M.Sc. in Communication and Information Systems Thesis Title: Student Name
M.Sc. in Communication and Information Systems Thesis Title: Student Name
M.Sc. in Communication and Information Systems Thesis Title: Student Name
*3GPP is not constrained to 3rd Generation. It includes work on both 2nd and 4th generation
technologies.
The 3GPP Specifications for LTE
• LTE introduced in Rel 8
• Minor improvements in Rel 9 and Rel 10
• Scalable channel bandwidths of 1.4, 3, 5, 10, 15 and 20 MHz allocations
• Support both paired (FDD) and unpaired (TDD) spectrum as well as half duplex FDD
• IP Packet switched radio interface
• Simplified architecture: The network side of E-UTRAN is composed only of eNodeBs
• Reasonable power consumption for the mobile terminal
• Flexible use of new and existing frequency bands
• Support for inter-operation and co-existence with legacy standards while evolving toward an all-IP network
• Supports at least 200 active users in every 5 MHz cell
• Significantly increased average user throughput and spectrum efficiency
• Downlink target 3-4 times greater than HSDPA Release 6
• Uplink target 2-3 times greater than HSUPA Release 6
• Increased data rates 10 times more than HSPA Release 6 technology
• Downlink Peak Data Rate: 100Mbit/s in a 20MHz downlink spectrum (i.e. 5 bit/s/Hz)
• Uplink: 50Mbit/s in a 20MHz uplink spectrum (i.e. 2.5 bit/s/Hz)
• Significantly reduced latencies
• High level of mobility and security. Optimized for low mobility(0-15km/h) but supports high speed.
• LTE coverage is optimized for cell sizes up to 5 km, works with slight degradation of performance up to 30
km cells. Also cell range up to 100 km not precluded.
• RAN (Radio Access Network) round-trip times of less than 10ms
• Co-existence with legacy standards
Spectrum and Frequency Bands for LTE
• Seamless integration with previous mobile systems and new frequency bands that
may be identified
• Support both paired and unpaired spectrum allocations
- FDD for paired spectrum, enables simultaneous transmission on two different
sufficiently separated frequencies: one for DL and one for UL.
- TDD for unpaired spectrum, DL and UL transmissions share the same channel
and carrier frequency. Transmissions are time multiplexed.
- Half-duplex FDD at the terminal, transmission and reception separated in both
frequency and time.
Uplink: SC-FDMA
• Based on OFDMA with DFT precoding
• Common structure of transmission resources compared to downlink
• Cyclic prefix facilitates frequency-domain equalisation at eNodeB
• Low PAPR for efficient transmitter design (mobile power saving)
Frame Structure
13
LTE Uplink Physical Layer
•The physical layer is defined taking bandwidth into consideration, allowing
the physical layer to adapt to various spectrum allocations.
•The modulation schemes supported in the downlink are QPSK, 16QAM and
64QAM, and in the uplink QPSK, 16QAM and 64-QAM.The Broadcast channel
uses only QPSK.
•The channel coding scheme for transport blocks in LTE is Turbo Coding with a
coding rate of R=1/3, two 8-state constituent encoders and a contention-free
quadratic permutation polynomial (QPP) turbo code internal interleaver.
•Trellis termination is used for the turbo coding. Before the turbo coding,
transport blocks are segmented into byte aligned segments with a maximum
information block size of 6144 bits. Error detection is supported by the use of
24 bit CRC.
LTE Uplink Channels
LTE Uplink Transport Channels
Uplink Physical Channels
Physical Uplink Shared Channel
(PUSCH)
• Data transmissions on Physical Uplink Shared Channel (PUSCH)
- In centre of uplink bandwidth
- Minimizes out-of-band emissions from wide-bandwidth data transmissions
- 1 transport block per TTI
- Same channel coding / rate matching as PDSCH
- Modulation QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM
• PUSCH Transmission
- Localized transmission w/o frequency hopping
-> Frequency Selective Scheduling Gain
- Distributed transmission with “frequency hopping”
-> Frequency Diversity Gain, Inter-cell Interference
Randomization
• Two types of PUSCH frequency hopping
- Sub-band based hopping according to cell-specific hopping
patterns
- Hopping based on explicit hopping information in the
scheduling UL grant
Uplink Physical Signals
• UL Physical Signals
- An uplink physical signal is used by the
physical layer but does not carry information
originating from higher layers
• Two types of reference signals
- UL Demodulation Reference Signal (DRS)
for PUSCH, PUCCH
- UL Sounding Reference Signal (SRS) not
associated with PUSCH, PUCCH
transmission
LTE Key Parameters
LTE-Advanced
Support of Wider Bandwidth(Carrier Aggregation) 100 MHz
• Use of multiple component carriers(CC) to extend bandwidth up to 100 MHz
• Common physical layer parameters between component carrier and LTE Rel-8 carrier
f
Improvement of peak data rate, backward compatibility with LTE Rel-8
CC
Advanced MIMO techniques
• Extension to up to 8-layer transmission in downlink
• Introduction of single-user MIMO up to 4-layer transmission in uplink
• Enhancements of multi-user MIMO
Improvement of peak data rate and capacity
Relay
• Type 1 relay supports radio backhaul and creates a separate cell and appear as Rel. 8 LTE eNB to Rel. 8 LTE Ues
Improvement of coverage and flexibility of service area extension