You are on page 1of 52

GSM Fundamental

By Uke Kurniawan Usman

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda

Network Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Structure


OMC

MSC/VLR BSC BIE BTS Abi s BSS C Um MS HLR/ AUC A MSC/VLR E PSTN ISDN PSPDN H SC/VM MSS

F
EIR

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Mobile Station ( MS )
Equipment used by mobile service subscribers for access to services.

Mobile Equipment Subscriber Identity Module (SIM)

Mobile stations are not fixed to one subscriber. A subscriber is identified with the SIM card.

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


Base Transceiver Station ( BTS )

Base Transceiver Station (BTS)


Wireless transmission Wireless diversity Wireless channel encryption Conversion between wired and wireless signals Frequency Hopping

BaseBand Unit: voice and data speed adapting and channel coding RF Unit: modulating/demodulating, transmitter and receiver Common Control Unit: BTS operation and maintenance

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


Base Station Controller ( BSC )

Managing Wireless network-BSS Monitoring BTS


Controls:
Wireless link distribution between MS and BTS Communication connection and disconnection MS location, handover and paging Voice encoding, transecoding (TC), rate, adaptation, The operation and maintenance functions of BSS.

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


Mobile Service Switching Center ( MSC )

holds all the switching functions manages the necessary radio resources,
updating the location registration carrying out the inter-BSC and inter-MSC tender

Inter-working with other networks (IWF).

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


Home Location Register ( HLR )

Manages the mobile subscribers database


subscriber information part of the mobile location information 3 identities essential the International Mobile subscriber Identity the Mobile station ISDN Number the VLR address

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


Visitor Location Register ( VLR )

dynamically stores subscriber information needed to handle incoming/outgoing calls Mobile Station Roaming Number When a roaming mobile enters an MSC area. This MSC warns the associated VLR of this situation; the mobile enters a registration procedure through which it is assigned a mobile subscriber roaming number (MSRN) Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identity, if applicable The location area in which the mobile has been registered Data related to supplementary service parameters

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Network Entity


AUC/EIR

Authentication Center(s) (AUC)


Providing the authentication key used for authorizing the subscriber access to the associated GSM PLMN.

Equipment Identity Register(s) (EIR)


Handling Mobile Station Equipment Identity

10

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda

Network Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

11

Overview: Function Layers of GSM-1


S ervice carrie r

O AM

Subsc riber

CM MM RR Tran smissi on

12

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Protocol Stack Structure of GSM

MS CM MM RR RR

BTS

BSC

MSC CM

RR BTSM

BS SAP MTP3

MM BS SAP SCCP MTP3 MTP2 A

BTSM SCCP LAPD MTP2 Abis

LAPDm Um

LAP Dm LAPD

13

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda
Network

Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
14
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

TDMA

time

Concept:
User 3 User 2 channel is composed of a series of timeslots of periodicity. Different signal energies are distributed into different timeslots. The adjacent channel interference is restricted by connection choosing from time to time. So the useful signal is passed only in the specified timeslot.

User 1
Frequency

GSM adopts TDMA/FDMA mode channel width: 200KHz each channel has 8 timeslots

15

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

GSM Timeslot and Frame structure


Frequency

200KHz

BP

time interval
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

15/26ms

16

Frequency Resource

GSM900 : up: 890~915MHz down: 935~960MHz duplex interval: 45MHz bandwidth: 25MHz frequency interval: 200KHz

EGSM900 : up: 880~890MHz down: 925~935MHz duplex interval: 45MHz bandwidth: 10MHz frequency interval: 200KHz GSM1900MHz: up:1850~1910MHz down:1930~1990MHz duplex interval: 80MHz working bandwidth: 60MHz frequency interval: 200KHz
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

17

GSM1800 : up: 1710-1785MHz down: 1805-1880MHz duplex interval: 95MHz working bandwidth: 75MHz frequency interval: 200KHz

Frequency Resource
Single Band Network
Which one?

General Priority
900MHz 1800MHz 1900MHz Low
Reason

High

New Operator

Propagation Characteristic
For Operator For Subscriber

18

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Frequency Resource
Single Band Network

Single Band
Dual Band

900MHz 1800MHz

Triple Band

1900MHz

In a sense, the network determines the handsets can be selected. But nowadays, most handsets support dual band.

19

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Frequency Resource
Single Band Network Cell coverage radius :

We know

Propagation characteristic
The higher the propagation frequency The higher the propagation loss 900MHz 1800MHz 1900MHz

The smaller the cell coverage radius.

20

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Timeslot and Frame structure


1 super high frame = 2048 super frame = 2715648 TDMA frame 0 1 2 3 2044 2045 2046 2047
BCCH CCCH SDCH

SACCH/TCH FACCH

1 super frame = 1326 TDMA frame6.12s 0 0 1 2 1 3 47 48 24 49 25 50

1 multiplex frame = 26 TDMA frames120ms 1 multiplex frame = 51 TDMA frame 0 1 24 25 0 1 49 50

1 TDMA frame = 8 timeslot120/26 = 4.615ms 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7


Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

21

Physical Channel

0
8

1
9

2
10

3
11

4
12

5
13

6
14

7
15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

The physical channel adopts FDMA and TDMA techs. On the time domain, a specified channel occupies the same timeslots in each TDMA frame, so it can be identified by the timeslot number and frame number.

22

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Type-Summary
14.4Kbit/s FR TCH (TCH/F14.4)
9.6Kbit/s FR TCH(TCH/F9.6) Data CH TCH Voice CH 4.8Kbit/s FR TCH (TCH/F4.8) 4.8Kbit/s HR TCH (TCH/H4.8) FR Voice Traffic Channel (TCH/FS) Enhanced FR Traffic Channel (TCH/EFR) HR Traffic Channel (TCH/HS) FCCH (down) SCH (down) BCCH (down) RACH (up) AGCH (down) PCH (down) SDCCH FACCH SACCH
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

channel
BCH CCH

CCCH

DCCH

23

Channel Type

Traffic Channel
Transmit voice and data

Signaling Channel
transmit the signaling and synchronous data between BTS and MS.

24

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Type

BCH : Frequency Correction CHannelFCCH -- for MS error correction Synchronous ChannelSCH) -- for MS frame synchronization and BTS recognization Broadcasting Control CHannelBCCH -- broadcasting information(cell selection information, etc..)

25

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Type

DCCH
Self-help Dedicated Control ChannelSDCCH for channel distribution information transmission Slow Associated Control Channel SACCH
combined with one traffic channel or SDCCH, to transmit some specific information of user information combined with one traffic channel, taking the same signal as SDCCH. It occupies the service channel to transmit signaling information.
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Fast Associated Control Channel FACCH

26

Structure of 51-frame Control CH


51 Frame BCCH+CCCH F S (Downlink) B C F S C C F S C C F S C C F S C C I

BCCH+CCCH R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R (uplink) (a) FCCH+SCH+BCCH+CCCH 8 SDCCH/8 (Downlink) D0 D0 8 SDCCH/8 (uplink) A1 A5 D1 D1 A2 A6 D2 D2 A3 A7 D3 D3 I I I I I I D0 D0 D4 D4 D1 D1 D5 D5 D2 D2 D6 D6 D3 D3 D7 D7 D4 D4 A0 A4 D5 D5 A1 A5 D6 D6 A2 A6 D7 D7 A3 A7 I I I I I I A0 A4

(b) SDCCH/8(0,...,7)+SACCH/C8(0,...,7) BCCH+CCCH+ F S 4SDCCH/4 (Downlink) F S BCCH+CCCH+ 4SDCCH/4 (uplink) D3 D3 B B R R R R C C A2 A0 F S F S A3 A1 C C C C F S F S D0 D0 D1 D1 F S F S D2 D2 D3 D3 D0 D0 F S F S D1 D1 A0 A2 F S F S A1 A3 D2 D2 I I

R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R (c) FCCH+SCH+CCCH+SDCCH/4(0,...,3)+SACCH/C4(0,...,3)

27

FFCCH BBCCH RRACH ASACCH/C

SSCH CCCCH(CCCH=PCH+AGCH+RACH) DSDCCH I idle

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Combination Type

Several logic channels combine together in some way to form some specific types of channel to transmit user data or signaling information. They are called combined channels. One combined channel can be mapped to a physical channel.

28

There are the following combined channels: a TCH/F + FACCH/F + SACCH/TF b TCH/H(0,1) + FACCH/H(0,1) + SACCH/TH(0,1) c TCH/H(0,0) + FACCH/H(0,1) + SACCH/TH(0,1) + TCH/H(1,1) d FCCH + SCH + BCCH + CCCH e FCCH + SCH + BCCH + CCCH + SDCCH/4(0...3) + SACCH/C4(0...3) f BCCH + CCCH g SDCCH/8(0 ..7) + SACCH/C8(0 .. 7) CCCH = PCH + RACH + AGCH
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Assignment inside cells

Small capacity cell with only 1 TRX


TN0: FCCH+SCH+CCCH+BCCH+SDCCH/4(0,_,3)+SACCH/C4(0,_,3);

TN1-7: TCH/F+FACCH/F+SACCH/TF

The medium-size cell with 4 TRXs


1TN0 group: FCCH+SCH+BCCH+CCCH; 2 SDCCH/8(0,_,7)+SACCH/C8(0,_,7); 29 TCH/F+FACCH/F+SACCH/TF

29

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Channel Assignment inside cells

Large-size cell with 12 TRXs


1 TN0 group: FCCH+SCH+BCCH+CCCH; 1 TN2 group, 1 TN4 group and 1 TN6 group: BCCH+CCCH; 5 SDCCH/8(0,_,7)+SACCH/C8(0,_,7); 87 TCH/F+FACCH/F+SACCH/TF

30

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda
Network

Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
31
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Cell Mode Layout

Omni-directional cell
O

Adopt omni-directional antenna the overall directional propagation characteristic is the same.

Directional cell
In general, cell with multi-sector is in common use. Every directional cell adopts directional antenna.

32

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

BTS Mode
Capacity
When the traffic is very low, and no possibility for quick increment, Omni-directional cell is used in common. Otherwise, we suggest to adopt the sector cell. Note: TRX-transceiver,each TRX handles 1 frequency. Coverage Area Sector cell is often used to enlarge the cell coverage radius because of the higher antenna gain. For special coverage ,such as road coverage, two-sector cell is adopted firstly.
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

33

System capacity

Erlang :

the traffic intensity of a totally occupied channel (i.e. the call hour of a unit hour or the call minute of a unit minute). For example, the traffic of a channel occupied for 30 minutes in an hour is 0.5 Erlang) GOS:
defined as the probability of call blocking or the probability when the call delay time is longer than a given queuing time.

34

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda
Network

Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
35
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Reasons for Interference

The transmission path is very complex, ranging from the simple line-of-sight transmission to encountering such terrain as buildings, hills and trees. Wireless channels are extremely unpredictable. Abrupt drop, or fading, of signal strength in the land mobile wireless channel is quite common. The fading feature of the mobile channel depends on the radio wave propagation environment.

36

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Reasons for interference

Environmental factors:
Terrain (mountains, hills, plains, water bodies, etc.); The quantity, heights, distribution and materials of buildings; The vegetation of the region; Weather conditions; Natural and artificial electromagnetic noises; Frequency; How MS is moved.
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

37

Interference

Co-Channel Interference
Conception:

38

the interference among the signals of cochannel cells is called co-channel interference. Result from : Frequency reuse Reduction method: co-channel cells must physically be spaced at a minimum interval to ensure Uke Kurniawan adequate isolation of transmissions. Usman - 2005

Interference

Adjacent Channel Interference Conception: The signal interference from the frequency adjacent to that of the signal used is called adjacent channel interference. Reduction method: accurate filtering and channel allocation (maximizing channel intervals of the cell). Interval of frequency reuse inter-cell interference, such as C/I, C/A

39

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Solution -Anti-interference

FH technology Dynamic power control (DPC) Discontinuous Transceiving (DTX) Diversity receiving technique
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

40

Frequency Hopping Technique

Reason: counteract Rayleigh Fading scatter interference among multiple calls Types: Base band frequency hopping keeps the transmission and receiving frequency of each carrier unit unchanged, but merely sends FU transmission data to different carrier units at different FN moments. radio frequency hopping controls the frequency synthesizer of each transceiver, making it hop according to different schemes in different time slots.

41

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Discontinuous Speech Transmission (DTX)

Two aims can be achieved by adopting DTX mode:


lower the total interference electric level in the air save transmitter power.
TRAU

BTS

BTS

MS

480 ms

comfort noise frame

42

Speech frame
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Diversity Reception Technology

The multi-path propagation of radio signals causes magnitude fading and delay time. Space Diversity (antenna diversity) Polarization Diversity orthogonal polarization diversity. horizontal polarization and vertical polarization. Frequency Diversity The working principle of this technology is that such fading wont take place on the frequency outside the coherence bandwidth of the channel.
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

43

Agenda
Network

Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
44
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Frequency Reuse
D3 C1 C3 A1 D2 B2 A1 A2 B1 B3 C2 A1 A3 D2 C1 C3 C2 D1 D3 A2 B1 C3 B2 A1 A3 D2 A1 B1 B3 C2 D1 D3 D2 C1 C3

4 3 reuse mode: one group includes 3 sectors /site ,12 frequency which are distributed to 4 sites. Every site owns 3 frequency.

45

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Frequency Reuse
B3 C1 C3 A1 A3 B2 C1 A2 B1 B3 A2 A1 A3 C2 A1 A3 B2 C1 C3 B2 C1 B3 A2 B1 B3 A2 A1 A1 A3 C2 A1 A3 B2 C1 C3

3 3 reuse mode: one group includes 3 sectors /site ,9 frequency which are distributed to 3 sites. Every site owns 3 frequency.

46

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Agenda
Network

Architecture Functional Layer of GSM Air Interface System Capacity Anti Interference Technology Network Planning Numbering arrangement
47
Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Numbering Arrangement
International Mobile Subscriber Identification number (IMSI)
It identifies a unique international universal number of a mobile subscriber, which consists of MCC+MNC+MSIN. 1) MCC: country code, 460 2MNC: network code, 00 or 01 3MSIN: subscriber identification, H1H2H3H4 9XXXXXX, H1H2H3H4: subscriber registering place H1H2: assigned by the P&T Administrative Bureau (operator )to different provinces, to each province H3H4: assigned by each province/city

48

the IMSI of user will be written into the SIM card by specific device and software and be stored into the HLR Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005 with other user information.

Numbering Arrangement
Mobile Subscriber ISDN NumberMSISDN

It is the subscriber number commonly used. China uses the TDMA independent numbering plan: CC+NDC+ H1H2H3H4 +ABC
CC: country code, 86 NDC: network code, 135139, 130 H1H2H3H4: HLR identification code ABCD: mobile subscriber number inside each HLR Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

49

Numbering Arrangement
International Mobile Equipment Identification code (IMEI)

It will uniquely identify a mobile station. It is a decimal number of 15 digits. Its structure is: TAC+FAC+SNR+SP

TAC=model ratification code, 6 digits FAC=factory assembling code, 2 digits SNR=sequence code, 6 digits SP=reserved, 1 digit

50

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Numbering Arrangement
Mobile Subscriber Roaming Number (MSRN)
The MSRN is temporarily distributed to the subscriber by the VLR according to the request by the HLR when this subscriber is called. The MSRN is released and can be assigned to other subscriber later.

CC + NDC + 00 + M1M2M3 + ABC CC: country code, 86 NDC: mobile network code, 135139, 130 M1M2: same as the H2H3 of MSISDN ABC: 000 -- 999

51

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

Numbering Arrangement
Temporarily Mobile Subscriber Identification Number (TMSI)

To insure the IMSI security, the VLR will assign an unique TMSI number for the accessed subscriber. It is used locally only and is a 4-byte TMSI number BCD code.

52

Uke Kurniawan Usman - 2005

You might also like