1Mbps: Economical and practical

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By Li Yuesheng

A bit rate of 1Mpbs achieves an optimal balance between cost and delivery of a pleasing mobile broadband (MBB) service experience anytime, anywhere, but the “anytime-anywhere” part is easier said than done. Comprehensive measures are available to achieve it, through better technology, optimal deployment, or both.

Data services are replacing voice services as the cornerstones of telco profit. Legacy KPIs such as dropped call rate and handover success rate no longer effectively assess the user experience, as many data services are self-healing, making effective assessment and delivery of a good MBB service experience real challenges.

Defining optimal user experience

MBB services can be divided into ten categories – WAP/web browsing, streaming video, VoIP, social networking, instant messaging (IM), cloud applications, email, file transfer, gaming, and machine-to-machine (M2M) communications. User experience for each typically falls into three intuitive levels – bad, good, and excellent; each has a certain bandwidth range correlated with it, depending on the service.

According to Huawei statistics (Figure 1), 300Kbps is satisfactory for 50% of all service categories (IM, VoIP, microblog, WAP browsing, and 360p video), making it adequate for basic service bandwidth, while 1Mbps can satisfy for 90% of all service categories, including gaming, web browsing, and standard-definition (SD) video, making it suitable as the mainstream standard bandwidth. But, how do we deliver it anytime, anywhere?

Balancing user experience and network scale

Reasonable inter-site distance

A good user experience requires a live network to deliver a certain data rate anytime, anywhere. Network capacity is key to high-speed access anytime, especially during busy hours, while sound network coverage is needed to ensure sufficient data speed anywhere, notably at cell edges. And finally, network quality is crucial to promising data rates that users can actually enjoy. In other words, user experience is affected by network capacity, coverage, and quality, and a satisfactory user experience can be defined as delivery of the expected data rate to 95% of areas 90% of the time.

UMTS is a soft capacity (self-interfering) technology, and operators need to consider this when promising users a certain data rate anytime, anywhere. During off hours, network load and interference are light, so the data rate is high anywhere within coverage, but during peak times, network load is heavy with interference severe, leading to low data rates anywhere within coverage.

Network simulations show a 1Mbps cell-edge data rate to be a clear line of demarcation for an HSPA cell that is at 90% of its capacity limit, as the theoretical bit rate limit a signal can reach is only 1.1Mbps, regardless of the inter-site distance, thanks to capacity limits and inter-site interference.

Cell-edge data rates of 1Mbps have been obtained in real-world commercial circumstances during busy hours. With appropriate inter-site distance, “anytime-anywhere” 1Mbps data rates can be ensured with the reliability mentioned earlier.

Table 1 shows the typical inter-site distance for UMTS (three sectors, inter-cell distance at 1.5 times the cell radius) that delivers a field-verified 1Mbps cell-edge data rate.

Increasing the inter-site distance can lead to a significant drop off in data rate. If inter-cell distance increases 1.67 or 2.25 fold, respectively, the data rate at the cell edges will decrease to 600Kbps or 300Kbps, in any environment.

Network scale is inversely proportional to the square of the inter-site distance. Based on the relationship between inter-site distance and cell-edge data rate, the network scale corresponding to a cell-edge data rate of 300Kbps or 600Kbps will be 0.2 or 0.36 times that for the cell-edge data rate of 1Mbps, respectively.

Improved user experience requires greater network scale

For the previous 1Mbps example involving 90% cell load, the maximum cell-edge data rate is 1.1Mbps, due to inter-cell interference, but if the cell load is reduced to 70% (high load), 50% (medium load), or 30% (low load), the cell-edge data rate can be enhanced to 1.2Mbps, 1.5Mbps or 2Mbps, respectively.

However, a lower cell load will lead to reduced cell throughput, meaning enlarged network coverage at the cost of capacity (cell throughput is negatively correlated with network coverage). In a 2100MHz network, if the cell-edge data rate increases from 1Mbps to 1.2Mbps or 1.5Mbps, the cell load must be lowered from 90% to 70% or 50%, with the cell throughput range decreased from 2.7-to-3.2Mbps to 2.4-to-2.9Mbps or 1.8-to-2.2Mbps, respectively. In this way, network scale is enlarged 1.1 or 1.5 fold, respectively, to ensure an equivalent overall network capacity.

For existing UMTS networks, operators can split three sectors into multiples (perhaps six) or use small cells to enhance network capacity when inter-site distance adjustment is difficult. In other words, coverage (cell-edge data rate) can be improved at the cost of capacity.

Finding the balance for user experience and network scale

Figure 2 illustrates how a cell-edge data rate of 300Kbps, 600Kbps, 1Mbps, or 1.5Mbps can achieve a good user experience for 50%, 70%, 90%, and 95% of service categories, respectively, as network scale increases 0.20, 0.36, 1.00, and 1.50 fold, also respectively, when compared with a 1Mbps cell-edge data rate.

As the figure shows, a 1Mbps anytime-anywhere data rate is the best balance point between user experience and network resource consumption, and operators can act accordingly, based on their current stage of network development. In the developing stages, operators can add more base stations and expand coverage, while for a more mature network, operators can add more carriers/sectors and use advanced technologies such as dual-carrier-HSDPA, four-carrier-HSPA, MIMO, and LTE.

Deployment for optimal user experience

Dense deployment for GSM/UMTS

Using the same or adjacent frequency bands, UMTS and GSM base stations can be co-sited 1:1 (Figure 3) to ensure 1Mbps anytime, anywhere. For instance, when both GSM and UMTS use 900MHz (or UMTS2100MHz with GSM1800MHz), UMTS (at 1Mbps anytime, anywhere) has the same inter-site distance as GSM.

However, for operators who run GSM900/850MHz with UMTS2100/1900MHz, four times as many UMTS sites are needed as GSM to deliver 1Mbps anytime, anywhere, as GSM900/850MHz has twice the coverage that UMTS2100/1900MHz does.

Introduction of UMTS900/850MHz, therefore, becomes necessary to expand network coverage and enhance user experience; operators who do not have UMTS900/850MHz or four times as many UMTS sites as they do GSM must build more.

Capacity expansion is key

Timely network expansion is key to ensuring 1Mbps anytime, anywhere; each cell has a capacity limit for a certain number of users. If traffic exceeds the limit, operators need to scale their networks; otherwise, the cell-edge data rate and user experience will deteriorate.

The maximum user capacity for a cell is calculated based on traffic models and cell throughput; both are greatly affected by ever-changing user behavior and the radio environment in general. The maximum user number supported by a cell greatly fluctuates and involves collection of core network data, making it unhelpful as a network expansion reference.

There are many ways to expand network capacity; operators typically expand their networks based on cell load, as this measure reflects how radio resources are consumed by users, services, and the radio environment. In normal cases, user experience can be guaranteed when cell load is not congested.

As cell load fluctuates, an instant peak load of 90% on a live network does not reflect the real cell load and cannot be used as a prerequisite for capacity expansion; instead, it should be based on the average cell load. Huawei suggests using an average cell load of 70% as the threshold for capacity expansion. In general, operators can expand network capacity by adding carriers, splitting sectors, adding more sites, or upgrading the network.

HetNet is also needed

On most networks, about 20% sites serve 80% of users, far exceeding macro site capacity limit and degrading user experience. In addition, a large amount of traffic is generated indoors, yet macro sites lag behind there in terms of comprehensive and in-depth network coverage.

Even with a reasonable inter-site distance of macro sites, operators cannot guarantee a good user experience throughout the entire network, making a heterogeneous network (HetNet) architecture a must for enhancing network capacity/user experience in hotspots and eliminating poor coverage areas in general.

As the optimal balance point between user experience and network resource consumption, 1Mbps anytime anywhere, requires reasonable inter-site distance and timely network capacity expansion.

Operators can flexibly deploy more sites and carriers, upgrade to HSPA+, split three sectors into six (or more), utilize UMTS900MHz, or introduce HetNet, and most will have to do more than one.

Figure 1 Bandwidth requirements and user experience (For details, see pdf)

Frequency band / Inter-cell distance (km)
Dense urban area / Urban area / Suburban area / Rural area
2100MHz / 0.45 / 0.72 / 2.63 / 7.64
900MHz / 0.92 / 1.50 / 5.49 / 14.01

Table 1 Typical inter-site distance delivering 1Mbps cell-edge data rate

Figure 2 Cell-edge data rate, network scale, and user experience(For details, see pdf)

Figure 3 Inter-site distance for GSM/UMTS co-deployment(For details, see pdf)

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