This invention relates to multi-bearer radio systems and in particular, but not only, to systems used for public safety such as LTE (3GPP Long Term Evolution) and P25 (APCO 25). More particularly the invention relates to diversity techniques and emergency communications involving multiple bearers such as LTE and P25.
Within Land Mobile Radio (LMR) operations there are a number of techniques used to extend coverage. It is typical to find LMR systems which use either scanning, voting or simulcast. Each mode of operation represents a technique for both extending coverage and offering either near or complete seamless mobile connectivity.
In the case of scanning, the same information (voice or data) is sent on the downlink from the same signal source (e.g a dispatch terminal) but travels over the air interface through being transmitted at different sites on different frequencies.
The radio terminal 10 in
In an alternative mode of operation, the terminal measures the signal quality on both f1 and f2 before ranking the best one and selecting it for reception where upon the terminal remains on the best channel for the remainder of the downlink transmission. This is referred to as voting.
The definition of best channel can take a number of forms such as signal strength, bit error rate, out of band signal status (squelch), synchronisation confidence, preamble confidence level, vocoder FEC correction rate (in the case of voice) or FEC correction rate or message error rate for data packets. Generally any or all of these signal measures can be used to assess the signal quality.
In the case of both scanning and voting the transmissions from the separate sites do not require precise launch time synchronisation. A difference of 100 ms is typical. In the case of scanning, the terminal end is generally configured to listen to each channel and stay on the first channel it detects. In the case of voting, the terminal end generally listens to each channel in the list before making a decision as to which one is best.
Diversity is a technique which takes advantage of information transmitted over uncorrelated paths. Traditionally, diversity is considered as occurring over alternative channels over the same bearer such as spatial diversity (separate physical channels), frequency diversity (separate parts of the frequency band) and temporal diversity (sent at different times). Diversity can also be acquired through polarisation of a signal e.g vertical or horizontal polarisation through antenna orientation. The common thread to these transmissions is the independent paths are uncorrelated. Given this lack of correlation, it means that when observed at a destination receiver, the probability of either of the paths being of a good quality is greater than the probability of just one path being acceptable.
In another mode of operation, referred to as simulcast, the downlink frequencies are the same f1, see
Public safety agencies around the world are considering the deployment of broadband bearers such as LTE for improving data connectivity in their radio systems. Utility industries such as electricity distribution are also looking to exploit similar technology. The expectation is to deploy this relatively wideband technology such as LTE to operate in parallel with existing narrow band systems such as P25. In the US, the FCC has made specific frequency allocations supporting this model of deployment.
The LTE standard is based on OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) and can be deployed in a number of channel bandwidths such as a Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) mode where uplink/downlink pairs include 20 MHz, 15 MHz, 10 MHz, 5 MHz, 3 MHz and 1.4 MHz. These are FDD allocations so the total spectrum allocations are double the bandwidths listed here. In the US allocations of spectrum have been made representing 10+10 MHz in 3GPP band 14 for broadband operation. Specifically, the US has allocated frequencies 758 MHz to 768 MHz paired with 788 MHz to 798 MHz for broadband operation using LTE for Public Safety use. In addition, an allocation has been made for Public Safety for narrow band operation from 769 MHz to 775 MHz paired with 799 to 805 MHz. In other parts of the world private broadband allocations are being considered for use by public safety and critical infrastructure.
LTE coverage is made up of a number of frequency blocks, also referred to as resource blocks. An FDD 5 MHz channel has a set 25 resource blocks where each block is 180 kHz. Collectively the set of 25 blocks produces a bandwidth of 4.5 MHz within the 5 MHz channel with the 0.5 MHz remainder being used to contain the spectral skirts that operate within regulated emission masks. The channel is further divided into timeslots each of 0.5 ms, where a collection of 20 slots defines a frame. A resource block is therefore a block extending over a period which may include many timeslots. A set of frequency blocks contains many frames.
Each bearer in a wireless communication system requires a network of base stations to provide the channels over which users can communicate. The base stations are geographically located to provide coverage over a wide area within which the users are expected to move and require voice or data services. The users typically employ hand held or vehicle mounted terminals to communicate with the base stations. Each network generally includes a scheduler or controller which determines the timing and pathway of calls through the network. Bearer networks send control messages which are interpreted by the user terminals, in addition to voice and data messages which are sent between the users. Messages are typically composed of packets and the terms are used interchangeably in this specification.
It is an object of the invention to provide for improved multi-bearer radio systems, or at least to provide alternatives for existing systems.
In one aspect the invention resides in a method for implementing downlink diversity for a multi-bearer radio communication system, including: transmitting a first copy of a message (or packet) on a downlink via a first radio bearer, transmitting a second copy of the message on a downlink via a second bearer, receiving the first and second copies at a radio terminal, and selecting or combining the received messages to improve radio coverage and/or reliability.
In another aspect the invention resides in a method for implementing a scheduler for a multi-bearer radio communication system including: assessing the link quality of a first bearer, assessing the link quality of a second bearer, and depending upon the relative quality of the links, scheduling communication over one or other bearer.
In another aspect the invention resides in a method for implementing uplink diversity in a multi-bearer radio communication system, including: transmitting a first copy of a message (or packet) on an uplink via a first radio bearer, transmitting a second copy of the message on an uplink via a second radio bearer, receiving the first and second copies at a network station, and selecting or combining the received messages to improve radio coverage and/or reliability.
In a further aspect the invention resides in a method of selecting a radio bearer at a multi-bearer terminal in a radio communication system, including: measuring downlink signal quality of data from a first bearer, measuring downlink signal quality of data from one or more further bearers, and either selecting an acceptable bearer for uplink communication, or continuing to measure downlink signal quality of the first and further bearers until an acceptable bearer is detected. In one embodiment the bearers are ranked before selection. The terminal may remain with a selected bearer until the bearer is no longer available, or may continue to measure bearers for further selection.
In a still further aspect the invention resides in a method for emergency communication in a public safety radio system having multiple bearers, including: activating an emergency process, transmitting emergency information on a first available bearer, and simultaneously transmitting emergency information on one or more further available bearers.
Connections between a terminal and an emergency service desk are therefore generally simultaneous rather than prioritised or sequential. This ensures that an emergency is reported as quickly as reasonably possible. In the case of emergency transmission in LTE, one or more Uplink Shared Channel (UL-SCH) is used irrespective of any scheduling grant and the transmission occurs at full power and using the strongest modulation coding rate irrespective of the interference that may cause.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described with respect to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring to the drawings it will be appreciated that the invention may be performed in a variety of ways using a range of different communication bearers. The preferred bearers LTE, P25 and 3G will be known to a skilled reader and need not be described in detail. It will also be appreciated that the embodiments described here are given by way of example only.
Given connectivity to multiple bearers, the hub has options for the transmission or reception of the messages. Effectively the hub has the choice of a number of communication bearers. It may use one or more as required depending upon, but not limited to the following rules; bearer coverage available, bearer quality available and total data rate required. Generally, the hub and its connected set of radio devices are installed in a vehicle. An external device such as a PC, connected to the hub sees a single connection through which it is sending data. The hub there for is a piece of equipment itself connected to other radio bearers. The hub is generally connected to two or more bearers. The hub itself is making intelligent decisions as to which bearer to use. One example of an installation is within a public safety vehicle where the hub is directly connected to an LTE radio, installed somewhere in the vehicle, and a P25 radio, also installed somewhere in the vehicle, and a 3G radio installed somewhere else in the vehicle. In an alternative form, one or more of the radio bearers may be integrated into the hub itself.
It should be noted however the concept of the hub is not limited to a vehicle installation. It could be deployed in smaller version about a person such as a public safety officer. In this case the hub may be worn about the belt and connected to a P25 radio and an LTE radio. Effectively this forms a personal area network. Alternatively the hub could be installed in a fixed position and simply manage connectivity depending upon the instantaneous coverage available. In other words, if one link fails the hub will use another.
The hub 40 can select one of the downlink messages it received via the different bearers. If a CRC check is passed, the hub could simply select the first message to arrive and discard further copies. Alternatively, the hub could base a decision on either best signal strength on the channel or lowest error rate on the channel. This provides improved performance of reception.
Given that the same message is transmitted over multiple media and the message is selected, it means the hub implicitly gains the benefit of selection diversity and thereby improves reception reliability. The terminal also benefits from seamless connectivity between bearers. In other words, the hub is capable of receiving data across multiple bearers as opposed to the traditional approach of solely across multiple frequencies. This mode of operation may be referred to as either multi-bearer scanning or multi-bearer simulcast.
With each message that arrives, a quality measure is also stored. This quality measure can be as simple as signal strength. It can also be a bit error rate or channel state information. Assuming signal strength is used then it must be compared to a reference capability of the channel or a interference +noise floor, if known. In other words, the received signal strength approach must be a C/(I+N) figure. A better approach would be to compare the estimated bit error rates. This can be derived from either the FEC of each bearer though clearly each figure of merit needs to be compared to the nominal capability of the bearers.
Assuming signal strength alone is used for simplicity and by way of example. A good signal level for P25 reception is −100 dBm. A good signal level for an LTE receiver assuming 5 MHz FDD channel, is −80 dBm. If a message arrived on the P25 channel at −110 dBm and the same message arrives over LTE at −70 dBm then the LTE path should be accepted. The received messages are ranked 64 according to the quality indicator where-upon the best signal is selected 65.
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A unit with hub 70 is shown with more detailed contents of P25 and LTE radio connectivity and other mobile units are also shown is various geographic areas. From each of the physical sites, backhaul technology, be it fibre, microwave or wire is used to connect the system back to a Network Operations Centre (NOC) 75. The NOC is the back office location from where public safety operations are coordinated. It is from here that a dispatcher may use voice to offer specific commands. Alternatively the commander may use electronic messaging to issue commands and receive information regarding situational awareness. One example of situational awareness might be video streaming. Another example might be GPS location of each mobile hub.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/504,665 entitled “Multiple Bearer Radio Systems,” filed on 5 Jul. 2011, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61504665 | Jul 2011 | US |