1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a base station for use in third generation (3G) mobile telecommunications systems. In particular, the invention relates to a miniaturized base station for indoor use suited for implementation at hotspots where many users are located in a relatively small area.
2. Background
From the initial analog systems, such as those defined by the standards AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone System) and NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephone), the cellular telephone industry has had an enormous development in the world in the past decades. In the past years, the development has been almost exclusively focused on standards for digital solutions for cellular radio network systems, such as D-AMPS (e.g., as specified in EIA/TIA-IS-54-B and IS-136) and GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications), generally referred to as the second generation of mobile communications systems.
Currently, the cellular technology is entering the 3rd generation, also denoted 3G. WCDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) is by far the most widely adopted 3G air-interface technology in the new IMT-2000 frequency bands. Standardized by 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project) and ITU (international Telecommunication Union), WCDMA has gained broad acceptance within the wireless communication industry. By 2005, there is expected to be close to 100 WCDMA networks in operation globally.
From the outset, WCDMA was designed to provide cost-efficient capacity for both modern mobile multimedia applications and traditional mobile voice services. One of the key benefits of the technology is efficient, flexible support for radio bearers, in which network capacity can be freely allocated between voice and data within the same carrier. WCDMA also supports both multiple simultaneous services and multimedia services comprising multiple components with different service quality requirements in terms of throughput, transfer delay, and bit error rate.
In WCDMA, user data is spread over a bandwidth of circa 5 MHz. The wide bandwidth supports high user data rates and also provides performance benefits due to frequency diversity. However, the exact data transmission speed that will be available for the system users is not easily predictable. The actual capacity in the mobile networks is affected by a number of factors, such as weather conditions, how many users currently communicate through a common base station, and, most importantly, the distance between the user mobile terminal and the base station antenna. In the terminology for WCDMA, a radio base station is referred to as a Node B.
According to a first aspect, the invention provides a base station devised for indoor use in a WCDMA network, comprising a support unit including a power supply unit, said support unit being adapted to be attached to support structure, such as e.g. a wall in a building, and a complete base station unit mechanically supported by said support unit.
In one embodiment, said support unit comprises support members and said base station unit comprises cooperating hanger members which are devised to connect to said support members in a pivotable engagement, and wherein cooperating locking means are included in said support unit and in said base station unit, which are devised to engage with each other by pivoting said base station unit.
In one embodiment, said base station comprises an internal antenna connected to said base station unit.
According to a second aspect, the invention provides a method for installing a base station for indoor use in a WCDMA network, which base station comprises a support unit including a power supply unit, and a complete base station unit mechanically supported by said support unit, comprising the steps of:
In one embodiment, said method further comprises the step of:
In one embodiment, said method further comprises the step of:
According to a third aspect, the invention provides a WCDMA network, including one or more outdoor macro base stations, and an indoor base station for which cell radius is restricted to a maximum of 1000 m and speed is restricted to a maximum of 120 km/h, for covering a hotspot area.
According to a fourth aspect, the invention provides a base station devised for indoor use in a WCDMA network, comprising a base station unit having an interface for connection to a power supply, a radio network controller, and to an antenna, said base station unit having a sandwich structure comprising a rigid metal back plate, a rigid metal front plate, and a main circuit board attached intermediate said back plate and front plate, wherein said main circuit board is cooled by means of self-convection of said back plate and said front plate.
In one embodiment, said back plate comprises cooling flanges on a side facing away from said circuit board.
In one embodiment, said front plate comprises a mechanical interface for attaching an internal antenna.
In one embodiment, said main circuit comprises border portions dividing the main circuit board in sections with separate circuits, and where said front plate comprises inner walls with end portions engaging said border portions for shielding said separate circuits from each other.
In one embodiment, said base station further comprises a separate circuit board carrying circuitry for a transmission interface to said network, which separate circuit board is connectable to said main circuit board.
According to a second aspect, the invention provides a method for assembly of a base station unit as recited above, comprising the steps of;
The features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, on which
An embodiment of the present invention relates to a telecommunications network including a base station intended for use in indoor environment to enhance coverage and increase capacity. The proposed base station is a low power, high capacity Node B optimized for indoor use, i.e. small size, low weight and possibilities to mount the Node B on a wall or in a ceiling. Optional cover panels are available to ensure that the bases station blends into the environment where it its installed. The base station is noise free due to self-convection cooling. The compact base station according to the present invention as described herein will be referred as a Pico Node B 100 base station.
The Pico Node B 100 is excellent for:
According to the invention, the Pico Node B 100 is a complete 3GPP/FDD Node B. The Pico Node B 100 supports one carrier and one sector with soft handover together with other Node B″s in the radio network. The Pico Node B 100 is optimized for indoor use and is designed accordingly, i.e. low power and high capacity, to be able to serve a large number of indoor users within a limited coverage area. As stated the Pico Node B 100 connects to the RAN, such as UTRAN (UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network), system using the lub interface. Receiver diversity is used together with either an internal antenna or external antennas. The Pico Node B 100 includes duplex filter, and no external duplex filters are needed when using external antennas.
The Node B Unit 402 has a complete 3GPP/FDD (Frequency Division Duplex) Node B functionality with all function blocks in one single hardware unit. A function block overview of the Node B Unit 402 is illustrated in
RF block.
This block handles the TRX functionality, i.e. channel filters, AD and DA conversion, TX and RX frequency conversion, transmit power amplifier and receiver low noise amplifier and RF filtering.
Table 1 below shows the main feature that a preferred embodiment of the Pico Node B 100 supports.
Both transmitter and receiver performance of a preferred embodiment of the Pico Node B 100 have been tested. Measurement methods and definitions are referring to 3GPP TS 25.104 v4.5.0 “BS Radio transmission and reception (FDD)” and 3GPP TS 25.141 v4.5.0 “BS conformance testing (FDD)”. With reference to
Table 2 shows the performance of the internal antenna, which is an optional feature.
The Transmitter performance is according to 3GPP TS 25.104 “BS Radio transmission and reception (FDD)”. Table 3 below lists the most important parameters.
The receiver performance fulfils requirements stated in 3GPP TS25.104 104 “BS Radio transmission and reception (FDD)” for DCH uplink (Chapter 8.1-8.5) and for RACH (Ch. 8.7), for radio propagation conditions applicable for pico-cells. The Pico Node B 100 Receiver Performance is illustrated in table 4 below.
In order to optimize the Pico Node B 100 receiver for indoor pico cell applications, the following restrictions are preferably made.
Furthermore, multi-path fading propagating conditions are preferably applied with restrictions corresponding to a Pico-cell as listed in table 6 below. Cell radius is preferably restricted to 1000 m and speed to 120 km/h.
The installation and commissioning procedure of the Pico Node B 100 is divided into two parts that can be performed separately. It is also possible to install and configure the Pico Node B 100 standalone, i.e. without connection to the transmission network. When this connection is available later, the last parts of the commissioning can be performed remotely via the NNM without any additional site visit. Needless to say, it is a prerequisite that the Pico Node B 100 site location is determined, and that all relevant planning, e.g. transmission, power, external equipment, is performed.
The Pico Node B 100 has been intentionally designed for simple and fast installation. Returning to
The first part of the Pico Node B 100 site installation is the mechanical mounting and connection of external cables, and this part mainly involves the support unit. The Node B Unit 402 can be brought to site at a later stage, e.g. at commissioning of the Pico Node B 100. The support unit, including an AC/DC unit, is mounted on the location chosen. Standard installation is wall mounting. However, installation kits for ceiling and pole mounting are also possible. Complete installation requires a power cable 100VAC, and transmission cables, preferably one or two twisted-pair cables with RJ45 connectors, depending on capacity need. If external antennas are used, RF cables with SMA connectors may also be included.
Mounting of the Node B unit (NBU) 402 to support unit 401 is preferably performed as illustrated in
An internal antenna 403 may be mounted directly on the NBU 402, preferably mechanically attached be means of screws. A transmission cable or cables are preferably installed for connecting the antenna 403 to the NBU 402 antenna connectors 1101, 1102, see
The following steps of commissioning shall be performed to finalize the installation and take the Pico Node B 100 into operation.
The support cover is removed if this is a separate site visit. An internal cable for Power, DC output cable from the AC/DC unit to the Node B unit 402, is connected. The LMT (Local Management Tool) is connected to the Node B Unit 402 using an Ethernet port of the NBU 402 for access at the Pico Node B 100 location. The Node B shall be loaded with the relevant revision of application software and Office Data for the particular Pico Node B 100 site using the LMT. This can be loaded at site or at the home office before the site visit. The Office Data may at least contain IP and ATM parameters to enable the network to access the Node B. If external alarms are used they can be defined and configured.
After this software download is made, a test session is preferably performed, starting with a self test. If connection to the Transmission Network is available, a Transmission Network Test to check RNC communication, and O&M Network Test to check communication with NNM and other O&M nodes, are also performed. An RF Coverage Test is preferably also made, after which the main cover is mounted, covering the NBU interface. The Pico Node B 100 is then ready to be taken into operation.
The state of the art base stations used in WCDMA systems take days or even weeks to install. If an indoor Node B is to be installed, standard outdoor Node B equipment are used. Such base stations are extremely complex, space-demanding, and expensive. With the present invention, a Node B which is specifically suited for indoor use is provided, and which may be installed in less than an hour. Both time and cost for installation is saved, and the installed Node B is extremely compact and discrete. Due to the advantageous wall mounting capabilities, the Node B may be placed so that it hardly occupies any workspace at all. Furthermore, the modular design of the Pico Node B 100 makes it particularly advantageous to repair, by simple module replacement. The field replaceable units include the NBU 402, the AC/DC power supply, and the optional internal antenna. These may all be replaced in less than 30 minutes.
As mentioned, the Node B application software and office data can be installed to the Node B by NNM remotely or using LMT locally on site. NNM/LMT pushes the new application package and/or office data to the Node B. The software installation is assisted by a Node B product inventory function, which ensures that new software is compatible with the existing Node B hardware. The compatibility check is carried out by NNM or LMT. Also upgrade of application software of the Node B is performed using the NNM or the LMT. The upgrade can be ordered or scheduled.
The main task of the NNM is to make the network wide management easier and faster by providing means to operate simultaneously towards multiple number of Node B″s. The NNM can also be used for management of a single Pico Node B 100, so called Element Management. The NNM application can be run in different environments. According to embodiments the supported platforms include PC with Win2000 OS, standard. PC (Pentium III, 512 MB RAM, 40 GB Hard drive, CPU clock speed 1 GHz); and SUN workstation with Solaris 8, Sun Fire 280 RThe NNM comprises a number of functions:
Network Management Support:
Configuration Management:
Fault Management (including External Alarms):
Performance Management:
Preferably, the NNM has a web-based GUI (Graphical User Interface), in that the NNM includes an HTTP server, which enables login from any terminal connected to the O&M IP Network.
The LMT is a mandatory installation tool for the Pico Node B 100. The LMT application may run on a standard laptop PC with Microsoft″s Windows OS. The LMT installation support may include the following functions:
Installation tests for Node B;
Retrieval of status and alarm information from the Node B;
Configuration of External alarms.
The LMT PC is connected locally via local Ethernet based O&M interface.
The office data is data that can be changed by the operator. The office data includes data for transport-, radio- and IP networks. Also site dependent data shall be set, e.g. position information. It is assumed that office data for large networks are generated from network planning tools. The major part of the office data for Pico Node B boos shall be inserted via the Network Node B Manager (NNM). The NNM provides a GUI for that purpose.
The basic communication office data may be loaded when the Node B is installed. This data opens the external management interface to Node B. This data is loaded into Node B with the LMT. Once the basic communication office data is inserted the rest of the configuration task can be carried out from a remote location using the NNM. A major part of the configuration parameters have factory default settings. However, not all configuration parameters can be factory default set e.g. IP address for end user network.
The following configuration areas require definitions of office data:
Site data.
The ATM Transport Network Office data is required in order to set up the communication paths for user and control planes. The transport network consists of several layers that may be configured to establish the communication link. Both between the Pico Node B 100 and the management nodes (NNM, FTP server, etc) for O&M and between Pico Node B 100 and RNC for the traffic parts. The layers that are required to be configured are:
Physical layer;
ATM layer;
ATM Protocol layer.
For the Radio Network Office Data, the local Cell Identity requires office data definition.
As for the IP Network Office Data, it shall provide data for O&M IP network. The IP traffic is carried by ATM (IP over ATM).
Site Office data comprises both informative and operative data.
The Node B Unit 402 preferably has an external interface according to
With reference to that drawing, one embodiment of the NBU interface comprises:
In order to make the Pico Node B 100 as compact and lightweight as possible, special features have been employed in the design of the NBU 402. This is illustrated in
In
According to this preferred embodiment of the invention, all circuits of the NBU 402 corresponding to the control processing block, the base band processing block and the RF block (cf.
In a preferred embodiment, circuitry for the transmission interface block is provided on a separate circuit board 1210, which is attachable to circuit board 1206 as illustrated in
Consequently, the inclusion of a separate detachable transmission interface circuit board 1210 provides flexibility to the base station 100, which otherwise may be identical regardless of selected transmission type. This is a clear advantage in terms of manufacture.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the assembly is designed such that cooling of the electronic circuitry is achieved by means of self-convection cooling. The elimination of moving mechanical parts, such as fans, advantageously reduces the risk for component failure due to wear of moving mechanical parts. It also advantageously reduces, or eliminates, the need for condition monitoring and maintenance of moving parts, such as cooling fans having ball bearings that are susceptible to mechanical wear. Hence, the design of the assembly so that cooling is achieved solely by air convection leads to an increased life-time for the base station, and it also reduces the costs for running the base station.
According to a preferred embodiment efficient self-convection cooling is achieved by designing the assembly such that all circuits apart from the transmission interface, are arranged on a single circuit board 1206, which is attached directly to back plate 1201, which back plate is provided with cooling flanges. The self-convection cooling advantageously makes the device noise free, due to the lack of any moving elements, such as cooling fans.
The NBU 402 further includes a front plate 1208, which is attached over circuit board 1206, as indicated in
Due to the modular concept and the inventive design and assembly of the included elements, the base station is very compact. The dimensions and weight of the complete Pico Node B 100 including the main cover, i.e. as illustrated in
The principles of the present invention have been described in the foregoing by examples of embodiments or modes of operations. However, the invention should not be construed as being limited to the particular embodiments discussed above, and it should be appreciated that variations may be made in those embodiments by persons skilled in the art, without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04445038.5 | Mar 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2005/000437 | 3/23/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/22/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60521285 | Mar 2004 | US |