1 / 30

3G Wireless

3G Wireless. Tanuj Gilja Keith Douglas. Introduction. Imagine the possibilities of connectivity! Scenarios: Traveler from New York to Tokyo Insurance appraiser at the scene of a natural disaster Paramedics capturing visuals of a victim’s injuries. Evolution of Wireless Systems.

liam
Télécharger la présentation

3G Wireless

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 3G Wireless Tanuj Gilja Keith Douglas

  2. Introduction • Imagine the possibilities of connectivity! • Scenarios: • Traveler from New York to Tokyo • Insurance appraiser at the scene of a natural disaster • Paramedics capturing visuals of a victim’s injuries

  3. Evolution of Wireless Systems • Radio telephony during World War I • Wireless telephones in late 1940’s • Provided only basic half-duplex voice • Used analog technology • Evolved into full-duplex 1G systems in the 1960’s

  4. From 1G to 3G…- 1G - • Started in the early to mid 1960’s offering simple wireless voice services based on analog technology • Were very limited in capacity and did not extend across geographic areas • Systems using 1G : AMPS, TACS, and NMT

  5. From 1G to 3G…- 2G - • Developed in Europe and the US to provide better voice quality, higher capacity as well as lower power consumption • Offer support for simple non-voice services like SMS (simple messaging service) • 2G technologies do not interoperate • Difficult roaming between countries using different systems • Cannot meet subscriber demands for new, faster non-voice services on the move

  6. What is 2.5G Wireless? • Also known as Interim Generation • GPRS (General Packet Radio service) & EDGE (Enhanced Data rate for GSM Evolution) • Provides options for higher data rate while building on existing 2G systems • GPRS -> 171.2 kbps theoretical max bit rate • EDGE -> 384 kbps bit rate

  7. 3G Wireless Systems • 3G Wireless Systems are the new generation of systems that offer high bandwidth and support digital voice along with multimedia and global roaming. • Globally, different systems are being used, so, to migrate to globally acceptable systems, numerous standardization activities were carried out and three systems emerged: W-CDMA, CDMA2000, and TD-SCDMA

  8. 3G System Capabilities

  9. 3G System Capabilities ….

  10. The Road to 3G 2.5G 3G 2G

  11. Comparison of Generations

  12. What is W-CDMA? • Insert Parameters of WCDMA table here

  13. W-CDMA……..cont.

  14. More on 3G… • CDMA – Multi-Carrier (CDMA2000) • Uses 3.6864 Mcps which is 3 x 1.2288 Mcps that was used for the old CDMA one. They both use a 1.25 MHz channel and this effectively translates into 5MHz bandwidth (3.6864 x 1.25). • CDMA – TDD (Ultra TDD & TD-SCDMA • Used only in China

  15. CDMA2000 Evolution • Voice Data up to 14.4 Kbps • Voice Data up to 115 Kbps • 2x increases in voice capacity upto 307 kbps* packet data on a single (1.25 MHz) carrier • First 3G system for any technology worldwide • Optimized, very high-speed data (Phase 1) • Up to 2.4Mbps* packet data on a single (1.25 MHz) carrier. • Integrated voice and data (Phase 2); up to 3.09 Mbps

  16. Comparison of Transmission Times

  17. Applications Using 3G • Education • Virtual schools • On-line science lab • On-line library • On-line language labs • Training • Communication services • Video telephony • Video conference • Personal location (GPS)

  18. Applications Using 3G… • Business services • Mobile office • Narrowcast business TV • Virtual workgroups • Expertise on tap • Finance services • Virtual banking • On-line billing • Universal USIM and credit card • Entertainment • Audio on demand • Games • Video clips • Virtual sightseeing

  19. 3G / WLAN Integration • Why Integrate ? • To have access to high-bandwidth access where WLAN coverage is offered, while accessing wide area coverage of 3G at other places. • Problems : - • Continuity of Sessions. • Security.

  20. Implementing 3G and WLAN • Architecture - Functionalities include reuse of 3G subscription, network selection, 3G system based authentication, authorization and security using SIM/USIM card - WLAN access will rely on existing 820.11 standards

  21. Implementing 3G and WLAN • Security – Problem in WLANs • Not too much of a problem in 3G, as the 3G Wireless component of the integration provides the necessary security features.

  22. Implementing 3G and WLAN • Tightly coupled - uses a 3G core network to access WLAN • Loosely coupled (preferred) - uses a WLAN gateway to directly access the internet

  23. Key Parameters of 3G and 4G Systems

  24. Conclusion • 3G technologies promise to deliver a lot and are slowly being put into effect. • We have already started seeing the early features of 3G technologies being implemented in our phones, i.e., the video phones in the market. • It remains to be seen how much of the promised features and applications are actually implemented in today’s economy. • However, they have been slow in coming in. Let’s see what the future holds…

  25. REFERENCES We are thankful to : - Books / Periodicals • IEEE Communication Magazine – November 2003, A number of articles on 3G/WLAN Integration. • Alex Lightman with William Rojas, ‘Brave New Unwired World: The Digital Big Bang and the Infinite Internet’, J. Wiley & Sons, c2002. • Clint Smith, Daniel Collins, ‘3G Wireless Networks’, McGraw-Hill, c2002. • John R. Vacca, ‘Wireless Broadband Networks Handbook – 3G, LMDS & Wireless Internet’, McGraw-Hill, 2001. • Jiangzhou Wang, Tung-Sang Ng, editors, ‘Advances in 3G Enhanced Technologies for Wireless Communications’ , Artech House Publishers, c2002. • Vijay K. Garg, ‘Wireless Network Evolution – 2G to 3G’, Prentice Hall PTR, 2002. • Ramjee Prasad, Werner Mohr, Walter Konhauser, ‘Third Generation Mobile Communication Systems’, Artech House Publishers, 2000. • Morgan Stanley, Inc Report on Wireless Technology, June 10, 2002 • Andrew S. Tannenbaum, ‘Computer Networks’, Prentice Hall PTR, 2003.

  26. REFERENCES • Websites • About/Cellphones <http://cellphones.about.com/library/glossary/bldef_3g_wireless.htm> • White Paper on ‘WCDMA’, InterDigital, Inc. <http://www.interdigital.com/tech_products_wcdma.shtml> • www.3g-generation.com • www.fcc.gov • www.cdg.org • www.3gsm.org • www.3g-newsroom.com

  27. Two Questions for Exam • 1 – Name two 3G Wireless Systems? • 2 – What is the Data Rate for 3G Wireless Systems

  28. The Answers • 1 – Name two 3G Wireless Systems? • WCDMA • CDMA-2000 • TD-CDMA • 2 – What is the Data Rate for 3G Wireless Systems? • 2 Mbps

  29. Thank You! Any questions ?

More Related