Mobile Communications Summer Term 2011
Freie Universitt Berlin - Computer Systems & Telematics Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] schiller@[Link]
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.1
Why Mobile Communications?
Largest SW/HW/networked system Largest number of subscribers Mobile devices dominate the Internet Mobile applications dominate Internet usage New possibilities, new threats Technology fully integrated into everybody's life almost 24/7, almost anywhere
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.2
Overview of the lecture
Introduction
Use-cases, applications Definition of terms Challenges, history
Broadcast Systems Wireless LANs
DAB, DVB Basic Technology IEEE 802.11a/b/g/, .15, Bluetooth, ZigBee Mobile IP Ad-hoc networking Routing Reliable transmission Flow control Quality of Service File systems, WWW, WAP, imode, J2ME, ...
Wireless Transmission
Medium Access
Frequencies & regulations, Cognitive Radio Signals, antennas, signal propagation, MIMO Multiplexing, modulation, spread spectrum, cellular system, SDR SDMA, FDMA, TDMA, CDMA CSMA/CA, versions of Aloha Collision avoidance, polling
Network Protocols
Transport Protocols
Wireless Telecommunication Systems Satellite Systems
GSM, HSCSD, GPRS, DECT, TETRA, UMTS, IMT-2000, LTE GEO, LEO, MEO, routing, handover
[Link]
Support for Mobility Outlook
MC - 2011
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.3
Mobile Communications Chapter 1: Introduction
A case for mobility many aspects History of mobile communication Market Areas of research
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.4
Computers for the next decades? Computers are integrated (95% embedded systems!)
small, cheap, portable, replaceable - no more separate devices
Technology is in the background
computer are aware of their environment and adapt (location awareness) computer recognize the location of the user and react appropriately (e.g., call forwarding, fax forwarding, context awareness))
Advances in technology
more computing power in smaller devices flat, lightweight displays with low power consumption new user interfaces due to small dimensions more bandwidth per cubic meter multiple wireless interfaces: wireless LANs, wireless WANs, regional wireless telecommunication networks etc. (overlay networks)
[Link] MC - 2011
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.5
Mobile communication Two aspects of mobility:
user mobility: users communicate (wireless) anytime, anywhere, with anyone device portability: devices can be connected anytime, anywhere to the network
Wireless vs. mobile
Examples stationary computer notebook in a hotel wireless LANs in historic buildings Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) The demand for mobile communication creates the need for integration of wireless networks into existing fixed networks:
local area networks: standardization of IEEE 802.11 Internet: Mobile IP extension of the internet protocol IP wide area networks: e.g., internetworking of GSM and ISDN, VoIP over WLAN and POTS
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.6
Applications I
Vehicles
transmission of news, road condition, weather, music via DAB/DVB-T personal communication using GSM/UMTS/LTE position via GPS local ad-hoc network with vehicles close-by to prevent accidents, guidance system, redundancy vehicle data (e.g., from busses, high-speed trains) can be transmitted in advance for maintenance
Emergencies
early transmission of patient data to the hospital, current status, first diagnosis replacement of a fixed infrastructure in case of earthquakes, hurricanes, fire etc. crisis, war, ...
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Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.7
Typical application: road traffic
UMTS, WLAN, DAB, DVB, GSM, cdma2000, TETRA, ...
Personal Travel Assistant, PDA, Laptop, GSM, UMTS, WLAN, Bluetooth, ...
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.8
Mobile and wireless services Always Best Connected
DSL/ WLAN 3 Mbit/s GSM/GPRS 53 kbit/s Bluetooth 500 kbit/s UMTS, GSM 115 kbit/s LAN 100 Mbit/s, WLAN 54 Mbit/s
UMTS 2 Mbit/s GSM/EDGE 384 kbit/s, DSL/WLAN 3 Mbit/s GSM 115 kbit/s, WLAN 11 Mbit/s
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
UMTS, GSM 384 kbit/s 1.9
Applications II
Traveling salesmen
direct access to customer files stored in a central location consistent databases for all agents mobile office remote sensors, e.g., weather, earth activities flexibility for trade shows LANs in historic buildings outdoor Internet access intelligent travel guide with up-to-date location dependent information ad-hoc networks for multi user games
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
Replacement of fixed networks
Entertainment, education, ...
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Location dependent services
Location aware services Follow-on services
what services, e.g., printer, fax, phone, server etc. exist in the local environment automatic call-forwarding, transmission of the actual workspace to the current location push: e.g., current special offers in the supermarket pull: e.g., where is the Black Forrest Cheese Cake? caches, intermediate results, state information etc. follow the mobile device through the fixed network who should gain knowledge about the location
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
Information services Support services Privacy
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Mobile devices
Pager receive only tiny displays simple text messages Sensors, embedded controllers Smartphone tiny keyboard simple versions of standard applications PDA graphical displays character recognition simplified WWW Laptop/Notebook fully functional standard applications
Mobile phones voice, data simple graphical displays
performance
No clear separation between device types possible (e.g. smart phones, embedded PCs, )
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.12
Effects of device portability
Power consumption
limited computing power, low quality displays, small disks due to limited battery capacity CPU: power consumption ~ CV2f
C: internal capacity, reduced by integration V: supply voltage, can be reduced to a certain limit f: clock frequency, can be reduced temporally
Loss of data
Limited user interfaces
higher probability, has to be included in advance into the design (e.g., defects, theft) compromise between size of fingers and portability integration of character/voice recognition, abstract symbols limited usage of mass memories with moving parts flash-memory or ? as alternative
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Limited memory (always in relation to e.g. PCs)
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.13
Wireless networks in comparison to fixed networks
Higher loss-rates due to interference Restrictive regulations of frequencies Lower transmission rates
emissions of, e.g., engines, lightning frequencies have to be coordinated, useful frequencies are almost all occupied local some Mbit/s, regional currently, e.g., 53kbit/s with GSM/GPRS or about 150 kbit/s using EDGE soon Mbit/s with LTE connection setup time with GSM in the second range, several hundred milliseconds for other wireless systems soon in ms range with LTE radio interface accessible for everyone, base station can be simulated, thus attracting calls from mobile phones secure access mechanisms important
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Higher delays, higher jitter
Lower security, simpler active attacking Always shared medium
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.14
Early history of wireless communication Many people in history used light for communication
heliographs, flags (semaphore), ... 150 BC smoke signals for communication; (Polybius, Greece) 1794, optical telegraph, Claude Chappe
Here electromagnetic waves are
of special importance: 1831 Faraday demonstrates electromagnetic induction J. Maxwell (1831-79): theory of electromagnetic Fields, wave equations (1864) H. Hertz (1857-94): demonstrates with an experiment the wave character of electrical transmission through space (1888, in Karlsruhe, Germany)
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.15
History of wireless communication I 1896 Guglielmo Marconi
first demonstration of wireless telegraphy (digital!) long wave transmission, high transmission power necessary (> 200kW) huge base stations (30 100m high antennas)
1907 Commercial transatlantic connections 1915 Wireless voice transmission New York - San Francisco 1920 Discovery of short waves by Marconi
reflection at the ionosphere smaller sender and receiver, possible due to the invention of the vacuum tube (1906, Lee DeForest and Robert von Lieben) wires parallel to the railroad track 1.16
1926 Train-phone on the line Hamburg - Berlin
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
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MC - 2011
History of wireless communication II 1928 many TV broadcast trials (across Atlantic, color TV, news) 1933 Frequency modulation (E. H. Armstrong) 1958 A-Netz in Germany 1972 B-Netz in Germany
analog, 160MHz, connection setup only from the mobile station, no handover, 80% coverage, 1971 11000 customers analog, 160MHz, connection setup from the fixed network too (but location of the mobile station has to be known) available also in A, NL and LUX, 1979 13000 customers in D
1979 NMT at 450MHz (Scandinavian countries) 1982 Start of GSM-specification
1983 Start of the American AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone
System, analog) 1984 CT-1 standard (Europe) for cordless telephones
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goal: pan-European digital mobile phone system with roaming
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.17
History of wireless communication III 1986 C-Netz in Germany
analog voice transmission, 450MHz, hand-over possible, digital signaling, automatic location of mobile device was in use until 2000, services: FAX, modem, X.25, e-mail, 98% coverage Digital European Cordless Telephone (today: Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications) 1880-1900MHz, ~100-500m range, 120 duplex channels, 1.2Mbit/s data transmission, voice encryption, authentication, up to several 10000 user/km2, used in more than 50 countries in D as D1 and D2, fully digital, 900MHz, 124 channels automatic location, hand-over, cellular roaming in Europe - now worldwide in more than 200 countries services: data with 9.6kbit/s, FAX, voice, ...
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1991 Specification of DECT
1992 Start of GSM
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.18
History of wireless communication IV 1994 E-Netz in Germany 1996 HiperLAN (High Performance Radio Local Area Network)
ETSI, standardization of type 1: 5.15 - 5.30GHz, 23.5Mbit/s recommendations for type 2 and 3 (both 5GHz) and 4 (17GHz) as wireless ATM-networks (up to 155Mbit/s) IEEE standard, 2.4 - 2.5GHz and infrared, 2Mbit/s already many (proprietary) products available in the beginning GSM with 1800MHz, smaller cells as Eplus in D (1997 98% coverage of the population)
1997 Wireless LAN - IEEE802.11
1998 Specification of GSM successors
for UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) as European proposals for IMT-2000 Iridium
66 satellites (+6 spare), 1.6GHz to the mobile phone
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.19
History of wireless communication V 1999 Standardization of additional wireless LANs
IEEE standard 802.11b, 2.4-2.5GHz, 11Mbit/s Bluetooth for piconets, 2.4GHz, <1Mbit/s decision about IMT-2000
Start of WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) and i-mode
several members of a family: UMTS, cdma2000, DECT, first step towards a unified Internet/mobile communication system access to many services via the mobile phone
2000 GSM with higher data rates
HSCSD offers up to 57,6kbit/s first GPRS trials with up to 50 kbit/s (packet oriented!) UMTS auctions/beauty contests Iridium goes bankrupt
Hype followed by disillusionment (50 B$ paid in Germany for 6 licenses!)
2001 Start of 3G systems
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
Cdma2000 in Korea, UMTS tests in Europe, Foma (almost UMTS) in Japan
[Link] MC - 2011
1.20
History of wireless communication VI
2002 2003 2005 2006
WLAN hot-spots start to spread UMTS starts in Germany Start of DVB-T in Germany replacing analog TV WiMax starts as DSL alternative (not mobile) first ZigBee products HSDPA starts in Germany as fast UMTS download version offering > 3 Mbit/s WLAN draft for 250 Mbit/s (802.11n) using MIMO WPA2 mandatory for Wi-Fi WLAN devices over 3.3 billion subscribers for mobile phones (NOT 3 bn people!) real Internet widely available on mobile phones (standard browsers, decent data rates) 7.2 Mbit/s HSDPA, 1.4 Mbit/s HSUPA available in Germany, more than 100 operators support HSPA worldwide, first LTE tests (>100 Mbit/s) Reuse of old analog TV bands, LTE as DSL replacement for rural areas
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2007 2008
2009 the story continues with netbooks, iphones, VoIPoWLAN 2010 LTE available in some cities, new frequencies allocated
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.21
Worldwide wireless subscribers (old prediction 1998)
700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 1.22
Americas Europe Japan others total
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
Mobile phones per 100 people 1999
Germany Greece Spain Belgium France Netherlands Great Britain Switzerland Ireland Austria Portugal Luxemburg Italy Denmark Norway Sweden Finland
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
2005: 70-90% penetration in Western Europe, 2009 (ten years later): > 100%!
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.23
Worldwide cellular subscriber growth
1200 1000
Subscribers [million]
800 600 400 200 0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
Note that the curve starts to flatten in 2000 2010: over 4.5 billion subscribers!
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.24
Cellular subscribers per region (September 2009)
Regions
7% 6% 12% 9% 11% Africa Americas Asia Pacific Europe: Eastern 11% Europe: Western Middle East USA/Canada 44% [Link]
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.25
Cellular subscribers in % per technology
100 50 0
2008
2009
[Link] 1.26
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
Mobile statistics snapshots (09/2002 / 12/2004 / 04/2006 / Q4/2007
Total Global Mobile Users 869M / 1.52G / 2G / 3.3G Total Analogue Users 71M / 34M / 1M Total US Mobile users 145M / 140M Total Global GSM users 680M / 1.25G 1.5G / 2.7G Total Global CDMA Users 127M / 202M Total TDMA users 84M / 120M Total European users 283M / 343M Total African users 18.5M / 53M / 83M Total 3G users 130M / 130M Total South African users 13.2M / 19M / 30M European Prepaid Penetration 63% European Mobile Penetration 70.2% Global Phone Shipments 2001 393M / 1G 2008 Global Phone Sales 2Q02 96.7M
[Link]/stats/ [Link] [Link]
#1 Mobile Country China (139M / 300M) #1 GSM Country China (99M / 282M / 483M) #1 SMS Country Philipines #1 Handset Vendor 2Q02 Nokia (37.2%) #1 Network In Africa Vodacom (6.6M / 11M) #1 Network In Asia Unicom (153M) #1 Network In Japan DoCoMo #1 Network In Europe T-Mobile (22M / 28M) #1 In Infrastructure Ericsson SMS Sent Globally 1Q 60T / 135G / 235G / 650 G SMS sent in UK 6/02 1.3T / 2.1G SMS sent Germany 1Q02 5.7T GSM Countries on Air 171 / 210 / 220 GSM Association members 574 / 839 Total Cost of 3G Licenses in Europe 110T SMS/month/user 36
The figures vary a lot depending on the statistic, creator of the statistic etc.!
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.27
Areas of research in mobile communication
Wireless Communication
Mobility
transmission quality (bandwidth, error rate, delay) modulation, coding, interference media access, regulations ... location dependent services location transparency quality of service support (delay, jitter, security) ... power consumption limited computing power, sizes of display, ... usability ...
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Portability
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
1.28
Simple reference model used here
Application Transport Network Data Link Physical Network Data Link Physical Network Data Link Physical Medium
Application Transport Network Data Link Physical
Radio
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.29
Influence of mobile communication to the layer model
Application layer service location new/adaptive applications multimedia congestion/flow control quality of service addressing, routing device location hand-over authentication media access/control multiplexing encryption modulation interference attenuation frequency
Transport layer Network layer
Data link layer
Physical layer
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller
[Link]
MC - 2011
1.30
Overview of the main chapters
Chapter 10: Support for Mobility Chapter 9: Mobile Transport Layer Chapter 8: Mobile Network Layer
Chapter 4: Telecommunication Systems
Chapter 5: Satellite Systems
Chapter 6: Broadcast Systems
Chapter 7: Wireless LAN
Chapter 3: Medium Access Control Chapter 2: Wireless Transmission
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.31
Overlay Networks - the global goal
integration of heterogeneous fixed and mobile networks with varying transmission characteristics regional vertical handover
metropolitan area
campus-based
horizontal handover
in-house
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller [Link] MC - 2011
1.32