15-446 Networked Systems Practicum Lecture 5 – Cellular Intro 1.

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Presentation transcript:

Networked Systems Practicum Lecture 5 – Cellular Intro 1

The Advent of Cellular Networks Mobile radio telephone system was based on: High power transmitter/receivers Could support about 25 channels in a radius of 80 Km To increase network capacity: Multiple low-power transmitters (100W or less) Small transmission radius -> area split in cells Each cell with its own frequencies and base station Adjacent cells use different frequencies The same frequency can be reused at sufficient distance Implications on mobile handsets

Cellular Reuse Transmissions decay over distance Spectrum can be reused in different areas Different “LANs” Decay is 1/R2 in free space, 1/R4 in some situations 3

Cellular Network Design Options Simplest layout Adjacent antennas not equidistant – how do you handle users at the edge of the cell? Ideal layout d d√2d d d

The Hexagonal Pattern A hexagon pattern can provide equidistant access to neighboring cell towers d = √3R In practice, variations from ideal due to topological reasons d R

Frequency reuse Each cell features one base transceiver Through power control cover the cell area while limiting the power leaking to other co- frequency cells Frequency reuse not possible for adjacent towers! The number of frequency bands assigned to a cell dependent on its traffic

Minimum separation?

How to Increase Capacity? Adding new channels Frequency borrowing Sectoring antennas Microcells Antennas on top of buildings, even lamp posts Form micro cells with reduced power Good for city streets, roads and inside buildings

Cell splitting Cell size ~ Km, Minimum ~ 1.5Km Requires careful power control and possibly more frequent handoffs for mobile stations A radius reduction by a factor of F reduces the coverage area and increases the required number of base stations by a factor of

Cell splitting Radius of small cell half that of the original

Cell sectoring Cell divided into wedge shaped sectors 3-6 sectors per cell, each with own channel set Subset of cell’s channel, use of directional antennas

Call progression (a) Monitor for strongest signal(b) Request for connection

Call progression (c) Paging(d) Call accepted

Call progression (f) Handoff(e) Ongoing call

Paging Broadcast mechanism to locate a target mobile unit Normally, there is knowledge on a limited number of cells where the mobile may be (Location Area in GSM, Routing Area if data packet sessions) GSM: neighbor cells grouped in Location Area and subscriber only updates when moving across. Paging restricted to the Location Area itself. How do we assign cells to LAs?

Handoff Could be network or client initiated, in which case the client provided the network with measurements Target performance metrics: Cell blocking probability Call dropping probability Call completion probability Probability of unsuccessful handoff Handoff blocking probability Handoff probability Rate of handoff Interruption duration Handoff delay

Handoff between 2 cells Base station A Base station B

State Machine for 2 Carriers 18

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Signal Strength Affects Power/Throughput 21

Bartendr Basic idea – wait until signal gets better and prefetch when signal is strong Requires good signal prediction 22

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RSSI on a path 24

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