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Introduction To Personal Communications Systems (PCS) : What's PCS and Its Principles

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views

Introduction To Personal Communications Systems (PCS) : What's PCS and Its Principles

Uploaded by

Rafia Shoukat
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 45

PCS

Introduction to Personal
Communications Systems (PCS):
What’s PCS and its Principles

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 1


What’s PCS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 2


What is Personal
Communication?

 A PCS provides people with


wireless access to information
service
• e.g. Cordless, cellular, mobile data
networks and etc.
 Mobility is the heart of PCS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 3


Characteristics of PCS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 4


Characteristics of PCS
 Personal Information Machine (PIM)
• Information device carried by the person
such as PDA, Notebook, Cellular Phone
 Personal Address
• Associated with the person as he or she
changes location
 Personal Profile
• Contains details of services selected by the
subscriber
 Ubiquitous:
• Services will be available anywhere &
anytime

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 5


Dimensions of PCS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 6


Examples of Two Telephone Calls
 Conventional Call
• A pair of wires connects each telephone
to the switching system
• Each pair of wires has its own
telephone number
 Cellular Call
• Wireless: Signals travel through the air
• Each host associates with a telephone
number regardless of location

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 7


Conventional Phone Call:
Network Elements

Public Switched
Telephone Network

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 8


Conventional Phone Call:
Information Flow

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 9


Cellular Phone Call:
Handoff (Hard and Soft)

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 10


A Cellular System
 A cellular system includes:
• Telephone sets, radio channels, base
stations, a switch, and connections
linking to the switch
 Cellular systems are more complex
than conventional telephone systems

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 11


Network Elements

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 12


Information Flow

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 13


Technical Challenges
 Mobility: Roaming
• Location management and Handoff
 Ether: Radio signals
• Access technology: FDMA, TDMA, CDMA
• Channel impairments: fading and noise
• Bandwidth: channel reuse, signal compression,
an efficient modulation and coding
• Privacy and Security: Encryption and
Authentication
 Energy: Power control

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 14


Evolution of PCS
 Four stepping-stones to PCS
• Cellular Networks
• Cordless Telephones
• Mobile Computing
• Paging

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 15


2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 16
Cellular Networks
 Four major trends in cellular
technologies:
• Analog systems ® Digital systems
• Signaling and network control
technologies ® Standard
• Vehicle-mounted ® Small portable units
• Expanding the scope of services such as
caller ID, transmit text message, direct
access to internet and WWW

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 17


Standards
 AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone
System)
• Used in the US and Canada
• Frequency bands: 850 MHz
• Access: FDMA
• More than 700 service areas (two
companies/each area)
 GSM (Global System for Mobile
Communications)
• Used in Europe
• Frequency bands: 900 MHz &1800 MHz
• Access: TDMA
2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 18
Cordless Phones
 Limited distance from a single residential
BS
 Standards: CT2 (Cordless Telephone,
Second Generation), DECT (Digital
European Cordless Telecommunications)
and CT2Plus
• To interconnect many different base stations
such as residential BSs, BSs connected to
business telephone systems (PBX), and
telepoint BSs (BS in public area)

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 19


Mobile Computing and Paging
 Mobile Computing = Portable
Computers + Internet
 Paging is the oldest of PCS and the

cheapest one
 The most advanced pagers also

receive voice email


 Two-way paging services are

supported since 1995 in USA

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 20


2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 21
Current PCS
 Europe: The term of PCS originated in
1989 in the United Kingdom
• Spectrum is assigned around 1800 MHz
 North America:
• Spectrum is assigned around 1900 MHz
• High-tier systems: High transmission power
serving at vehicle speed such as NA-TDMA,
NA-CDMA, GSM
 Low-tier systems: PACS (Personal
Access Communications system), DECT
 Japan: A low-tier system PHS (Personal
Handyphone System) operated in 1995
2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 22
Frequency Bands

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 23


Other Wireless
Communications Systems
 Four important systems to serve
special needs
• Mobile communication satellites: low-
bit-rate, global coverage area
• Wireless local area networks: high-
bit-rate, limited coverage area
• Wireless local loops: higher spectrum
efficiency
• Wireless data networks: diversity

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 24


2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 25
Mobile Satellite Systems

 A major trends since 1990:


• Broadcast satellite TV industry
• Two-way communication between
satellites and vehicles, ships
• One-way GPS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 26


Categories of Satellite
Systems
 GEO (geosynchronous orbits) at 35,800
km above the equator
• Advantage: simple network configuration (3
satellites are enough to cover the earth)
• Disadvantages: high transmission power,
long propagation path delay, poor radio
coverage at high latitudes
 MEO (Medium Earth Orbits) at 10,000
km above the earth

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 27


Categories of Satellite
Systems
 LEO (Low Earth Orbits) on the order
of 500 to 2,000 km above the earth
 Both the MEO and LEO satellite

systems required handoff in satellites


 Channel Transmission rates:

2.4Kbps ~ 2 Mbps

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 28


Principles of PCS

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 29


Information Services for People
 Telephone Services
 Short Message Services (SMS)
 Voice-band Data and Facsimile
 Direct Digital Access
• Transparent data transmission: using FEC
• Non-transparent data transmission: using
ARQ
 Closed User Groups
 Telemetry
 Wireless Local Loops
 Video and Other Broadband Services

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 30


Voice-band Data and Facsimile

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 31


Figures of Merit (Design Goals)
 Subscribing to a system:
• Terminal price,Terminal size and weight,
Service price, Range of services, Coverage
area, Roaming
 Using a system:
• User interface, Call blocking, Setup time,
Transmission quality, Privacy,Mobility, Call
dropping, Battery life, Modes of operation
 Operating company:
• Infrastructure cost, Cell radius, Spectrum
efficiency, Network security, Early deployment
and adaptability
2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 32
System Operations

 User Information Transport


 Mobility Management

 Authentication and Encryption

 Call Management

 Radio Resources Management

 Operations, Administration and

Maintenance (OA&M)

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 33


Radio Resources
Management
 Resources assigned by the system to
a terminal includes:
• A base station
• A physical channel depends on the
access technology
• The power of the signal transmitted by
the terminal
• The power of the signal transmitted to
the terminal by the base station
 RRM is an combination optimization
problem
2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 34
2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 35
Four Separate Tasks
 Call Admission
• Determine whether the system accepts a
request to set up a new communication
 Base Station and Channel Assignment
• Fixed channel allocation
• Dynamic channel allocation
 Power Control
• Reduce system interference
• Promote battery life
 Handoff Criteria

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 36


2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 37
PCS Architecture:
Network Elements

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 38


Examples: Cellular - Centralized

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 39


Cordless - Distributed

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 40


Air Interfaces

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 41


Obstacles of Radio
Transmission
 Limited spectrum that must be shared
efficiently
 Transmission impairments that can change
abruptly with time, location and frequency
band
 Interrupted connections associated with
handoff procedures
 Limited power available to portable
terminals

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 42


How to Conquer the Obstacles
 Modulation
 Source coding

 Channel coding

 Interleaving

 Diversity reception

 Channel equalization

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 43


Media Access
 Three frequently used access
techniques:
• FDMA
• TDMA
• CDMA
 Two multiplexing methods:
• TDM
• FDM

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 44


Review Exercise
1. Why do cellular phone systems require handoff
procedures?
2. What are some advantages and disadvantages
of using communications satellites to provide
wireless personal communications?
3. Why does a terminal register its location with a
network? What is the advantage of frequent
registration? What is the disadvantage?
4. Compare fixed channel allocation with dynamic
channel allocation. What are some advantages
and disadvantages of the two approaches?

2001/11/30 Prof. Huei-Wen Ferng 45

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