WC01-Intro Mobile Communications
WC01-Intro Mobile Communications
WC01-Intro Mobile Communications
HCM
Bộ Môn Viễn Thông
Tham khảo:
▪ A. Goldsmith, Wireless Communications, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
▪ J. G. Proakis , M. Salehi , G. Bauch Contemporary Communication Systems Using MATLAB, Cengage
Learning, 2012.
▪ William H. Tranter et al, Principles of communication System and wireless Applications, Prentice
Hall PTR, 2004
3
Chapter 1
1. Introduction to communication systems
▪ Basic diagram, Fundamental concepts
▪ Radio communication
▪ Wire phone
▪ 1876, Alexander G. Bell (“Watson come here; I need you.”)
5
Historical of Communication Systems
▪ Telegraph
▪ 1830, Joseph Henry
▪ Telephone
▪ 1876, Alexander G. Bell (“Watson come here; I need you.”)
▪ 1888, Strowger stepper switch
▪ 1915, US transcontinental service (requires amplifiers)
▪ Radio
▪ 1906, Reginald Fessendend, first broadcast
▪ 1920, first commercial AM radio station (Montreal XWA ! CINW)
▪ Focus on voice
▪ Incompatible standards:
8
2G second generation wireless
❑ 2 G wireless
o Its was invented and developed in 1990-91.
o Digital transmission technology
o Increased quality of service
o Possible for wireless data services
❑ 2.5 G wireless
o General packet radio service (GPRS)
o Data rates: 56 kb/s to 115 kb/s
o Services: WAP, MMS and SMS, Search and directory
❑ 2.75 G wireless
o Maximum data rate: 384 kbps.
9
3G third generation wireless
❑ 3 G wireless
o Introduced in 2004-05
o Applications: mobile TV, video on demand, video conferencing, location based serviced services.
❑ 3.5 G wireless
o Known as HSDPA (high-speed downlink packet access)
o Data transmission up to 8-10 Mbps (and 20 Mbps for some systems)
❑ 3.75 G wireless
o Refereed to HSUPA (high-speed uplink packet access)
o Speed: 1.4 Mbps-5 Mbps, Real-time person to person gaming
10
4G Fourth generation wireless
o A collection of technology creating fully packet-switched networks optimized for data.
o Provide speed of 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps.
o Provide wireless alternative for broadband access to residential and business customers.
❑ 5 G Wireless (2020s)
o Data rate: ~10 Gbps
11
5G
▪ At the end of 2020 …
12
5G
▪ At the end of 2020 …
13
Mobile wireless generation
14
Comparison of mobile generations
.
15
Mobile media
16
Historical of Communication Systems
▪ 1940s
▪ Number of mobile users ~ 50K
▪ Mobile traffic: ~ 1GB
▪ Single antenna
▪ Several connections per BS
▪ 2020
▪ 5.27 billion mobile phone users
▪ Mobile traffic: 127 exabytes = 127 x 109 GB = 127 x 109 x 109 Bytes
▪ Massive antenna number (128, 256, ...)
▪ 1M connections per BS
17
Introduction
18
Introduction
19
Introduction
20
Introduction
21
Mobile app trends 2022
22
Mobile app trends 2022
23
Mobile app trends 2022
24
1. Introduction to communication system
▪ The purpose of a communication system is to transport an information bearing signal from a source
to a user destination.
o Analog communication systems: the information bearing signal is continuously varying in both
amplitude and time.
26
Basic diagram of communication systems
27
Basic signal processing blocks
❑ Transmitter:
o Source coding: eliminate or reduce redundancy so as to provide an efficient representation of the
source output.
o Channel coding: introduce redundancy to provide reliable communication over a noisy channel.
o Modulation: to provide the efficient transmission of the signal over the channel.
❑ Channel: wired (telephone channels, coaxial cables, optical fibers) or wireless (microwave radio,
satellite channels, mmWave channel, military channels, …).
28
2. Radio Communication
▪ Radio or radio communication means any transmission, emission, or reception of signs, signals,
writing, images, sounds by means of electromagnetic waves of the radio frequency range, from about
3 kHz to 300 GHz propagated in space without artificial guide.
29
Introduction
Classification of radio spectrum
30
The Radio Spectrum
o The frequency spectrum is a shared resource.
o Radio propagation does not recognize geopolitical boundaries (globalization or security).
o International cooperation and regulations are required for an efficient use of the radio spectrum.
▪ The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is an agency, within the UN, that takes care of this
resource.
o Frequency assignment.
o Standardization.
o Coordination and planning of the international telecommunication services.
31
History
33
Persons
Invention of modern radio Jaap Haartsen Nicolas Sornin
GPS
36
History
▪ Commercial Television and the Birth of Mobile Telephony
• 1946 — First interconnection of mobile users to public switched telephone
network (PSTN)
• 1949 — FCC recognizes mobile radio as new class of service
• 1940s — Number of mobile users > 50K
• 1950s — Number of mobile users > 500K
• 1960s — Number of mobile users > 1.4M
• 1960s — Improved Mobile Telephone Service (IMTS) introduced; supports full-duplex, auto
dial, auto trunking
• 1976 — Bell Mobile Phone has 543 pay customers using 12 channels in the New York City area;
waiting list is 3700 people; service is poor due to blocking
37
38
Statistics
https://datareportal.com/reports
39
Current Wireless Networks
Global
Satellite
Suburban Urban
In-Building
Picocell
Microcell
Macrocell
Basic Terminal
PDA Terminal
Audio/Visual Terminal
43
Type of Cells
44
3. QoS Requirements and Design Challenges
▪ QoS refers to the requirements associated with a given application, typically rate and delay
requirements.
▪ It is hard to make a one-size-fits all network that supports requirements of different applications.
▪ Wired networks have much higher data rates and better reliability than wireless.
45
3. QoS Requirements and Design Challenges
▪ QoS: quality-of-service
46
Mobile wireless communication
.
47
Evolution of Wireless Systems
48
Evolution of Wireless Systems
49
Mobile wireless communication
.
50
mmWave Communication - Frequency spectrum
51
Evolution of Wireless Systems
52
Satellite Systems (thinking to 6G …)
❑ Cover very large areas
53
Bluetooth
▪ Bluetooth is a wireless technology standard for exchanging data over short distances (using short-
wavelength radio transmissions in the ISM band from 2400–2480 MHz) from fixed and mobile devices,
creating personal area networks (PANs) with high levels of security
▪ Short range (10m, extendable to 100m)
54
IEEE 802.15.4 / ZigBee Radios
▪ Wireless personal area networks built from small, low-power digital radios.
▪ ZigBee operates in the industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) radio bands; 868 MHz in Europe,
915 MHz in the USA and Australia and 2.4 GHz in most jurisdictions worldwide.
▪ Data rates of 20, 40, 250 Kbps
▪ The low cost allows the technology to be widely deployed in wireless control and monitoring
applications
▪ Very low power consumption
55
Tradeoffs 802.11n
3G
Rate
802.11g/a
Power
Fundamental Design Breakthroughs Needed 802.11b
UWB
Bluetooth
ZigBee Range
Other Tradeoffs:
Rate vs. Coverage
Rate vs. Delay
Rate vs. Cost
Rate vs. Energy
56
Radio Communication Challenges
▪ Three main problems:
o The path loss
o Noise (interference)
o Sharing the radio spectrum
57
Radio Communication Challenges
❑ First main problems:
o The path loss (attenuation, multipath, fading ...)
58
Coexistence Challenge:
Many devices use the same radio band
❑ Second main problems:
▪ Technical Solutions:
▪ Interference Cancellation
▪ Smart/Cognitive Radios
59
Radio Communication Challenges
❑ Third main problems:
o Sharing the radio spectrum
60
Vietnam Spectrum allocation
2012
62
US Spectrum allocation today
63
4. Design Challenges
▪ Simplex
▪ Half-duplex
▪ Full-duplex
o The 2 channels can be separated in frequency – Frequency Division Duplex (FDD)
o The 2 channels can be separated in time to share a single physical channel – Time Division Duplex
(TDD)
64
FDD vs TDD
65
Modulation and Multiplexing
▪ Modulation and multiplexing are electronic techniques for transmitting information efficiently from one
place to another.
Modulation makes the information signal more compatible with the medium.
Multiplexing allows more than one signal to be transmitted concurrently over a single medium.
66
The Cellular Concept
67
TYPE
Type of Cells
OF CELLS
Global
Satellite
Suburban Urban
In-Building
Picocell
Microcell
Macrocell
Basic Terminal
PDA Terminal
Audio/Visual Terminal
68
The Cellular Concept
▪ Why cellular?
▪ Radio spectrum is a finite resource.
▪ How to accommodate a large number of users over a large geographic area within a limited radio spectrum?
▪ The solution is the use of cellular structure which allows frequency reuse.
69
Multiple Access
▪ Multiple access
o FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access)
o TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access)
o SDMA (Space Division Multiple Access)
o SSMA (Spread Spectrum Multiple Access)
• FHMA (Frequency Hopped Multiple Access)
• CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
70
Emerging Wireless Systems
▪ Higher generation cellular and beyond
▪ Closer to user
▪ Non-stop increasing data-rate, low-latency, # connections, …
▪ Massive MIMO, advanced multiple access, antenna array, beamforming, modulation, …
71
Key Techniques
❖ Adaptive Techniques
❑ Link, MAC, network, and application adaptation
❑ Resource management and allocation (power control)
❖Diversity techniques
❑ Link diversity (space, time, frequency)
❑ Access diversity
❑ Route diversity
❖Multiplexing
❑ Spatial multiplexing (MIMO, beamforming)
❑ Frequency multiplexing (OFDM, multi-carrier)
72