Introduction To 3G , UMTS, And Its Techniques
The
Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS)
The Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
(UMTS) is a third generation mobile cellular system for networks based on the
GSM standard. Developed and maintained by the 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership
Project), UMTS is a component of the International Telecommunications Union
IMT-2000 standard set and compares with the CDMA2000 standard set for networks
based on the competing cdmaOne technology. UMTS uses wideband code division
multiple access (W-CDMA) radio access technology to offer greater spectral
efficiency and bandwidth to mobile network operators.UMTS specifies a complete
network system, which includes the radio access network (UMTS Terrestrial Radio
Access Network, or UTRAN), the core network (Mobile Application Part, or MAP)
and the authentication of users via SIM (subscriber identity module) cards.The technology described in
UMTS is sometimes also referred to as Freedom of Mobile Multimedia Access
(FOMA) or 3GSM.Unlike EDGE (IMT Single-Carrier, based on GSM) and
CDMA2000 (IMT Multi-Carrier), UMTS requires new base stations and new frequency
allocations. UMTS supports maximum theoretical data transfer
rates of 42 Mbit/s when HSPA+ is implemented in the network.[2] Users in
deployed networks can expect a transfer rate of up to 384 kbit/s for Release
'99 (R99) handsets (the original UMTS release), and 7.2 Mbit/s for HSDPA
handsets in the downlink connection. These speeds are significantly faster than
the 9.6 kbit/s of a single GSM error-corrected circuit switched data channel,
multiple 9.6 kbit/s channels in HSCSD and 14.4 kbit/s for CDMAOne channels.Since 2006, UMTS networks in many
countries have been or are in the process of being upgraded with High Speed
Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA), sometimes known as 3.5G. Currently, HSDPA
enables downlink transfer speeds of up to 21 Mbit/s. Work is also progressing
on improving the uplink transfer speed with the High-Speed Uplink Packet Access
(HSUPA). Longer term, the 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) project plans to move
UMTS to 4G speeds of 100 Mbit/s down and 50 Mbit/s up, using a next generation
air interface technology based upon orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing.The first national consumer UMTS
networks launched in 2002 with a heavy emphasis on telco-provided mobile
applications such as mobile TV and video calling. The high data speeds of UMTS
are now most often utilised for Internet access: experience in Japan and
elsewhere has shown that user demand for video calls is not high, and
telco-provided audio/video content has declined in popularity in favour of high-speed
access to the World Wide Web—either directly on a handset or connected to a
computer via Wi-Fi, Bluetooth or USB.
Technologies:-
UMTS combines three different air interfaces, GSM's Mobile Application Part (MAP) core, and the GSM family of speech codecs.
UMTS combines three different air interfaces, GSM's Mobile Application Part (MAP) core, and the GSM family of speech codecs.
Air interfaces
UMTS provides several different
terrestrial air interfaces, called UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (UTRA).[3] All
air interface options are part of ITU's IMT-2000. In the currently most popular
variant for cellular mobile telephones, W-CDMA (IMT Direct Spread) is used.Please
note that the terms W-CDMA, TD-CDMA and TD-SCDMA are misleading. While they
suggest covering just a channel access method (namely a variant of CDMA), they
are actually the common names for the whole air interface standards W-CDMA
(UTRA-FDD) UMTS transmitter on the roof of a building W-CDMA uses the DS-CDMA
channel access method with a pair of 5 MHz wide channels. In contrast, the
competing CDMA2000 system uses one or more available 1.25 MHz channels for
each direction of communication. W-CDMA systems are widely criticized for their
large spectrum usage, which has delayed deployment in countries that acted
relatively slowly in allocating new frequencies specifically for 3G services
(such as the United States).
The specific frequency bands originally defined by
the UMTS standard are 1885–2025 MHz for the mobile-to-base (uplink) and
2110–2200 MHz for the base-to-mobile (downlink). In the US,
1710–1755 MHz and 2110–2155 MHz are used instead, as the 1900 MHz
band was already used.[5] While UMTS2100 is the most widely deployed UMTS band,
some countries' UMTS operators use the 850 MHz and/or 1900 MHz bands
(independently, meaning uplink and downlink are within the same band), notably
in the US by AT&T Mobility, New Zealand by Telecom New Zealand on the XT
Mobile Network and in Australia by Telstra on the Next G network. Some carriers
such as T-Mobile use band numbers to identify the UMTS frequencies. For
example, Band I (2100 MHz), Band IV (1700/2100 MHz), and Band V (850 MHz).
UTRA-TDD
HCR
UMTS-TDD's air interfaces that use the
TD-CDMA channel access technique are standardized as UTRA-TDD HCR, which uses
increments of 5 MHz of spectrum, each slice divided into 10ms frames
containing fifteen time slots (1500 per second).[6] The time slots (TS) are
allocated in fixed percentage for downlink and uplink. TD-CDMA is used to
multiplex streams from or to multiple transceivers. Unlike W-CDMA, it does not
need separate frequency bands for up- and downstream, allowing deployment in
tight frequency bands.
TD-CDMA
is a part of IMT-2000 as IMT CDMA TDD.
TD-SCDMA
(UTRA-TDD 1.28 Mcps low chip rate)
TD-SCDMA
TD-SCDMA
uses the TDMA channel access method combined with an adaptive synchronous CDMA
component[7] on 1.6 MHz slices of spectrum, allowing deployment in even
tighter frequency bands than TD-CDMA. However, the main incentive for
development of this Chinese-developed standard was avoiding or reducing the
license fees that have to be paid to non-Chinese patent owners. Unlike the
other air interfaces, TD-SCDMA was not part of UMTS from the beginning but has
been added in Release 4 of the specification.
Radio access network UTRAN
UMTS
also specifies the Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network (UTRAN), which is
composed of multiple base stations, possibly using different terrestrial air
interface standards and frequency bands.
UMTS
and GSM/EDGE can share a Core Network (CN), making UTRAN an alternative radio
access network to GERAN (GSM/EDGE RAN), and allowing (mostly) transparent
switching between the RANs according to available coverage and service needs.
Because of that, UMTS's and GSM/EDGE's radio access networks are sometimes
collectively referred to as UTRAN/GERAN.
UMTS networks are often combined with GSM/EDGE,
the latter of which is also a part of IMT-2000.The UE (User Equipment) interface
of the RAN (Radio Access Network) primarily consists of RRC (Radio Resource
Control), RLC (Radio Link Control) and MAC (Media Access Control) protocols.
RRC protocol handles connection establishment, measurements, radio bearer
services, security and handover decisions. RLC protocol primarily divides into
three Modes—Transparent Mode (TM), Unacknowledge Mode (UM), Acknowledge Mode
(AM). The functionality of AM entity resembles TCP operation whereas UM
operation resembles UDP operation. In TM mode, data will be sent to lower
layers without adding any header to SDU of higher layers. MAC handles the
scheduling of data on air interface depending on higher layer (RRC) configured
parameters The set of properties related to data transmission is called Radio Bearer
(RB). This set of properties decides the maximum allowed data in a TTI
(Transmission Time Interval). RB includes RLC information and RB mapping. RB
mapping decides the mapping between RB<->logical
channel<->transport channel. Signaling messages are sent on Signaling
Radio Bearers (SRBs) and data packets (either CS or PS) are sent on data RBs.
RRC and NAS messages go on SRBs. Security includes two procedures: integrity
and ciphering. Integrity validates the resource of messages and also makes sure
that no one (third/unknown party) on the radio interface has modified the
messages. Ciphering ensures that no one listens to your data on the air
interface. Both integrity and ciphering are applied for SRBs whereas only
ciphering is applied for data RBs
Core network:-
Mobile
Application
With Mobile Application Part, UMTS uses
the same core network standard as GSM/EDGE. This allows a simple migration for
existing GSM operators. However, the migration path to UMTS is still costly:
while much of the core infrastructure is shared with GSM, the cost of obtaining
new spectrum licenses and overlaying UMTS at existing towers is high.The CN can be connected to various
backbone networks, such as the Internet or an Integrated Services Digital
Network (ISDN) telephone network. UMTS (and GERAN) include the three lowest
layers of OSI model. The network layer (OSI 3) includes the Radio Resource
Management protocol (RRM) that manages the bearer channels between the mobile
terminals and the fixed network, including the handovers.
UMTS frequency bands
Over 130 licenses have already been
awarded to operators worldwide (as of December 2004), specifying W-CDMA radio
access technology that builds on GSM. In Europe, the license process occurred
at the tail end of the technology bubble, and the auction mechanisms for
allocation set up in some countries resulted in some extremely high prices
being paid for the original 2100 MHz licenses, notably in the UK and Germany.
In Germany, bidders paid a total €50.8 billion for six licenses, two of which
were subsequently abandoned and written off by their purchasers (Mobilcom and
the Sonera/Telefonica consortium). It has been suggested that these huge
license fees have the character of a very large tax paid on future income
expected many years down the road. In any event, the high prices paid put some
European telecom operators close to bankruptcy (most notably KPN). Over the
last few years some operators have written off some or all of the license
costs. Between 2007 and 2009, all three Finnish carriers begun to use
900 MHz UMTS in a shared arrangement with its surrounding 2G GSM base
stations for rural area coverage, a trend that is expected to expand over
Europe in the next 1–3 years.
The 2100 MHz band (downlink around
2100 MHz and uplink around 1900 MHz) allocated for UMTS in Europe and
most of Asia is already used in North America. The 1900 MHz range is used
for 2G (PCS) services, and 2100 MHz range is used for satellite
communications. Regulators have, however, freed up some of the 2100 MHz
range for 3G services, together with a different range around 1700 MHz for
the uplink.
AT&T Wireless launched UMTS services
in the United States by the end of 2004 strictly using the existing
1900 MHz spectrum allocated for 2G PCS services. Cingular acquired
AT&T Wireless in 2004 and has since then launched UMTS in select US cities.
Cingular renamed itself AT&T Mobility and is rolling out[citation needed]
some cities with a UMTS network at 850 MHz to enhance its existing UMTS
network at 1900 MHz and now offers subscribers a number of dual-band UMTS
850/1900 phones.T-Mobile's rollout of UMTS in the US
focused on the 1700 MHz band.
In Canada, UMTS coverage is being
provided on the 850 MHz and 1900 MHz bands on the Rogers and
Bell-Telus networks. Bell and Telus share the network. Recently, new providers
Wind Mobile, Mobilicity and Videotron have begun operations in the
1700 MHz band.
In 2008, Australian telco Telstra
replaced its existing CDMA network with a national UMTS-based 3G network,
branded as NextG, operating in the 850 MHz band. Telstra currently
provides UMTS service on this network, and also on the 2100 MHz UMTS
network, through a co-ownership of the owning and administrating company 3GIS.
This company is also co-owned by Hutchison 3G Australia, and this is the
primary network used by their customers. Optus is currently rolling out a 3G
network operating on the 2100 MHz band in cities and most large towns, and
the 900 MHz band in regional areas. Vodafone is also building a 3G network
using the 900 MHz band.
UMTS phones (and data cards) are highly
portable—they have been designed to roam easily onto other UMTS networks (if
the providers have roaming agreements in place). In addition, almost all UMTS
phones are UMTS/GSM dual-mode devices, so if a UMTS phone travels outside of
UMTS coverage during a call the call may be transparently handed off to
available GSM coverage. Roaming charges are usually significantly higher than
regular usage charges.
Most UMTS licensees consider ubiquitous,
transparent global roaming an important issue. To enable a high degree of
interoperability, UMTS phones usually support several different frequencies in
addition to their GSM fallback. Different countries support different UMTS
frequency bands – Europe initially used 2100 MHz while the most carriers
in the USA use 850 MHz and 1900 MHz. T-Mobile has launched a network
in the US operating at 1700 MHz (uplink) /2100 MHz (downlink),
and these bands are also being adopted
elsewhere in the Americas. A UMTS phone and network must support a common
frequency to work together. Because of the frequencies used, early models of
UMTS phones designated for the United States will likely not be operable
elsewhere and vice versa. There are now 11 different frequency combinations
used around the world—including frequencies formerly used solely for 2G
services.
UMTS phones can use a Universal
Subscriber Identity Module, USIM (based on GSM's SIM) and also work (including
UMTS services) with GSM SIM cards. This is a global standard of identification,
and enables a network to identify and authenticate the (U)SIM in the phone.
Roaming agreements between networks allow for calls to a customer to be
redirected to them while roaming and determine the services (and prices) available
to the user. In addition to user subscriber information and authentication
information, the (U)SIM provides storage space for phone book contact. Handsets
can store their data on their own memory or on the (U)SIM card (which is
usually more limited in its phone book contact information). A (U)SIM can be
moved to another UMTS or GSM phone, and the phone will take on the user details
of the (U)SIM, meaning it is the (U)SIM (not the phone) which determines the
phone number of the phone and the billing for calls made from the phone.
Japan was the first country to adopt 3G
technologies, and since they had not used GSM previously they had no need to
build GSM compatibility into their handsets and their 3G handsets were smaller
than those available elsewhere. In 2002, NTT DoCoMo's FOMA 3G network was the
first commercial UMTS network—using a pre-release specification,[8] it was
initially incompatible with the UMTS standard at the radio level but used
standard USIM cards, meaning USIM card based roaming was possible (transferring
the USIM card into a UMTS or GSM phone when travelling). Both NTT DoCoMo and
SoftBank Mobile (which launched 3G in December 2002) now use standard UMTS.
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