Cellular Communication
Cellular Communication
Cellular Communication
Introduction:
AT & T and Bell Labs offered first mobile telephone service in 1973.
This system’s high powered BS Txs with elevated antennas provided
a larger coverage area and enough signal for urban settlements.
Typically 250 watt FM transmitter paged mobiles when there was an
incoming call for the mobile.
Limitation - limited users, no frequency reuse, cell congestion, high
power requirement.
Improvement: The main objective of cellular concept is to allocate
more users in a limited allocated spectrum.
The Cellular Concept
Introduction:
The basic system characteristics are
Area divided into Cells, each served by base station BS with lower
power transmitter covers a few hundred meters in some cities.
Each cell gets a portion of total no. of channels.
Neighboring cells assigned different groups of channels in order to
reduce the interference.
Multiple lower-power base stations that service mobile users within
their coverage area and handoff users to neighboring base stations
as users move.
The Cellular
Concept
Cluster : It is a group of cell that makes use of all the available radio
spectrum.
Cluster has N cells with unique and disjoint channel.
Since adjacent cell cannot use the same frequency channels, the total
frequency allocation is divided up over the cluster and then repeated
for other clusters in the system.
The no. of cells in a cluster is known as the cluster size / frequency
reuse factor (1/N)
Cellular Hierarchy
Reuse Number
To gain the maximum reuse of the frequencies for a cellular system,
cells are arranged in clusters.
Interference levels generated by the co-channel cells is used to
determine the minimum size cluster that can be used.
D = reuse distance, N = cluster size N, R = cell radius R.
Reuse Number
The frequency reuse distance can be calculated by:
D = R (3N) 1/2
Values of N can only take on numbers calculated from the following
expression: N = i2 + ij + j2, where i and j are integers.
Frequency Reuse
CELLULAR INTERFERENCE ISSUES (S/I)
Conclusion:
Cell splitting effectively increases system capacity by
reducing the cell size and therefore reducing the
frequency reuse distance thus permitting the use of more
CAPACITY EXPANSION TECHNIQUES
Cell splitting
Advantages:
Increases the system capacity.
Disadvantages:
Co channel interference increases.
3 directional antennas
with 120o beamwidth to
illuminate the entire area
previously services by
omnidirectional antenna
CAPACITY EXPANSION TECHNIQUES
Cell Sectoring provides interference reduction, hence S/I ratio
increases. co-channel interference.
It does not require new cell sites and additional antennas and
triangular mounting only.
Demerits: Increased network system architecture complexity
Table below tabulates these new values for a three-sector scheme for
some common values
of cluster size.
Co-Channel Interference (CCI)