Synergy 2000 - LTE Product Specification Rev2.2

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

AirSynergy 2000
LTE Product Specification

Revision: 2.2

CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY DATA


This document is the property of Airspan Networks Inc. Any duplication, reproduction, or transmission of this
document or any of its contents to unauthorized parties without the prior written permission of Airspan
Networks Inc. is prohibited

Product Management Revision: 2.2 Page 1 of 28


AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
Written by: AMM

Role: Senior PLM

Status: Approved

TABLE 1: APPROVALS

Name Role Approval Date


Product Management MOB VP Products & Marketing 18/03/2013
EYV VP Access Technology 18/03/2013
R&D
BOP PHY System 18/03/2013
Quality IAF VP QA 11/03/2013

TABLE 2: REVISION HISTORY

Rev Issue Date Descriptions By


1.0 10/01/2013 Initial Version AMM
1.1 11/02/2013 Updating with comments after initial review AMM
1.2 13/02/2013 Updating antenna support section AMM
1.3 14/02/2013 Minor formatting updates AMM
Updating pictures, front-mount antenna specifications
1.4 18/03/2013 MOB/AMM
and RF-related information
1.5 09/05/2013 Added SBA support MOB
1.6 19/05/2013 Updated Top & Bottom Panel figures AMM
1.7 24/07/2013 Updated power consumption and SBA details AMM
1.8 07/08/2013 Updated Rx Sensitivity AMM
1.9 22/10/2013 Updated improved Noise Figure AMM
Backhaul interface definition (4.3) and Tx Dynamic
2.0 22/12/2013 AMM
Range update
2.1 09/02/2014 Updated supported frequencies and antennas sections AMM
Added dimensions and models for all variants in
2.2 19/02/2014 AMM
section ‎12.1

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 5
2. ACRONYM, ABBREVIATIONS & DEFINITIONS............................................................................... 5
3. PRODUCT OVERVIEW .................................................................................................................. 8
4. PHYSICAL INTERFACES ................................................................................................................ 9
4.1. RF ANTENNA PORTS ............................................................................................................................... 9
4.2. GPS ANTENNA PORT............................................................................................................................... 9
4.3. COPPER ETHERNET PORT ....................................................................................................................... 9
4.4. POWER CONNECTION .............................................................................................................................. 9
4.5. LED DISPLAY ........................................................................................................................................... 9
5. PHYSICAL, MAC AND NETWORKING CAPABILITIES ................................................................ 10
5.1. FREQUENCY OF OPERATION & DUPLEX METHODS ............................................................................ 10
5.2. MULTIPLE ACCESS SCHEME .................................................................................................................. 11
5.3. CHANNEL BANDWIDTHS ........................................................................................................................ 12
5.4. CHANNEL FREQUENCY RESOLUTION ................................................................................................... 12
6. ANTENNA SYSTEM .................................................................................................................... 13
6.1. SWITCHED BEAM ANTENNA ................................................................................................................. 13
6.2. FRONT MOUNT SECTOR ANTENNA ...................................................................................................... 14
7. RADIO PERFORMANCE.............................................................................................................. 15
7.1. FREQUENCY STABILITY ......................................................................................................................... 15
7.2. MODULATION & FEC ............................................................................................................................ 15
7.3. FRAME DURATIONS & CYCLIC PREFIXES ............................................................................................. 15
7.4. POWER .................................................................................................................................................... 15
7.5. TRANSMITTER DYNAMIC RANGE.......................................................................................................... 16
7.6. TRANSMITTER SPURIOUS EMISSIONS .................................................................................................. 16
7.7. TRANSMITTER ERROR VECTOR MAGNITUDE...................................................................................... 16
7.8. RX NOISE FIGURE................................................................................................................................... 16
7.9. RECEIVER SENSITIVITY LEVEL.............................................................................................................. 16
7.10. IN CHANNEL SELECTIVITY .................................................................................................................... 17
7.11. ADJACENT CHANNEL SELECTIVITY....................................................................................................... 17
7.12. RECEIVE DYNAMIC RANGE .................................................................................................................... 17
7.13. MAXIMUM INPUT SIGNAL ...................................................................................................................... 17
7.14. MAXIMUM INPUT SIGNAL WITHOUT DAMAGE .................................................................................... 17
7.15. RECEIVER SPURIOUS EMISSION ............................................................................................................ 17
8. IP DATA AND MAC FUNCTIONALITY....................................................................................... 18
8.1. GENERAL ................................................................................................................................................. 18

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
8.2. RRM........................................................................................................................................................ 18
8.3. MOBILITY ................................................................................................................................................ 18
8.4. SECURITY ................................................................................................................................................ 18
9. TIME AND FREQUENCY SYNCHRONIZATION ............................................................................. 19
9.1. SYNCHRONIZATION COMPLIANCE......................................................................................................... 19
9.2. FREQUENCY ACCURACY ......................................................................................................................... 19
9.3. PHASE ACCURACY .................................................................................................................................. 19
9.4. SUPPORTED CLOCK SOURCES................................................................................................................ 19
10. NETWORK INTERFACES ............................................................................................................ 21
10.1. MANAGEMENT ........................................................................................................................................ 21
10.2. S1 INTERFACE ........................................................................................................................................ 21
10.3. X2 INTERFACE ........................................................................................................................................ 21
10.4. TRAFFIC SEPARATION ........................................................................................................................... 21
10.5. STAND ALONE OPERATION ................................................................................................................... 22
11. SELF-ORGANIZING NETWORK .................................................................................................. 23
12. PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND POWER .............................................................................. 24
12.1. DIMENSIONS ........................................................................................................................................... 24
12.2. WEIGHT .................................................................................................................................................. 24
12.3. MOUNTING .............................................................................................................................................. 25
12.4. POWER SUPPLY ...................................................................................................................................... 26
12.5. POWER CONSUMPTION .......................................................................................................................... 26
13. STANDARDS COMPLIANCE ........................................................................................................ 27
13.1. CE MARKING .......................................................................................................................................... 27
13.2. ENVIRONMENTAL ................................................................................................................................... 27
13.3. EMC ........................................................................................................................................................ 27
13.4. LIGHTENING PROTECTION .................................................................................................................... 27
13.5. ELECTROSTATIC DISCHARGE ................................................................................................................. 27
13.6. SAFETY .................................................................................................................................................... 28
13.7. ROHS & WEEE COMPLIANCE............................................................................................................. 28
13.8. RELIABILITY AND MAINTENANCE ........................................................................................................ 28

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

1. INTRODUCTION
This Hardware Product Specification describes Airspan’s AirSynergy Pico eNodeB variant, its
Hardware capabilities, dimensions and Standard Compliance.

This document is intended for readers with LTE working knowledge.

All information in this document is for general information only, and is subject for change without
notice. For the latest roadmap and features, please contact your nearest Airspan sales
representative.

2. ACRONYM, ABBREVIATIONS & DEFINITIONS


TABLE 3: ACRONYM, ABBREVIATIONS & DEFINITIONS

Short Long
3GPP 3rd Generation Partnership Project, responsible for LTE
ABS Almost Blank Subframes
Adjacent Channel Selectivity is a measurement of a receiver's ability to process a
desired signal while rejecting a strong signal in an adjacent frequency channel.
ACS ACS is defined as the ratio of the receiver filter attenuation on the assigned
channel frequency to the receiver filter attenuation on the adjacent channel
frequency
AWGN Additive White Gaussian Noise is a channel model in which the only impairment
to communication is a linear addition of white noise with a constant spectral
density and a Gaussian distribution of amplitude.
BER Bit Error Rate
CN Core Network
CP Cyclic Prefix
Convolution Turbo Code is a high-performance forward error correction (FEC)
CTC
code
Decibel. A logarithmic unit used to describe a ratio (such as power ratio in radio
dB
telecommunications)
An abbreviation for the power ratio in decibels (dB) of the measured power
referenced to one milliwatt (mW). It is used as a convenient measure of absolute
dBm
power because of its capability to express both very large and very small values
in a short form
eNodeB Evolved Node B, is the element in E-UTRAN of LTE
Encapsulating Security Payloads (ESP) provide confidentiality, data-origin
ESP
authentication, connectionless integrity, an anti-replay service (a form of partial

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

Short Long
sequence integrity), and limited traffic-flow confidentiality
Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network, is the air interface of 3GPP's
E-UTRAN
Long Term Evolution
The Error Vector Magnitude or EVM (sometimes also called Receive Constellation
Error or RCE) is a measure used to quantify the performance of a digital radio
EVM/RCE
transmitter or receiver. It is measured in dB or percentage (%) – the lower the
better
Frequency-Division Duplexing. A transceiver mode where the transmitter and
FDD
receiver operate at different carrier frequencies
GNSS Global Navigation Satellite System is a term used to describe a satellite navigation
system with global coverage. There are currently two fully operational GNSSs –
the US GPS and the Russian GLONASS.
GPRS Tunneling Protocol for User data is a relatively simple IP based tunneling
GTP-U
protocol which permits many tunnels between each set of end points
HPBW Half Power BandWidth is the angular separation in an antenna, in which the
magnitude of the radiation pattern decreases by 50% (or -3 dB) from the peak of
the main beam
ICS In-channel selectivity is a measure of the receiver’s ability to receive a wanted
signal at its assigned Resource Block locations in the presence of an interfering
signal
Internet Protocol Security is a protocol suite for securing Internet Protocol (IP)
IPSec communications by authenticating and encrypting each IP packet of a
communication session
LED Light Emitting Diode
LTE Long Term Evolution
Medium Access Controller – responsible for several functions such Error
MAC
Correction, Packet (De)Multiplexing, etc…
Multicast-Broadcast Single Frequency Network is an LTE feature designed to
MBSFN deliver services such as Mobile TV using the LTE infrastructure, and is expected
to be a competitor to DVB-H-based TV broadcast
MCS Modulation and Coding Scheme
Mobility Management Entity is the key control-node for the LTE access-network.
MME It is responsible, among other things for idle mode UE tracking and paging
procedure including retransmissions
MTBF Mean Time Between Failures
Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) is a multi-user version
OFDMA
of OFDM digital modulation scheme, used for eNodeB transmissions to UEs

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

Short Long
Packet Data Convergence Protocol. A Sub-Layer in LTE responsible for IP Header
PDCP
(De)Compression, etc…
PDU Protocol Data Unit
Precision Time Protocol is used to synchronize clocks throughout a network. In
PTP
this document, PTP is referring to IEEE1588-2008 protocol
RB Resource Block
Radio Link Control. A Sub-Layer in LTE responsible for Ack/Nack, error
RLC
correction, packet reordering, etc…
ROHS Restriction Of Hazardous Substances
Radio Resource Control. A Sub-Layer in LTE responsible for Broadcast of system
RRC
information, paging, security functions, radio bearer control, etc…
Radio Resource Management is used to cover all functions that are related to the
RRM
assignment and sharing of radio resources among UEs
Serving Gateway. A Core entity in the LTE EPC architecture responsible for
routing and forwarding user data packets, while also acting as the mobility
S-GW
anchor for the user plane during inter-eNodeB handovers and as the anchor for
mobility between LTE and other 3GPP technologies
SBA Switched Beam Antenna
Single-Carrier FDMA is a frequency-division multiple access scheme, dealing with
SC-FDMA the assignment of multiple users to a shared communication resource. Used in
LTE for UE transmissions to the eNodeB
Stream Control Transmission Protocol is a reliable transport layer protocol,
SCTP
ensuring in-sequence transport of messages with congestion control like TCP
SDR Software Defined Radio
SyncE Synchronous Ethernet. A method for maintaining synchronous communication
over Ethernet using the physical layer (L1), as defined by ITU-T G.8262
Time-Division Duplexing. A transceiver mode where the transmitter and receiver
TDD
operate on the same carrier frequency
UE User Equipment. The end user in LTE
WEEE Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

3. PRODUCT OVERVIEW
AirSynergy is part of Airspan’s carrier-class 4G Pico eNodeB family. AirSynergy supports 3GPP’s
Long Term Evolution (LTE) eNodeB, providing high-speed data and mobility, in order to meet the
demands of the Broadband Wireless Access market.
AirSynergy is a compact, easy to install pico-cell, allowing an operator to deploy LTE broadband
services using existing Street Furniture (e.g. street lamps, power poles, etc…)
AirSynergy employs Software Defined Radio (SDR) technology, together with two transmit and
receive paths, antennas and a GPS receiver - all in a highly integrated, physically small and light, All-
Outdoor package, targeted to blend seamlessly into the urban environment. This very compact
outdoor product minimizes physical footprint, power consumption and operator OPEX.
AirSynergy supports a wide array of frequencies and channel sizes, able to operate in both licensed
and unlicensed bands, as described in section ‎4.5, with more frequencies and channel sizes added
regularly.

AirSynergy implements dual 30dBm (2 x 1W) transmitters, with several optional integral antennas
and external antennas connectivity.

AirSynergy fully supports the standard LTE (Uu/S1/X2) interfaces, and can also operate in
“Standalone” mode, without the need for an LTE Core network - providing an ideal cost effective
solution for fixed applications.

All Airspan eNodeB products, including AirSynergy, are interoperable with a rich portfolio of 3rd
party end user devices, including many handsets, indoor UEs, outdoor UEs and USB dongles from
several ODMs, using various chipsets. For an updated of interoperability list, please contact your
nearest Airspan Sales Representative.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

4. PHYSICAL INTERFACES
This section defines all external Network and Maintenance equipment interfaces as well as System
LEDs. All interfaces are Weatherproof, supporting IP66 Ingress Protection Rating.

4.1. RF ANTENNA PORTS


Two/Four RF Ports, depending whether Internal/External Duplexers are used (see Table 4), are
located on the top side of the enclosure for connecting antennas, as shown in Figure 2 & Figure 3.

Connector Type N-Type Female


Characteristic Impedance 50 Ω
In-band Input Return Loss ≥ -15dB
Quantity 2

4.2. GPS ANTENNA PORT FIGURE 1 - AIRSYNERGY CONNECTORS

Connector Type TNC Female


Characteristic Impedance 50 Ω
Quantity 1

4.3. COPPER ETHERNET PORT


Connector Type RJ45
Standard 100/1000Base-T
Cable Type STP Category 5E FIGURE 2 - AIRSYNERGY RF PORTS (INT. DUPLEXERS)
Interface Speed 100/1000 Mbps
Communication Mode Full/Half Duplex with Auto Negotiation
Quantity 1

4.4. POWER CONNECTION


Connector Type Proprietary
Power Rating -48V DC
Cable Length Various

FIGURE 3 - AIRSYNERGY RF PORTS (EXT. DUPLEXERS)


4.5. LED DISPLAY
A single tri-color LED (Green/Red/Orange) appears at the bottom of the unit, providing unit status
indication.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

5. PHYSICAL, MAC AND NETWORKING CAPABILITIES


AirSynergy is compliant with 3GPP’s‎LTE‎release‎9, and is SW upgradable to the latest LTE release.

5.1. FREQUENCY OF OPERATION & DUPLEX METHODS


AirSynergy supports the following frequency bands and Downlink/Uplink ratios:
TABLE 4: SUPPORTED FREQUENCY BANDS

Downlink Freq. Uplink Freq. External


Band Variant Duplex
(MHz) (MHz) Duplexers
SYN35-CN1-00-U25-000
2, 25 1930-1995 1850-1915 FDD No
SYN35-FM2-00-U25-000
SYN35-CN-00-U03-000
3, 9 1805-1880 1710-1785 FDD No
SYN35-FM-00-U03-000
4, 10 SYN35-CN-00-U10-000 2110-2170 1710-1770 FDD No
5 SYN35-CN-00-U05-000 869-894 824-849 FDD Yes
SYN35-CN-00-U07-000
7 SYN35-FM-00-U07-000 2620-2690 2500-2570 FDD No
SYN35-SW-00-U07-000
12, 17 SYN35-CN-00-U12-000 729-746 699-716 FDD Yes
14 SYN35-CN-00-U14-000 758-768 788-798 FDD Yes
20 SYN35-CN-00-U20-000 791-821 832-862 FDD Yes
SYN35-CN-00-U38-000
38 SYN35-FM-00-U38-000 2570-2620 2570-2620 TDD No
SYN35-SW3-00-U38-000
SYN35-CN-00-U40-000
40 SYN35-FM-00-U40-000 2300-2400 2300-2400 TDD No
SYN35-SW-00-U40-000
SYN35-CN-00-U41-000
38, 41 SYN35-FM-00-U41-000 2496-2690 2496-2690 TDD No
SYN35-SW-00-U41-000
SYN35-CN-00-U42-000
42 SYN35-FM-00-U42-000 3400-3600 3400-3600 TDD No
SYN35-SW-00-U42-000

1
CN – Connectorized HW Variant
2
FM – Front Mount Antenna HW Variant
3
SW – Switched Beam Antenna HW Variant

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

Downlink Freq. Uplink Freq. External


Band Variant Duplex
(MHz) (MHz) Duplexers
SYN35-CN-00-U43-000
43 SYN35-FM-00-U43-000 3600-3800 3600-3800 TDD No
SYN35-SW-00-U43-000

AirSynergy supports Downlink/Uplink ratios of 40/60…90/10 for LTE (meeting LTE specification
limits). These ratios can be set per sector via Netspan (Airspan’s Management System).

5.2. MULTIPLE ACCESS SCHEME


Downlink: OFDMA
Uplink: SC-FDMA

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

5.3. CHANNEL BANDWIDTHS


AirSynergy supports the following channel bandwidth: 1.4MHz, 3MHz, 5MHz, 10MHz, 15MHz and
20MHz.

5.4. CHANNEL FREQUENCY RESOLUTION


The center frequency is tunable with a 100 KHz resolution.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

6. ANTENNA SYSTEM
The following antennas are designed specifically for deployments with AirSynergy and
specifications are included in this section. Externally mounted antennas are available for use as
well, but are specified separately.
For a list of compatible external antennas, please contact your nearest Airspan sales representative.

6.1. SWITCHED BEAM ANTENNA


Switched beam antenna product variants include a top mounted steerable antenna with the
following specification. The antenna is a multi-element cross polarized (dual slant) design which
can be used in directional or omni modes of operation.
The switched beam antenna connects to the top of the unit (as shown in Figure 1), and includes a
GPS antenna, removing the need to connect another GPS antenna for normal operation.

TABLE 5: SWITCHED BEAM ANTENNA PARAMETERS - DIRECTIONAL MODE

Parameter 2.3 GHz 2.6 GHz 3.x GHZ


Frequency 2.3 – 2.5 GHz 2.5 – 2.7 GHz 3.4 – 3.7 GHz
Polarization Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45
Polarization
14-15 dB 14-15 dB 14-15 dB
discrimination
Boresight gain 8 dBi 8 dBi 9 dBi
Azimuth HPBW 90±10 90±10 90±10
Elevation HPBW 20 20 20
EN302-326-3 Class EN302-326-3 Class EN302-326-3 Class
Co & X-Pol RPE
DN1 DN1 DN1
Grounding DC Grounded DC Grounded DC Grounded

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
TABLE 6: SWITCHED BEAM ANTENNA PARAMETERS - OMNI MODE

Parameter 2.3 GHz 2.6 GHz 3.x GHZ


Frequency 2.3 – 2.5 GHz 2.496 – 2.7 GHz 3.3 – 3.8 GHz
Polarization Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45
Polarization
10-16 dB 10-16 dB 10-16 dB
discrimination
Average gain 2 dBi 2 dBi 3.5 dBi
Maximum gain ripple 4.5 dB 4.5 dB 4.5 dB
Elevation HPBW 20 20 20
Co & X-Pol RPE EN 302-326-3 EN 302-326-3 EN 302-326-3
Grounding DC Grounded DC Grounded DC Grounded

6.2. FRONT MOUNT SECTOR ANTENNA


The front mounted sector antenna is a cross polarized fixed antenna which mounts on the front of
the unit in place of the sun-shield.
When using a front mounted antenna, external antennas cannot be used.

TABLE 7: FRONT MOUNTED SECTOR ANTENNA PARAMETERS

Parameter 1.8 GHz 2.x GHz 3.x GHz


Frequency 1.71-1.88 GHz 2.3 – 2.7 GHz 3.3 – 3.8 GHz
Polarization Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45 Dual Slant ±45
Polarization
>15 dB >18 dB >15 dB
discrimination
Boresight gain 11 dBi 12 dBi 11.5 dBi
Azimuth HPBW 65 63 65
Elevation HPBW 22 21 22
Grounding DC Grounded DC Grounded DC Grounded

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

7. RADIO PERFORMANCE

7.1. FREQUENCY STABILITY


The AirSynergy reference frequency accuracy is better than ±0.05ppm.

7.2. MODULATION & FEC


AirSynergy supports QPSK, 16QAM and 64QAM modulations on both Downlink and Uplink with all
Modulation and Coding Schemes defined in 3GPP TS 36.211.

7.3. FRAME DURATIONS & CYCLIC PREFIXES


7.3.1. FRAME DURATION
AirSynergy supports 10ms frames, as well as 1ms subframes, as defined by 3GPP.

7.3.2. CYCLIC PREFIX


The following Cyclic Prefixes (CP) are used:

TABLE 8: AIRSYNERGY CYCLIC PREFIXES FOR LTE

Subcarrier Spacing (KHz) Normal CP (us) Extended CP (us)


~5.2 for first DFT block
15 N/A
~4.7 for remaining DFT blocks
7.5 N/A ~33.34

Extended CP is typically used for MBSFN, in order to compensate for timing differences between
transmissions received from different cells.
CP may be changed on a per subframe basis.

7.4. POWER
Maximum Configurable Tx Power (per RF port): 30dBm (1W)
Transmit Power Accuracy: ±1dB in normal conditions
Transmit Power Adjustment Range 50dB
Control Step 1dB

4
DL only

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

7.5. TRANSMITTER DYNAMIC RANGE


The transmitter supports a monotonic power control of 50dB with step size of 1dB.

7.6. TRANSMITTER SPURIOUS EMISSIONS


AirSynergy complies with the “Category B” transmitter spurious emissions, as they are defined in
TS 36.104.

7.7. TRANSMITTER ERROR VECTOR MAGNITUDE


The Error Vector Magnitude or EVM (sometimes also called Receive Constellation Error or RCE) is a
measure used to quantify the performance of a digital radio transmitter or receiver. It is measured
in dB or percentage (%) – the lower the better.

The AirSynergy transmitter EVM/RCE is no more than -32dB for all power levels.

7.8. RX NOISE FIGURE


AirSynergy’s receiver noise figure is 5dB.

7.9. RECEIVER SENSITIVITY LEVEL


The receiver sensitivity power level is the minimum mean power received at the antenna connector
at which a throughput requirement is being met for a specified reference measurement channel.
The values in the table below are defined for QPSK ⅓ with allocation BW as indicated by TS 36.104:

TABLE 9: LTE RECEIVER SENSITIVITY LEVELS

Channel Bandwidth () Allocation Size (RB) Reference Sensitivity Level (dBm)


1.4 6 -106.8
3 15 -103.0
5 25 -101.5
10 25 -101.5
15 25 -101.5
20 25 -101.5

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

7.10. IN CHANNEL SELECTIVITY


In-channel selectivity (ICS) is a measure of the receiver ability to receive a wanted QPSK½ signal at
its assigned resource block locations in the presence of an interfering signal received at a larger
power spectral density.
AirSynergy complies with ICS as defined by TS 36.104.

7.11. ADJACENT CHANNEL SELECTIVITY


Adjacent Channel Selectivity (ACS) is defined as the measure of the receiver’s ability to receive a
wanted signal at its assigned channel frequency in the presence of an adjacent channel signal with a
specified center frequency offset of the interfering signal to the band edge of a victim system.

AirSynergy provides ACS of 45dB.

7.12. RECEIVE DYNAMIC RANGE


AirSynergy’s receiver has a dynamic range of 40dB.

7.13. MAXIMUM INPUT SIGNAL


The AirSynergy receiver can receive a maximum on-channel signal of –55dBm.

7.14. MAXIMUM INPUT SIGNAL WITHOUT DAMAGE


The AirSynergy receiver can tolerate a maximum signal of -10dBm without damage.

7.15. RECEIVER SPURIOUS EMISSION


The spurious emissions are the power of emissions generated or amplified in a receiver that appear
at the receiver antenna connector. AirSynergy complies with the receiver spurious emission as
defined by TS 36.104 as well as ETSI EN 301 893.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

8. IP DATA AND MAC FUNCTIONALITY

8.1. GENERAL
AirSynergy can support both IPv4 and IPv6 and complies with 3GPP TS 36.321-323 and TS 36.331
Release 9 for the MAC, RLC, PDCP and RRC sub-layers.

8.2. RRM
The purpose of radio resource management (RRM) is to ensure the efficient use the available radio
resources. AirSynergy supports unique and sophisticated RRM algorithms to ensure an efficient use
of the radio resources. The RRM includes, among other things, a control of the radio bearers,
admission control and connection mobility control, dynamic resource allocation and Inter Cell
Interference Coordination (ICIC).

8.3. MOBILITY
AirSynergy can support Intra and Inter frequency handovers.

8.4. SECURITY
AirSynergy complies with eNodeB security requirements as specified by 3GPP TS 33.401,
supporting:
For RRC signaling and user plane traffic
 EEA0 (Null ciphering)
 128-EEA1 (SNOW 3G)
 128-EEA2 (AES)
For RRC signaling integrity protection
 EIA0 (Null integrity)
 128-EIA1 (SNOW 3G)
 128-EIA2 (AES)

In order to protect the S1 and X2 control plane, AirSynergy supports IPSec ESP according to RFC
4303 as specified by TS 33.210. For both S1-MME and X2-C, IKEv2 certificates based authentication
according to TS 33.310 are implemented. For S1-MME and X2-C, tunnel mode IPSec is supported.
In order to protect the S1 and X2 user plane, AirSynergy supports tunnel mode IPSec ESP according
to RFC 4303 as profiled by TS 33.210, with confidentiality, integrity and replay protection.
AirSynergy includes an embedded X509 certificate bounded to its MAC Address. This shall be used
for authentication purposes

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

9. TIME AND FREQUENCY SYNCHRONIZATION

9.1. SYNCHRONIZATION COMPLIANCE


AirSynergy meets the synchronization requirements as they are defined in TS 36.104 and TS
36.133.
Inter eNodeB synchronization is supported to enable both 1PPS frame synchronization for TDD
interference avoidance and frequency synchronization for ICI avoidance.

9.2. FREQUENCY ACCURACY


For Frequency stability, the same source is used for RF frequency and data clock generation. The
modulated carrier frequency of the eNodeB has an accuracy of ±0.05ppm observed over a period of
one subframe (1ms).

9.3. PHASE ACCURACY


Phase accuracy, (required for TD-LTE interference coordination and for both TD-LTE and FDD-LTE
when considering MBSFN or ABS) is 1usec or better with holdover of up to 8 hours. During
holdover period, phase shift does not exceed 1usec. Participation of the eNodeB in MBSFN during
holdover time is prohibited.

9.4. SUPPORTED CLOCK SOURCES


AirSynergy supports three different external clock sources for providing the required Frequency
and Phase accuracy – GPS, PTP and SyncE. The user can configure the priority of each clock source
(if several are used simultaneously), to determine the redundancy scheme between them. By
default, GPS gets highest priority (when available).
If all valid clock sources fail, the eNodeB enters Holdover state until such time, when at least one
clock source becomes valid again. The eNodeB enters Holdover state in case both GPS and PTP are
not available, regardless of the SyncE status.
Note: The eNodeB should not be left running in Holdover state for long periods, for fear of its
internal clock drifting from the required accuracy.

9.4.1. GPS
AirSynergy comes equipped with a GPS receiver, connected to an external GPS antenna (GPS
antenna sold separately). See section ‎4.2 for more details about the GPS connector.
AirSynergy can also connect to GLONASS/Galileo satellites (for Russian or EU deployments) via the
same GPS connector, using a GLONASS/Galileo antenna.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
9.4.2. PTP
AirSynergy implements IEEE1588-2008 Slave/Ordinary clock, able to recover the Frequency and
Phase information from the PTP packets, transmitted from an IEEE1588-2008 Grand Master clock
located in the customer’s network.

9.4.3. SYNCE
AirSynergy supports Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) – both Master and Slave clock functionalities,
as it is defined in ITU-T G.8261, G.8262 and G.8264, including Ethernet Synchronization Message
Channel (ESMC).
SyncE can be used by the AirSynergy in several scenarios:
 In Tandem to PTP – In this mode GPS is unavailable as a clock source, and synchronization
is achieved by using SyncE to maintain accurate frequency lock, while IEEE1588-2008 is
used for phase synchronization. This mode allows for better phase accuracy (compared to
PTP-Only) even during normal operation.
 GPS Redundancy Clock Source – When GPS clock fails, SyncE is used to maintain frequency
lock and minimize phase drift. In this mode, the eNodeB enters holdover upon GPS failure,
but can maintain phase accuracy with no performance degradation for up to 8 hours.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

10. NETWORK INTERFACES

10.1. MANAGEMENT
AirSynergy is managed via Airspan’s EMS (Netspan) using SNMPv3 and supports management
using a default IP address.

10.2. S1 INTERFACE
The LTE S1 user plane interface (S1-U) is defined between the eNodeB and the S-GW in 3GPP TS
36.414. The S1-U interface provides non-guaranteed delivery of user plane PDUs between the
eNodeB and the S-GW. The transport network layer is built on IP transport and GTP-U is used on
top of UDP/IP to carry the user plane PDUs between the eNodeB and the S-GW. AirSynergy
complies with the requirements set by TS. 36.414
The S1 control plane interface (S1-MME) is defined between the eNodeB and the MME. The
transport network layer is built on IP transport, similarly to the user plane but for the reliable
transport of signaling messages, SCTP is added on top of IP. The application layer signaling protocol
is referred to as S1-AP (S1 Application Protocol). AirSynergy complies with the requirement set by
TS 36.413, including:
 S1 paging function
 S1 UE context management function
 Intra LTE handover
 E-RAB service management function
 NAS signaling transport function
 Location reporting function
 Warning message transmission function

10.3. X2 INTERFACE
The X2 user plane interface (X2-U) is defined between eNodeBs in 3GPP TS 36.414. The X2-U
interface provides non-guaranteed delivery of user plane PDUs. The transport network layer is
built on IP transport and GTP-U is used on top of UDP/IP to carry the user plane PDUs. The X2-U
interface protocol stack is identical to the S1-U protocol stack. AirSynergy complies with the
requirements set by TS. 36.414.
The X2 control plane interface (X2-CP) is defined between two neighbor eNodeBs. The transport
network layer is built on SCTP on top of IP. The application layer signaling protocol is referred to as
X2-AP (X2 Application Protocol).

10.4. TRAFFIC SEPARATION


Traffic separation between Core Network (CN) operators can be achieved using VLANs. This
solution supports the following configuration in the eNodeB:

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
 One VLAN for S1 (S1-MME & S1-U) interface per CN operator and one VLAN for X2 interface
per one or several neighbor couple(s).
 One VLAN per CN operator for PTP traffic

In all cases a dedicated VLAN for OAM traffic can be defined.

10.5. STAND ALONE OPERATION


Support for LTE standalone mode is on the Airspan’s roadmap for its entire eNodeB portfolio. In
LTE, this means each eNodeB includes a scaled-down LTE Core (EPC), without the need to deploy
expensive core elements – significantly cutting down the operators’ costs.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

11. SELF-ORGANIZING NETWORK


This Self Organizing Network (SON) concept includes several different functions from eNodeB
activation to radio parameter tuning.

Self-configuration process is defined as the process where newly deployed nodes are configured
by automatic installation procedures to get the necessary basic configuration for system operation.
This process works in pre-operational state. Pre-operational state is understood as the state from
when the eNodeB is powered up and has backbone connectivity until the RF transmitter is switched
on. Functions handled in the pre-operational state are: Basic Setup and Initial Radio Configuration.

Self-optimization process is defined as the process where UE & eNodeB measurements and
performance measurements are used to auto-tune the network. This process works in operational
state. Operational state is understood as the state where the RF interface is additionally switched
on. Functions handled in the operational state are Optimization and Adaptation.
AirSynergy supports an API that will enable it to be connected to a centralized SON server.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

12. PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND POWER

12.1. DIMENSIONS
AirSynergy 2000 dimensions vary depending on the specific variant, as shown in the following
figures.

TABLE 10: AIRSYNERGY DIMENSIONS


Variant Dimensions (H x W x D)
Connectorized Variant (with sunshield) 549 x 142 x 98 mm / 21.6 x 5.6 x 3.8 in.
Front Mount Variant 549 x 142 x 123 mm / 21.6 x 5.6 x 4.8 in.
SBA Variant (with sunshield) 770 x 142 x 98 mm / 30.3 x 5.6 x 3.8 in.

FIGURE 5 – CONNECTORIZED VARIANT FIGURE 4 - FRONT MOUNT VARIANT FIGURE 6 - SBA VARIANT

12.2. WEIGHT
The weight of all AirSynergy mounting components is listed in the following table.

TABLE 11: AIRSYNERGY COMPONENTS WEIGHT


Variant Dimensions
Main unit (Connectorized) 4.65 kg
Universal mounting bracket (Including pole straps) 925 g
Sun-shield 575 g
Front mount antenna & plate 1.35 kg

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

12.3. MOUNTING
AirSynergy includes a pole mounting kit with the following attributes:

TABLE 12: POLE MOUNTING KIT ATTRIBUTES


Attribute Values
Mechanical tilting range 0° to -2.5°
Supported pole diameters 30 mm to 200 mm
Supported wind load 200 km/hr

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

12.4. POWER SUPPLY


AirSynergy supports direct connection to DC power source (-48V DC):
 Operational Voltage Range: -40.5 to -57 VDC
 Transient Voltage: +150V (ETR283).

AC power feed is also available, using an AC/DC power converter offered by Airspan.

For more details on the offered AC/DC Converter (sold separately), please contact your nearest
Airspan sales representative.

12.5. POWER CONSUMPTION


AirSynergy power consumption is described in the following table:

Tx Power at Nominal Power Power Supply Requirement


Duplex
RF Port (dBm) 5 Consumption (W)6 (W)7
FDD 30 80 120
TDD 30 78 120

5
For units with external duplexers, the value refers to the Tx Power after the duplexer
6
Refers to average power consumption over time
7
Refers to the required power supply rating connected to the eNodeB

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification

13. STANDARDS COMPLIANCE

13.1. CE MARKING
AirSynergy conforms to the European Union R&TTE Directive, and is therefore CE marked
accordingly.

13.2. ENVIRONMENTAL
AirSynergy meets the following environmental requirements:
 ETSI EN 300-019-1-4 Operational (non-weather protected equipment)
 ETSI EN 300-019-1-1 Storage (weather protected, not temperature controlled locations)
 ETSI EN 300-019-1-2 Transportation

TABLE 13: AIRSYNERGY ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE


Type Details Standard Compliance
Operating temperature -40°C to 55°C ETSI 300 019 1-4
Operating humidity 5% - 100% non-condensing ETSI 300 019 1-4
Storage temperature -40°C to 70°C N/A
Storage humidity 5% - 100% non-condensing ETSI 300 019 1-4
Rain and dust ingress protection IP66 N/A
70-106 kPa as well as:
Operational altitude From -60m to 1800m @ 40C ETSI 300 019 1-4
From 1800m to 4000m @ 30C
Solar radiation 1120 W/m2 ETSI 300 019 1-4

13.3. EMC
AirSynergy complies with the EMC requirement as specified by ETSI EN 301 489-1 V1.9.2 (2011-
09) Class A, as well as EN 301 489-4 V1.4.1 (2009-05).

13.4. LIGHTENING PROTECTION


AirSynergy complies with ETSI EN 301 489-1, CISPR24 and IEC61000-4-5.

13.5. ELECTROSTATIC DISCHARGE


All AirSynergy ports meet the ESD requirements of EN61000 4-2. The test condition is level 3 for
air discharge and level 2 for contact discharge.
AirSynergy also complies with IEEE-STD 1613.

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AirSynergy 2000 LTE Product Specification
In addition to the above compliance, AirSynergy complies with EMI of 100V/m.

13.6. SAFETY
AirSynergy conforms to IEC 60950, UL 60950, EN 60950-1:2006 and EN 60950-22:2006.
In addition to this specification, the following specifications covering human exposure to radio
frequency electromagnetic fields are also met:

 EN 50385:2002 Product standard to demonstrate the compliances of radio base stations


and fixed terminal stations for wireless telecommunication systems with the basic
restrictions or the reference levels related to human exposure to radio frequency
electromagnetic fields (110 - 40 GHz). General public
 EN 50401:2006 Product standard to demonstrate the compliance of fixed equipment for
radio transmission (110 - 40 GHz) intended for use in wireless telecommunication
networks with the basic restrictions or the reference levels related to general public
exposure to radio frequency electromagnetic fields, when put into service

13.7. ROHS & WEEE COMPLIANCE


 The chemical content of the equipment and its packaging meets the EU ROHS directive -
2002/95/EC (ROHS) – compliant with ROHS6 (up to 2009)
 The WEEE symbol is present on the product label as per the requirements of European
directive 2002/96/EC

13.8. RELIABILITY AND MAINTENANCE


The following reliability data assumes worst case requirements. Overall reliability is improved
when considering the dual transceivers as a redundancy factor (this consideration is not included
in the quoted figures).

Average Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) = 25 years

Product Management Revision: 2.2 Page 28 of 28

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