1 / 25

MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS

MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS. PRESENTED BY : MIHIR RAO SWAPNIL RANE AMOL HATKAR MAZHAR NOORI SYED JAVED AATIF MODAK AZEEM HASHMANI MUBIN. COMMUNICATION ABOUT:

kelli
Télécharger la présentation

MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS

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. MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS

  2. PRESENTED BY: • MIHIR RAO • SWAPNIL RANE • AMOL HATKAR • MAZHAR NOORI • SYED JAVED • AATIF MODAK • AZEEM HASHMANI • MUBIN

  3. COMMUNICATION ABOUT: • IT IS THE PROCESS WHEREBY THE MEANINGFUL INFORMATION IS TRANSFERRED FROM ONE POINT (LOCATION) CALLED SOURCE IN SPACE TO THE OTHER POINT (LOCATION) CALLED DESTINATION (OR USER). • IT IS A TWO -WAY TRANSMISSION & RECEPTION OF DATA STREAMS. • THE SCIENCE OF COMMUNICATION INVOLVING LARGE DISTANCE IS CALLED TELE-COMMUNICATION. TYPES: • WIRE (OR LINE) COMMMUNICATON. • WIRELESS (OR RADIO) COMMUNICATION. (MOBILE COMMUNICATION COMES UNDER WIRELESS COMMUNICATION)

  4. FREQUENCY BANDS FOR MOBILE COMMUNICATION • THE CURRENT FREQUENCY SPECTRUM ALLOCATION FOR CELLULAR MOBILE RADIO IN USA IS 50MHz WITHIN THE 824 TO 849 MHz AS UP-LINKFREQUENCY BAND & 869 TO 894 MHz AS DOWN-LINK FREQUENCY BANDS. • 50MHz LEADS TO TOTAL OF 832 FULL DUPLEX CHANNELS. OUT OF WHICH 416 CHANNELS, 21 CHANNELS ARE USED AS SETUP (CONTROL) CHANNELS, WITH REMAINING 395 CHANNELS FOR USER TRAFFIC. • THE OTHER 416 CHANNELS ARE SHARED BY TWO OPERATORSNAMELY WIRELESS COMMON CARRIER (WCC) & THE RADIO COMMON CARRIER (RCC).

  5. TYPES OF MODULATIONS USED • THE FIRST GENERATION (1G)(ANALOG) CELLULAR SYSTEMS USE FM FOR SPEECH TRANSMISSION & FSK FOR SIGNALING. • THE SECOND GENERATION (2G)(DIGITAL) CELLULAR SYSTEMS ARE BASED ON TDMA & CDMA TECHNOLOGY USE PCM WITH VOICE TRANSMISSION RATE OF 24 KBPS OR HIGHER FOR COMMERCIAL USES. • THE GSM TECHNOLOGY WHICH IS USED ALMOST WORLD WIDE.IT USES TDMA & FDMA FOR MODULATIONS. • GSM EDGE (ENHANCED DATA RATES FOR GSM EVOLUTION)IS THE THIRD GENERATION (3G)VERSION NEWLY USED.

  6. BASIC MOBILE TELEPHONE SERVICE NETWORK

  7. GENERAL BLOCK DIAGRAM OF A CELULLAR RADIO

  8. A SMALL GEOGRAPHIC COVERAGE AREA OF A BASE STATION WITH A DIAMETER OF 2 TO 50 KM EACH OF WHICH A NUMBER OF RF CHANNELS IS CALLED A CELL. • GEOMETRIC SHAPES OF CELL ARE: A SQUARE, AN EQUILATERAL TRIANGLE, A HEXAGON. A HEXAGONAL CELL CELLULAR CONCEPT

  9. CELLULAR SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE

  10. THE DESIGN PROCESS OF SELECTING & ALLOCATING RF CHANNEL GROUPS FOR ALL OF THE CELLULAR BASE STATIONS WITHIN A CELLULAR SYSTEM IS CALLED FREQUENCY REUSE OR FREQUENCYPLANNING. FREQUENCY REUSE

  11. CELL SPLITTING

  12. HANDOFF MECHANISM

  13. THERE ARE THREE IMPORTANT TECHNIQUES ; 1) CDMA (CODE DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS). 2) FDMA (FREQUENCY DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS). 3) TDMA (TIME DIVISION MILTIPLE ACCESS). • FROM THE ABOVE TECHNIQUES, CDMA IS THE MOST USED & IMPORTANT ONE. WIRELESS COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUES

  14. CODING METHODS: 1) AUTO CORRELATION CODES. 2) ORTHOGONAL CODES. 3) WALSH CODES. 4) SCRAMBLING CODES. 5) CHANNELIZATION CODES. 6) CARRIER MODULATION CODES. • CDMA VERSIONS: 1) W-CDMA (WIDEBAND) 2) 3G CDMA -2000 3) TD-SCDMA (TIME DIVISION- SYNCHRONOUS) CDMA (METHODS & VERSIONS)

  15. HISTORY • THE CONFERENCE OF EUROPEAN POSTAL & TELECOMMUNICATIONS ADMINISTRATIONS (CEPTA) DEVELOPED THE GSM STANDARDS FOR TDMA SYSTEM IN JUNE 1982. • THEY MADE IT TO SERVE TWO MAIN OBJECTIVES; 1) EUROPEAN ROAMING THROUGHOUT THE CONTINENT, 2) INTERACTION WITH ISDN. • THE FIRST COMMERCIAL GSM SYSTEM CALLED D2, WAS IMPLEMENTED IN GERMANY IN 1992. GSM TECHNOLOGY

  16. MOST ‘2G’ GSM NETWORKS OPERATE IN 900MHz TO 1800MHz BANDS. • MOST EUROPEAN ‘3G’ GSM NETWORKS OPERATE IN 2100MHz BANDS. • ‘2G’ GSM USES 890 TO 915 MHz FOR UPLINK & 925 TO 960 MHz FOR DOWNLINK PRONIDING 125 RF CHANNELS SPACED AT 200KHz. DUPLEX SPACING OF 45 MHz IS USED. • THEY HANDLE LOW SPEED DATA SERVICES (UPTO 9.6 KBPS). GSM FREQUENCY RANGES

  17. TELESERVICES: SMS, EMREGENCY CALLING,FAX,MMS,VIDEOTEX,TETLTEX • BEARER (OR DATA) SERVICES:FULL DUPLEX, TRANSPARENT, NON TRANSPARENT DATA TX.,SYNCHRONOUS OR ASYNCHRONOUS PACKAGE DATA (GPRS). • SUPPLEMENTARY (ISDN) SERVICES: CALLER ID, CALL WAITING, CALL HOLD, CALL BARRING, CLOSED USER GROUP, TELE- CONFERENCING ETC.. GSM SERVICES

  18. GSM ARCHITECTURE

  19. In addition to the battery, GSM mobile phones require a small microchip, called a Subscriber Identity Module or SIM CARD, to function. • the SIM Card is usually placed underneath the battery in the rear of the unit, and (when properly activated) stores the phone's configuration data, and information about the phone itself, such as which calling plan the subscriber is using. • When the subscriber removes the SIM Card, it can be re-inserted into another phone that is configured to accept the SIM card[16] and used as normal. SUBSCRIBER INDENTITY MODULE (SIM)

  20. THE TYPICAL SIGNALING SEQUENCES FOR CALL FLOW IN GSM ARE AS FOLLOWS: • LOCATION UPDATING. • MOBILE CALL ORIGINATION. • MOBILE CALL TERMINATION • AUTHENTIFICATION & CIPHERING. • INTER-MSC CALL HANDOFF. CALL FLOW SEQUENCE

  21. MOBILE CALL ORIGINATION IN GSM

  22. MOBILE CALL TERMINATION IN GSM

  23. ADVANTAGES: • HIGH COVERAGE RANGE & AREA. • GOOD SPEECH QUALITY. • LARGE VARIETY OF DATA & SUPPLEMENTARY SERVICES. • PROVIDES SEAMLESS GLOBAL ROAMING. APPLICATIONS: • PAGING & SMS’s • EMAIL & INTERNET ACCESS • INVENTORY CONTROL • DATA INPUTS. • CREDIT CARD AUTHORIZATIONS (FROM REMOTE LOCATIONS)

  24. WEBSITES: • www.google.com • www.wikipedia.com • www.telecomindia.com BOOKS: • MOBILE COMMUNICATION BY V.G. YANGALVAR, R.C. JAISWAL, & GANESH B. AKOLIYA REFERENCES

  25. THANK YOU

More Related