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Forward Traffic Channels At the end of this section, the following objectives will have been accomplished: Understand what Forward Traffic Channels are.

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Presentation on theme: "Forward Traffic Channels At the end of this section, the following objectives will have been accomplished: Understand what Forward Traffic Channels are."— Presentation transcript:

1 Forward Traffic Channels At the end of this section, the following objectives will have been accomplished: Understand what Forward Traffic Channels are used for, how they are generated and which are the main modulation parameters associated with them. Introduce the concept of Service Options. Understand the process of analog-to-digital signal conversion Understand the role of the vocoders, the type of vocoders used in CDMA, and where they are physically located. Understand the Forward Traffic Channel frame structure for both the 8 kb and the 13 kb vocoder and the purpose of the tail bits. Understand the purpose of the Symbol Puncturing step applied to the modulation symbols when the 13 kb vocoder is used. Introduce the concept of Power Control Subchannel and identify its effect on the Forward Traffic Channel bit stream. Demonstrate how spreading and despreading work in a composite signal made of three different bit streams. Understand the concept of Composite I and Composite Q Understand the concept of QPSK, I and Q mapping, signal constellations, and phase transitions Understand how the CDMA Forward Channels are demodulated and the concepts of correlator, search correlator, finger and rake receiver. Understand the concept of Traffic Frame Staggering Summarize the messages transmitted on the CDMA Forward Channels

2 CDMA Forward Traffic Channels

3 Service Options

4 Digital Stream 0 (DS0)

5 A-law, devised by CCITT MU-Law, devised by BELL Analog to Digital Conversion

6 Traffic Channel Vocoding

7 Variable Rate Vocoding

8

9 Forward Traffic Channel Generation

10 Forward Traffic Channel Modulation Parameters

11 Forward Traffic Channel Frame structure

12 Tail Bits (step 1)

13 Tail Bits (steps 2 & 3)

14 Tail Bits (steps 2 & 3) – cont.

15 Tail Bits (step 4)

16 Tail Bits (steps 5 & 6)

17 Tail Bits (steps 5 & 6) – cont.

18 Forward Traffic Channel Frame Information Bits for Multiplex Option

19 Forward Traffic Channel Frame Information Bits for Multiplex Option 2

20 Convolutional Encoding and Symbol Repetition

21 Symbol Repetition and Power Reduction

22 Symbol Puncturing Rate Set 2 (13 kb Vocoder)

23 Block Interleaving

24 Data Scrambling

25 Power Control Sub Channel

26 Orthogonal Spreading

27 Direct and Inverse Walsh Code

28 Creating a Composite Signal

29 Example Building Blocks

30 Example Building Block cont.

31 Example – Building Blocks (Walsh 0 and 2)

32 Example: Spreading three Sequences

33 Extracting a code channel from the composite signal

34 An Equivalent Procedure

35 Example – Despreading with Walsh Code 0 (User A)

36 Example – Despreading with Walsh Code 2 (User B)

37 Example – Despreading with Walsh Code 3 (User C)

38 Example – Despreading with Walsh Code 1 (No User)

39 Quadrature Spreading & Baseband Filtering

40 Composite I and Q

41 Quadrature Phase Shift Key (QPSK) Modulation

42 QPSK Modulation

43 QPSK Modulation cont.

44 I & Q Mapping (I, Q, or Both?)

45 I & Q Mapping (Signal Constellation)

46 I & Q Mapping (Phase Transitions)

47 I & Q Mapping (States Transitions)

48 Traffic Channel Frame Staggering

49 Forward Channel Demodulation

50 End of section


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