This invention relates to high capacity wireless communication networks such as LTE (3GPP Long Term Evolution). Particularly to use of LTE in mobile radio networks for public utilities or involving public safety.
The LTE standard is designed to provide flexible, high capacity wireless communication for commercial users but is also being adapted for public safety systems. Public safety systems have notable differences compared to commercial systems, such as lower user density, an expectation of a higher quality of service and priority access, and greater cell sizes involving greater coverage areas and data rates. In these larger cell sizes, there is a need for each radio terminal or UE (“User Equipment”) to transmit at a higher power level than for a commercial system.
LTE systems use dynamic UE power control such that the received signal levels from all the terminals related to a particular base station (or “eNodeB”) are roughly the same. This is critical in CDMA systems to prevent the classic near/far problem where stronger signals from terminals close to the base-station can swamp weaker signals from more distant terminals to the point where the weaker become undetectable. In LTE and other OFDMA systems the problem is less important because the uplink SC-FDMA signal from each UE is separated in both time and frequency. However, there are still detailed definitions of power control involving upwards of 9 parameters that cover the PUCCH (Uplink Control Channel), PUSCH (Uplink Shared Channel, for data payload) and Reference Signals (RS).
An LTE network assesses the data throughput capabilities of the terminals on the system via the power headroom report (PHR) that each UE periodically sends via the base station serving the local cell. The network can then determine both a bandwidth (ie: the number of 180 kHz wide Resource Blocks, M) and a modulation coding scheme (MCS) for each UE to maximize data throughput while at the same time optimising the interference management of the network. If the power headroom reports are too low, for example, data throughput could be significantly below optimum levels.
Power Headroom is a prediction of the difference between the maximum UE power output permitted in a particular cell (Pmax) and the uplink power required for a particular data throughput, rather than a measure of the difference between Pmax and actual UE output power. The present limits in ETSI TS 136 101 for the UE transmission power are for a commercial system, ie: Pmax=+23 dBm, Pmin=−40 dBm, transmitter ‘off’ power=−50 dBm.
Power headroom reports can therefore range from +40 to −23 dB. If a UE reports negative power headroom, this means that the terminal has received an uplink grant containing a modulation and coding scheme and a number of resource blocks that would require more output power than the UE has available. The network could then reduce the number of resource blocks allocated to the particular terminal, and grant the remainder to other terminals, ensuring system capacity is not wasted.
It is an object of the invention to provide for improved management of data throughput and interference between terminals in radio networks having relatively large cell sizes.
In one aspect the invention may be said to reside in a radio for use in a mobile radio network, including: a user terminal having a transceiver, a power controller and an antenna; and a power booster having an amplifier and an amplifier bypass, under control of the user terminal; wherein the booster is coupled between the transceiver and the antenna to form a signal path for transmission of radio signals by the terminal, and the power controller switches the signal path between the amplifier and the amplifier bypass according to transmitter power required from the user terminal. Preferably the power controller switches the booster into the signal path when the required transmitter power reaches a maximum power available from the transceiver, and correspondingly decreases the power provided by the transceiver. The power controller then switches the booster out of the signal path when the required transmitter power is available from the transceiver alone. The power controller generates a power headroom report which includes power available from the booster.
In another aspect the invention resides in a radio for use in a mobile radio network, including: a user terminal having a transceiver, a power controller and an antenna; and a power booster having an amplifier which is coupled between the transceiver and the antenna to form a signal path for transmission of radio signals by the terminal to the network, wherein the power controller generates a power headroom report for the network including the power available from the booster.
In a third aspect the invention resides in a radio for use in a mobile radio network, including: a user terminal having a transceiver, a power controller and an antenna; and a power booster having an amplifier which is coupled between the transceiver and the antenna to form a signal path for transmission of radio signals by the terminal to the network, wherein the power controller generates a power headroom report for the network not including the power available from the booster, and the power controller correspondingly receives control signals from the network which decrease the power output from the user terminal by the power available from the booster.
In a fourth aspect the invention resides in a radio for use in a mobile radio network, including: a user terminal having a transceiver and an antenna; and a power booster having an amplifier, an amplifier bypass, and a power controller; wherein the booster is coupled between the transceiver and the antenna to form a signal path for transmission of radio signals by the terminal, and the power controller switches the signal path between the amplifier and the amplifier bypass according to transmitter power received from the transceiver. The booster is active at relatively high power output of the UE and is inactive at relatively low power output of the UE in order to comply with LTE requirements for in-band emissions.
In a fifth aspect the invention resides in a booster for use with a UE terminal, including: a pair of switches, an RF power input for connection to an output of the UE, an RF power output for connection to an antenna, an amplifier and an amplifier bypass connected in parallel between the switches, and a controller which operates the switches to connect either the amplifier or the bypass between the power input and the power output, according to power requirements of the UE.
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 can be implemented in a range of different ways. It will also be appreciated that the LTE embodiments described in this specification are given by way of example only. These embodiments relate to half duplex FDD (frequency division duplex) or TDD (time division duplex) terminals.
In an LTE radio system, uplink power control is a combination of open-loop and closed-loop components. Firstly, the UE selects an Open Loop Operating Point, depending on estimates of downlink path loss and knowledge of the receiver power desired at the eNodeB. The UE output power is further adjusted by a Closed Loop Dynamic Offset, where the network can directly control the UE power with explicit power control commands, based on factors such as the modulation and coding scheme MCS to be used, and multipath fading. Closed loop control can be applied from sub-frame to sub-frame.
Detailed power control formulae are given in ETSI TS 136 213 for the Uplink Control (PUCCH), Uplink Shared (PUSCH) channels and the Sounding Reference Signals (SRS). These formulae follow a common format:
UE Transmit Power (Pcalc)=Open Loop Operating Point+Closed Loop Dynamic Offset+Bandwidth Factor
Open Loop Operating Point=Po+α.PL
Po=Base Operating Level, PL=Path Loss, α=Compensation Factor
The Base Operating Level Po is the desired received power level per resource block at the eNodeB. In theory, Po can be set to any number between −126 and +23 dBm. It can be used to quickly correct for systematic errors in UE power setting, such as path loss measurement errors. Po will depend on the uplink interference level and thus may vary over time. This calculation alone would give a suitable power for the lowest modulation scheme, given the measured path loss and slow fading.
The Open Loop Path Loss PL is based on the level at which the UE receives downlink Reference Signals (RS) from the eNodeB. The Compensation Facto, α lies between 0 and 1 and alters the degree to which UE transmit power responds to Path Loss. It is used for PUSCH and SRS, while for the PUCCH, α always equals 1. Full path loss compensation (α=1) maximizes the quality of service for UEs at the cell edge, but when considering a system with multiple cells, optimum system capacity is achieved with compensation factors of around 0.7 to 0.8.
Closed Loop Dynamic Offset=TF+TPC
TF=Transport Format command, TPC=Transmitter Power Control command
The Open Loop Operating Point sets the UE transmit power for the lowest modulation scheme MCS given the measured path loss. The ΔTF component allows the UE power to be adapted for a particular modulation scheme, reflecting that different minimum S/N ratios are required at the eNodeB for different schemes.
The TPC commands are sent to the UE in messages on the Downlink Control Channel (PDCCH), and the UE is required to check for TPC commands every sub-frame. Two types of TPC command are defined in ETSI TS 136 213—‘accumulation enabled’ TPC (available for PUSCH, PUCCH and SRS), and ‘accumulation not enabled’ TPC (PUSCH only). With ‘accumulation enabled’ TPC commands, each new command signals a change in the UE output power relative to the previous step. This is the default mode and can be used to adjust the power from sub-frame to sub-frame. There are two sets of accumulation enabled TPC values that can be used: (−1, +1) dB and (−1, 0, +1, +3) dB. The maximum power step that can be made with accumulation enabled TPC commands is therefore −1, +3 dB, but the range over which the power can be changed relative to the Open Loop Operating Point is unlimited so long as it stays between the −40 to +23 dBm boundaries. In contrast, ‘accumulation not enabled’ TPC commands ignore previous accumulative TPC commands. Instead ‘accumulation not enabled’ TPC commands signal a power offset from the Open Loop Operating Point. The offsets that can be signalled by an ‘accumulation not enabled’ TPC command are (−4, −1, +1, +4) dB. Thus this mode can only control the power by +/−4 dB around the Open Loop Operating Point, but a change of up to 8 dB can be triggered by a single command.
The UE power per Resource Block (RB) is obtained by adding the Open Loop Operating Point and the Closed Loop Dynamic Offset. To convert this to an overall transmitted power a Bandwidth Factor is added, based on the number of Resource Blocks allocated to the UE. For a larger number of RBs, a higher received power is needed at the eNodeB, meaning a correspondingly higher UE transmit power is required.
Bandwidth Factor=10 log10 M
M=number of Resource Blocks
Once the Open Loop Operating Point and Dynamic Offset are understood the UE power can be controlled to an accuracy of about 1 dB.
Calculated UE Output Power (Pcalc)=[(Po+α.PL)+(ΔTF+TPC)+(10 log10 M)]
This figure must be less than or equal to the maximum UE Output Power permitted in the cell (Pmax):
Actual UE Output Power (PUE)=min [Pmax, ((Po+α.PL)+(ΔTF+TPC)+(10 log10 M))]
The Power Headroom can then be calculated by the UE:
Power Headroom=Pmax−Pcalc=Pmax−[(Po+α.PL)+(ΔTF+TPC)+(10 log10 M)]
The term ‘User Equipment” (UE) can refer to a wide range of devices which conform to the LTE standard. It may include a mobile telephone, a mobile radio or a laptop with a suitable wireless adaptor, for example. In general terms, each UE has a processor and a memory which operate software, and usually some associated hardware, to implement a range of functions. Each UE also has an RF transceiver which includes transmit Tx and receive Rx paths for RF signals. These paths include a modem which implements the MCS, typically including a quadrature (I/Q) modulator and demodulator. A typical transceiver portion includes transmit and receive amplifiers which are alternately connected to an antenna through a common signal path. A power control algorithm is provided in software which is typically stored in the memory and implemented by the processor. The algorithm conforms to requirements of the LTE standard and carries out calculations as described above.
In this embodiment, if the UE transmitter power Pcalc is less than +23 dBm, the booster is bypassed and the standard UE transmitter output ‘P’ is selected. This is the UE transmitter output corresponding to Pcalc. If the required output power Pcalc should rise above the standard UE level of +23 dBm, or possibly approach +23 dBm within a small range, the booster is switched in and the UE simultaneously selects the ‘P-12 dB’ power setting. Both are switched together to minimise discontinuities when the booster alone is switched in or out. Should Pcalc then drop below −28 dBm, the booster is bypassed and the UE power control setting P is re-selected. The booster in/out line is not the same as Tx/Rx. In receive mode Rx, the booster is always bypassed.
Open Loop Operating Point=Po+α.PL−Gb
Where Gb=booster gain (18 12 dB)
Hence, the actual UE power becomes:
Actual UE Power (P(UE))=min [Pmax, ((Po+α.PL−Gb)+(ΔTF+TPC)+(10 log10 M))]
Ptx—The actual UE+Booster output power in dBm
Pcalc—The calculated UE output power, in dBm.
P(UE)—The actual UE output power before the booster, in dBm (ie: Pcalc−12 dB)
Pmax—A parameter defining the maximum UE output power.
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A potential drawback is the higher Pmin of −28 dBm. Assuming the terminals are uniformly distributed throughout the cell, then the terminals that would nominally be transmitting at a level <−28 dBm would be those in an inner circle where the propagation loss is 63 dB less than at the extended cell edge. The area of that ring is about 1/1000 of the area of the cell (ie: 10(−63/20).. In a system with uniformly distributed UEs, fewer than 1 in a 1000 would be transmitting too loudly, and of those very few would be 12 dB too loud since the excess starts at 0 dB from the boundary of the inner ring.
As with the second embodiment, the booster is ‘always on’ in the third embodiment, so the potential drawback with Pmin being −28 dBm still exists. Thus, there remains a possibility of boosted UEs operating inside an inner boundary interfering with a more distant standard UE situated at the edge of a standard cell, but the effect is minimal as illustrated for the second embodiment.
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Booster 121 includes a power controller 127, a pair of switches 128, and a power detector 129 which determines whether the amplifier and the attenuator are included in the signal path between the UE and the antenna. The power detector determines the RF power output by the UE and activates the power controller to include the attenuator and amplifier when the power output by the UE reaches or increases towards a predetermined level, Ptrip. The overall power from the radio can then increase when the radio moves from the normal cell 10 in
The booster 121 in
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This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/597,154 entitled “Power Boosters for Radio Terminals,” filed on 9 Feb. 2012, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61597154 | Feb 2012 | US |