at full power at all times. However this is rarely the
case in practical systems. Thus the interference is lower and the outage degradation less.
For E-UTRA systems with narrower bandwidth than 5 MHz, e.g. 1.6 MHz the power spectral density in the interfering
region is higher if we assume that the output power of an E-UTRA eNodeB is the same as for the 5 MHz system. The
increase is 5 dB which would increase the requirements in table 7.13 with 5 dB. The interference will affect fewer GSM
channels though since the fall off previously mentioned is steeper for a 1.6 MHz system.
3GPP
Release 100T 51 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
2
1,8
GSM Outage Increase (%)
1,6
1,4
Ericsson (R4-070390) 5 MHz
1,2
1 Siemens (R4-061304) 1.25 MHz
0,8
0,6
0,4
0,2
0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 50
ACIR (dB)
The results show that the outage increase in both cases (a) and (b)is negligible even for flat ACLR/ACS and very low
levels of ACIR.
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Release 100T 52 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Generalising from 5 MHz and 10MHz to the 20MHz bandwidth we make the following assumptions:
• A 13dB ACLR improvement is assumed for frequency separations larger than B from the edge of the UE
occupied bandwidth.
The simulation results are given in Figure 7.20 and the numerical data are presented in Table 7.15.
20
20MHz->20MHz
18
20MHz->5MHz
16
loss in 5%-tile throughput [%]
14
12
10
0
10 20 30 40 50 60 70
ACIR [dB]
We also note some effects when a 5 MHz E-UTRA system aggresses a 20 MHz E-UTRA system. Considering the case
where the victim network bandwidth is larger than the aggressing network bandwidth, the impact of the aggressing UEs
to the victim BS is lower than for the case of symmetric bandwidth, because the "shoulder" of the ACLR of the
immediately adjacent aggressing UE will cover a smaller bandwidth of the victim network. This case is therefore
uncritical.
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Release 100T 53 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
For the 2GHz rural environment case 18dBi antenna gain and 45m antenna height were assumed. Propagation model for
the 2GHz rural environment case is according to section 4.5.3 modified for 2GHz and 45m antenna height with the
following formula:
Where:
Figure 7.21 presents average system throughput loss in percent relative to the reference throughput without external
system interference. Figure 7.22 presents 5% CDF user throughput loss in percent relative to the reference throughput
without external system interference.
14
E-UTRA DL average system throughput loss [%]
12
10
0
15 20 25 30 35
ACIR [dB]
2GHz [10MHz], urban, 500m 900MHz [1.25MHz], urban, 500m 900MHz [1.25MHz], rural, 2000m
900MHz [1.25MHz], rural, 5000m 2GHz [10MHz], rural, 2000m 2GHz [10MHz], rural, 5000m
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Release 100T 54 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
60
5% CDF E-UTRA DL user throughput loss [%]
50
40
30
20
10
0
15 20 25 30 35
ACIR [dB]
2GHz [10MHz], urban, 500m 900MHz [1.25MHz], urban, 500m 900MHz [1.25MHz], rural, 2000m
900MHz [1.25MHz], rural, 5000m 2GHz [10MHz], rural, 2000m 2GHz [10MHz], rural, 5000m
On the basis of the simulation results it can be assumed that the worst case scenario is 2GHz, urban environment, 500m
cell range.
Simulation results are presented in Table 7.17 and plotted in Figure 7.23 and 7.24 for the average throughput loss and
5% CDF throughput loss for Power Control Parameter Set 1. The symmetrical results of 10 MHz TDD E-UTRA to 10
MHz TDD E-UTRA are also plotted for reference.
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Release 100T 55 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Table 7.17: Simulation results for Power Control Set 1 (F ACLR = 0, P ACLR = 0)
ACIR (dB) Average Throughput Loss (%) 5% CDF Throughput Loss (%)
X 30 + X Scenario 1 Scenario 2 Scenario 3 Scenario 1 Scenario 2 Scenario 3
-15 15 26.0 31.5 47.9 64.3 73.5 89.1
-10 20 15.0 18.0 30.8 30.4 40.9 72.3
-5 25 6.9 10.1 18.2 11.0 16.0 38.5
0 30 3.3 4.9 9.1 4.1 5.8 13.3
5 35 1.4 2.3 4.6 1.0 1.7 5.5
10 40 0.2 1.2 2.4 0.7 0.5 1.7
15 45 0.0 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.3
20 50 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
50
45
Average E-UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
0
10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACLR = X + 30 (dB)
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Release 100T 56 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
100
90
5% CDF E-UTRA TDD Throughput Loss (%)
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
ACLR = X + 30 (dB)
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Release 100T 57 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Figure 7.25: CDF of the total received power level at the own system base stations (10MHz) from all
other system terminals, PC set 1
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Release 100T 58 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Figure 7.26: CDF of the total received power level at the own system base stations (10MHz) from all
other system terminals, PC set 2
Total received power level was assumed here for simplicity, however it should be noted that this may be pessimistic as
the most relevant RX impairments are a nonlinear function of the blocker received power levels present at the receiver
input.
It is proposed the mean power of the interfering signal is equal to -43dBm which is a compromise between the 30dBm
Maximum Output Power terminals defined in TR 36.803 and the 24dBm assumption in TR 36.942 under worst case
MCL conditions.
7.2 RRM
1
ACIR =
1 1
+
ACLR ACS
ACLR is the Adjacent Channel Leakage power Ratio of the interfering systems transmitter (specified as the ratio of the
mean power centred on the assigned channel frequency to the mean power centred on an adjacent channel frequency)
and ACS is the corresponding receiver requirement on Adjacent Channel Selectivity of the victim system receiver.
It is assumed that the capacity or throughput loss of the victim system shall not exceed 5%. It is also assumed that ACIR
is dominated by the UE ACLR.
BS ACLR can be obtained from downlink simulation results presented in section 7.1.1.1. For 5% UTRA capacity loss
an E-UTRA BS ACLR of at least 33dB is required. Assuming the legacy UTRA ACLR of 45dB for E-UTRA BS will
result in less than 3% UTRA capacity loss.
UE ACLR can be obtained from uplink simulation results presented in section 7.1.1.3. It must be noted that the
simulation assumptions represent a multiple worst case scenario which is unlikely to for real network deployments. The
simulation results for power control set 1 and set 2 represent therefore the upper and lower boundary for the required
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Release 100T 59 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
ACIR. It was demonstrated in [9] that the more aggressive power control set 1 does not improve the throughput in some
scenarios. Moreover, additional improvements by more advanced schedulers demonstrated in [10], [11], [12], have not
been taken into account for the simulations. Considering in addition UE implementation constraints, a UE ACLR of
33dB represents a balanced approach of system performance and UE complexity which is discussed in [13].
9 Deployment aspects
E-UTRA provides a significant number of features which can be exploited to support operation in diverse frequency
bands. The purpose of this section is to provide informative description how these features can be augment in a practical
deployment
750 θ 2
urban macro- 128.1+37.6 log(R), A(θ ) = − min 12 , Am
θ 3dB
1 2.0 70
cell size in R in kilometers
36.942
θ 3dB = 65 degrees, A m = 20 dB
15dBi
1732 θ 2
128.1+37.6 log(R), A(θ ) = − min 12 , Am
θ 3dB
2 2.0 70
macro-cell size R in kilometers
in 25.814
θ 3dB = 65 degrees, A m = 20 dB
130 L[dB ] = 7 + 56 log10 (d [m]) 6 dBi for micro cell case with omni-
antennas
3 2.0 micro-cell size 53 (Outdoor to indoor,
in 25.814 penetration included) A(θ ) = 1
As for LTE UL power control, each LTE UE’s power is adjusted according to the following power control scheme:
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Release 100T 60 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
CL
γ
Pt = Pmax × min 1, max Rmin ,
CLx −ile
where P max = 24dBm, Rmin = -54dB if UE minimum power is -30dBm (or R min = -64dB if UE minimum power is -
40dBm), CL x-ile and γ are set according to Table 9.2:
• For each scenario, the CDF curves for Pmin = -30dBm and Pmin = -40dBm almost overlap with each other
except for the power region where UEs transmit around minimum power.
• Generally speaking, UE transmit power for case 2 is greater than that for case 1 for the power region where
UEs transmit at high power. This is because case 2 has larger cell size and results in higher UE power for UEs
located close to cell border. This is also confirmed in Table 9.3 that presents UE mean and 95% CDF power
for different scenarios.
• For case 3 where a micro cell size is simulated, UE transmit power is not always lower than that for case 1 or 2.
The reason is that the pathloss model as shown in Table 9.1 includes penetration loss. As a result, the pathloss
is not necessarily smaller than that in case 1 or 2, where no penetration loss is considered. Since the PC scheme
is based on UE pathloss, the resulting UE power is not necessarily lower either. However, as shown in Table
9.3, the UE mean and 95% CDF power is significantly lower than their counterparts in case 1 or 2.
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Release 100T 61 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
PC set 2
1
case 1, Pmin=-30dBm
0.9
case 2, P =-30dBm
min
0.8 case 3, Pmin=-30dBm
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
-40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
LTE UE transmit power (dBm)
PC set 1
1
case 1, Pmin=-30dBm
0.9
case 2, Pmin=-30dBm
0.8 case 3, Pmin=-30dBm
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
-40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
LTE UE transmit power (dBm)
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Release 100T 62 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Fig. 9.2 shows the UE transmit power distribution for different scenarios when different PC parameters are used.
Similar observations as mentioned for Fig. 9.1 can be made except for the fact that UEs transmit at a lower power than
when PC set 1 is used, which is expected.
Table 9.3: UE mean and 95% CDF power for PC set 1 and set 2
10 Multi-carrier BS requirements
The purpose of this section is to provide guidance how to interpret transmitter and receiver requirements for multi-
carrier BS.
Different LTE channel bandwidths have different operating band unwanted emissions requirement. Only 5 MHz and
higher channel bandwidths have the same requirement. E-UTRA and UTRA have different mask requirements. In
section 10.1.2 and 10.1.3, unwanted emission requirements for BS with different channel bandwidths and in case of E-
UTRA and UTRA with following limited scenarios are introduced as a guideline.
- multi-carrier BS of different E-UTRA channel bandwidths covering only 5 MHz and higher channel bandwidths
(less than 5 MHz is FFS)
As an example, we can assume an operation such as the channel bandwidth of 10 MHz for the 1st carrier and
that of 5 MHz for the adjacent carrier as shown in Figure 10.1.
E-UTRA E-UTRA
10MHz 5MHz
f
- multi-carrier BS of different E-UTRA and UTRA covering only 5 MHz and higher E-UTRA channel bandwidths
(less than 5 MHz is FFS)
As an example, we can assume an operation such as E-UTRA with channel bandwidth of 5 MHz for 1st carrier
and UTRA for adjacent carrier as shown in Figure 10.2.
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Release 100T 63 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
E-UTRA UTRA
5MHz 5MHz
f
- the guidelines below assumes that the power spectral density of the multiple carriers is the same.
For multi-carrier E-UTRA BS of different channel bandwidths (≥5 MHz), the channel bandwidth of the outer most
carrier in the operating band should be considered. That is, the corresponding requirements for the channel bandwidth
of the outer most carrier should be applied at either side of the operating band as shown in Figure 10.3.
From a co-existence point of view, this guideline means that multi-carrier BS should not cause larger interference to
adjacent systems than single carrier BS. From the specification’s complexity point of view, this concept seems
reasonable.
E-UTRA E-UTRA
10MHz 5MHz
ACLR2 ACLR1 ACLR1 ACLR2
f
for UTRA for UTRA for UTRA for UTRA
Figure 10.3: Unwanted emissions requirements for multi-carrier BS of different E-UTRA channel
bandwidths
- more than 10 MHz below the lowest frequency of the BS transmitter operating band if E-UTRA is the lowest
carrier or
- more than 10 MHz above the highest frequency of the BS transmitter operating band if E-UTRA is the highest
carrier.
Exceptions are the requirement in Table 6.6.4.3-2 and 6.6.4.3-3 of [19] that apply also closer than 10 MHz from
operating band.
For UTRA, the transmitter spurious emissions requirements in [20] should be applied at frequencies within the specified
frequency ranges, which are
- more than 12.5MHz below the first carrier used if UTRA is the lowest carrier or
- more than 12.5 MHz above the last carrier frequency used if UTRA is the highest carrier.
Exceptions are the requirement in Clause 6.6.3.5 and 6.6.3.8 of [20] that apply also closer than 12.5 MHz from the
outermost carrier frequency used.
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Release 100T 64 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Furthermore, Spectrum emission mask (SEM) applies to a UTRA BS transmitting on single RF carrier [20]. Thus SEM
should not be applied to multi-carrier BS of different RATs. Therefore, ACLR and Operating band unwanted emissions
requirements for such a scenario with E-UTRA and UTRA should be specified as follows:
For multi-carrier BS of E-UTRA (channel bandwidth(s) ≥5 MHz) and UTRA, the RAT being used at the edge of the
operating band should be considered. That is, the corresponding requirements for the RAT being used on the outer
most carrier should be applied at either side of the operating band as shown in Figure 10.4.
From a co-existence point of view, this guideline means that multi-carrier BS should not cause larger interference to
adjacent systems than single carrier BS. From the specification’s complexity point of view, this concept seems
reasonable.
E-UTRA UTRA
5MHz 5MHz
ACLR2 ACLR1
f
ACLR1 ACLR2
for UTRA for UTRA
ACLR2 ACLR1
for EUTRA for EUTRA
Operating band
-f_offsetmax
unwanted emissions
Figure 10.4: Unwanted emissions requirements for multi-carrier BS of E-UTRA and UTRA
With a multi-carrier wanted signal, the same principles applied to multi-carrier TX testing can also be applied to RX
testing. The manufacturer declares which frequency range and multi-carrier bandwidths that are supported. The lowest
and the highest supported bandwidth are tested as specified in section 4.7 of TS 36.141[21]. A wanted signal is applied
at the lower edge of the tested multi-carrier bandwidth. Another wanted signal is applied at the upper edge of the tested
multi-carrier bandwidth. It is not deemed necessary to apply wanted signals between the outer carriers, because usually
the worst performance is obtained at the outer channels. In the Reference sensitivity measurement only the two wanted
signals are applied. In the ACS, blocking and intermodulation measurements interferers are applied at frequencies
outside the tested multi-carrier bandwidth, with spacing as defined for each requirement in relation to the closest wanted
signal respectively. Following the TX testing approach, no requirements are specified for interferers between the
wanted channels.
Current specification allows the desensitization of the wanted signals in the presence of an interfering signal e.g., in the
ACS test. It is FFS whether this desensitization should be consider further for multi-carrier case.
Regarding Dynamic range and In-channel selectivity, a similar approach as for the Reference sensitivity level can be
adopted, i.e. two simultaneous wanted signals, one at the lowest assigned channel frequency and one at the highest
assigned channel frequency are chosen, together with their corresponding in-channel interfering signals. That is to say,
that the currently specified single carrier requirements should be simultaneously fulfilled at the lowest and highest
assigned E-UTRA channel frequency.
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Release 100T 65 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
• In a receiver that can receive multiple contiguous carrier over a declared multi-carrier bandwidth, two
wanted carriers are tested simultaneously, at both edges of the multi-carrier bandwidth.
• There are no requirements for interfering signals between the wanted carriers.
• Only the highest and the lowest supported multi-carrier bandwidth are tested.
• The same set of interfering signals is used as in the equivalent single-carrier test. E.g. in a blocking
test there is only one blocker at a time, even though two simultaneous wanted signals are used.
• The test is repeated for the lower and upper wanted signals, with the interfering signals below the
lower and above the higher wanted signal respectively. The properties of the interferer(s) are chosen
according to the requirements of the closest wanted signal.
• For the receiver tests the desensitization for the wanted signals should be the same as for the single
carrier case.
Out-of-band emission = Emission on a frequency or frequencies immediately outside the necessary bandwidth which
results from the modulation process, but excluding spurious emissions.
Spurious emission = Emission on a frequency, or frequencies, which are outside the necessary bandwidth and the level
of which may be reduced without affecting the corresponding transmission of information. Spurious emissions include
harmonic emissions, parasitic emissions, intermodulation products and frequency conversion products but exclude out-
of-band emissions.
Some requirements in [19] may only apply in certain regions either as optional requirements or set by local and regional
regulation as mandatory requirements. It is normally not stated in the 3GPP specifications under what exact
circumstances the requirements apply, since this is defined by local or regional regulation.
All requirements that may be applied differently in different regions are listed in [19] Clause 4.3.
- The SEM limit should also be set to allow some variations due to varying power allocation between resource
blocks.
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Release 100T 66 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
- FCC requirements [25] which apply mainly in Region 2 should be defined separately as an absolute limit and
may need a smaller reference bandwidth in some cases.
- In UTRA, the spectrum emissions mask is not only defined in the OOB domain, but also across the spurious
domain inside the operating band. This can also be the case for the E-UTRA mask, as long as the limits in the
spurious domain are consistent with recommended spurious limits in SM.329 [22]. The “unified” in-band OOB
+ spurious emissions for E-UTRA can be named “unwanted emissions” which is the agreed terminology [25]
that encompasses both OOB and spurious emissions.
- The SEM limit should apply for both single and multi-carrier BS.
- FCC requirements as defined in [25] apply for bands 2, 4, 5, 10, 12, 13, 14, 17, 35 and 36 as additional limits.
The Operating band unwanted emission limits are defined as a “mask” that stretches from 10 MHz below the lowest
frequency of the BS transmitter operating band up to 10 MHz above the highest frequency of the BS transmitter
operating band, as shown in Figure 11.1. Parts of the mask will be in the out-of-band domain (within +/-2.5 times the
necessary bandwidth of the carrier) and parts will be in the spurious domain..
The unwanted emission limit in the part of the operating band that falls in the spurious domain must be consistent with
SM.329 [22]. Based on the Category B spurious emission limits in [22] a level of -25 dBm in 100 kHz (-15 dBm in
1 MHz) is selected as the lower bound for the unwanted emission limits. This is consistent with the level used for
UTRA as spurious emission limit inside the operating band. Further details on the spurious emission limits and their
interpretation for UTRA (and E-UTRA) are given in TR 25.942 [3], clause 14.2.
For E-UTRA Bands 2, 4, 5, 10, 12, 13, 14, 17, 35, 36, an additional Unwanted emission limit is derived from FCC Title
47 [25] Parts 22, 24 and 27. The requirement stated in [25] is interpreted as -13 dBm in a measurement bandwidth
defined as 1% of the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth". For the E-UTRA channel bandwidths, the following additional
requirements are defined:
- 1.4 MHz channel bandwidth: -14 dBm in 10 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
1.26 MHz.
- 3 MHz channel bandwidth: -13 dBm in 30 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
3.0 MHz.
- 5 MHz channel bandwidth: -15 dBm in 30 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
4.75 MHz.
- 10 MHz channel bandwidth: -13 dBm in 100 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
10 MHz.
- 15 MHz channel bandwidth: -15 dBm in 100 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
15.8 MHz.
- 20 MHz channel bandwidth: -16 dBm in 100 kHz, which assumes that the "-26 dB modulation bandwidth" is <
20 MHz.
The additional limit outside the first MHz adjacent to the channel bandwidth, for all channel bandwidths, is -
13dBm/100kHz for E-UTRA Bands 5, 12, 13, 14, 17, and -13dBm/1MHz for E-UTRA Bands 2, 4, 10, 35 and 36.
3GPP
Release 100T 67 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Limits in
Carrier spurious domain
must be
consistent with
SM.329 [4]
10 MHz 10 MHz
OOB domain
Figure 11.1 Defined frequency range for Operating band unwanted emissions with an example RF
carrier and related mask shape.
The requirements shall apply whatever the type of transmitter considered (single carrier or multi-carrier). It applies for
all transmission modes foreseen by the manufacturer's specification.
Emissions shall not exceed the maximum level specified in [19] for [any] BS maximum output power, where:
- ∆f is the separation between the channel edge frequency and the nominal -3dB point of the measuring filter
closest to the carrier frequency.
- f_offset is the separation between the channel edge frequency and the centre of the measuring filter.
- f_offset max is the offset to the frequency 10 MHz outside the operating band edge.
- ∆f max is equal to f_offset max minus half of the bandwidth of the measuring filter.
Since it is important to assess sharing properties both with adjacent UTRA systems and with E-UTRA carriers the
ACLR is defined with different bandwidths:
- ACLR/UTRA in a 1st and 2nd adjacent channel with 5 MHz and/or 1.6 MHz reference bandwidth depending on
paired or unpaired spectrum.
- ACLR/E-UTRA (reference bandwidth equal to E-UTRA channel bandwidth) in a 1st and 2nd adjacent channel.
- For carriers with channel bandwidth larger than 5 MHz positioned close to or adjacent to the band edge, the 1st or
2nd adjacent channel that define the ACLR/E-UTRA may fall partly or fully outside the point 10 MHz from the
band edge. If it is fully outside, it should not be defined. If it is partly outside it can still be defined, but may not
be limiting compared to the unwanted emission limits defined by SEM and spurious emissions.
ACLR measured in other reference bandwidths (smaller or larger) than the E-UTRA carrier or 5 MHz are indirectly
defined by the mask.
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Release 100T 68 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
ACLR is defined for two cases as shown in Figure 11.2, i.e. for 1st and 2nd adjacent E-UTRA carriers of the same
bandwidth and for 1st and 2nd adjacent UTRA carriers. Separate limits are defined for each channel bandwidth. The
requirements can be stated with two tables, one for adjacent E-UTRA and one for adjacent UTRA.
Carrier
ACLR limits
defined for
adjacent
LTE carriers
ALCR limits
defined for Carrier
adjacent
UTRA carriers
10 MHz 10 MHz
Spurious Spurious
emissions limit emissions limit
st nd
Figure 11.2 The two defined ACLR measures, one for 1 and 2 adjacent E-UTRA carriers and one
st nd
for 1 and 2 adjacent UTRA carrier.
Minimum BS requirements for Category A and Category B are specified in [19]. BS ACLR requirements are captured
for E-UTRA operating in paired spectrum and in unpaired spectrum. For Category A, either the limits in [19] or the
absolute limit of -13dBm/MHz (Note 2) apply, whatever is less stringent. For Category B, the numbers are based on the
co-existence simulations outlined in this TR 36.942. Either the limits in [19] or the absolute limit of -15dBm/MHz
apply, whatever is less stringent.
NOTE: Whether the absolute limit is applicable to other base station classes is ffs.
NOTE2 Since the limits -13 dBm and -15 dBm are regulatory requirements taken from Category A and B spurious
emissions respectively, the test requirement shall also be -13dBm and -15 dBm respectively, i.e. the test
tolerance shall be zero when deriving the test limit.
The ACLR2 for the UTRA is set to be the same as ACLR1. It was revealed in [26] and [27] that the second adjacent
channel interference contributes only little to overall ACIR because ACLR/ACS in the second adjacent channel is
significantly higher than the UTRA UE ACS1.
It was pointed out in [28] that an E-UTRA BSs must not cause larger interference (in terms of absolute power) to the
co-existing UTRA system than the one allowed in the current 3GPP requirements, irrespective of its channel bandwidth.
For the deployment in Japan, additional spurious emission requirement to protect co-existing (domestic) wireless
systems may be required for certain bands (i.e. E-UTRA Band 1, 6, 9, and 11) in order to limit the ACI in 10, 15, and
20 MHz Channel BW options.
The measurement filter for the transmitted E-UTRA carrier and the adjacent E-UTRA carrier is a rectangular filter with
a bandwidth equal to the transmission bandwidth configuration N RB ∙ 180 kHz. For ACLR/UTRA, the power of the
adjacent carrier is measured using an RRC filter with roll-off factor α =0.22.
Adjacent Channel Leakage power Ratio (ACLR) is the ratio of the filtered mean power centered on the assigned
channel frequency to the filtered mean power centred on an adjacent channel frequency.
The requirements shall apply whatever the type of transmitter considered (single carrier or multi-carrier). It applies for
all transmission modes foreseen by the manufacturer's specification.
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Release 100T 69 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
The UTRA core requirements for spurious emissions are specified for the BS in TS 25.104 [20].
References for the spurious emissions requirements are summarised in Table 11.1 for the BS. The tables give references
to RAN4 core specs, to where the term is defined and to some relevant regulatory references. These regulatory
references have either defined the limit value in 3GPP or they have used it as a basis for studies or recommendations.
Since the spurious emission limits defined here does not cover the frequency range of the spurious domain inside the
operating band, they should be named “Spurious emissions outside the operating band”, in order to distinguish them
from the definition of spurious emissions in the spurious domain in ITU-R SM.329 [22].
10 MHz 10 MHz
Figure 11.3 Defined frequency ranges for spurious emissions and operating band unwanted
emissions
Spurious emission limits as defined in ITU-R SM.329[22] are divided into several Categories, where Category A and B
are applied for 3GPP as regional requirements. The Category A and Category B spurious emission limits in Tables 11.2
and 11.3 are in line with ITU-R SM.329[22]. They would apply outside of the region where the limits for “Operating
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Release 100T 70 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
band unwanted emissions” are defined (operating band plus 10 MHz on each side). Further details on the spurious
emission limits and their interpretation for UTRA (and E-UTRA) are given in TR 25.942 [3], clause 14.2.
Table 11.2: BS Spurious emission limits outside the operating band, Category A
Table 11.3: BS Spurious emissions limits outside the operating band, Category B
Minimum BS spurious emissions requirements are specified in [19] including Category A, Category B, protection of the
BS receiver of own or different BS, co-existence with other systems in the same geographical area, limits for BS in
geographic coverage area of PHS, limits for protection of public safety operations and co-location with other base
stations.
BS Spurious emissions limits for BS co-located with another BS in [19] do not apply for the 10 MHz frequency range
immediately outside the BS transmit frequency range of an operating band. This is also the case when the transmit
frequency range is adjacent to the Band for the co-location requirement. The current state-of-the-art technology does not
allow a single generic solution for co-location with other system on adjacent frequencies for 30dB BS-BS minimum
coupling loss. However, there are certain site-engineering solutions that can be used. These techniques are addressed in
TR 25.942 [3].
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Release 100T 71 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
12 LTE-Advanced co-existence
Parameters Assumptions
Deployment scenario Macro cell, Urban area, Uncoordinated deployment
BS noise figure 5 dB
21 dBm for 5MHz UTRA,
UE Tx power 24dBm for 1.6MHz UTRA
23 dBm for 10 MHz LTE/ 40MHz LTE-A
UE noise figure 9 dB
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Release 100T 72 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
For uplink, the number of UEs per sub-frame might affect the simulation results, because the total transmission power
for the system would depend on the number of UEs per sub-frame. Since the number of resource blocks for one UE
would be typically 8~16 in the actual UL scheduler, it is proposed that the number of UEs per sub-frame is calculated as
follows:
(Number of UEs per sub-frame) = round down ((Total number of RBs for the system) / 16)
The number of UEs per sub-frame for uplink is presented in Table 12.4.
Note: The resource block size should be 180 kHz instead of 375 kHz.
ACIR1 ACIR3
ACIR2 ACIR3
frequency
The bandwidth of victim UEs are same that of aggressor UEs in Scenario #1 and #2 (victim in LTE or LTE-Advanced).
ACIR value could be calculated from uplink ACIR model shown in table 12.6.
3GPP
Release 100T 73 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
For Scenario #3 (3.84 MHz UTRA victim), the bandwidth of victim UEs are larger than that of aggressor UEs (2.88
MHz = 180 kHz x 16 RBs). As shown in figure 12.2, 12.3 and 12.4, victim UE suffer from the interference composed
by two ACIR regions from an aggressor UE in asymmetrical bandwidths case. Based on the method described in
5.1.1.4.2, ACIR value from a UE could be calculated as shown in table 12.7.
Figure 12.2 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE1 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
Figure 12.3 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE2 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
Figure 12.4 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE3 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
3GPP
Release 100T 74 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
For Scenario #4 (1.28 MHz UTRA victim), the bandwidth of victim UEs are smaller than that of aggressor UEs (2.88
MHz = 180 kHz x 16 RBs). As shown in figure 12.5, 12.6 and 12.7, victim UE suffer from the interference one ACIR
region from an aggressor UE. Based on the method described in 5.1.1.4.2, ACIR value from a UE could be calculated
as shown in table 12.8.
Figure 12.5 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE1 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
Figure 12.6 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE2 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
Figure 12.7 Uplink ACIR models from aggressor UE3 for LTE-A vs. UTRA case
3GPP
Release 100T 75 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
1 1 5 5 30
= * 0.1* ACS 1 + 0.1* ACS 2 + 0.1* ACS 3
40 10
0.1* Average
10 10 10
For Scenario 2, the “Average” is based on an assumption for the 40 MHz LTE-A ACS.
For Scenarios 4, the “Average” is determined from the UE ACS requirements (ACS1, ACS2 and ACS3) according to
the respective specifications by the following relation (all parameters in dB):
3GPP
Release 100T 76 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
For LTE coexistence study, the fractional power control was used for the initial uplink coexistence simulations. It is
noted that the parameter CLx-ile in the table below is the same for both 40 MHz and 10 MHz systems because it is
assumed that each UE is assigned 16 RBs in either system.
3GPP
Release 100T 77 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
CL x-ile
Parameter Set Gamma
40MHz 10MHz
Set 1 1 112- ∆ 112- ∆
Set 2 0.8 129- ∆ 129- ∆
Note: ∆ = 21log10 ( f c / 2.0) , adjustment parameter related to different carrier
frequency point. For fc=2GHz, ∆ =0dB.
In RAN1 TS36.213, The setting of the UE Transmit power PPUSCH for the physical uplink shared channel (PUSCH)
transmission in subframe i is defined by:
Note 1: ∆ TF (i ) = 0 dB, f (i ) = 0 dB, and PL in the above equation is equivalent to CL defined in TR 36.942
Section 5.1.1.6.
Note 2: PO_PUSCH ( j ) should be derived from CL x-ile so that the actual transmission power should be the same as
the one for PC Set 1/2. Following this principle, PO_PUSCH ( j ) can be obtained and included in the table
below, assuming each UE occupies 16RBs (as shown in Section 12.1.2):
Note that when calculating PO_PUSCH ( j ) , it is assumed that PCMAX is equal to P PowerClass. In other words, no MPR, A-
MPR or power tolerances are considered for simplicity.
12.2 Results
12.2.1 Radio reception and transmission
Simulation results for average E-UTRA downlink cell throughput loss are presented in table 12.12 and figure 12.11.
Simulation results for 5% CDF E-UTRA downlink user throughput loss are presented in table 12.13 and figure 12.12.
3GPP
Release 100T 78 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
NTT
ACIR Qual Hua Alcatel- CMC Sam Moto
LGE DOCO CATT CATR ZTE
offse ave comm wei Lucent C sung rola
(R4- MO (R4- (R4- (R4-
t rag (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
101144 (R4- 10117 10158 10170
X e 10214 10135 101114 10127 10184 10207
) 101350 3) 9) 0)
[dB] 7) 3) ) 8) 2) 6)
)
-25 17.6 15.3 20.2 17.3
-20 9.9 8.1 11.2 9.99 11.17 9.2 10.26 8.81 10.7
-15 5.1 3.8 5.8 4.94 5.8 5.79 4.4 5.38 4.79 5.3
-10 2.6 2.8 1.6 2.8 2.18 2.7 2.82 2.1 2.57 2.35 2.4 4.2
-5 1.1 1.3 0.6 1.2 0.85 1.1 1.22 0.8 1.14 1.06 1 1.8
0 0.4 0.56 0.2 0.5 0.29 0.4 0.53 0.4 0.46 0.44 0.4 0.7
5 0.2 0.24 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.19 0.1 0.17 0.17 0.1 0.25
10 0.1 0.09 0.1 0.032 0.1 0.09 0.05 0.06 0.1 0.07
15 0.0 0.0 0.01 0 0.02 0
20.0 average
Qualcomm
(R4-102147)
LGE
15.0 (R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101350)
Huawei
Loss [%]
(R4-101353)
10.0 Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
CATT
(R4-101173)
CMCC
5.0 (R4-101278)
CATR
(R4-101589)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
0.0 Samsung
-20 -10 0 10 20 (R4-101842)
Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102076)
Qual NTT
ACIR Hua Alcatel- CMC Sam Moto
com LGE DOCO CATT CATR ZTE
Offse ave wei Lucent C sung rola
m (R4- MO (R4- (R4- (R4-
t r (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
(R4- 101144 (R4- 10117 10158 10170
X age 10135 101114 10127 10184 10207
10214 ) 101350 3) 9) 0)
[dB] 3) ) 8) 2) 6)
7) )
-25 83.0 70.8 100.0 78.3
-20 47.8 37.3 47.1 100 52.29 40.4 44.74 21.68 39.1
-15 22.0 16.2 23.4 46.54 18.2 24.17 18.7 23.52 8.05 18.8
3GPP
Release 100T 79 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
-10 8.9 11.5 6.2 10.6 11.65 7.7 10.7 8.2 10.93 2.69 7.9 10.3
-5 3.4 4.6 2.1 5.0 2.81 1.4 5.33 3.2 4.7 0.87 3.2 4.5
0 1.3 1.8 0.6 1.2 0.78 0.8 2.23 1.3 1.8 0.28 1.6 1.5
5 0.5 0.77 0.2 0.6 0.27 0.7 0.84 0.4 0.53 0.09 0 0.56
10 0.2 0.39 0.2 0.087 0.6 0.38 0.2 0.03 0 0.21
15 0.0 0 0.029 0.2 0.01 0
50.0 average
Qualcomm
(R4-102147)
40.0 LGE
(R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101350)
30.0 Huawei
Loss [%]
(R4-101353)
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
20.0 CATT
(R4-101173)
CMCC
(R4-101278)
10.0 CATR
(R4-101589)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
0.0 Samsung
(R4-101842)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102076)
12.2.1.2 ACIR Uplink 40 MHz Advanced E-UTRA interferer – 10 MHz E-UTRA victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for average E-UTRA uplink cell throughput loss are presented in table 12.14 and figure 12.13 for
TPC set 1 and table 12.15 and figure 12.14 for TPC set 2 respectively. Simulation results for 5% CDF E-UTRA uplink
user throughput loss are presented in table 12.16 and figure 12.15 for TPC set 1 and table 12.17 and figure 12.16 for
TPC set 2 respectively.
3GPP
Release 100T 80 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Qual
NTT NOKI Hua Alcatel- CM Sam Moto
Offset com LGE CATT ZTE
ave DOCOM A wei Lucent CC sung rola
value m (R4- (R4- (R4-
rag O (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
X (R4- 10114 10117 10170
e (R4- 10138 102054 101114 101 10184 10207
[dB] 1013 4) 3) 0)
101341) 9) ) ) 278) 2) 6)
07)
-20 27.9 35.90 19.84
-15 22.5 34.7 25.6 21.73 21.8 18.7 11.09 23.6
-10 12.5 13.16 18.6 13.2 20.41 11.53 10.6 10.29 9 5.46 10.7 14.8
-5 5.7 5.71 8.8 6.1 10.33 5.29 4.7 4.65 3.8 2.27 4.4 6.3
0 2.4 2.60 3.8 2.6 4.7 2.11 2.3 1.98 1.6 0.81 1.7 2.4
5 0.9 1.18 1.5 1.0 1.97 0.75 0.9 0.77 0.5 0.27 0.6 0.95
10 0.4 0.50 0.6 0.4 0.78 0.25 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.09 0.2 0.28
15 0.1 0.2 0.0 0.08 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.03 0.1
20 0.0 0.04
30.0
average
Qualcomm
25.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
20.0 (R4-101341)
NOKIA
Loss [%]
(R4-101389)
15.0 Huaw ei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
10.0 CATT
(R4-101173)
CMCC
5.0 (R4-101278)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
Samsung
0.0 (R4-101842)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102076)
Qual
NTT NOKI Hua Alcatel- CM Sam Moto
Offset com LGE CATT ZTE
ave DOCOM A wei Lucent CC sung rola
value m (R4- (R4- (R4-
r O (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
X (R4- 10114 10178 10170
age (R4- 10138 102054 101114 101 10184 10207
[dB] 10130 4) 0) 0)
101341) 9) ) ) 278) 2) 6)
7)
-20 19.0 28.35 9.64
-15 15.3 22.6 17.5 15.35 15.7 12.4 5.25 18.2
-10 7.5 7.8 10.9 8.3 10.6 7.16 7.4 6.2 5.4 2.22 8.4 8.49
-5 3.2 3.34 4.7 3.6 4.72 2.90 3.2 2.62 2.2 0.79 3.5 3.34
0 1.2 1.31 1.9 1.4 1.95 1.05 1.3 1.04 0.8 0.26 1.4 1.23
5 0.5 0.61 0.7 0.5 0.76 0.35 0.5 0.39 0.4 0.08 0.5 0.42
10 0.2 0.29 0.3 0.2 0.28 0.11 0.2 0.14 0.2 0.03 0.2 0.13
3GPP
Release 100T 81 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
30.0 average
Qualcomm
25.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
20.0 (R4-101341)
NOKIA
Loss [%]
(R4-101389)
15.0 Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
10.0 CATT
(R4-101780)
CMCC
5.0 (R4-101278)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
Samsung
0.0
(R4-101842)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102076)
Qual
NTT Hua Alcatel CMC Samsu
com LGE CATT ZTE
Offset ave DOCOM wei -Lucent C ng Motorola
m (R4- (R4- (R4-
value rag O (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
(R4- 10114 101173 101700
X [dB] e (R4- 10205 101114 10127 101842 102076)
1013 4) ) )
101341) 4) ) 8) )
07)
-20 53.2 51.49 54.93
-15 39.4 90.2 42.4 25.83 36.7 34.2 17.51 29.1
-10 14.5 17.22 29.8 17.1 8.25 14.6 11.74 12.9 5.55 11.5 16.6
-5 5.6 6.42 11 6.5 2.32 7.9 5.17 4.6 1.76 4.2 5.8
0 1.9 2.24 4 2.9 0.57 2.6 1.99 1.5 0.56 1.8 1.3
5 0.7 1.09 1.5 1.3 0.19 0.6 0.64 0.5 0.18 0.6 0.62
10 0.2 0.56 0.3 0.4 0.06 0.1 0.14 0.2 0.06 0 0.14
15 0.0 0 0.0 0.02 0 0.06 0.2 0.02 0
20 0.0 0.02
3GPP
Release 100T 82 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
50.0
average
Qualcomm
40.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
30.0 (R4-101341)
Loss [%]
Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
20.0 (R4-101114)
CATT
(R4-101173)
CMCC
10.0
(R4-101278)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
0.0 Samsung
(R4-101842)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
Offset value X dB] (R4-102076)
Qual
NTT Hua Alcatel- Moto
Offset com LGE CATT CMCC ZTE Sam
ave DOCOM wei Lucent rola
value m (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- sung
rag O (R4- (R4- (R4-
X (R4- 10114 101780 101278 101700 (R4-
e (R4- 102054 101114 102076
[dB] 1013 4) ) ) ) 101842)
101341) ) ) )
07)
-20 32.2 41.14 23.27
-15 26.6 52.8 31.7 17.91 30.8 23.9 7.37 21.6
-10 11.6 15.7 20.7 13.0 6.41 14.6 10.13 9.5 2.33 8.8 14.39
-5 4.2 5.5 7.6 5.2 1.68 5.4 3.94 3.2 0.74 4 4.75
0 1.3 1.81 2.7 1.8 0.51 1.3 0.97 0.9 0.23 1.6 1.05
5 0.5 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.17 0.3 0.34 0.3 0.07 0.8 0.3
10 0.1 0.13 0.1 0.2 0.05 0 0.06 0.1 0.02 0.1 0.09
15 0.0 0 0 0.02 0 0.01 0.1 0.01 0
20 0.0 0
3GPP
Release 100T 83 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
50.0
average
Qualcomm
40.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101144)
NTT DOCOMO
30.0 (R4-101341)
Loss [%]
Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
20.0 (R4-101114)
CATT
(R4-101780)
CMCC
10.0 (R4-101278)
ZTE
(R4-101700)
Samsung
0.0
(R4-101842)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102076)
Simulation results for average Advanced E-UTRA downlink cell throughput loss are presented in table 12.18 and figure
12.17. Simulation results for 5% CDF Advanced E-UTRA downlink user throughput loss are presented in table 12.19
and figure 12.18.
Qual
NTT Hua Alcatel- Moto
ACIR com LGE CMCC CATR ZTE Sam
ave DOCOM wei Lucent rola
offset m (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- sung
r O (R4- (R4- (R4-
X (R4- 10114 101279 101589 101701 (R4-
age (R4- 101354 101114 102077
[dB] 10144 5) ) ) ) 101843)
101350) ) ) )
6)
-20 20.8 21.9 14.61 25.81
-15 12.1 10.5 12.4 7.66 12.8 11.9 17.53 12.2
-10 6.4 6.4 5.2 6.5 3.62 6.6 6.1 6.18 10.93 6.1 5.92
-5 3.1 3.2 2.3 3.2 1.51 3.2 2.7 3.04 6.43 2.8 2.69
0 1.4 1.47 0.9 1.4 0.55 1.4 1.1 1.37 3.66 1.2 1.03
3GPP
Release 100T 84 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
5 0.7 0.48 0.3 0.6 0.18 1.3 0.4 0.55 2.03 0.5 0.54
10 0.3 0.16 0.1 0.2 0.05 0.2 0.2 0.21 1.10 0.2 0.14
15 0.1 0 0.1 0.006 0.1 0 0.07 0.60 0.1
20 0.0 0.0
20.0 average
Qualcomm
(R4-101446)
LGE
15.0 (R4-101145)
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101350)
Loss [%]
Huawei
(R4-101354)
10.0
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
CMCC
(R4-101279)
5.0 CATR
(R4-101589)
ZTE
(R4-101701)
Samsung
0.0
(R4-101843)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
(R4-102077)
Offset value X [dB]
NTT
Qualc Alcatel- Sam Moto
ACIR LGE DOCO CATR ZTE
omm Huawei Lucent CMCC sung rola
offse aver (R4- MO (R4- (R4-
(R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
tX age 10114 (R4- 10158 10170
10144 101354) 101114 101279) 101843 102077
[dB] 5) 101350 9) 1)
6) ) ) )
)
-25 100.0 100.0 100.0
-20 93.7 100.0 100 81.15
-15 55.6 49.2 54.4 83.17 48.7 52.6 57.67 43.4
-10 25.8 27.9 23 28.8 26.3 21.2 25.7 26.82 30.11 21.9 26.71
-5 11.1 12.9 9.2 14.1 8.71 8.9 11.4 12.86 12.00 9.4 11.32
0 4.3 5.8 3.2 6.0 2.4 2.3 4.3 5.43 4.13 4.7 4.28
5 1.6 2.2 0.9 2.40 1.11 1.7 1.4 1.91 1.35 1.6 1.76
10 0.5 0.68 0.4 0.75 0.32 0.8 0.4 0.74 0.43 0 0.72
15 0.2 0.1 0.15 0.19 0.6 0.1 0.23 0.14 0
20 0.2 0.15
3GPP
Release 100T 85 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
50.0
average
Qualcomm
40.0 (R4-101446)
LGE
(R4-101145)
NTT DOCOMO
30.0 (R4-101350)
Loss [%]
Huawei
(R4-101354)
Alcatel-Lucent
20.0 (R4-101114)
CMCC
(R4-101279)
10.0 CATR
(R4-101589)
ZTE
(R4-101701)
0.0 Samsung
(R4-101843)
-20 -10 0 10 20
Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102077)
Simulation results for average Advanced E-UTRA uplink cell throughput loss are presented in table 12.20 and figure
12.19 for TPC set 1 and table 12.21 and figure 12.20 for TPC set 2 respectively. Simulation results for 5% CDF
Advanced E-UTRA uplink user throughput loss are presented in table 12.22 and figure 12.21 for TPC set 1 and table
12.23 and figure 12.22 for TPC set 2 respectively.
Table 12.20 average Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 1)
NTT
Offse Hua Alcatel- Sam Moto
Qual LGE DOCO NOKIA CATT CMCC ZTE
t wei Lucent sung rola
aver comm (R4- MO (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
value (R4- (R4- (R4- (R4-
age (R4- 1011 (R4- 101389 10117 101965 101701
X 10205 101114 10184 10207
101307) 45) 101341 ) 3) ) )
[dB] 4) ) 3) 7)
)
-20 25.7 34.53 27.4 15.2573
-15 18.0 31.2 19.1 20.60 17.7 13.5 6.8806 16.9
3GPP
Release 100T 86 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
-10 9.7 8.78 16 9.1 16.48 10.72 8.1 10.29 5.8 2.9315 6.9 11.12
-5 4.2 3.64 7.2 3.8 7.72 4.78 3.3 4.65 2.3 1.1669 2.5 5.13
0 1.7 1.37 2.9 1.5 3.2 1.85 1.2 1.98 0.8 0.427 0.9 2.32
5 0.6 0.52 1.1 0.6 1.23 0.64 0.4 0.77 0.3 0.1448 0.3 0.94
10 0.2 0.19 0.4 0.2 0.45 0.21 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.047 0.1 0.35
15 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.07 0 0.1 0.015 0
20 0.0 0.04
30.0 average
Qualcomm
25.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101145)
20.0 NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101341)
Loss [%]
NOKIA
(R4-101389)
15.0 Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
10.0 (R4-101114)
CATT
(R4-101173)
CMCC
5.0
(R4-101965)
ZTE
(R4-101701)
0.0 Samsung
-20 -10 0 10 20 (R4-101843)
Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102077)
Figure 12.19 average Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 1)
Table 12.21 average Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 2)
3GPP
Release 100T 87 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
30.0
average
Qualcomm
25.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101145)
20.0 NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101341)
Loss [%]
NOKIA
15.0 (R4-101389)
Huawei
(R4-102054)
10.0 Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
CMCC
(R4-101965)
5.0
ZTE
(R4-101701)
Samsung
0.0 (R4-101843)
-20 -10 0 10 20 Motorola
(R4-102077)
Offset value X [dB]
Figure 12.20 average Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 2)
Table 12.22 5%-ile Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 1)
3GPP
Release 100T 88 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
50.0 average
Qualcomm
(R4-101307)
40.0 LGE
(R4-101145)
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101341)
30.0
Loss [%]
Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
20.0 (R4-101114)
CMCC
(R4-101965)
CATT
10.0 (R4-101173)
ZTE
(R4-101701)
0.0 Samsung
(R4-101843)
-20 -10 0 10 20
Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102077)
Figure 12.21 5%-ile Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 1)
Table 12.23 5%-ile Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 2)
3GPP
Release 100T 89 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
50.0
average
Qualcomm
40.0 (R4-101307)
LGE
(R4-101145)
(R4-101341)
Huawei
(R4-102054)
20.0
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
CMCC
10.0 (R4-101965)
ZTE
(R4-101701)
0.0 Samsung
(R4-101843)
-20 -10 0 10 20
Motorola
Offset value X [dB] (R4-102077)
Figure 12.22 5%-ile Advanced E-UTRA uplink throughput loss (TPC set 2)
12.2.1.5 ACIR Downlink 40 MHz Advanced E-UTRA interferer – 5 MHz UTRA victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for 5 MHz UTRA downlink capacity loss are presented in table 12.24 and figure 12.23.
Offset NTT
Huawei Alcatel-Lucent Qualcomm ZTE
value average DOCOMO
(R4-101355) (R4-101114) (R4-102147) (R4-102188)
X [dB] (R4-101350)
-20 24.1 35.7 11.59 25
-15 16.0 19.1 6.31 22.3 16.3265
-10 8.9 10.2 3.03 11.1 9.83 10.2041
-5 4.7 5.1 1.23 4.5 4.29 8.1633
0 2.0 1.9 0.38 2.1 1.72 4.0816
5 0.9 0.6 0.09 0.7 0.57 2.3168
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50.0 average
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101350)
40.0 Huawei
(R4-101355)
Alcatel-Lucent
(R4-101114)
30.0 Qualcomm
Loss [%]
(R4-102147)
ZTE
(R4-102188)
20.0
10.0
0.0
-20 -10 0 10 20
Offset value X [dB]
12.2.1.6 ACIR Uplink 40 MHz Advanced E-UTRA interferer – 5 MHz UTRA victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss are presented in table 12.25 and figure 12.24 for Advanced E-
UTRA TPC set 1 and in table 12.26 and figure 12.25 for Advanced E-UTRA TPC set 2.
Table 12.25 average 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 1)
Alcatel-
Offset NTT NOKIA ZTE
Qualcomm Huawei Lucent
value average DOCOMO (R4- (R4-
(R4-101307) (R4-102054) (R4-
X [dB] (R4-101341) 101389) 102188)
101114)
-20 100.0 100
-15 100.0 100.0 100 100
-10 93.1 100 100.0 100 83.42 100 75
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50.0
average
Qualcomm
40.0
(R4-101307)
NTT DOCOMO
(R4-101341)
30.0
Loss [%]
NOKIA
(R4-101389)
20.0 Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
10.0 (R4-101114)
ZTE
(R4-102188)
0.0
-20 -10 0 10 20
Offset value X [dB]
Figure 12.24 average 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 1)
Table 12.26 average 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 2)
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50.0
average
40.0 Qualcomm
(R4-101307)
NTT DOCOMO
30.0 (R4-101341)
Loss [%]
NOKIA
(R4-101389)
20.0
Huawei
(R4-102054)
Alcatel-Lucent
10.0 (R4-101114)
ZTE
(R4-102188)
0.0
-20 -10 0 10 20
Offset value X [dB]
Figure 12.25 average 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 2)
12.2.1.5 ACIR Downlink 40 MHz Advanced E-UTRA interferer – 1.6 MHz UTRA victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for 1.6 MHz UTRA downlink capacity loss are presented in table 12.27 and figure 12.26.
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60.0
50.0
Huawei(R4-103090)
40.0
30.0
ZTE(R4-103305)
20.0
10.0
Td-tech(R4-103078)
0.0
-20 -10 0 10 20
Offset value X [dB]
12.2.1.6 ACIR Uplink 40 MHz Advanced E-UTRA interferer – 1.6 MHz UTRA victim
Simulations are based on the following assumptions:
Simulation results for 5 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss are presented in table 12.28 and figure 12.27 for Advanced E-
UTRA TPC set 1 and in table 12.29 and figure 12.28 for Advanced E-UTRA TPC set 2.
Table 12.28 average 1.6 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 1)
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100.0
90.0
80.0
70.0 average
CMCC (R4-102996)
Loss [%]
60.0
50.0 CATT (R4-102913)
40.0 Huawei(R4-103090)
30.0 ZTE(R4-103305)
20.0
10.0
0.0
-20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10
Offset value [dB]
Figure 12.27 average 1.6 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 1)
Table 12.29 average 1.6 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 2)
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50.0
40.0
average
30.0 CMCC (R4-102996)
Loss [%]
CATT (R4-102913)
Huawei(R4-103090)
20.0 ZTE(R4-103305)
10.0
0.0
-20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10
Offset value [dB]
Figure 12.28 average 1.6 MHz UTRA uplink capacity loss (TPC set 2)
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Annex A (informative):
Link Level Performance Model
A.1 Description
Annex A.2 provides detail on how the baseline throughput curves are derived. It shows that the throughput of a modem
with link adaptation can be approximated by an attenuated and truncated form of the Shannon bound. (The Shannon
bound represents the maximum theoretical throughput than can be achieved over an AWGN channel for a given SNR).
The following equations approximate the throughput over a channel with a given SNR, when using link adaptation:
The parameters α, SNRMIN and THRMAX can be chosen to represent different modem implementations and link
conditions. The parameters proposed in table 1 represent a baseline case, which assumes:
- Typical Urban fast fading channel model (10kmph DL, 3kmph UL)
- Link Adaptation (see table 1 for details of highest and lowest rate codes)
- Channel prediction
- HARQ
Table A.1 Parameters describing baseline Link Level performance for E-UTRA Co-existence
simulations
Parameter DL UL Notes
α, attenuation 0.6 0.4 Represents implementation losses
SNIR MIN , dB -10 -10 Based on QPSK, 1/8 rate (DL) & 1/5 rate (UL)
Thru MAX , bps/Hz 4.4 2.0 Based on 64QAM 4/5 (DL) & 16QAM 3/4 (UL)
Table A.1 shows parameters proposed for the baseline E-UTRA DL and UL. Table A.2 shows the resulting look up
table, which is plotted in Figure A.1. Table A.2 gives throughput in terms of spectral efficiency (bps per Hz), and per
375khz Resource Block (RB), in kbps.
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5
Shannon
Throughput, bps/Hz
4
DL
3 UL
2
0
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25
SNIR, dB
Table A.2 Look-Up-Table of UL and DL Throughput vs. SNIR for Baseline E-UTRA Coexistence
Studies
Throughput Throughput
kbps per kbps per
SNIR bps/Hz 375kHz RB SNIR bps/Hz 375kHz RB
dB DL UL DL UL dB DL UL DL UL
-15 0 0 0 0 6 1.39 0.93 521 347
-14 0 0 0 0 7 1.55 1.04 582 388
-13 0 0 0 0 8 1.72 1.15 646 430
-12 0 0 0 0 9 1.90 1.26 711 474
-11 0 0 0 0 10 2.08 1.38 778 519
-10 0.08 0.06 31 21 11 2.26 1.51 847 565
-9 0.10 0.07 38 26 12 2.44 1.63 917 611
-8 0.13 0.08 48 32 13 2.63 1.76 988 658
-7 0.16 0.10 59 39 14 2.82 1.88 1059 706
-6 0.19 0.13 73 48 15 3.02 2.00 1131 750
-5 0.24 0.16 89 59 16 3.21 2.00 1204 750
-4 0.29 0.19 109 73 17 3.41 2.00 1277 750
-3 0.35 0.23 132 88 18 3.60 2.00 1350 750
-2 0.42 0.28 159 106 19 3.80 2.00 1424 750
-1 0.51 0.34 190 127 20 3.99 2.00 1498 750
0 0.60 0.40 225 150 21 4.19 2.00 1572 750
1 0.71 0.47 265 176 22 4.39 2.00 1646 750
2 0.82 0.55 308 206 23 4.40 2.00 1650 750
3 0.95 0.63 356 237 24 4.40 2.00 1650 750
4 1.09 0.72 408 272 25 4.40 2.00 1650 750
5 1.23 0.82 463 309
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Figure A.3 Coding and Modulation for Transmission of data over a radio link
Figure A.3 shows a radio transmitter and receiver. The throughput over a radio link is the number of data bits that can
be successfully transmitted per modulation symbol. Coding (more specifically, Forward Error Correction) adds
redundant bits to the data bits which can correct errors in the received bits. The degree of coding is determined by its
rate, the proportion of data bits to coded bits. This typically varies from 1/8th to 4/5ths. Coded bits are then converted
into modulation symbols. The order of the modulation determines the number coded bits that can be transmitted per
modulation symbol. Typical examples are QPSK and 16 QAM, which have 2 and 4 bits per modulation symbol,
respectively.
The maximum throughput of a given MCS (Modulation and Coding Scheme) is the product of the rate and the number
of bits per modulation symbol. Throughput has units of data bits per modulation symbol. This is commonly normalised
to a channel of unity bandwidth, which carries one symbol per second. The units of throughput then become bits per
second, per Hz.
A given MCS requires a certain SNIR (measured at the rx antenna) to operate with an acceptably low BER (Bit Error
Rate) in the output data. An MCS with a higher throughput needs a higher SNIR to operate. AMC (Adaptive
Modulation and Coding) works by measuring and feeding back the channel SNIR to the transmitter, which then chooses
a suitable MCS from a ‘codeset’ to maximise throughput at that SNIR. A codeset contains many MCS’s and is designed
to cover a range of SNRs. An example of a codeset is shown in Figure A.4. Each MCS in the codeset has the highest
throughput for a 1-2dB range of SNIR.
7
MCS-1 [QPSK,R=1/8]
MCS-2 [QPSK,R=1/5]
6
MCS-3 [QPSK,R=1/4]
Throughput, bits per second per Hz
MCS-4 [QPSK,R=1/3]
5 MCS-5 [QPSK,R=1/2]
MCS-6 [QPSK,R=2/3]
MCS-7 [QPSK,R=4/5]
4
MCS-8 [16 QAM,R=1/2]
MCS-9 [16 QAM,R=2/3]
3 MCS-10 [16 QAM,R=4/5]
MCS-11 [64 QAM,R=2/3]
2 MCS-12 [64 QAM,R=3/4]
MCS-13 [64 QAM,R=4/5]
Shannon
1
0
-10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
SNR, dB
Figure A.4 Throughput of a set of Coding and Modulation Combinations, AWGN channels assumed
Figure A.4 also shows the Shannon bound, which represents the maximum theoretical throughput that can be achieved
over an AWGN channel with a given SNR. The example AMC system achieves around 0.75x the throughput of the
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Shannon bound, over the range of SNR which it operates. We can approximate the performance of AMC with an
attenuated and truncated form of the Shannon bound as shown in Figure A.5.
8
1:1 AWGN Shannon
7 1:1 AWGN MTS Codeset
AMC Approximation: 0.75xShannon
6
Throughput, bps/Hz
0
-10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25
Mean SNR, dB
Figure A.5 Approximating AMC With an Attenuated and Truncated form of the Shannon Bound
The following equations approximate the throughput over a channel with a given SNR, when using AMC:
Where:
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Release 100T 100 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
1.8 0.66
5.0 0.99
7.0 1.32
11.2 1.99
14.2 2.38
7
Spectral Efficiency (bps/Hz)
0
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
SINR (dB)
Figure A.6 Throughput per DL Channel vs. SINR for Downlink UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD (HSDPA)
The attenuated Shannon approximation to UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD spectral efficiency is based on the approach used for
E-UTRA. The maximum spectral efficiency is derived assuming a code rate of 0.9 and 16QAM modulation. The
Shannon approximation to UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD spectral efficiency is:
Table A.4 Parameters describing baseline UTRA 3.84 Mcps TDD performance Look-Up-table
Parameter DL Notes
α, attenuation 0.5 Represents implementation losses
SNIR MIN , dB -10 Based on QPSK, 1/12 rate (DL) without Rx Diversity
Thru MAX , bps/Hz 2.38 Based on 16QAM rate 0.9 (DL)
SNIR MAX , dB 14.20
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A.4 Link Level Performance for E-UTRA TDD (LCR TDD frame
structure based)
The throughput of a modem with link adaptation can be approximated by an attenuated and truncated form of the
Shannon bound. (The Shannon bound represents the maximum theoretical throughput than can be achieved over an
AWGN channel for a given SNR). The following equations approximate the throughput over a channel with a given
SNR, when using link adaptation:
Where:
The parameters α, SNRMIN and THRMAX can be chosen to represent different modem implementations and link
conditions. The parameters proposed in table 1 represent a baseline case, which assumes:
• Link Adaptation (see table A.X for details of highest and lowest rate codes)
• No HARQ
Table A.5 Parameters describing baseline Link Level performance for E-UTRA TDD Co-existence
simulations
Parameter UL DL Notes
α, attenuation 0.55 0.6 Represents implementation losses
SNIR MIN , dB -4.9 -4.5 Based on BPSK, 1/7 rate for UL and QPSK 1/8 for DL
SNIR MAX , dB 11.45 16.72 Based on16QAM, 4/5 rate
Thru MAX , bps/Hz 2.15 3.4 Based on 16QAM, 4/5 rate
Throughput vs. SNR curves are plotted in Figure A.7 for uplink and Figure A.8 for downlink. Table A.6 and table A.7
present throughput in terms of spectral efficiency (bps/Hz), and per 375kHz Resource Block (RB), in kbps.
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Figure A.7 Throughput vs SNR for Baseline E-UTRA Coexistence Studies for uplink
Figure A.8 Throughput vs SNR for Baseline E-UTRA Coexistence Studies for downlink
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Table A.6 Look-Up-Table of UL Throughput vs SNIR for Baseline E-UTRA-TDD Coexistence Studies
Throughput Throughput
SNIR(dB) bps/Hz kbps per SNIR(dB) bps/Hz kbps per
375kHz RB 375kHz RB
-6 0 0 5 1.13 424.33
-5 0 0 6 1.27 477.77
-4 0.27 99.72 7 1.42 533.74
-3 0.32 120.88 8 1.58 591.89
-2 0.39 145.55 9 1.74 651.92
-1 0.46 173.96 10 1.90 713.51
0 0.55 206.25 11 2.07 776.41
1 0.65 242.48 12 2.15 805.07
2 0.75 282.58 13 2.15 805.07
3 0.87 326.43 14 2.15 805.07
4 1.00 373.78 15 2.15 805.07
Table A.7 Look-Up-Table of DL Throughput vs SNIR for Baseline E-UTRA-TDD Coexistence Studies
Throughput Throughput
SNIR(dB) bps/Hz kbps per SNIR(dB) bps/Hz kbps per
375kHz RB 375kHz RB
-7 0 0 7 1.6 584.3
-6 0 0 8 1.7 647.9
-5 0 0 9 1.9 713.6
-4 0.3 109.3 10 2.1 781.0
-3 0.4 132.3 11 2.3 849.9
-2 0.4 159.3 12 2.5 919.9
-1 0.5 190.4 13 2.6 990.9
0 0.6 225.8 14 2.8 1062.7
1 0.7 265.4 15 3.0 1135.1
2 0.8 309.3 16 3.2 1208.1
3 1.0 357.3 17 3.4 1260.9
4 1.1 409.2 18 3.4 1260.9
6 1.2 464.5 19 3.4 1260.9
7 1.4 523.0 20 3.4 1260.9
Annex B (informative):
Smart Antenna Model for UTRA 1.28 Mcps TDD
B.1 Description
Considering beam forming function of smart antenna, the following five basic beam forming pattern is provided with
their main beam pointing to 0°,30°,45°,60° and 70° respectively. The beam patterns pointing to -30°,-45°,-60° and -70°
can be derived through the image of the above beam patterns. Thus, we can get nine angles beamforming radioation
pattern. The gain of blow -90 and above 90 is assumed as -∞ by using the ideal isolation. In the simulation each UE will
select the most adjacent (in angle) beam pattern for signal strength and interference calculation accroding the the angle
calculated from the UE position and BS sector antenna direction. For example if a UE ‘s angle to the direction of the
sector is 250, the 300 beam pattern will be selected. Then the selected beam pattern will be shifted -50, by which the
main beam will pointing the UE. The signal strengh and interference from different direction will be calculated based
on the shifted pattern. The shifted angle out of [-90°,90°] will be transfered inside [-90°,90°] by horizontal imaging.
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Annex C (informative):
Simulation assumptions for LTE-A coexistence
UE noise figure 9 dB
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Release 100T 108 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
0.2 (DL)
-2.5 dB (UL)
Target SIR
-2.5 dB (DL)
Parameter Assumption (LTE)
system bandwidth 10 MHz
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Release 100T 109 3GPP TR 36.942 V10.3.0 (2012-06)
Annex D (informative):
Change history
Change history
Date TSG # TSG Doc. CR Rev Subject/Comment Old New
2005-11 R4 #37 R4-051134 TR created
2006-02 R4 #38 R4-060353 Approved Documents included:R4-060301, R4-060347, R4- 0.1.0
060348, R4-060349, R4-060350, R4-060351, R4-060352
2006-05 R4 #39 R4-060373 Approved Documents included:R4-060372, R4-060390 0.1.0 0.2.0
2006-05 R4 #39 R4-060641 Approved Documents included:R4-060639, R4-06040, R4-060673, 0.2.0 0.3.0
R4-060674, R4-060680, R4-060699
2006-09 R4 #40 R4-061216 Approved Documents included:R4-061054, R4-061066, R4- 0.3.0 0.4.0
060973, R4-061067
2006-11 R4 #41 R4-061359 Approved Documents included: R4-061312, R4-061319, R4- 0.4.0 0.5.0
061344, R4-061366, R4-061374,
2007-02 R4#42 R4-070280 TR number 36.942 assigned 0.5.0 0.6.0
2007-02 R4#42 R4-070289 Approved Documents included: R4-070288, R4-070295, R4- 0.6.0 1.0.0
070319
2007-04 R4#42bis R4-070445 Editorial cleanup 1.0.0 1.0.1
2007-04 R4#42bis R4-070457 Approved Documents included: R4-070459 1.0.1 1.1.0
2007-06 R4#44 R4-071172 Approved Documents included: R4-070931, R4-071146 1.1.0 1.2.0
2007-08 R4#44bis R4- Approved Documents included: R4-071173, R4-071212 1.2.0 1.3.0
0711535
2007-10 R4#44bis R4-071753 Approved Document included: R4-071535 1.3.0 1.4.0
2008-02 R4 #46 R4-080435 Approved Document included: R4-080309 1.4.0 1.5.0
2008-08 R4#48 R4-081728 Approved Document included: R4-081638 1.5.0 1.6.0
2008-08 R4#48 R4-082117 Approved Document included: R4-082085 1.6.0 1.7.0
Editorial clen-up.
2008-09 RP-41 RP-080592 Presentation for Approval 1.7.0 2.0.0
2008-09 RP-41 RP-080592 TR 36.942 V2.0.0 2.0.0 8.0.0
2008-12 RP-42 RP-080906 1 Rationales of unwanted emissions in TR 36.942 8.0.0 8.1.0
2008-12 RP-42 RP-080907 2 1 Correction of unwanted emission requirements for multi-carrier BS 8.0.0 8.1.0
2009-05 RP-44 RP-090544 3 Clarification of requirements for multicarrier BS 8.1.0 8.2.0
2009-12 SP-46 Automatic upgrade from previous Release 8.2.0 9.0.0
2010-09 RP-49 RP-100914 007 1 CR TR 36.942-10.0.0 Clause 5.1.1.4.1 Uplink Asymmetrical 10.0.0 10.1.0
Bandwidths ACIR
2010-12 RP-50 RP-101344 010 CR TR 36.942 v10.1.0 annex A.4 Link Level Performance for E- 10.1.0 10.2.0
UTRA TDD
2010-12 RP-50 RP-101359 009 Additional of LTE-Advanced co-existence simulation results 10.1.0 10.2.0
(scenario #4)
2012-06 RP-56 RP-120778 011 1 Clarification of unwanted emissions requirements for TS 36.942 10.2.0 10.3.0
Rel-10
2012-06 RP-56 RP-120766 014 1 Clarification of uplink power control in TR36.942 10.2.0 10.3.0
3GPP