The present disclosure relates generally to wireless communication systems and, more particularly, to techniques for switching between wireless communication systems.
A mobile wireless communication network, such as a cellular network, is often divided into a plurality of geographically separated, but normally overlapping cells. Each cell is controlled by a base station (BS) for communicating with mobile stations (MS) within the cell. When an MS moves from one cell to another cell and the MS is transferred from one BS to another BS, a handover process is performed by the BSs and the MS. Because the BSs may be controlled by different network operators, these BSs may use different communication formats, such as time division multiple access (TDMA), frequency division multiple access (FDMA), or code division multiple access (CDMA), The MSs may be transferred by using different procedures, such as where the handover is initiated by an MS or a BS.
Various techniques have been developed to perform the handover process. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,115,608 issued to Duran et al. on Sep. 5, 2000 (the '608 patent), describes an intersystem handover method and apparatus. In the '608 patent, an MS is aware of all the IDs of all the BSs of a different communication system with which it is to interact and, thus, internally initiates handoff requests. The MS monitors signals of formats of the BSs involved for maintaining a table of received signals from nearby cells, the cell IDs and signal quality, while maintaining an active call and further transmits a handover request in a command channel while in an active call mode. As another example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,010,300 issued to Jones et al. on Mar. 7, 2006 (the '300 patent) describes a method and system for intersystem wireless communications session hand-off. In the '300 patent, an MS uses one protocol to communicate with one access system and uses a second protocol that encapsulates the first protocol to communicate with a second access system. After the MS registers with the second access system, the ongoing communication session is handed over to the second access system according to the second protocol over the first protocol (hand-off/switch indication) between the MS and the first access system.
However, these conventional techniques do not address situations in which newly developed advanced BSs co-exist with legacy BSs. It may be desirable for the advanced BSs and MSs to achieve backward compatibility to support the legacy BSs. Further, if the advanced BSs and MSs support a legacy operation mode in addition to an advanced operation mode to provide the legacy support, a system switch procedure may be needed to transfer an active communication session or access link between an advanced BS and an advanced MS from the legacy operation mode to the advanced operation mode.
Methods and systems consistent with certain features of the disclosed embodiments address one or more of the problems set forth above.
An example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a method of a base station for wireless communication. The method includes providing a first zone and a second zone for wireless communication; operating the first zone using a first operation mode; and operating the second zone using a second operation mode. The method also includes communicating with a mobile station in the first zone using the first operation mode; and determining whether the mobile station is capable of operating using both the first operation mode and the second operation mode. Further, the method includes performing a zone switch procedure to switch the mobile station from the first zone using the first operation mode to the second zone using the second operation mode, if the mobile station is determined to be capable of operating using both the first and second operating modes.
Another example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a method of a mobile station capable of communicating in a first operation mode and a second operation mode. The method includes operating in the first operation mode for communicating with a first zone of a base station, and establishing a communication link with the base station using the first operation mode. The method also includes determining that the base station is capable of operating in both the first operation mode and the second operation mode. Further, the method includes performing a zone switch procedure to switch the mobile station from the first zone using the first operation mode to a second zone using the second operation mode and operating in the second operation mode for communicating with the second zone of the base station.
Another example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a method of a communication network for wireless communication. The method includes providing a first base station capable of operating in a first operation mode; providing a second base station capable of providing one or more zones and operating in at least a second operation mode; and providing at least one mobile station capable of operating in the first operation mode and the second operation mode. The method also includes communicating, by the mobile station, with one of the first base station and the second base station, and performing a handover procedure to hand over the mobile station between the first base station and the second base station.
Another example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a base station for wireless communication. The base station includes one or more antennas and a transceiver coupled to the one or more antennas for receiving and transmitting communication data from and to mobile stations. The base station also includes a processor. The processor is configured to provide a first zone and a second zone for wireless communication; to operate the first zone using a first operation mode; and to operate the second zone using a second operation mode. The processor is also configured to communicate with a mobile station in the first zone using the first operation mode; and to determine whether the mobile station is capable of operating using both the first operation mode and the second operation mode. Further, the processor is configured to perform a zone switch procedure to switch the mobile station from the first zone using the first operation mode to the second zone using the second operation mode, if the mobile station is determined to be capable of operating using both the first operation mode and the second operation mode.
Another example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a mobile station capable of communicating in a first operation mode and a second operation mode. The mobile station includes one or more antennas and a transceiver coupled to the one or more antennas for receiving and transmitting communication data from and to base stations. The mobile station also includes a processor. The processor is configured to operate the first operation mode for communicating with a first zone of a base station; and to establish a communication link with the base station using the first operation mode. The processor is also configured to determine whether the base station is capable of operating in both the first operation mode and the second operation mode, and to perform a zone switch procedure to switch the mobile station from the first zone using the first operation mode to the second zone using the second operation mode, if the base station is determined to be capable of operating using both the first and second operation modes. Further, the processor is configured to operate the second operation mode for communicating with the second zone of the base station.
Another example in accordance with the present disclosure includes a mobile station for wireless communication. The mobile station includes one or more antennas and a transceiver coupled to the one or more antennas for receiving and transmitting communication data from and to base stations. The mobile station also includes a processor. The processor is configured to provide a first operation mode for communicating with a first base station capable of operating in the first operation mode, and to provide a second operation mode for communicating with a second base station capable of operating in the first operation mode in a first zone and operating in the second operation mode in a second zone. The processor is also configured to communicate with one of the first base station and the second base station, and to perform a handover procedure to hand over between the first base station and the second base station.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the invention, as claimed.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
Further, BS 110 may be an advanced BS and BS 120 may be a legacy BS. Other types of systems, however, may also be used. A legacy BS, as used herein, may refer to a base station that operates in a legacy operation mode according to legacy specifications. A legacy specification is used relative to an advance specification. A legacy specification may refer to a specification of a standard, such as IEEE 802.16, that is still in use but is outdated by another specification of the standard, usually providing improvement on speed, bandwidth, and/or efficiency (i.e., an advanced specification). An advanced BS, as used herein, may refer to a base station that operates in an advanced operation mode according to one or more advanced specifications. The advanced BS may also support the legacy operation mode in order to be backward compatible with the legacy BS.
For example, a BS according to IEEE 802.16e standards, which has been included in IEEE 802.16Rev2, may be considered as a legacy BS; while a BS according to IEEE 802.16m standards may be considered as an advanced BS, which may provide backward compatibility with the IEEE 802.16e standards. Other standards, however, may also apply.
Advanced BS 110 may include two or more different zones, e.g., a legacy zone and an advanced zone. A zone, as used herein, may refer to a set of systems, hardware resources, and/or software resources configured by a BS to support a particular operation mode within a cell. For example, a zone may include a block or segment of time and/or frequency resources for the particular operation mode. A legacy zone thus may mean a time duration and/or a frequency band that is dedicated for legacy communications and operations and an advanced zone may mean a time duration and/or a frequency band that is dedicated for advanced communications and operations. Further, a zone may also include a certain coverage area within the cell. Any appropriate time/space/frequency resources may be included in a zone.
In operation, BS 110 may reserve resources for access with the legacy operation mode for the legacy zone, and may also reserve resources for access with the advanced operation mode for the advanced zone. The coverage of the legacy zone and the advanced zone may cover different areas within cell 112; may overlap certain areas within cell 112; or may coincide with each other. The resources may include any appropriate hardware and/or software resources used in wireless communication, such as memory, processor, backend server, network operation equipment, databases, transmission opportunities, etc.
MS 130 may also operate in both an advanced operation mode and a legacy operation mode. Thus, MS 130 may choose a particular operation mode to access BS 110. For example, MS 130 may use the legacy operation mode to access a legacy zone of BS 110; or may use the advance operation mode to access an advanced zone of BS 110. Further, MS 130 may switch the access between the legacy zone and the advanced zone by using zone switch procedures or system switch procedures.
A zone that currently serves MS 130 or provides an active access link may be referred to as a serving zone, and a zone that MS 130 switches to may be referred to as a target zone. Thus, the legacy zone and the advanced zone of BS 110 may be either the serving zone or the target zone, and the zone switch may be from the legacy zone to the advanced zone or from the advanced zone to the legacy zone. Further, the zone switch procedures may be initiated by either MS 130 or BS 110.
During the zone switch, MS 130 may perform a target zone entry procedure to establish an access link with a target zone. If MS 130 terminates the access link with a serving zone before performing the target zone entry procedure, it is called a break-before-make zone switch because MS 130 breaks the original access link before making the target zone entry. A break-before-make zone switch may also be called a break-before-entry zone switch.
On the other hand, if MS 130 terminates the access link with the serving zone after performing the target zone entry procedure, it is called a make-before-break zone switch because MS 130 makes the target zone entry before it breaks the original link. A make-before-break zone switch may also be called an entry-before-break zone switch.
Again with reference to
As shown in
MS 130 may include any appropriate communication terminal capable of communicating with BS 210 based on any of the various communication standards, such as IEEE 802.16 standards (e.g., IEEE 802.16e, IEEE 802.16m), IEEE 802.11 standards, CDMA, WCDMA, GSM, etc. MS may include terminal devices such as a mobile phone, a hand-held device, or any type of wireless device. MS 130 may also be configured to communicate with other communication terminals (not shown) directly or indirectly via BS 210, such as a landline communication device or a wireless communication device. Further, MS 130 may include a wireless communication transceiver 230 for carrying out the communication between MS 130 and BS 210 and/or between MS 130 and the other communication terminals.
Transceiver 230 may include any appropriate type of mobile device communication transceiver, i.e., a combination of a transmitter and a receiver having a common frequency control. Transceiver 230 may include various circuitries provided for processing signals generated during the transmitting and/or receiving operations of transceiver 230.
Further, MS 130 may include one or more antennas 250 used by transceiver 230 to receive and transmit signals from and to BS 210. MS 130 may also be configured to operate in SISO, SIMO, MISO, and/or MIMO mode. MS 130 receives signals or data from BS 210 through a downlink (DL) channel established between MS 130 and BS 210 and transmits signals or data to BS 210 through an uplink (UL) channel established between MS 130 and BS 210.
Operations of MS 130 and/or BS 210 may be controlled by a controller (not shown in
Processor 302 may include any appropriate type of general purpose microprocessor, digital signal processor, application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and/or microcontroller. Processor 302 may execute sequences of computer program instructions to perform various information processing functions and control functions. Processor 302 may be coupled to or access other devices, such as transceivers, other processors, radio frequency (RF) devices, and/or antennas.
RAM 304 and ROM 306 may include any appropriate type of random access memory, read only memory, or flash memory. Storage 308 may include any appropriate type of mass storage provided to store any type of information that processor 302 may need to perform processing/functions. For example, storage 308 may include one or more hard disk devices, optical disk devices, floppy disk devices, and/or other storage devices to provide storage space.
Input/output interface 310 may send control and data signals to other devices from processor 302 and may receive control and data signals sent from other devices to processor 302. Communication interface 312 may provide communication connections to enable controller 300 to exchange information with other systems via, for example, computer networks, such as the Internet.
As explained previously, a zone switch may be performed between MS 130 and BS 110, and the zone switch may be initiated by either MS 130 or BS 110.
As shown in
The alternative zone indicator may be a flag, a bit, or several bits in the messages. For example, a reserved bit in the frame control header (FCH) of IEEE 802.16 systems may be used to represent the alternative zone indicator, as shown in Table 1 below.
As shown in Table 1, the alternative zone indicator includes a single reserved bit. The single reserved bit having a value of ‘1’ indicates the capability of zone switch (e.g., advanced operation mode according to IEEE 802.16m); while having a value of ‘0’ indicates no support for zone switch. Other methods of detecting the capability of zone switch may also be used.
After identifying that BS 110 is capable of performing zone switch (402), MS 130 sends a zone switch request message, such as an MSZS-REQ (MS zone switch request) message to BS 110 (404). MS 130 sends the MSZS-REQ to BS 110 through the serving zone to ask for performing zone switch. The zone switch request contains identification of MS 130 to inform BS 110 who is asking for the zone switch.
After receiving the zone switch request from MS 130, BS 110 determines whether to accept or reject the zone switch request. If BS 110 determines to accept the zone switch request, BS 110 performs zone switch preparation (406). For example, BS 110 may check if the target zone is activated or not. If the target zone is not activated, BS 110 activates the target zone during zone switch preparation. BS 110 may also allocate resources in target zone to support the same quality of service (QOS) in the serving zone. Further, BS 110 may transfer or map the user profile and all parameters, messages, and resource for link control such as authentication, key management, registration information, timers, buffers, retransmission sequences, and other required entities from the serving zone to the target zone.
BS 110 also replies to MS 130 with a zone switch response (MSZS-RSP) message (408). The MSZS-RSP message may include information related to the zone switch, including target zone information, such as the synchronization parameters (e.g., synchronization channel index, timing offset for the target zone), new MS identification, a zone switch timer, and optional new security configuration/parameters.
On the other hand, if BS 110 rejects the zone switch request, BS 110 may ignore the request or send a MSZS-RSP message with reject indication to MS 130. If MS 130 does not receive the zone switch response within a period of time or receives the reject indication, MS 130 stops the zone switch procedure.
Assuming BS 110 accepts the zone switch request and indicates such acceptance in the MSZS-RSP message, MS 130 turns on operation mode for the target zone (410). MS 130 also performs a target zone entry procedure to establish an access link with the target zone (412). If target zone entry procedure is successfully completed before the zone switch timer expires, MS 130 sends a zone switch indication message, such as an MSZS-IND (MS zone switch indication) message to BS 110 through the serving zone to notify BS 110 that the target zone entry procedure is successful (414).
After receiving the MSZS-IND message, BS 110 releases serving zone resources for MS 130 and clears serving zone state machine parameters for MS 130 (416). BS 110 also confirms the success of target zone entry and the resource release in the serving zone. MS 130 turns off the operation mode for the serving zone (418).
In 510, MS 130 sends a zone switch indication message, such as an MSZS-IND (MS zone switch indication) message to BS 110 before performing any target zone entry procedure. After receiving the MSZS-IND message, BS 110 releases serving zone resources for MS 130 (512), which is similar to 416 (
Further, MS 130 turns on the operation mode for the target zone and turn off the operation mode for the serving zone (514), similar to 410 and 418 (
For the above zone switch processes shown in
For example, BS 110 may be able to detect an advanced MS indication message or an advanced MS indicator carried in other messages from MS 130. MS 130 may send the advanced MS indication message or an advanced MS indicator carried in other messages upon a request from BS 110 or voluntarily. The advanced MS indication message or an advanced MS indicator may indicate whether MS 130 is an advanced MS or a legacy MS.
The advanced MS indicator may be a flag, a bit, or several bits in certain types of messages. For example, the advanced MS indicator may be carried by the uplink control message such as a reserved bit in the ranging request (RNG-REQ) in IEEE 802.16 based systems, as shown in Table 2 below.
As shown in Table 2, the advanced MS indicator may include a single reserved bit. The single reserved bit having a value of ‘1’ indicates capability of zone switch (e.g., advanced mode according to IEEE 802.16m); while having a value of ‘0’ indicates no support for zone switch.
After identifying that MS 130 has the capability to perform the zone switch (602), BS 110 performs zone switch preparation (step 604). For example, BS 110 may check if the target zone is activated or not. If the target zone is not activated, BS 110 may activate the target zone during zone switch preparation. BS 110 may also allocate resources in target zone to support the same quality of service (QOS) in the serving zone. Further, BS 110 may transfer or map the user profile and all parameters, messages, and resources for link control such as authentication, key management, registration information, timers, buffers, retransmission sequences, and other required entities from the serving zone to the target zone.
Further, BS 110 sends MS 130 a zone switch request message (e.g. BSZS-REG) to initiate the zone switch procedure. The zone switch request message may contain target zone information, such as the synchronization parameters (e.g., synchronization channel index, timing offset for the target zone), new MS identification, a zone switch timer, and optional new security configuration/parameters. Other information may also be included in the zone switch request message.
The remaining operations 608, 610, 612, 614, and 616 are similar to operations 410, 412, 414, 416, and 418, illustrated in
Similar to the MS initiated zone switch procedure, during the BS initiated zone switch procedure shown in
Returning to
Further, the handover procedures may include a one-stage handover procedure and a two-stage handover procedure. A one-stage handover, as used herein, refers to a single switchover from the serving BS to the target BS; while a two-stage handover refers to more than a single switchover from the serving BS to the target BS. For example, a two-stage handover may include a switchover from the serving BS to the target BS and a zone switch from a serving zone to a target zone.
As shown in
For example, legacy BS 120 using IEEE 802.16e standards may add a legacy preamble index into neighbor cell advertisement messages (e.g., MOB_NBR-ADV) to imply the existence of neighbor advanced BSs using IEEE 802.16m standards. That is, MS 130 may scan and search neighboring legacy BSs based on the legacy synchronization information in the neighbor cell advertisement messages, and may scan and search neighboring advanced BSs based on information mapping from the legacy synchronization information in the neighbor cell advertisement messages.
The legacy neighbor cell advertisement messages may implicitly or explicitly contain the information about neighboring advanced BSs, such as the synchronization information and the capability information. Also, mapping relationships between legacy preambles (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) and advanced preambles (e.g., IEEE 802.16m) may be pre-defined. Thus, a legacy BS (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) may add an advanced (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) preamble index into the MOB_NBR-ADV messages to imply possible preambles of the neighboring advanced (e.g., IEEE 802.16m) BSs. MS 130, with a legacy serving BS (BS 120), may scan neighboring legacy BSs based on the legacy (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) preamble index recommended in the MOB_NBR-ADV messages, and may also scan neighboring advanced BSs based on the preambles related to the advanced (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) preamble index.
For example, information about neighbor BSs may be inserted into a legacy neighbor cell advertisement message (e.g. MOB_NBR-ADV). The format of inserted advanced BS information should be compatible with the legacy format, so the information may need to be re-defined. Further, an indicator may be added to specify that the neighbor information is from a legacy BS or an advanced BS. For example, the ‘Preamble Index’ field in an IEEE 802.16e MOB_NBR-ADV message is an 8-bit field, in which the most significant bit (MSB) is a reuse factor, and the remaining 7 bits represent 114 preamble indexes. Because there are at least 512 secondary synchronization channels (S-SCH), or called secondary advanced preamble according to IEEE 802.16m, the ‘Preamble Index’ field may be unable to represent all the S-SCHs in the IEEE 802.16e MOB_NBR-ADV message.
However, because the field ‘Preamble Index’ in the MOB_NBR-ADV message can represent 128 values (7 bits), and only 114 values are used, 14 values are unused. Further, if counting in the MSB, which is the reuse factor of 2, a total 28 values are unused. Thus, these 28 unused values may be used as a demarcation between IEEE 802.16e preamble/SCH indexes and IEEE 802.16m information. It may be assumed that the values 0 to 113 are assigned to represent the IEEE 802.16e preamble indexes in the IEEE 802.16e preamble index set. In other words, if the value of the ‘Preamble Index’ field is smaller than or equal to 113 (belongs to 16e preamble index set), all IEEE 802.16e and IEEE 802.16m systems recognize the value as a valid IEEE 802.16e preamble index. However, if the value of ‘Preamble Index’ field is greater than 113, an IEEE 802.16e system may skip this neighbor information because it cannot recognize it, while an IEEE 802.16m system may recognize the value as valid IEEE 802.16m neighbor information. Further, the IEEE 802.16m neighbor information may be encoded according to a legacy TLV (type, length, and value) principle with predefined parameters and entities.
After obtaining neighbor cell information (802), MS 130 may find candidate neighboring advanced base stations based on the neighbor cell information (804). Alternatively or additionally, MS 130 may also discover new target BSs by using autonomous base stations scanning. Further, MS 130 may determine a target advanced BS (e.g., BS 110) based on predetermined criteria, such as signal quality or communication quality, etc. Further, MS 130 or serving BS 120 may initiate legacy handover procedures with the serving legacy BS (806). After legacy handover procedures are finished, MS 130 or serving BS 120 may terminate the access link with the serving legacy BS (806).
Further, MS 130 may turn on an advance operation mode (808), and may perform advanced network entry procedures with the target advanced BS (810) and perform advance network entry procedures through the advanced zone of the target advanced BS. After completing the advanced network entry procedures (810), MS 130 and the target advanced BS (e.g., BS 110) can enter normal operation in advanced operation mode (812).
The serving advanced BS (BS 110) may be able to provide neighbor base station synchronization information for both legacy and advanced BSs. For example, BS 110 may broadcast the neighbor cell advertisement messages to include the synchronization information of the neighboring legacy (e.g., IEEE 802.16e) and advanced (e.g., IEEE 802.16m) BSs. Using this information, MS 130 may be able to perform neighbor BS scanning for both neighboring legacy BSs and advanced BSs.
After obtaining neighbor cell information (902), MS 130 may perform base station scanning based on the neighbor cell information to find candidate neighboring legacy base stations (904). Alternatively or additionally, MS 130 may also discover new target BSs by using autonomous base station scanning. Further, MS 130 may find candidate neighboring BSs and identify a target legacy BS (e.g., BS 120) based upon predetermined criteria, such as signal quality or communication quality, etc. MS 130 or serving BS 110 may also initiate advanced handover procedures (906). After the advanced handover procedures are completed, MS 130 or serving BS 110 may terminate the access link between MS 130 and the serving advanced BS 110 (906).
Further, MS 130 turns on legacy operation mode (908), and performs legacy network entry procedures with the target legacy BS (910). After completing the legacy network entry procedures (910), MS 130 and the target legacy BS (e.g., BS 120) enter the normal operation in legacy operation mode (912).
Further, MS 130 and advanced BS 110 perform the zone switch procedures to switch the access link between MS 130 and BS 110 from the legacy zone to the advanced zone in stage 2 (1004). The zone switch procedures may be initiated by MS 130 or target advanced BS 110, using the make-before-break or the break-before-make method, as described in previous sections. After the zone switch procedures, MS 130 and advanced BS 110 perform normal operation in the advanced operation mode (1006).
Further, MS 130 and target legacy BS 120 may complete legacy handover procedures (1054), such as the neighbor BS scanning, the handover process, network entry procedures, etc., in stage 2 such that MS 130 is handed over from serving advanced BS 110 to target legacy BS 120. After the handover procedures, MS 130 and legacy BS 120 perform normal operation in legacy operation mode (1056).
Although
As shown in
MS 130 performs downlink synchronization with target advanced BS 110 (step 1114) and obtains uplink parameters from target advanced BS 110 (1116). MS 130 performs these actions in legacy operation mode with the legacy zone of BS 110 to perform the legacy network entry procedures to the legacy zone of target advanced BS 110. However, when performing a ranging request (RNG-REQ) during the legacy network entry procedures, MS 130 may insert an advanced MS indicator in the ranging request message to inform target advanced BS 110 that MS 130 is an advanced (e.g., IEEE 802.16m) MS.
After receiving the advanced MS indicator from MS 130, target advanced BS 110 starts to perform BS-initiated zone switch procedures from the legacy zone to the advanced zone via 1120, 1122, 1124, 1126, 1128, 1130, and 1132, which are the same as 604, 606, 608, 610, 612, 614, and 616, illustrated in
Based upon the information in the response message, MS 130 synchronizes and measures neighboring legacy BSs and the legacy zone of target advanced BS 110 (1206), and determines a handover to the legacy zone of target advanced BS 110. Further, MS 130 sends serving legacy BS 120 a handover request via a handover request message (MOB_MSHO-REQ) (1208). After receiving the handover request, serving legacy BS 120 performs handover preparation and sends MS 130 a handover response via a handover response message (MOB_BSHO-RSP) (1210). Further, MS 130 sends serving legacy BS 120 a handover indication via a handover indication message (MOB_HO-IND) (1212). Serving legacy BS 120 also terminates the access link between MS 130 and serving legacy BS 120 and releases resources for MS 130.
MS 130 may also obtain broadcast messages from the legacy zone of target advanced BS 110 (1212). The broadcast message may include information about capability of target advanced BS 110, such as FCH (frame control header) and DCD (downlink channel description (1214)). MS 130 may perform target network entry procedures based upon the information obtained from the legacy zone of target advanced BS 110 (1216).
As shown in
Returning again to
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/096,754 to Yung-Han Chen et al. filed on Sep. 12, 2008, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61096754 | Sep 2008 | US |