Wireless Access (MBWA) technologies (IEEE 802.16e and IEEE 802.20)
By Thikriat Al mosawi November 2004 2 OUTLINE Introduction: what is the Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) Benefits of BWA Two technologies IEEE 802.16
IEEE 802.20
An overview and Technical issues 3 Introduction
What is a BWA? High speed connection Uses radio waves Point to multipoint system
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Benefits of BWA High speed data, voice and video services Faster time to market and lower total cost of ownership Last-mile connection Flexible reliability Competitive environment 5
Two technologies IEEE 802.16 and IEEE 802.20
IEEE 802.16 an overview IEEE 802.16 MAN Standard will be able to connect 802.11 hotspots to the internet. provides up to 31 miles of service area range. has developed a point-to-multipoint broadband wireless access standard for systems in the frequency ranges 10-66 GHz and sub 11 GHz. the standard covers both MAC and the PHY layers.
6 IEEE 802.16e (Mobile Wireless MAN) It was approved on the 23rd of September 2004 It is a modification to IEEE Standard 802.16 It covers MAC and PHY layers for Combined Fixed and Mobile Operation in Licensed Bands. It will enable a mobile user to keep their connection while moving at vehicular speed (75-93 miles/h).
7 WiMAX Forum It is a non-profit organization It was formed in 2003 It supports the IEEE 802.16 Broadband Wireless Access It has more than 110 members such as Alcatel, AT&T, Intel, Nortel, Motorola, SBC, Siemens, and so forth.. Rosedale is the first WiMAX chipset 8 WiMAX Technology Worldwide Interoperability of Microwave Access (WiMAX) It will provide fixed, nomadic, portable and, eventually, mobile wireless broadband connectivity. connectivity at rates of up to 75 Mb/sec WiMAX 10-66 GHz technical working group - two MAC system profile - two primary PHY system profile WiMAX 2-11 GHz technical working group - defining MAC and PHY system profile for IEEE 802.16e and HiperMAN standards.
9 IEEE 802.16 Technology design issues It was designed to develop an air interface based on a common MAC protocol. Designed a flexible MAC layer and accompanying physical layer (PHY) for 10-66 GHz. 10 Physical Layer The 10-66 GHz PHY assumes line-of-sight propagation
It contains several forms of modulations and multiplexing to support different frequency ranges and applications
Data rates determined by exact modulation and encoding schemes.
Channel Size (MHz) Bit Rate (Mbps) QPSK Bit Rate (Mbps) 16-QAM Bit Rate (Mbps) 64-QAM 20 32 64 96 25 40 80 120 28 44.8 89.6 134.4 11 Medium Access Control (MAC) Designed for point-to-multipoint BWA applications. The original design of MAC is flexible enough to support, with extension, all other projects of the IEEE 802.16 Addresses the need for very high bit rates for both uplink and downlink.
12 IEEE 802.16 Reference Model and Protocol Stack 13 IEEE 802.16e MBWA technology related issues IEEE802.16e Mobility Enhancements -MAC and PHY enhancements -Power consumption reduction -Hand-Off
Mobility Management -Control by L2.5 Routing
MAC and PHY enhancements - The proposal addresses the need for fast correction , frequency and timing. -The proposed PHY layer is based on OFDM/OFDMA - The configuration offers simplicity for both fixed and mobile implementations Power Consumption Reduction -Battery power for the Mobile Terminal -Introduce two modes for the SS: Awake-mode and Sleep-Mode Awake-mode: is when SS is receiving and transmitting PDUs in a normal fashion Sleep-Mode: is when the SS may power down. It has two parameters: Sleep-interval and Listening- interval
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Example of the Sleep Mode
15 Example of the Sleep Mode
16 IEEE802.16e Mobility Enhancements Handoff Optimize L2 handoff Provide trigger to L3 Allow mobile SSs to move efficiently between BSs Smooth BSs transitions with minimal loss of PDUs Fast BSs transition to guarantee QoS
17 Mobility Management
Communication link between terminal and the Internet must be preserved IP address should stay the same even a terminal changes its location
18 Mobility Management
In a multi-hop network several paths exists. a tunnel needs to be created to allow send or receive packets from or to known IP address of a terminal The tunnel must follow the movement of the terminal
19 Mobility Management The 802.16e aim is : To find the best path between terminal and gateway node. The tunnel should be the best path Also the bandwidth must be guaranteed
20 Mobility Control by L2.5 Routing
Three possibilities can be considered to set up a tunnel either by using L1 or L3 or L2.5.
The IEEE 802.16e proposed is to use L2.5 label to set up tunnels.
21 Creating tunnels by using L1
It is not scalable
It will have complex routing as the BS getting bigger.
22 Creating tunnels by using L3
It is very complicated path control depends on IP IP is wrapped by IP
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Creating tunnels by using L2.5
802.16e proposal An appropriate path will be set up Getting path control over heterogeneous physical The path control is independent from the IP layer Both IPv4 and IPv6 can be used at the same time 24 IEEE 802.20 MBWA an overview MBWA Working Group was approved on the 11th of December 2002 To prepare a formal specification for a packed-based air interface designed for IP-based services with peak data rates per user in excess of 1 Mbps Will address MBWA in licensed bands below 3.5 GHz MBWA Could provide commuters with reliable high-speed wireless voice and data links from trains and cars travelling at up to 250km/h (155miles/h). 25 The vision of the IEEE 802.20 Work Domain Home Domain Seamless Seamless Ubiquitous Ubiquitous Experience Experience Mobile Domain Portable Remote Access Services Field Service Apps Hotel/Motel Portable Services Mobile Commerce Services Mobile Office (Voice and Data Apps) High BW Connectivity Video Streaming - Conferencing Apps Portable Office Reservations-Listings Directions Services Video Streaming - Conferencing Apps Video Streaming - Conferencing Apps Mobile Broadband Wireless Access 26 IEEE 802.20 Technology Design Issues
It specifies the PHY and MAC layers of an air interface Its system reference architecture will be based on a layered architecture
The MAC layer may consist of common part and a PHY- specific part if more than one PHY technology is adopted
27 IEEE 802.20 MBWA technology related issue Seamless Handover between 802.20 MBWA/802.11/802.15 Fast handover Traffic model
28 Seamless Handover between 802.20 MBWA/802.11/802.15 They propose an adaptation layer (Virtual Interface) to interact with the IP and Data link layer.
They provide a unique virtual MAC address
29 Fast handover They address the benefits of providing layer 2 hints (triggers) to the network layer Fast handovers anticipate movement with the help of link layer (triggers)
30 Traffic model The 802.20 Traffic Models is a subgroup of 802.20 Channel and Traffic Model Group Traffic Models is needed because MBWA will have multiple types of IP-based services There will be a mix of user applications and various different user scenarios
31 Traffic model
Traffic and application details depend on user and device scenario
Laptop
PDA
Smart phone 32 Traffic types
Web browsing FTP (File Transfer Protocol) E-mail WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) VoIP Video telephony/ videoconference Audio streaming Gaming File-sharing
33 Traffic mix Different types of devices such as laptop, PDA and phone. Different services from same device or user such as web-conference (Web +audio) v. single service (E-mail). Different level of use (intense V. light) Different demand on response time ( real- time Vs. best-effort) 34 Conclusion
IEEE 802.20 and IEEE 802.16e standards seem very similar. But 802.16e 802.20 It is the extension of an existing standard It operates in the 2 to11 GHz licensed spectrum It is starting from scratch It operates in the licensed band below 3.5 GHz Speeds of 75 to 93 miles/h
Speeds of 155 miles/ h there are some important differences !!!