Alcatel WiMax Write Paper
Alcatel WiMax Write Paper
Alcatel WiMax Write Paper
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 What is WiMAX? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Standards associated to WiMAX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 WiMAX, the reality beyond the hype . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 WiMAX product availability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Market for WiMAX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 WiMAX and its three main markets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 WiMAX, a complement to fixed and mobile access . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 WiMAX for fixed wireless access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2
The WiMAX CPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Deployment topologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Operators business case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3
WiMAX Technology Challenge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 WiMAX, more flexibility and security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 WiMAX, a very efficient radio solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 System performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 WiMAX Spectrum and Regulation Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Biography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
Introduction
Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) has been serving enterprises and operators for years, to the great satisfaction of its users. However, the new IP-based standard developed by the IEEE 802.16 is likely to accelerate adoption of the technology. It will expand the scope of usage thanks to: the possibility of operating in unlicensed frequency bands, unique performance under Non-Line-of-Sight (NLOS) conditions, Quality of Service (QoS) awareness, extension to mobility, and more. In parallel, the WiMAX forum, backed by industry leaders, will encourage the widespread adoption of broadband wireless access by establishing a brand for the technology and pushing interoperability between products. The purpose of this White Paper is to highlight and assess the value of WiMAX as the right solution to: bridge the digital divide in low-density areas where technical and economic factors make broadband deployment very challenging, offer fixed broadband access in urban and suburban areas where copper quality is poor or unbundling difficult, extend the currently limited coverage of public WLAN (hotspots) to citywide coverage (hotzones) the same technology being usable at home and on the move, blanket metropolitan areas for mobile data-centric service delivery. In addition to these uses, this paper will highlight other potential applications, such as telephony or an effective point-to-multipoint backhauling solution for operators or enterprises.
(NLOS) and nomadicity through additional radio capabilities such as antenna beam forming and OFDM sub-channeling, Early 2005, an IEEE 802.16e variant will introduce support for mobility. See Figure 1 for the applications associated with each of these standards. The WiMAX Forum intends to do for 802.16 what the Wi-Fi Alliance did for 802.11: harmonize standards and certify interoperability between equipment from different vendors. Standardized interoperable solutions will result in mass volume and bring down costs, promote and establish a brand for the technology. WiMAX, the reality beyond the hype WiMAX offers broadband wireless access at data rates of several tens of Mbit/s (up to 75 Mbit/s per base station) and within a range of several tens of kilometers (up to 50 km). However, 75 Mbit/s is achievable with a 20 MHz channel. Regulators will often allow only smaller channels (10 MHz or less) reducing the maximum bandwidth, 50 km is achievable only under optimal conditions and with a reduced data rate (a few Mbit/s). Typical coverage will be around 5 km with indoor CPE (NLOS) and around 15 km with a CPE connected to an external antenna (LOS), Mobility will target only urban usage, with up to 60 km/h vehicle speed to maintain optimum throughput performance.
What is WiMAX?
Standards associated to WiMAX WiMAX product availability Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access Mass deployment of WiMAX products is planned in two (WiMAX) is the common name associated to the IEEE main steps: 802.16a/REVd/e standards. These standards are issued by the IEEE Fig. 1 The different flavors of WiMAX 802.16 subgroup that originally covered the Wireless Local Loop (WLL) technologies with radio spectrum from 10 to 66 GHz. 802.16a 802.16REVd 802.16e Recently, these specifications were extended below 10 GHz: Fixed Outdoor Fixed Outdoor Limited Mobility In January 2003, the IEEE approved 802.16a as an amendment to IEEE 802.162001, defining (Near) Line-OfSight capability, Mid-2004, IEEE 802.16REVd, which should be published under the name IEEE 802.16-2004, will introduce support for indoor CPE
Applications E1/T1 service for enterprises Backhaul for Hotspots Limited residential Broadband access CPE External box connected to PC with outside antenna Applications Indoor Broadband access for residential users (High Speed Internet, VoIP,...) CPE External box connected to PC with built-in antenna Applications "Portable" Broadband access for consumers Always Best Connected CPE PC Card
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mid-2005, availability of the 802.16REVd chipset, allowing the development of costoptimized CPE operating indoors (NLOS), in 2006, availability of 802.16e chipsets embedded in laptops and later on in other mobile devices, enabling mobility (portable Internet). Current pre-WiMAX products and initial 802.16a WiMAX products available in early 2005, operating similarly to current proprietary equipment (LOS, not cost-optimized CPE) and at similar cost, will not be widely deployed.
Fig. 2
802.16e 802.16a/REVd
Point-to-Multipoint backhaul
WiFi Hotspots
competition (the same subscription could be used throughout a city). This market will also start in 2005, with WiMAX progressively replacing current proprietary products. It will then introduce the portable Internet application by providing broadband access on the move, extending the currently limited coverage of public WLANs to city-wide coverage (hotzones). Later expansion will be to Metropolitan areas, providing high-speed data services under mobility conditions. This market will first emerge in North America, followed by most of the developed and developing countries. It will take off with the availability of WiMAX-enabled laptops in 2006.
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whereas coverage of remote areas -smaller towns and rural areas - is lagging behind. Hurdles to overcome are the poor line quality of the installed copper base, the large distances to the central offices or cabinets, or the low population density. In this context, WiMAX, with its QoS support, longer reach, and data rates similar to DSL, is naturally positioned as a viable last mile option to offer broadband access to residential users. In emerging countries, the main focus of broadband deployment is on urban and sub-urban areas, and will remain so in the near future. The low POTS penetration and the low quality of the copper pair prevent mass scale DSL deployment and foster the need for alternate broadband technologies. In this context, WiMAX is positioned as an excellent option. Moreover, the possibility of offering broadband services in combination with voice services will gradually lead to narrowband WLL substitution. In addition to WiMAX, alternate technologies available to cover urban and rural markets in developed and developing countries are remote DSL solutions, satellite combined with Wi-Fi for the last mile, Fiber to the User (FTTU), and possibly Power Line Communications (PLC). Parameters such as availability of the copper, distance to the remote unit/central office, backhauling costs, and teledensity will drive the choice for one or other of these solutions. For further details, refer to the article Providing Always-on Broadband Access to Under-served Areas in the Alcatel Telecommunication Review (Q4 2003). The WiMAX CPE In most case, a simple plug and play terminal, similar to a DSL modem, provides connectivity. See Figure 3. For customers located several kilometers from the WiMAX base station, a self-install outdoor antenna may be required to improve transmission quality. To serve isolated customers, a directive antenna pointing to the WiMAX base station may be required.
For customers requesting voice in addition to broadband services, specific CPE will allow the connection of standard or VoIP phones. Deployment topologies Several topology and backhauling options are to be supported on the WiMAX base stations: wireline backhauling (typically over Ethernet), microwave Pointto-Point connection, as well as WiMAX backhaul. See Figure 4. With the latter option, the base station has the capability to backhaul itself. This can be achieved by reserving part of the bandwidth normally used for the end-user traffic and using it for backhauling purposes. Operators business case WiMAX is of interest for incumbent, alternate, and mobile operators. Some possible business cases: The incumbent operators can use the wireless technology as a complement to DSL, allowing them to offer DSL-like services in remote, low-density areas that cannot be served with DSL. For alternate operators, the wireless technology is the solution for a competitive high-speed Internet and voice offering bypassing the landline facilities, with applicability in urban or sub-urban areas. In the long term, mobile operators may also take market share from fixed operators due to substitution of fixed broadband access by wireless broadband access, giving access to users on the move but also at home. WiMAX for limited mobility access WiMAX, the natural complement to Wi-Fi and mobile networks Mobile networks offer mobility, ubiquitous coverage, and voice support, but at the expense of limited data rates. WiMAX can be positioned as a complementary solution by offering high bandwidth when required, in particular in dense urban areas.
Fig. 3
Public WLAN, while offering clear benefits, is limited in coverage and mobility capabilities. WiMAX by-passes these limitations and offers broadband connectivity in larger areas (hotzones). Wi-Fi and WiMAX solutions are also WiMAX CPE for fixed access, WiMAX PC card for nomadic access complementary, with Wi-Fi being more adapted for short-range, indoor connections (in particular in the enterprise and at home) and WiMAX for long- range outdoor connections. From nomadicity to full mobility While nomadicity offers mobility within the coverage area of a single base station, limited mobility access implies session continuity throughout the network possibly with between base stations.
WiMAX
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Fig. 4
Base station
Network CPE
A new generation of networks with multi-access (3G, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, DSL, FTTU, etc.) enable end-users to enjoy an Always Best Connected experience when accessing their applications via the best available network at home, on the pause, or on the move. See Figure 5. WiMAX becomes an additional radio access solution in the global network architecture.
WiMAX, the obvious choice for operators By integrating WiMAX into their networks, mobile operators can boost their service with high bandwidth, when necessary, the same applications (messaging, agenda, location-based services, ) being offered on both networks with a single billing. Mobile operators can also reuse existing radio sites and backhauling equipment to facilitate the deployment of WiMAX.
Fig. 5
Always Best Connected Fixed operators, incumbent or alternate, will offer nomadic and mobile usage as an addition to their fixed access offering to complement their DSL and Wi-Fi bundle. For those having deployed WiMAX for fixed access, this is also a natural evolution of their offering.
At Home
At the Office
ADSL
Public WLAN
Hotspots
Continuity Service
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and independent management of the traffic of every user. This simplifies the support of real-time and voice applications. One of the inhibitors to widespread deployment of WLAN was the poor security feature of the first releases. WiMAX proposes the full range of security features to ensure secured data exchange: terminal authentication by exchanging certificates to prevent rogue devices, user authentication using the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), data encryption using the Data Encryption Standard (DES) or Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), both much more robust than the Wireless Equivalent Privacy (WEP) initially used by WLAN. Furthermore, each service is encrypted with its own security association and private keys. WiMAX, a very efficient radio solution WiMAX must be able to provide a reliable service over long distances to customers using indoor terminals or PC cards (like todays WLAN cards). These requirements, with limited transmit power to comply with health requirements, will limit the link budget. Subchannelling in uplink and smart antennas at the base station have to overcome these constraints. The WiMAX system relies on a new radio physical (PHY) layer and appropriate MAC layer to support all demands driven by the target applications. The PHY layer modulation is based on OFDM, in combination with a centralized MAC layer for optimized resource allocation and support of QoS for different types of services (VoIP, real-time and non real-time services, best effort). The OFDM PHY layer is well adapted to the NLOS propagation environment in the 2 11 GHz frequency range. It is inherently robust when it comes to handling the significant delay spread caused by the typical NLOS reflections. Together with adaptive modulation, which is applied to each subscriber individually according to the radio channel capability, OFDM can provide a high spectral efficiency of about 3 4 bit/s/Hz. However, in contrast to single carrier modulation, the OFDM signal has an increased peak:average ratio and increased frequency accuracy requirements. Therefore, selection of appropriate power amplifiers and frequency recovery concepts are crucial. WiMAX provides flexibility in terms of channelization, carrier frequency, and duplex mode (TDD and FDD) to meet a variety of requirements for available spectrum resources and targeted services.
An important and very challenging function of the WiMAX system is the support of various advanced antenna techniques, which are essential to provide high spectral efficiency, capacity, system performance, and reliability: beam forming using smart antennas provides additional gain to bridge long distances or to increase indoor coverage; it reduces inter-cell interference and improves frequency reuse, transmit diversity and MIMO techniques using multiple antennas take advantage of multipath reflections to improve reliability and capacity. System performance Table 2 gives typical cell size and throughput at 3.5 GHz in various configuration and environments. Tab. 2 Typical cell size and throughput
Typical cell size 1 km (5/8 mi) 2.5 km (1.5 mi) 7 km (4 mi) 5 km (3 mi) 15 km (9 mi) Sector throughput 21 Mbps w. 10 MHz channel 22 Mbps w. 10 MHz channel 22 Mbps w. 10 MHz channel 4.5 Mbps w. 3.5 MHz channel 4.5 Mbps w. 3.5 MHz channel
Environment Urban indoor (NLOS) Suburban indoor (NLOS) Suburban outdoor (LOS) Rural indoor (NLOS) Rural outdoor (LOS)
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Conclusion
The latest developments in the IEEE 802.16 group are driving a broadband wireless access (r)evolution thanks to a standard with unique technical characteristics. In parallel, the WiMAX forum, backed by industry leaders, helps the widespread adoption of broadband wireless access by establishing a brand for the technology. Initially, WiMAX will bridge the digital divide. Then, thanks to competitive equipment prices, the scope of WiMAX deployment will broaden to cover markets where the low POTS penetration, high DSL unbundling costs, or poor copper quality have acted as a brake on extensive high-speed Internet and voice over broadband. WiMAX will reach its peak by making portable Internet a reality. When WiMAX chipsets are integrated into laptops and other portable devices, it will provide highspeed data services on the move, extending todays limited coverage of public WLAN to metropolitan areas. Integrated into new generation networks with seamless roaming between various accesses, it will enable endusers to enjoy an Always Best Connected experience. The combination of these capabilities makes WiMAX attractive for a wide diversity of people: fixed operators, mobile operators, and wireless ISPs, but also for many vertical markets and local authorities. Alcatel, the worldwide broadband market leader with a market share in excess of 37%, is committed to offer complete support across the entire investment and operational cycle required for successful deployment of WiMAX services.
References
[1] WiMAX: The Critical Wireless Standard, BluePrint WiFi Report, October 2003 [2] WiMAX/802.16 and 802.20, ABI Research, Q4 2003 [3] Last Mile Wireless High Speed Market, Skylight Research, March 2004 [4] Providing Always-on Broadband Access to Underserved Areas, Alcatel Telecommunication Review (p. 127-132), Q4 2003 [5] WiMAX forum web site: www.wimaxforum.org
Glossary
CPE DSL FDD MAC MIMO NLOS OFDM PLC POTS STC TDD WLAN WLL Customer Premise Equipment Digital Subscriber Line Frequency Division Duplex Media Access Control Multiple-Input-Multiple-Output Non-Line-Of-Sight Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex Power Line Communications Plain Ordinary Telephone System Space Time Coding Time Division Duplex Wireless Local Area Network Wireless Local Loop
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LAINE Philippe Network Strategy Manager, Chief Technology Officer organization. After his university studies in Electrical Engineering, Philippe started his career in 1985 as a software engineer, working on various projects in telecommunications and satellite image processing. In 1989, Philippe joined Alcatel, at first working on a cable TV project, then as project manager in charge of the development of network management systems. From 1995 to 2001, as marketing manager in the Mobile Networks Division, he handled the promotion of GSM, GPRS, and 3G mobile systems. Based on this experience, he joined the Network Strategy Group to define and promote the corporate vision for the evolution of wireless networks. BOETTLE Dietrich Project Leader, Wireless Access, CTO/Research & Innovation. After his studies at the University of Stuttgart, Dietrich joined Standard Elektrik Lorenz (SEL), now Alcatel, in Stuttgart, Germany. His main activities in the past included managing projects and leading research teams in the areas of optical transmission and broadband switching. He is currently head of the Access Network department in Stuttgart and project leader for the Alcatel project Wireless DSL in Research and Innovation.
BOSCHER Christophe Networking Strategy, Chief Technology Officer. organization within the Mobile Communications Group Christophe is a member of the CTO organization within the Mobile Communication group. He focuses on networking strategy for ubiquitous broadband access delivery. Christophe obtained an engineers degree in electrical engineering from the Ecole Polytechnique de lUniversit de Nantes in 1988. Prior to his current position, he held a variety of positions within several Alcatel business units in charge of data networking. He worked ten years in R&D as a software developer and system engineer on several data systems, beginning with X.25 and evolving to Frame Relay, ATM, and IP/MPLS. He has also been product manager in charge of Voiceover-DSL solutions. FEIJT Laurence Broadband Access, Solution Marketing, Solution Marketing Management within the Fixed Communication Group. Laurence graduated in business studies at the Institut Catholique des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (ICHEC) in Brussels (Belgium). She took a postgraduate course in Telecommunications at the Universit Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) and earned her MBA in Telecommunications Marketing at INSEAD. Laurence joined Alcatel in 1998 in the product management team for NGN. Today, she works in the Broadband Access Solution team, responsible for the development of end-to-end solutions in the Broadband Access Space including xDSL, WLAN, and other fixed wireless technologies. She is also involved as consultant in the Alcatel Consultancy Program for xDSL customers. Laurence has written and contributed to several papers on topics related to broadband access.
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Alcatel and the Alcatel logo are registered trademarks of Alcatel. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Alcatel assumes no responsibility for the accuracy of the information presented, which is subject to change without notice. 06 2004 Alcatel. All rights reserved. 3GQ 10001 0014 TQZZA Ed.01