Concepts of & cell sectoring and micro cell

42,296 views 31 slides Oct 09, 2013
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 31
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31

About This Presentation

It will let u know the Concept of & cell sectoring and micro cell. How they work.


Slide Content

CONCEPT OF & CELL
SECTORING AND MICRO
CELL
By Kundan Kumar

Shape of Cells
Square
Width dcell has four neighbors at distance dand four at distance
d
Better if all adjacent antennas equidistant
Simplifies choosing and switching to new antenna
Hexagon
Provides equidistant antennas
Radius defined as radius of circum-circle
Distance from center to vertex equals length of side
Distance between centers of cells radius R is R
Not always precise hexagons
Topographical limitations
Local signal propagation conditions
Location of antennas2 3

Cellular Geometries

Frequency Reuse
Power of base transceiver controlled
Allow communications within cell on given frequency
Limit escaping power to adjacent cells
Allow re-use of frequencies in nearby cells
Use same frequency for multiple conversations
10 –50 frequencies per cell
E.g.
N cells all using same number of frequencies
K total number of frequencies used in systems
Each cell has K/Nfrequencies
Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) K=395, N=7 giving 57
frequencies per cell on average

Characterizing Frequency
Reuse
D = minimum distance between centers of cells that use the same
band of frequencies (called cochannels)
R = radius of a cell
d = distance between centers of adjacent cells (d = R)
N = number of cells in repetitious pattern
Reuse factor
Each cell in pattern uses unique band of frequencies
Hexagonal cell pattern, following values of N possible
N = I
2
+ J
2
+ (I x J), I, J = 0, 1, 2, 3, …
Possible values of N are 1, 3, 4, 7, 9, 12, 13, 16, 19, 21, …
D/R=
D/d = N3 N

Frequency Reuse Patterns

Frequency Reuse Patterns

Principles of Cellular Frequency Reuse
Typical frequency reuse plan for 7 different radio
frequencies, based on hexagonal cells.
In fact some problems in cellular frequency
assignment are solved using map coloring
theory.

Principles of Cellular Frequency Reuse
(con’t)
Frequency 're-use' distanceis the closest
distance between the centers of two cells using
the same frequency (in different clusters) is
determined by the choice of the cluster size C
and the lay-out of the cell cluster.

Co-Channel Interference (CCI)
CCI arises in cellular systems where the available
frequency channels are divided into different sets.
Each set being assigned to a specific cell and with
several cells in the system using the same set of
frequencies.
CCI limits the system capacity
This interference generally happens in places where
population is high.

The Capacity of Cellular
Network
Why do we need more capacity?
Reach more users at the same time
Share more information throughout the network.
New technologies will require more complex
solutions and these solutions can be achieved
with maximum space available.

The Capacity of Cellular Network
(con’t)
The capacity of cellular systems can be
increased by;
Frequency borrowing
Cell splitting
Cell sectoring
Microcells

Frequency Borrowing
RF bandwidth is the most important constraint
in wireless systems.
So to increase the capacity, frequency of
Radio Signals and wireless systems shall be
increased.
To do this, frequencies are taken from adjacent
cells by congested cells.

Cell Splitting
The unit area of RF coverage for cellular
network is called a cell.
In each cell, a base stationtransmits from a
fixed cell sitelocation, which is often centrally
located in the cell.
In base stations where the usage of cellular
network is high, these cells are split into
smaller cells.

Cell Splitting (con’t)
The radio frequencies are reassigned, and
transmission power is reduced.
A new cell site must be constructed when a cell is
split
Cell splitting is one of theeasy and less costly
solution when increasing the capacity of cellular
network.
Splitting the cells into smaller ones also lead to a
new solution called cell sectoring.

Cell Sectoring
Sectorization consists of dividing an
omnidirectional(360 degree) view from the cell
site into non-overlapping slices called sectors.
When combined,sectors provide the same
coverage but they are considered to be
separate cells.
Also considered as one of easy and
inexpensive capacity increasing solution.

Sectoring
In basic form, antennas are omnidirectional
Replacing a single omni-directional antenna at base station
with several directional antennas, each radiating within a
specified sector.
achieves capacity improvement by essentially rescaling the
system.
less co-channel interference, number of cells in a cluster can
be reduced
Larger frequency reuse factor, larger capacity

Sectoring methods

Sectoring Examples
Only two cochannel cell
S/I improvement 7.2dB
Capacity 12/7
First type handoff
Trunking efficiency low
Urban area not good
Example 3.9

DAYANANDA SAGAR
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING,
BANGALORE
Repeater
Extend coverage range
Directional antenna or distributed antenna
systems

Microcells
As the splitting of cell idea evolves, the usage
of smaller cells become efficient and it leads
the creation of microcells.
The aim of creating microcells are increasing
the capacity of cellular network in areas where
population is high.

Microcells (con’t)
Typical comparison can be made like this;
Cells typically range in size from two to twenty
kilometers in diameter.
Microcells range from about a hundred meters to
a kilometer in diameter.

Micro Cell Zone Concept
Large control base station is replaced by
several lower powered transmitters on the
edge of the cell.
The mobile retains the same channel and the
base station simply switches the channel to a
different zone site and the mobile moves from
zone to zone.
Since a given channel is active only in a
particular zone in which mobile is traveling,
base station radiation is localized and
interference is reduced.

Micro Cell Zone
Superior to sectoring, any base
station channel may be assigned to
any zone by the base station
Same channel
No handoff
Only the active zone

DAYANANDA SAGAR
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING,
BANGALORE
Example
2.33 times
capacity gain

Questions

Question1
How can Cellular network capacities will be
improve in the future?
A:There are lots of solutions for improving the
capacity of the Network. But the one of the
most logical one is, using the logical solution
cell in the sector with adaptive antennas. And
using more cells where the number of
subscriber is bigger.

Question2
Why we need the frequency reuse? What are
the reasons?
A:We need frequency reuse because we
have a bandwidth. If we use same frequency
in every cell, the other cells make interference.
Hence the specific frequency is trying to not
use by the other cells.