1 / 26

Making way for novel broadband radio services

International Telecommunication Union Telecommunications Development Bureau. Making way for novel broadband radio services. Dr. Arturas Medeisis ITU-BDT Spectrum Management Expert. ITU Regional Workshop on Efficiency of the Frequency Spectrum Use in the Arab Region

glennaa
Download Presentation

Making way for novel broadband radio services

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. International Telecommunication UnionTelecommunications Development Bureau Making way for novel broadband radio services Dr. Arturas Medeisis ITU-BDT Spectrum Management Expert ITU Regional Workshop on Efficiency of the Frequency Spectrum Use in the Arab Region Amman-Jordan, 5-7 Dec. 2011

  2. Scope of presentation • Why we need broadband? • Modifying existing mobile assignments • Assigning new spectrum • Other than mobile options? • Looking into the future? ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  3. Importance of broadband • Enabling modern inclusive ICT services • Wireless BB provides faster deployment, especially to “green-field” underserved areas with poor infrastructure Radio Spectrum Services competition Consumer benefits Convergent ICT Wireless broadband services platform Inclusion Innovativeness Societal benefits IT services platform Economic growth ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  4. Global data traffic forecasts ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  5. Two directions • Creating opportunities for existing spectrum assignments to be “upgraded” to provide novel Broadband services: • i.e. Technological level re-farming • Seeking new spectrum assignment opportunities: • Exclusive licences • Overlay licences (shared access) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  6. Technological re-farming • Mostly concerns the possibility of upgrading old 2G spectrum to provide 3G/4G services • Especially the 900 MHz band, as it provides best coverage optimisation The concept of “sandwiching” broadband channel between narrow-band 2G channels Source: CEPT ECC Report 82 ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  7. Upgrading 2G licences • 2G operators should be given cart blanche to freely decide on technological evolution within their assigned spectrum • Even typical 2 x 8...12 MHz spectrum blocks could be well used to accommodate broadband CDMA/OFDMA channels • Modern Software Defined Radio (SDR) Base Stations allow seamless re-organisation of network access from 2G (GSM) to 4G (LTE) in any channel combination ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  8. New bands for broadband ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  9. Importance of lower bands • Compare mobile OFDM coverage options for different bands (open area Hata model) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  10. The terms of licensing? • In the past new assignments were made to specific technology, e.g. GSM • Nowadays, NRAs are ill placed to decide on which broadband technology would become the winning proposition: • witness WiMAX vs LTE battle for dominance • Therefore it is important that from the start the new assignments are technology-neutral and flexible in terms of service offering (mobile vs. FWA vs. BS/IPTV etc.) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  11. Playing the neutrality card safe • Important to engineer sufficient safeguards into the spectrum assignments to ensure smooth functioning of neutrality • Primary technological solutions: • FDD/TDD-friendly solutions • Universal channel rasters • Block Edge Mask concept • Border coordination thresholds ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  12. a) Initial assignment FDD duplex spacing Operator A Operator B Operator A Operator B b) Possible outright deployment of different technologies Operator A FDD uplink Operator B TDD block 1 Operator A FDD downlink Operator B TDD block 2 Operator A Combined contiguous TDD block Operator B Combined contiguous TDD block c) If both operators agree to use TDD technology, they must be allowed to swap their respective FDD blocks FDD/TDD flexibility ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  13. TX Output Power Density (dBW/MHz) Assigned block Adjacent block Internal guard band (~1/2 system channel) PMAX 1st  system channel (typical size) 2nd  system channel (typical size) -36 -77 -89 0 F, from the block edge A B The BEM concept (I) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  14. PTx a c b ΔF The BEM concept (II) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  15. BEM implications • BEM favours homogenous deployment of uniform transmitters with gradual densification Source: CEPT Report 19 ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  16. ITU-R work on mobile BB • Preparation of a new ITU-R Report “Analysis and assessment of global broadband wireless services and marketplace for IMT” • Series of workshops “IMT for the Next Decade” ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  17. Turning to alternative options...

  18. BWA concept is still alive • Wireline quality dedicated radio links • Single connection for multimedia use • Network roll-out faster than DSL/fibre • Deployment in FS bands from 10 GHz and above Internet/ Packet Data BWA Switch / Central Station (CS) Control CS1 PSTN CSi CPE PC TV TV/ video contribution CSN ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  19. Or even high density FS • E.g. 59 GHz, 64-66 GHz • Suitable for short hop bridging links in dense (urban) scenarios • High and flexible channel bandwidth: • from 100 MHz up to 2 GHz • 59 GHz applications could be licence-exempt, 64 GHz well suited for light-licensing ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  20. Thinking further into the future • TV White Spaces (TVWS) – a medium-term flexible solution for on-demand (ad hoc) broadband connectivity ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  21. How much White Spaces? • USA: • Some European countries: (UC Berkeley, 2010) (FP7’s FARAMIR, 2011) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  22. A closer national study • Poland: • Based on ITU GE-06 plan • 30 m 36 dBm Base Stations • Protection of interference-limited coverage of TV (NIT Wroclaw, 2011) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  23. A vision for TVWS SM solution UK, Ofcom ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  24. Problems, issues to address • Protection of existing services: • Broadcasting Service • Wireless microphones (Programme Making Special Events) • Other (Radio Astronomy, Radionavigation, etc.) • Development of TV WSD technology: • stable technical characteristics, standardisation • link with geo-location database, security, integrity • business case? • Regulatory considerations: • regulatory mechanism for the Dynamic Spectrum Access • equipment type approval • enforcement issues (“FCC chip” idea, etc.) ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  25. Conclusions • Fuelled by the constant proliferation of personal “smart” phones, tablets, etc., the growth in demand of wireless broadband services will remain an important factor well into the future • NRAs should consider all available options and strive to satisfy the demand by the industry in the most forward-looking and flexible manner ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

  26. Thank you!Dr. Arturas Medeisisam@sm-jazz.lt ITU: Committed to connecting the World ITU Regional Workshop, Amman, 5-7 Dec 2011

More Related