frequency planning and reuse engr. mehran mamonai

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Page 1: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Planning and Reuse

Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Page 2: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency planning

• Neighbor list planning

• Frequency Hopping Planning

• Interference requirement

Page 3: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Spectrum Allocation

Page 4: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

ARFCN

• Channel bandwidth is 200kHz

Page 5: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Neighbor list planning

• Neighbours are “neighbouring cells” that the serving cell is required to monitor and measure

• These neighbours are potential handover candidates

• Maximum of thirty two (32) can be defined– In practice, much less (10-12)

Page 6: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Neighbor list planning

• Theoretically, up to six neighbours• In practice, it varies with cell shape and level

of overlap• Two-way relationship

Page 7: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Neighbor list planning

Page 8: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Interference requirement

Page 9: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Regular cell structures and re-use

• Conceptually hexagons

Page 10: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Regular cell structures and re-use

• In reality hexagons are not achievable:– Unequal antenna heights– Cannot acquire sites on grid– Requirement for different cell sizes

(traffic/coverage)– Terrain and clutter effects

Page 11: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Automatic planning: predicted or measured

Page 12: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Manual Planning

• Manual planning is possible when:– Cells are on a reasonably regular grid– Cells are approximately equal in size– About the same number of TRX are in each cell– There are not too many cells

• After each plan, create a C/I plot– Then iterate the plan– Swap frequencies to remove interference– Adjust antenna tilts etc to remove interference– Very tedious!

Page 13: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Manual Planning

• Problem when cell sizes are different

Page 14: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Realistic cell structures

Page 15: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Hopping

• GSM implementation

• Each frequency has different fading characteristics

Page 16: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Hopping

• Used for frequency planning and fading mitigation

• Frequency planning (later section)

• Fading mitigation– Baseband hopping– Synthesized/RF hopping

Page 17: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Baseband Hopping

• 28 µs was too short for early technology to change frequencies

• Instead: keep TRXs at constant frequency and change inputs each frame

Page 18: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Baseband Hopping

• You can only Hop as many frequency are there as TRXs

Page 19: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Synthesized or RF hopping

• Each TRX can re-tune to any frequency.

Page 20: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Limitation

• The timeslot carrying the BCCH cannot hop.– BCCH is a “beacon” and must remain at the same

frequency for Mobiles to find the network and neighbor cells.

• Solution: separate hopping lists for BCCH Carrier and non-BCCH carriers or separate lists for TS 0 and other timeslots

Page 21: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Advantages

• Frequency hopping may give a few dB

• Improvement by combating multipath fading

• The BCCH timeslot has no improvement

• Coverage must still be dimensioned for the worst case

Page 22: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Planning (Interference)

• Assign frequencies to a network using as few frequencies as possible.

• The quality and availability of the radio-link path is minimally affected by interference.

• Frequency planning is often based on the “3 dB threshold degradation approach”

Page 23: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Assignment Of Radio-relay Frequencies

• Prevention of mutual interference such as the interference between the radio frequency channels in the actual path, interference to/from.

• Other radio paths, interference to/from satellite communication system, etc.

• Aim at frequency economy of the available radio frequency spectrum.

• Proper and reasonable selection of frequency band that conforms to the required transmission capacity.

• Frequency band suitable to both path characteristics (path length, site location, terrain topography) and atmospheric effects.

Page 24: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Interference In Frequency Planning

• Far interference

• Near interference

Page 25: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Far Interference In Frequency Planning

• Typical far interference scenario with two “real” paths (AB and CD) and two “virtual” paths (AD and BC).

• The “virtual” paths are the “Interfering” Paths.• Far interference is often the primary factor

that limits the number of paths that can be set up within a given geographical area.

Page 26: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Far Interference In Frequency Planning

• Planning a network that is “free” from the effects of far interference requires the following issues:

– Knowledge of the geographic locations of the sites, the layout, and dimensioning of the radio-link paths.

– Equipment data

– Existing network frequency assignment

– Reasonable radio-wave propagation models far interference also affects the possibility of realizing a variety of network solutions

Page 27: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Far Interference In Frequency Planning

Page 28: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Near Interference In Frequency Planning

• Near interference refers to receiver disturbances that are generated by transmitters that are grouped at the same site, i.e. co-located stations.

Page 29: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Near Interference In Frequency Planning

• Disturbances may appear in the form of inter-modulation effects, i.e., the mixture of two or more transmitter frequencies that may arise close to a particular receiver frequency

Page 30: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Near Interference In Frequency Planning

• Another important characteristic, that should be considered when calculating the effect of near interference, is the coupling loss between two antennas located at the same site

Page 31: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Near Interference In Frequency Planning

• The following isolation values may be used when performing rough estimations (the values are, in fact, dependent on the distance and angles between the two antennas):– Approximately 40 dB between two antennas made up of dipoles– Approximately 80 dB between two parabolic antennas.

• The selection of proper duplex-bands for transmitter and receiver equipment, during the frequency-allocation process, is essential if one is to control the risk of disturbances that arise as a result of insufficient transmitter-receiver frequency separation

Page 32: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

How may interference be avoided

• The following conditions shall be met:– Sufficiently weak interference signals.– No frequency overlap (receiver frequencies are

sufficiently separated from interfering signals).

• The first condition may be very difficult to meet, often as the result of frequent occurrence of co-located radio systems (occasionally forced co-location) . while the second condition may be attained but requires careful frequency planning.

Page 33: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

ETSI 05.05 Requirements

• Co-channel channel interference: z = 9 dB• 200 kHz adjacent channel: z = 9 dB• 400 kHz adjacent channel: z = 41 dB• 600 kHz adjacent channel: z = 49 dB

Page 34: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Planning Tips

• Frequency planning is not carried out with the purpose of avoiding interference, rather to accomplish the quality and availability objectives of each portion of the network!

• Reuse frequencies, i.e., repeat frequencies as often as is possible!, Good frequency economy is always encouraged!

• Use antennas having high front-to-back ratios and large side-lobe suppression. These result in both good frequency economy and, in the final analysis, good overall network-economy. High performance antennas may be a suitable alternative.

• Do not use higher radio-link output power than necessary! Start always frequency planning with the lowest available output power

Page 35: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Frequency Planning Tips

• When assigning specific channels to the individual links in a network it is strongly recommended to start with high capacity links (the links demanding wider bandwidth).

• Generally, interference problems in radio-relay networks are greatest for links connected to a Interfering signals are not always in line of sight!

Page 36: Frequency Planning and Reuse Engr. Mehran Mamonai

Its End Now