Compatibility measurements UMTS/LTE/GSM -> GSM-R Thomas Hasenpusch Federal Network Agency, Germany CG-GSM-R(13)033.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GSM Receiver Key Parameters
Advertisements

3.7) On-going activities within CEPT/ECC Thomas Weilacher Vice Chairman of CEPT/ECC Working Group FM (Frequency Management)
Activities in CEPT ECC/WGFM/ Project Team FM54
1 Public Safety Communications Research Department of Commerce – Boulder Labs PSCR Update Dr. Rob Stafford Project Engineer – NTIA/ITS PS Broadband Project.
1 Compatibility of Digital Broadcasting and Mobile Services Regional Seminar on Digital TV Broadcasting Algiers, 4-5 December 2007 Presented by Jan Doeven.
Quiz Draw a block diagram of a quadrature (I/Q) demodulator. Carrier Recovery cos(  o t) Splitter  /2) LPF Recovered Q Data: Q R (kT) Recovered I Data:
08/16/01. Link Budgets for Cellular Networks Presented by Eric Johnson.
Polar Loop Transmitter T. Sowlati, D. Rozenblit, R. Pullela, M. Damgaard, E. McCarthy, D. Koh, D. Ripley, F. Balteanu, I. Gheorghe.
08/16/01.
Current research work and plans Zbigniew M. Jóskiewicz Wroclaw University of Technology Institute of Telecommunication and Acoustics Wybrzeże Wyspiańskiego.
2.4-GHZ RF TRANSCEIVER FOR IEEE B WIRELESS LAN UF# UF#
Coexistence challenges in the UHF band Bruno ESPINOSA European Communications Office (ECO) Overview of CEPT/ECC actions.
Modelling of Emission and Blocking mask European Communications Office Jean-Philippe Kermoal (ECO) October 2010 EUROPEAN COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Nansensgade.
The $20 Billion Question: Can Satellite and Terrestrial Wireless Co-Exist in C-band? David Hartshorn Secretary General Global VSAT Forum.
#UIC ERTMS World Conference 1. – 3. April 2014, Istanbul UIC Rail System Department UIC ERTMS World Conference Dirk Schattschneider UIC Frequency Manager.
The $20 Billion Question: Can Satellite and Terrestrial Wireless Co-Exist in C-band? David Hartshorn Secretary General GVF.
System parameters and performance CDMA-2000, W-CDMA (UMTS), GSM 900, WLAN a, WLAN b, Bluetooth. By Øystein Taskjelle.
GSM onboard aircraft : SE7 activities Joint meeting, ETSI – 09 September GSM ONBOARD AICRAFT CEPT / SEWG / PT SE7 Jean-Philippe Millet, ANFR
How to use the net-monitor (FTD) on Nokia Symbian Phone.
Basic examples of setting simulations European Communications Office Jean-Philippe Kermoal (ECO) October 2010 EUROPEAN COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Nansensgade.
Basic functionality: coverage/simulation radius European Communications Office Jean-Philippe Kermoal (ECO) 05 June 2012 EUROPEAN COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE.
[Qualcomm, Ericsson, Nokia Networks, Huawei,…]
[Qualcomm, Ericsson, Nokia Networks, Huawei,…]
Modeling of Unwanted and Blocking Interference Modes European Communications Office Jean-Philippe Kermoal 05 October 2010 EUROPEAN COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE.
Coexistence in heterogeneous networks Discuss the interference issue
R 18 G 65 B 145 R 0 G 201 B 255 R 104 G 113 B 122 R 216 G 217 B 218 R 168 G 187 B 192 Core and background colors: 1 © Nokia Solutions and Networks 2014.
AI MHz MHz ECC DEC (15)01 + CEPT report 53 ECC-FCC-IC Liaison Meeting Maisons Alfort, May 2015 Didier Chauveau ECC PT1 Chairman.
A study of LTE interference potential with regard to PMSE operation Matthias Fehr / Wolfgang Bilz ECC SE24 Meeting # / Mainz, Germany.
GSM-R = -85dBm I = -94dBm 9dB C/I Note 1: The I should be the sum of Rx thermal noise, co-channel, adjacent channel and Unwanted Emission. Here only UE.
Basic examples of setting simulations European Communications Office Stella Lyubchenko (ECO) June 2013 EUROPEAN COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Nansensgade.
TEMS Parameter. Module Objectives On completion of the module one should be clear about the parameters required during drive test what does it mean and.
RFI Protection Activities in IAA RAS
Noise Figure vs. IP3 Skip Crilly CTO, Cellular Specialties, Inc.
EARTH SEGMENT & SPACE LINK
Classical blocking test (e.g. EN )
Basics of Small Scale Fading: Towards choice of PHY
RFI Protection Activities in IAA RAS
Modelling of Emission and Blocking mask
Coexistence challenges in the UHF band
Setting Emission and Blocking masks
Mobile Broadcast and Spectrum Issues (DVB-T) Workshop April 2003
LRTC 3.4 – 3.8 GHz Ericsson input PT1 XO 29 – 31/
State-Of-The-Art PMSE
Cellular Wireless Networks
Drive Testing Basics 2013 March
Michael Franceschini ICAO FSMP WG 4, ICAO APAC March 29 - April
3GPP TSG RAN Meeting #67 Shanghai, China, 9 – 12 March, 2015
Amplitude Modulation 2-3 AM RECEIVERS
Long Term Evolution (LTE)
DESIGN OF A SPECIFIC CDMA SYSTEM FOR AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL APPLICATIONS
Setting Emission and Blocking masks
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CA combinations are divided into intra-band (contiguous and non-contiguous) and inter-band. Aggregated carriers can be adjacent or non-adjacent.
Scoping Out CA CA(Carrier Aggregation) is a technique used to combine multiple Long ‐ Term Evolution (LTE) component carriers (CCs) across the available.
Antennas Topologies Directly connecting two duplexers together can affect each other’s filter characteristic, thereby losing the isolation that is needed.
LTE-Advanced New UE Categories[4] LTE-Advanced New UE Categories[4]
March 2017 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Suitability of IEEE ah for LPWAN Applications]
Measurements of digital signals with spectrum analyzers
RF Front End Radio Design- Simulations and Specifications
Selectivity / Channel Rejection
Liaison statement and Request for Specification and Implementation of Harmonised Pan-European Emission Limits relevant for the GSM-R Operating Range.
Radio Frequency Interference
Interference investigation on UMTS base stations
Measurements of digital signals with spectrum analyzers
Current Development State at Samsung Electro-Mechanics
GSC: Standardization Advancing Global Communications
Basic examples of setting simulations
Regional Seminar on Digital TV Broadcasting
Tutorial MHz GSM system is using FDD (frequency division duplex). Uplink channels are in the frequency band of 890.2MHz to 915MHz, and the downlink.
Interference investigation on UMTS base stations
GSM Radio Network Optimization. Absolute Radio Frequency Channel Number (ARFCN)  GSM 900 F U (n) = n MHz F D (n) = Fu(n) + 45 MHz Where: 1.
Presentation transcript:

Compatibility measurements UMTS/LTE/GSM -> GSM-R Thomas Hasenpusch Federal Network Agency, Germany CG-GSM-R(13)033

2 Motivation / Aims Frequency planning in Europe: What happens to the GSM-R terminal receivers when facing UMTS/LTE in the public mobile band above 925 MHz? GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

3 Interference Mechanisms (1) Unwanted emissions from UMTS/LTE in the GSM-R channel A f 925 MHz GSM-R channel GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

4 Interference Mechanisms (2) Receiver blocking due to high input powers A f Min. S/N Max. mixer power GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

5 Interference Mechanisms (3) Receiver intermodulation (2 narrowband signals) A f GSM-R channel f1f1 f2f2 f IM f IM = 2*f 1 -f 2 GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

6 Interference Mechanisms (4) Receiver intermodulation (1 wideband signal) 921.2MHz 924.8MHz UMTS GSM UMTS signal IM products (all) IM frequencies involved when GSM-R frequency is MHz IM frequencies involved when GSM-R frequency is MHz GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

7 Interfering GSM Signals GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

8 Interfering UMTS signals GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

9 Interfering LTE/5MHz signals GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

10 Receiver Selection Rx1 „improved“: Receiver with highly linear front- end, improved filter and AGC, exceeding requirements of ETSI TS Rx2 „standard“: Receiver representing equipment currently used in trains, meeting requirements of ETSI EN V8.5.1 and ETSI TS V8.16 GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

11 Failure Criterion The GSM-R link was regarded interfered when the RxQual value reported by the terminal receiver dropped to 4 or less. Measured with CMU200 base station tester. GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

12 Measurement of Receiver Characteristics Sensitivity of both receivers: -107 to -108 dBm Selectivity (measured with unmodulated carrier): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

13 C/I from Unwanted Emissions Measurement setup: GSM-R base station emulator CMU dB GSM-R receiver (DUT) M downlink uplink Rx Tx Circulator (10) Directional coupler 20 dB 50 dB Signal generator Interfering signal 6-60 dB GSM-R signal level: -101 dBm and -98 dBm GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

14 C/I from Unwanted Emissions Measurement results for standard interferers: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

15 C/I from Unwanted Emissions Measurement results for realistic interferers: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

16 C/I Using Blocking Test Setup: Measurement setup: GSM-R base station emulator CMU dB GSM-R receiver (DUT) M downlink uplink Rx Tx Circulator Directional coupler 20 dB 50 dB Signal generator Interfering signal 6-60 dBBand pass GSM-R frequencies MHz and MHz GSM-R signal levels between -101 and -35 dBm 3 different interfering frequencies, but always high offset GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

17 C/I Using Blocking Test Setup Measurement results for GSM interferer: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

18 C/I Using Blocking Test Setup Measurement results for broadband interferer: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

19 C/I Using Intermodulation Test Setup Measurement setup: GSM-R base station emulator CMU dB GSM-R receiver (DUT) M downlink uplink Rx Tx Circulator (10) Directional coupler 20 dB 50 dB Signal generator 1 Interfering signal 6-60 dBBand pass Signal generator Ω GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

20 C/I Using Intermodulation Test Setup Frequency combinations: Signal 1Signal 2 CombinationSystemFrequency f 1 SystemFrequency f 2 1GSM935,0 MHzGSM948,8 MHz 2GSM935,0 MHzUMTS947,5 MHz 3UMTS937,5 MHzGSM953,8 MHz 4LTE/10MHz935,0 MHzUMTS942,5 MHz 5UMTS937,5 MHzUMTS952,5 MHz 6GSM927,4 MHzUMTS932,5 MHz GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

21 C/I Using Intermodulation Test Setup Measurement results GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

22 Combination of Results One single GSM interferer GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

23 Combination of Results One UMTS interferer: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

24 Combination of Results One LTE/5MHz interferer: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

25 Combination of Results Two or more GSM interferers: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

26 Combination of Results UMTS interferer plus UMTS/GSM interferer: GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

27 Result Evaluation (1) At low GSM-R levels unwanted emissions dominate, at higher GSM-R levels receiver overloading dominates. Transition between interference effects strongly depends on interfering signal quality: Realistic signals have much less interference potential from unwanted emissions than signals just meeting the standard. The interference potential of UMTS and LTE/5MHz is nearly equal. Interference potential due to unwanted emissions from UMTS/LTE is about dB higher than from GSM. One UMTS/LTE signal alone may create receiver intermodulation often affecting the whole GSM-R band. GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

28 Additional Measurements with Filters Necessary to assess: GSM-R on upper channels, UMTS/LTE in first 5MHz of public band (critical situations) Improvements by different receiver filter solutions Receiver configurations: Rx1: „improved“ Rx2: „standard“ Rx3: „standard“ receiver plus dual 8-cavity Kaelus filter Rx4: „improved“ receiver plus small Lorch filter GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

29 Additional Measurements with Filters Filter response dual 8-cavity Kaelus (1): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

30 Additional Measurements with Filters Filter response dual 8-cavity Kaelus (2): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

31 Additional Measurements with Filters Filter response low pass Lorch (1): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

32 Additional Measurements with Filters Filter response low pass Lorch (2): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

33 Additional Measurements with Filters Measurement setup: GSM-R base station emulator CMU dB GSM-R receiver (DUT) incl. filter for Rx3 and Rx4 M downlink uplink Rx Tx Circulator (10) Directional coupler 20 dB 50 dB Signal generator SMU200A Interfering signal GSM-R frequencies MHz and MHz GSM-R levels from -101 dBm to -31 dBm Interfering frequencies MHz and MHz (UMTS/LTE) and MHz (GSM) GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

34 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (realistic broadband interferer): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

35 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (standard broadband interferer): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

36 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (realistic interferer on MHz): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

37 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (standard interferer on MHz): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

38 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (realistic interferer vs. channel 970): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

39 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (standard interferer vs. channel 970): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

40 Additional Measurements with Filters Result example (GSM realistic interferer): GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

41 Additional Measurements with Filters Transition levels from unwanted emissions to overloading effects InterfererRx1 (improved) Rx2 (standard) Rx3 (standard with Kaelus filter) Rx4 (improved with Lorch filter) UMTS realistic on MHz -80 dBm-100 dBmnever *)-80 dBm LTE realistic on MHz -85 dBm-98 dBmnever *)-85 dBm UMTS standard on MHz -48 dBm-72 dBmnever *)-45 dBm LTE standard on MHz -52 dBm-78 dBmnever *)-50 dBm UMTS realistic on MHz never *)-100 dBmnever *)- LTE realistic on MHz never *)-100 dBmnever *)- UMTS standard on MHz never *)-85 dBmnever *)- LTE standard on MHz never *)-90 dBmnever *)- GSM realistic on MHz -90 dBm-80 dBm -88 dBm GSM standard on MHz -85 dBm-75 dBm-72 dBm-82 dBm *) never = not overloaded up to about +10 dBm GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

42 Result Evaluation (2) The standard receiver is nearly always overloaded by UMTS/LTE in the first 5 MHz of the public mobile band. The improved receiver is only overloaded when UMTS/LTE is on MHz and the GSM-R level is high (>80dBm for realistic, >50dBm for standard signals), and then the tolerable interference level is up to 20 dB higher than for the standard receiver. Receivers with the Kaelus filter are never overloaded by UMTS/LTE signals. The additional Lorch filter for the improved receiver does not further increase immunity against UMTS/LTE on MHz. GSM-R compatibility measurements (BnetzA Germany)

Compatibility measurements UMTS/LTE/GSM -> GSM-R Thomas Hasenpusch Federal Network Agency, Germany / ECC Thank you for your attention!