Broadband wireless access systems must
adequately address the combined requirements of wireless and
multimedia communications. On one hand, the system must allow users
to share the limited bandwidth resource efficiently. This implies
two criteria: maximizing the utilization of the radio frequency
spectrum and minimizing the delay experienced by the users. On the
other hand, the system is required to handle a wide range of
information bit rates together with various types of real-time and
non-real-time service classes with different traffic
characteristics and quality of service guarantees. This paper
discusses the design and development of broadband wireless access
systems with emphasis on how such systems can efficiently support
disparate classes of multimedia traffic.
The IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN
Standards
The IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN standards
specify wireless connectivity for fixed, portable, and moving users
in a geographically limited area. The switching mode is
packet-based. Like the IEEE 802.3 (Ethernet) standard, the IEEE
802.11 standard supports multiple physical layer media.
The 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.11 Standard
The 802.11 physical layer specification allows three transmission
options, namely:
- Direct-sequence spread spectrum
- Frequency-hopping spread spectrum
- Diffuse infrared.
Data Rate
(Mbit/s) |
Symbol Rate
(Msymbols/s) |
Bits Per
Symbol
|
Code Length
|
Modulation
|
| 1 |
1 |
1 |
11-bit Barker Code |
DBPSK |
| 2 |
1 |
2 |
11-bit Barker Code |
DQPSK |
| 5.5 |
1.375 |
4 |
8-bit CCK |
DQPSK |
| 11 |
1.375 |
8 |
8-bit CCK |
DQPSK |
Table 1: Specifications for the 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.11
physical layer
Note that spread spectrum is not used as a multiple access
technique in 802.11 wireless LANs. Rather, it is used to protect
data signals against the effects of multipath and other propagation
impairments.
The standard defines two medium access control (MAC) protocols.
The distributed coordination function (DCF) employs CSMA with
collision avoidance (CSMA/CA) for contention-based multiple access.
Contention-free service is provided by the point co-ordination
function (PCF), which is essentially a polling access method. The
PCF relies on the asynchronous access service provided by the
DCF.
The 5 GHz IEEE 802.11 Standard
The IEEE 802.11 committee has also finalized a 5 GHz wireless LAN
standard (approved as IEEE 802.11a on September 16, 1999
) that will support wireless data rates of 6 to 54
Mbit/s based on coded orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
(OFDM).
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Mandatory data rates (Mbit/s) |
6, 12, 24 |
| Optional data rates (Mbit/s) |
18, 36, 48, 54 |
| Number of subcarriers |
52 (48 for data, 4 for pilots) |
| Sampling rate |
20 Msamples/s |
| Guard interval |
800 ns (16 time samples) |
| Channel spacing |
20 MHz |
| Signal bandwidth |
16.6 MHz |
| Modulation for subcarrier |
BPSK, QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM |
| Bit-interleaved convolutional coding |
Constraint length=7, Rate=1/2, 2/3, 3/4 |
Table 2: Specifications for the 5 GHz IEEE 802.11
physical layer
OFDM has been chosen due to its excellent performance in highly
dispersive channels. OFDM also allows considerable flexibility in
the choice of different modulation methods. The channel spacing of
20 MHz is a compromise between having high data rates per channel
and having a reasonable number of channels in the allocated
spectrum.
Out of the 52 subcarriers in each channel, 48 are subcarriers
carrying user data while the remaining four subcarriers are pilots
that facilitate phase tracking for coherent demodulation. Each
subcarrier serves as one communication link between the access
point and the mobile terminals. The 800 ns guard interval is
sufficient to enable good performance on channels with delay spread
of up to 250 ns.
BPSK, QPSK, and 16-QAM are the supported subcarrier modulation
schemes with 64-QAM as an option. Forward error correction is
performed by convolutional coding with rate of 1/2 and constraint
length of 7. The three code rates of 1/2, 2/3, and 3/4 are obtained
by code puncturing.
The HiperLAN Wireless LAN Standards
The HiperLAN standards are European
standards that support high performance radio-based
LANs.
The HiperLAN Type 1 Standard
HiperLAN Type 1 operates between 5.15 and 5.30 GHz at a data rate
of 23.5 Mbit/s. The 5 GHz band is compatible with the U-NII band in
the U.S. Unlike the 802.11 standard, which supports both the ad-hoc
(distributed) and infrastructure (centralized) topologies, HiperLAN
Type 1 supports only the ad-hoc topology. However, the standard
also caters for the multihop ad-hoc topology, as opposed to the
single-hop topology adopted by 802.11. This allows HiperLAN Type 1
networks to be implemented without the need for frequency
planning.
HiperLAN Type 1 defines five channel access priority levels
according to residual (useful) lifetime and user priority (Table
3). The user priority is an attribute assigned to each packet
according to the traffic type it carries. The residual lifetime
represents the maximum time interval the packet must be delivered.
Since multihop routing is supported, the residual lifetime is
normalized to the number of hops it has to travel before reaching
the final destination.
Normalized Residual
Lifetime (NRL) |
High User-Defined
Priority |
Low User-Defined
Priority |
| NRL < 10 ms |
0 |
1 |
| 10 ms < NRL < 20 ms |
1 |
2 |
| 20 ms < NRL < 40 ms |
2 |
3 |
| 40 ms < NRL < 80 ms |
3 |
4 |
| NRL > 80 ms |
4 |
4 |
Table 3: HiperLAN Type 1 defines five
channel-access priority levels according to residual (useful)
lifetime and user priority
The residual lifetime is computed as follows. While a lower
priority packet is waiting, its residual lifetime will be
decremented. The user may decide to increase the priority of a
packet as its residual lifetime decreases. When the residual
lifetime becomes zero and the packet has not been serviced, it will
be discarded. Within the same priority class, FCFS policy prevails.
Hence, the MAC protocol in HiperLAN Type 1 provides either best
effort latency for isochronous traffic (e.g., voice, video) or best
effort integrity for asynchronous traffic (e.g., data).
The HiperLAN Type 2 Standard
HiperLAN Type 2 allows wireless LANs to be interconnected to
virtually any type of fixed network technology. It can carry
Ethernet or IP packets, ATM cells, and supports UMTS. The standard
provides wireless data rates of up to 54 Mbit/s at the physical
layer and up to 25 Mbit/s at the network layer with QoS guarantees
such as maximum allowable delay and cell loss ratio. Like the 5 GHz
IEEE 802.11 standard, HiperLAN Type 2 is based on OFDM. The
physical-layer specifications are similar to those of the 802.11
standard depicted in Table 2. A key feature of the physical
layer is the provision of several modulation and coding
configurations (Table 4). This allows a HiperLAN Type 2
network to adapt to changing radio link quality.
| Data Rate |
Modulation |
Code Rate |
Coded Bits Per
Subcarrier |
Data Bits Per
OFDM Symbol |
| 6 |
BPSK |
1/2 |
1 |
24 |
| 9 |
BPSK |
3/4 |
1 |
36 |
| 12 |
QPSK |
1/2 |
2 |
48 |
| 18 |
QPSK |
3/4 |
2 |
72 |
| 27 |
16-QAM |
9/16 |
4 |
108 |
| 36 |
16-QAM |
3/4 |
4 |
144 |
| 54 |
64-QAM |
3/4 |
6 |
216 |
Table 4: HiperLAN Type 2 modulation and coding
parameters
Unlike 802.11, HiperLAN Type 2 is connection-oriented.
Connections must be established between the mobile terminal and the
access point prior to data transmission. This is achieved using
signaling functions. The connections are time-division multiplexed
over the air interface and can be point-to-point and
point-to-multipoint. Point-to-point connections are bidirectional
whereas point-to-multipoint connections are unidirectional (towards
the mobile terminal).
In the HiperLAN Type 2 MAC protocol, the access point exercises
centralized control and adapts according to the resources demanded
by each mobile terminal. The protocol is based on TDD and dynamic
TDMA. TDD allows communication in the downlink and uplink within
the same time-slotted frame. The time slots are allocated
dynamically depending on the need for bandwidth resources.
The connection-oriented nature of HiperLAN Type 2 allows
straightforward implementation of QoS support. Each connection can
be assigned a specific QoS in terms of bandwidth, delay, jitter,
and bit error rate. It is also possible to employ a simpler
approach where each connection is assigned a priority level
relative to other connections. The QoS support enables the
transmission of a mixture of traffic types of (e.g. voice, video,
and data). There are also specific connections for unicast,
multicast, and broadcast transmission.
Home Networks
The past two years have seen a growing
demand for home wireless networks. For instance, the HomeRF Working
Group is supported by the International Telecommunications Union
and includes more than 90 companies. The Bluetooth Special Interest
Group has a current support strength of some 1900 members while the
Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) Forum has over 500 members.
Home wireless networks differ from wireless LANs in that they
merely provide cable replacement. However, users get integrated
voice and data transmission that is highly flexible and affordable.
There is no need to string cable between computers and peripherals
or attach phones to existing telephone jacks. Connections between
computers, peripherals, and handsets are entirely
wireless.
The HomeRF Standard
HomeRF’s Shared Wireless Access Protocol (SWAP)
specification defines an over-the-air interface that is designed to
support both wireless voice and data traffic. SWAP adopts a hybrid
access protocol:
- TDMA for delivery of interactive voice and other isochronous
services
- CSMA/CA for delivery of asynchronous high-speed packet
data.
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Hopping rate |
50 hop/s |
| Frequency range |
2.4 GHz ISM band |
| Transmit power |
100 mW (20 dBm) |
| Data rate |
1 Mbit/s (2-FSK), 2 Mbit/s (4-FSK) |
| Range |
Up to 50 m |
| Number of users |
Up to 127 per network |
| Voice connections |
Up to 6 full duplex connections, with error control |
Table 5: Main system parameters for HomeRF
Bluetooth
Bluetooth is a wireless data interface standard that provides a
simple means of exchanging data between two portable communications
devices (e.g., mobile phones, personal computers). Bluetooth
operates in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz ISM band. The standard supports
two types of connections:
- Synchronous Connection Oriented (SCO)
- Asynchronous Connectionless (ACL).
SCO packets are transmitted over reserved slots in a
point-to-point connection between a controlling master unit and a
slave device. Once the connection is established, both master and
slave may send SCO packets. A SCO packet allows both voice and data
transmission. However, only the data portion is retransmitted when
corrupted. The ACL connection supports both symmetric and
asymmetric data traffic. The master unit controls the connection
bandwidth and decides how much bandwidth is given to each slave.
Slaves must be polled before they can transmit data (Figure
1).
Figure 1: Polling mechanism in Bluetooth
Bluetooth can support one asynchronous data connection, up to
three synchronous voice connections, or a connection that
simultaneously supports a mixture asynchronous data and synchronous
voice. Each synchronous connection supports a data rate of 64
Kbit/s. An asynchronous connection supports 721 Kbit/s in the
forward direction while permitting 57.6 Kbit/s in the reverse
direction. Alternatively, it can support a symmetric connection of
432.6 Kbit/s.
Wireless ATM
Many high-speed wireless ATM projects have
been proposed recently. The wireless ATM concept combines the user
mobility with statistical multiplexing and QoS guarantees provided
by ATM networks. It also facilitates deployment of integrated,
high-speed wireless access in the local loop.
The efficiency of wireless ATM access varies according to the
type of ATM traffic supported. For example, fixed-assignment access
is efficient for predictable constant bit rate (CBR) traffic but
can result in poor utilization when serving many variable bit rate
(VBR) connections. Random access can be inefficient in supporting
ATM traffic, due to the unpredictable delays that a lossy wireless
channel can induce. On-demand assignment access appears to be a
popular choice for wireless ATM since it results in statistical
multiplexing that leads to high channel utilization
. The drawback is the increased delay and
complexity needed to implement a request-reservation mechanism.
Wireless Local Loop
The wireless local loop (WLL) allows a
long-distance carrier to bypass the local service provider, thereby
cutting down subscriber costs. Local Multipoint Distribution
Service (LMDS) and the Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service
(MMDS) are two major fixed WLL solutions for delivery of broadband
services to customer premises (e.g., residential homes, business
offices) and are seen as strong competitors to wireline
alternatives (e.g., ADSL, cable modems). Both MMDS and LMDS employ
cellular architectures. However, unlike mobile phone networks, the
links between the central hub and the distributed users within each
radio cell are fixed. Typical cell coverage areas for MMDS and LMDS
range from 25 to 35 miles and 1 to 5 miles respectively.
Standardization activities are currently being undertaken by the
ATM Forum, DAVIC, ETSI, and ITU. The majority of these activities
focus on ATM as the transport mechanism.
MMDS
MMDS operates with a bandwidth of 500 MHz in the 2.150 to 2.682
GHz band and provides large capacities in the order of 10s of
Mbit/s (a potential capacity of around 200 video channels).
LMDS
LMDS was originally intended for consumer services with limited
interactivity (e.g., digital TV broadcasting, video-on-demand). It
was later recognized that LMDS systems have a strong potential to
supply broadband services to both homes and businesses and the
interest gradually shifted towards these applications.
LMDS typically operates at a millimeter wave band (28 to 31 GHz)
and extremely large blocks of allocated spectrum of approximately 1
GHz are available. Thus LMDS promises much larger capacities in the
order of 100s of Mbit/s data rates on each link and is capable of
supporting emerging broadband telecommunication services including
fast Internet access, digital video distribution, video
teleconferencing, and other interactive switched multimedia
services.
Although channel impairments play a significant role in the
design of both MMDS and LMDS systems, LMDS requires special
attention since millimeter waves are very much affected by outages
due to rain. Thus, the implementation of LMDS demands many
innovations in modulation, channel coding, and adaptive antenna
techniques.
The customer premise equipment can be attached to LMDS networks
using TDMA, FDMA, or CDMA. Currently, TDMA and FDMA are the
predominant access methods. These methods apply only to uplink
transmissions from the customer site to the hub. The downlink
traffic from the hub is based on time-division multiplex.
IMT-2000
Third generation (3G) global wireless
technologies are becoming available over a period of several years,
starting in 2000 in some countries and as late as 2002 in others.
The governing standard is ITU’s International Mobile
Telephony 2000 or IMT-2000 (previously known as FPLMTS). This
air-interface standard provides worldwide compatibility among
wireless systems and is supported by TIA in the U.S., ETSI in
Europe, and ARIB in Asia. IMT-2000 provides a total bandwidth of
230 MHz in the 1885 to 2025 MHz and 2110 to 2200 MHz bands
identified by the World Administrative Radio Conference in 1992
(WARC ’92).
ITU’s vision of global wireless access in the 21st
century, including mobile and fixed access, is aimed at providing
direction to the diverse second generation (2G) technologies in the
hope of unifying these competing wireless systems into a seamless,
3G radio infrastructure capable of offering a wide range of
services. The benefits are enormous since a successful IMT-2000
standard creates a single market for all aspects of cellular
telephony.
Coverage Areas and Data Rates
IMT-2000 aims to provide ubiquitous wireless communications in
many different environments. It covers both terrestrial and
satellite networks, from indoor pico radio cells through outdoor
micro and macro cells to satellite mega cells. In addition to
international roaming, it will support high data rate services,
including 2.048 Mbit/s for indoor users, 384 Kbit/s for pedestrian
subscribers, 144 Kbit/s for moving vehicles, and 9.6 Kbit/s for
mobile satellite services. The radio technologies are expected to
have vastly improved capabilities over existing 2G mobile systems
(e.g., multi-environment, multi-mode, multi-band, multimedia
operations).
Figure 2: Convergence of disparate technologies in
IMT-2000
CDMA Proposals
A number of Radio Transmission Technologies (RTTs) developed in
Asia, Europe, and the U.S. have been proposed for IMT-2000. Three
proposals were initially submitted, namely direct-sequence wideband
CDMA (W-CDMA), multi-carrier CDMA mode (CDMA2000), and
time-duplexed CDMA (TD-CDMA). W-CDMA is backward compatible to GSM
and PDC systems in Europe and Asia respectively while CDMA2000 is
backward compatible to IS-95 (developed by the TIA) in North
America. Recently, the wireless industry has agreed to a harmonized
Global 3G (G3G) CDMA framework.
W-CDMA
W-CDMA increases data rates by using multiple 1.25 MHz channels as
opposed to the single channel adopted by the current IS-95 standard
(Figure 3). A significant concept distinguishing W-CDMA from
current IS-95 systems is the introduction of inter-cell
asynchronous operation, which is vital for continuous system
deployment from outdoors to indoors, and the data channel
associated pilot channel for a coherent reverse link as well as a
forward link. W-CDMA facilitates the application of interference
cancellation and adaptive antenna array techniques on both the
reverse and forward links to significantly enhance the link
capacity and coverage.
Figure 3: W-CDMA uplink multirate transmission
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Channel bandwidth (MHz) |
1.25, 5, 10, and 20 |
| Chip rate (Mchips/s) |
1.024, 4.096, 8.192, 16.384 |
| Frame length (ms) |
10, 20 |
| Data modulation |
QPSK (downlink), BPSK (uplink) |
| Multirate |
Variable spreading and multicode |
| Power control |
Open and fast closed loop control |
| Spread factors |
4 to 256 |
Table 6: W-CDMA parameters
Time-Duplexed CDMA
In TD-CDMA, different channels are multiplexed onto the same time
slot. Since the spreading ratio is small, it may require multiuser
detection to remove intracell interference. Another reason why
multiuser detection is needed can be attributed to the slow power
control in TD-CDMA, resulting in highly variable received power
levels.
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Channel bandwidth (MHz) |
1.6 |
| Chip rate (Mchips/s) |
2.167 |
| Frame length (ms) |
4.615 (8 slots per frame) |
| Data modulation |
QPSK, 16-QAM |
| Multirate |
Multislot and multicode |
| Signal detection |
Coherent |
| Spread factors |
16 chips/symbol |
Table 7: TD-CDMA parameters
CDMA2000
The main goal of CDMA2000 is to provide 144 Kbit/s and 384 Kbit/s
with approximately 5 MHz of bandwidth. Like W-CDMA, CDMA2000
employs slotted ALOHA for packet transmission. However, instead of
a fixed transmit power, it increases the transmit power after an
unsuccessful attempt. This increases the probability of success for
a retransmission through the capture effect.
TDMA Proposals
TDMA technology is represented by Universal Wireless Communication
(UWC-136), which harmonizes GSM with North America’s TDMA.
The CDMA and TDMA air-interface proposals were harmonized through
the 3G-Partnership Project (3GPP).
| Parameter |
Specification |
| Channel bandwidth (MHz) |
1.25, 5, 10, 15, and 20 |
| Direct-spread chip rate (Mchips/s) |
1.2288, 3.6864, 7.3728, 11.0593, 14.7456 |
| Multicarrier chip rate (Mchips/s) |
N x 1.2288 (N = 1, 3, 6, 9, 12) |
| Frame length (ms) |
5 (control), 20 (data) |
| Data modulation |
QPSK (downlink), BPSK (uplink) |
| Multirate |
Variable spreading and multicode |
| Power control |
Open loop and fast closed loop controls |
| Spread factors |
4 to 256 |
Table 8: CDMA2000 parameters
A second world standard is expected as GSM and TDMA systems
evolve into the 3G standard, Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution
(EDGE). EDGE increases the data rate of current GSM systems by
roughly three times through the use of 8-PSK (3 bits/symbol)
modulation instead of GMSK (1 bit/symbol).
| Radio Parameters |
GSM |
EDGE |
| Carrier spacing |
200 KHz |
200 KHz |
| Modulation rate |
270.1 symbols/s |
270.1 symbols/s |
| Frame length |
4.615 ms |
4.615 ms |
| Number of slots/frame |
8 |
8 |
| Modulation |
GMSK |
8-PSK |
| Payload per burst (symbols) |
116 |
116 |
| Bits per burst (bits) |
116 |
384 |
| Radio interface data rate |
22.8 Kbit/s (1 slot)
182.4 Kbit/s (1 frame) |
69.6 Kbit/s (1 slot)
556.8 Kbit/s (1 frame) |
Table 9: Parameters for GSM and EDGE
Many 3G wireless systems involving high-speed wireless LANs,
wireless ATM networks, and wireless Internet connectivity are the
major focus of recent research efforts. These broadband networks
aim to provide integrated, packet-oriented, transmission of text,
graphics, voice, image, video, and computer data between
individuals as well as in the broadcast mode. Although the
underlying access protocols supporting these networks have evolved
rapidly, the basic access methods (e.g., ALOHA, CSMA, TDMA, and CDMA)
are still very much relevant.