Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Similar documents
The CellAdvisor Portfolio. Approved by major mobile operators

Active Antennas: The Next Step in Radio and Antenna Evolution

Essentials of Fiber to the Antenna: Cable and Antenna Testing

Introduction to Same Band Combining of UMTS & GSM

Radio Frequency Analysis at Fiber-Based Cell Sites

White paper. Long Term HSPA Evolution Mobile broadband evolution beyond 3GPP Release 10

Electro-Optical Performance Requirements for Direct Transmission of 5G RF over Fiber

A Business Case for Employing Direct RF Transmission over Optical Fiber In Place of CPRI for 4G and 5G Fronthaul

WIRELESS 20/20. Twin-Beam Antenna. A Cost Effective Way to Double LTE Site Capacity

Technical Education Catalog 2018

InterferenceAdvisor TM Solution. Fully automated interference hunting

DragonWave, Horizon and Avenue are registered trademarks of DragonWave Inc DragonWave Inc. All rights reserved

LTE Advanced Test Guide CellAdvisor JD745B or JD785A/B Series (FW 3.085)

Beamforming for 4.9G/5G Networks

Ericsson Radio Dot System

2012 LitePoint Corp LitePoint, A Teradyne Company. All rights reserved.

LTE Signal Quality Analysis. BTS Master, Cell Master,, Spectrum Master

Keysight Technologies Performing LTE and LTE-Advanced RF Measurements with the E7515A UXM Wireless Test Set

CellAdvisor. JD748B/JD788B Signal Analyzers

CellAdvisor. JD745B/JD785B Base Station Analyzers

Remote RF is Becoming a Mainstream Solution

t-series The Intelligent Solution for Wireless Coverage and Capacity

Digital GPS Repeaters for Wireless Network Timing

Minimal form factor Multi system MIMO technology ANTENNA SITE SOLUTION

SmartScan. Application Note. Intelligent Frequency Response and Limits in Plant Distribution. VIAVI Solutions

Test Range Spectrum Management with LTE-A

Technical keys to successful network modernization: PIM

LTE Walk Test Measurements Using Consultix WTX-610 ILLuminator & Test Phones

NTT DOCOMO Technical Journal. 1. Introduction. 2. Features of an Activeantenna. 2.1 Basic Configuration of Base Station using an Active Antenna

Financial Impact of Magnolia s Mobile Transmit Diversity Technology in WCDMA Networks

Field Test of Uplink CoMP Joint Processing with C-RAN Testbed

JD746A/JD786A CellAdvisor RF Analyzer

HyperLink Wireless Low PIM DAS 2x2 MIMO Ceiling Antenna Model: HG72706DPCUPR-NF

Optimizing LTE Network Performance with Tower Mounted Amplifiers

Cisco Prisma II Quad Optical Input Enhanced Digital Return (EDR) Receiver for Compact Segmentable Nodes

NTT DOCOMO Technical Journal. 1. Introduction. Tatsuhiko Yoshihara Hiroyuki Kawai Taisuke Ihara

M A R C H 2 6, Sheri DeTomasi 5G New Radio Solutions Lead Keysight Technologies. 5G New Radio Challenges and Redefining Test

Cellular Radio Systems Department of Electronics and IT Media Engineering

Simply configured Radio on Fiber link yielding positive gain for mobile phone system

HELIAX SureFlex premium cable assemblies. Exceptional performance guaranteed

Long Term Evolution (LTE) Radio Network Planning Using Atoll

Overview. Key Facts. TSP Transmitter. TRANSCOM Cellular Network Measurement

RADWIN JET POINT-TO-MULTIPOINT BEAMFORMING SOLUTION DELIVERS FIBER-LIKE CONNECTIVITY FOR RESIDENTIAL AND ENTERPRISE

Metro Cell: Best Practices. For a Successful Densification Strategy

Radio over Fiber technology for 5G Cloud Radio Access Network Fronthaul

White Paper. 850 MHz & 900 MHz Co-Existence. 850 MHz Out-Of-Band Emissions Problem xxxx-xxxreva

LTE Base Station Equipments Usable with W-CDMA System

NR Physical Layer Design: NR MIMO

4 channel low power Active DAS tray with power monitoring and attenuation control (+18dBm maximum average

Massive MIMO for the New Radio Overview and Performance

SEN366 (SEN374) (Introduction to) Computer Networks

USERS MANUAL Section (C)(3)

White Paper 850 MHz & 900 MHz Co-Existence 900 MHz Receiver Blocking Problem

GREEN Solutions for Wireless Systems WHITE paper

Advanced Test Equipment Rentals ATEC (2832)

Analysis of RF requirements for Active Antenna System

DAS Solutions. Delivering coverage and capacity in today s challenging environments

High Spectral Efficiency Designs and Applications. Eric Rebeiz, Ph.D. Director of Wireless Technology 1 TARANA WIRELESS, INC.

LONG HAUL MULTI- GIGABIT MICROWAVE: A NEW APPROACH. An Advanced Technology Webinar From Aviat Networks. 14 August 2013

Cisco Enhanced Digital Return (EDR) 85 System Compact Segmentable Nodes

MAKING TRANSIENT ANTENNA MEASUREMENTS

Mission Critical DAS Solution

ELECTRICAL TESTING

Report Demonstration Field Test

High-end vector signal generator creates complex multichannel scenarios

Drones for Telecommunications

Cellular Coverage Workgroup. A Hotelier s Guide to Cellular Coverage Solutions. Solution Architectures

FlexWave Universal Radio Head Flexible Outdoor Coverage and Capacity

Affordable Family Friendly Broadband Alternate FDD Proposal. July 3, 2008

Data and Computer Communications. Tenth Edition by William Stallings

Co-Existence of UMTS900 and GSM-R Systems

User's Manual F10G-5S-LCD 1 / 20 BOOST CELL PHONE SIGNAL BOOSTERS MADE BY HUAPTEC

Zyxel Has You Covered. In-Building Coverage Solution Brief

Demystifying DAS. A DAS Industry Overview

LTE-A Carrier Aggregation Enhancements in Release 11

5G and mmwave Testing

Innovations in RF Distribution Networks: Evolution of Distributed Antenna Systems. By Frank Rayal

Simulation for 5G New Radio System Design and Verification

PAPER AVIAT NETWORKS FOUR RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FIRSTNET BACKHAUL

FlexWave CPRI Digital Interface Unit

Technical User Manual JDIR / 40-90

Architecture and Applications of a Versatile Small- Cell, Multi-Service Cloud Radio Access Network Using Radio-over-Fiber Technologies

3G LTE2100 4G 2600mhz Dual band signal Repeaters Max coverage 3500m2

Swept Return Loss & VSWR Antenna Measurements using the Eagle Technologies RF Bridge

Technical Manual. Mobile Communication Mini Booster Model: PW-MB or PW-MB10-900

Densifying with grace: the resurgence of RF conditioning devices

Application Note: Swept Return Loss & VSWR Antenna Measurements using the Eagle Technologies RF Bridge

Small Cell : Backhaul Toolkit, the enabler for Deployment Acceleration. Panos Dallas Product Line Manager Wireless Network Systems

Addressing Future Wireless Demand

Simple Guide to In-Building Coverage Systems

User Warnings MUST READ!

VIRTUAL SEGMENTATION. Executive summary. Online. Website: technetix.com

5G - The multi antenna advantage. Bo Göransson, PhD Expert, Multi antenna systems Systems & Technology

RF Channel Characterization with Multiple Antenna Systems for LTE

Operated by Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's NNSA

Cisco Smart SFP Network Interface Device

Testing passive networks in distributed antenna systems (DAS) White paper

VIAVI VST. Data Sheet. 6 GHz RF Vector Signal Transceiver (VST)

Long Term Evolution (LTE)

Passive and active antenna systems for base stations of IMT systems

Transcription:

Optimize Cell-Site Deployments CellAdvisor BBU Emulation Mobile operators continue to face an insatiable demand for capacity, driven by multimedia applications and the ever-increasing number of devices connecting to the network. These challenges require operators to quickly and efficiently deploy cell sites to remain competitive. However, the cell-site deployment process is complex, involving multiple parties such as tower builders and radio manufacturers. And, there is network commissioning that creates delays and operational costs due to interaction, verification, and conformance activities at each stage of the process. In general, the installation process has three main phases: 1. Installation installing cell-site infrastructure including power, cabling, remote radio heads (), and antenna mounts. Remote radio head () t i t t 2. Commissioning configuring the base band unit, its interface with the core network, and initial turn-up of the cell site as well as service verification. 3. Site tuning tuning antennas and resolving any installation issues. feeder Installation Time: t i t n feeder (CPRI) Baseband unit (BBU) Commissioning Time: t i + t n + t c t c t m feeder (CPRI) Site Tuning Time: t i + t n + t c + t m + t t Figure 1. The installation process in three phases Application Note

A major challenge facing mobile service providers is the overall time that this installation process takes. Providers need to realize service revenues quickly and minimize customer churn. Figure 2 shows a basic time assessment of this cell-site deployment process. Cell Site Installation Process Installation t i Commissioning t c Site tuning t t Verification t n Network Operations t m Labor cost Revenue loss Tower Crew OpEx Pass Fail Tower Crew time ARPU Churn t Total installation time depends on a number of factors: Figure 2. The cell site installation time flow y Installation time (t i ) varies from weeks to months based on permissions, construction, and complexity of the cell-site y Time between installation and commissioning (t n ) averages 15 to 30 days: installers and network commissioning have different schedules and priorities y Commissioning time (t c ) requires a few days to a week based on backhaul performance and potential troubleshooting issues y Time between commissioning and site tuning (t m ) averages 15 to 30 days y Site tuning (t t ) varies from a few days to weeks based on repairs and availability of replacement parts The total installation time (T) adds up to several months: T = t i + t n + t c + t m + t t. This extended time can drastically affect mobile operators financially. They cannot provide or charge for services, and they risk churning existing customers to other mobile service operators. Table 1. Overall installation costs Cell-Site Installation Days Revenue Loss Churn Cost Labor Opportunity Cost t i : Time of installation 7 $ 11,666.67 $ 233.33 $ 11,900.00 t n : Time of commissioning 7 $ 11,666.67 $ 233.33 $ 11,900.00 t c : Time of commissioning 30 $ 50,000.00 $ 1,000.00 $ 51,000.00 t m : Time for tower crew 30 $ 50,000.00 $ 1,000.00 $ 51,000.00 t t : Time of repair and tuning 1 $ 1,666.67 $ 33.33 $ 1,700.00 Tower Crew $ 3,000.00 $ 3,000.00 Total Time and Cost 75 $ 125,000.00 $ 2,500.00 $ 3,000.00 $ 130,500.00 The considerations for the above model are: y Revenue loss = daily ARPU x subscribers, where the typical monthly ARPU (average revenue per user) is $50.00 or $1.67 per day for 1, 000 service subscribers y Churn cost = revenue x 2% churn rate 2 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Site tuning or installation verification is currently done as a third phase of the process, since it requires the baseband unit (BBU) to communicate with the and perform a functional test. However, this process can be eliminated if the BBU can be emulated to conduct the functionality at the installation phase. Turn-up and verification can occur at the time of installation. Cell Site Installation Process (BBU-Emulation) Installation t i Commissioning t c Verification Tower Crew t n Network Operations Site tuning t t Labor cost Revenue loss Tower Crew OpEx Pass Fail Tower Crew time ARPU Churn t Figure 3. Cell-site installation with BBU emulation This expedites installation time, eliminating the time between commissioning and site tuning. It also reduces recurring visits of a tower crew for repairs or site tuning. The cost savings achieved with BBU emulation can be significant. Considering the cost model in Table 2, BBU emulation yields a 30-day reduction in deployment time and opportunity cost savings of $54,000 per cell site. Table 2. Overall estimated costs with BBU emulation Cell-Site Installation Days Revenue Loss Churn Cost Labor Opportunity Cost t i : Time of installation 7 $ 11,666.67 $ 233.33 $ 11,900.00 t t : Time of repair and tuning 1 $ 1,666.67 $ 33.33 t n : Time of commissioning 7 $ 11,666.67 $ 233.33 $ 11,900.00 t c : Time of commissioning 30 $ 50,000.00 $ 1,000.00 $ 51,000.00 Total Time and Cost 45 $ 75,000.00 $ 1,500.00 $ - $ 76,500.00 RFoCPRI BBU Emulation Distributed cell sites with fiber links between the BBU and remote provide the necessary bandwidth for multi-carrier, multi-standard, and multi-antenna transmission; however, this architecture creates challenges for cell-site installation and maintenance: y Installation the verification of the installation should be made performing RF tests at the since the BBU is not yet commissioned. This significantly increases installation costs, and in some cases, RF tests are omitted until the BBU is commissioned. In most cases, this creates a series of unnecessary cycles of installation verification and commissioning. This increases operational costs and excessively delays network deployment. y Maintenance regular maintenance procedures ensure service availability and quality, including proper RF emissions verifying reflections on feed-lines, intermodulation (PIM) products causing interference, and real-time analysis to detect external interference; however these tests are performed at the increasing maintenance cost and extending time for resolution. Proper installation and maintenance practices can overcome these challenges without incurring prohibitive expenses or delaying deployments. However, it is important that these practices: y Effectively perform RF testing from the BBU (RF over CPRI) y Perform functional tests by emulating the BBU 3 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Overview Distributed cell-site installation and maintenance testing with BBU emulation covers two main areas: y The configuration profile of the y The transmission characteristics of the The configuration profile should include: y Optical power transmission, reception, and CPRI link status y Model number and technology supported y Operational frequency band for transmission and reception y Carrier information and transmission signal type y Attributes of its optical interface or small form-factor pluggable transceiver (SFP) y Firmware loaded, version, and serial number y The RF reception and transmission profile should include: y Spectrum clearance or interference analysis in the mobile s transmission frequency y Radio transmission for coverage range testing including: RF cable reflections or voltage standing wave ratios (VSWR) Verification and adjustment of antenna tilts y Passive intermodulation analysis These installation and maintenance tests with BBU emulation are applicable to any type of cell site, including but not limited to macrocells, microcells, small cells, and distributed antenna systems. Tx/Rx bands Carrier s signal SFP attributes CPRI configuration Model and firmware RF reflection CPRI link status Uplink interference Passive inter-modulation Coverage range Antenna tilts BBU emulation Figure 4. installation and maintenance aspects 4 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Configuration Profile An configuration profile test ensures proper equipment is installed in the cell site. A BBU emulation operation starts with the verification of optical power and CPRI communication status, then establishes a communication session with the radio retrieving its hardware characteristics including radio type, operating frequencies, optical transceiver, and its configuration including carrier s information and firmware loaded. Optical Power and CPRI Link Status CPRI link status performs Layer-1 and Layer-2 verification tests. These include optical power levels as well as CPRI digital alarms and errors corresponding to loss of signal due to low power levels and loss of frame due to lack of synchronization. CPRI status Optical power CPRI link status Figure 5. BBU emulation with CPRI status and optical power measurements Description and Optical Transceivers An description includes the hardware characteristics of the radio including the radio s model, cellular technology supported, operating band, and transmitting power limits. The information of the optical transceiver (SFP) is also retrieved, confirming its type and rate as well as the port where it is installed. Tx/Rx bands SFP attributes description SFP information Figure 6. BBU emulation with description and SFP information measurements 5 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Carrier Information Carrier information provides the configuration of the cellular signal of the radio, including transmission s (downlink) center frequency, and reception (uplink) center frequency, a signal s technology and bandwidth, and power limits. Carrier information Carrier information Figure 7. BBU emulation with carrier information CPRI Configuration and Firmware CPRI configuration ensures the alignment of active ports with optical transceivers and provides the CPRI line rate set on the radio. In addition, it provides the active software loaded in the radio to verify consistency among the different sectors of the cell site. CPRI configuration Active software CPRI configuration Active software Figure 8. BBU emulation with CPRI configuration and active software information RF Reception and Transmission Profile The radio frequency profile is set by the BBU emulation function, controlling how the radio will receive and transmit RF signals to assess interference and the radio s coverage. 6 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Radio RF Reception The BBU emulation function sets the radio s RF reception profile and performs the following RF tests: y Configures the radio s profile to enable a carrier and open its RF path to perform interference analysis of the mobile transmission band (uplink) y Retrieves RF reflection measurements (VSWR) of the coax cables and antenna y Retrieves antenna tilts and permits setting a different degree value RF cable VSWR Antenna tilts Uplink external interference CellAdvisor Uplink interference analysis DL power VSWR Antenna tilt Figure 9. Uplink interference analysis, VSWR, and antenna tilts 7 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Radio RF Transmission and PIM Analysis The BBU emulation function configures the radio s transmission profile and generates a 3GPP standard LTE signal with all of the resource block active with 64 QAM modulation via CPRI. This enables performing passive intermodulation (PIM) tests on the uplink. 64 QAM 10.13 degrees 8.36 db RB : 0 24 LTE 5 MHz downlink LTE 5 MHz uplink LTE (OCNS) CPRI Spectrum CPRI RFoCPRI LTE signal generator Figure 10. LTE signal generation and PIM detection PIM analysis Spectral flatness Figure 11. PIM analysis (uplink) with spectral flatness 8 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Radio RF Transmission and Modulation Analysis BBU emulation configures the radio s transmission profile and generates a 3GPP standard LTE signal with all of the resource block active with 64 QAM modulation via CPRI. This enables performing a modulation quality test to identify distortion created by the or DAS remote units. It also verifies proper connectivity on multiple antennas or branches present in MIMO systems. RF monitoring CPRI 2 CPRI 1 64 QAM RFoCPRI LTE signal analysis RB : 0 24 LTE 5 MHz downlink LTE (OCNS) CPRI RFoCPRI BBU emulation LTE signal generator Figure 12. modulation quality test (connected mode) 64 QAM RB : 0 24 LTE 5 MHz downlink RFoCPRI LTE signal analysis LTE (OCNS) CPRI RFoCPRI BBU emulation LTE signal generator Figure 13. modulation quality test (over-the-air-mode) 9 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

DAS host DAS remote 64 QAM RB : 0 24 RF monitoring LTE 5 MHz downlink LTE (OCNS) CPRI RFoCPRI BBU emulation LTE signal generator RFoCPRI LTE signal analysis Figure 14. DAS remote modulation quality test RFoCPRI LTE signal generator Figure 15. BBU emulation LTE signal generator 10 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

RFoCPRI signal analyzer (data channels) RF monitoring Over-the-air mode RF monitoring Connection mode Resource block modulation: 64 QAM Figure 16. RFoCPRI LTE signal analysis Conclusion Mobile operators are experiencing increasing demands for high-quality mobile services everywhere. They need to deploy cell sites quickly and efficiently to remain competitive. CellAdvisor with BBU emulation capability simplifies the deployment of cell-sites by verifying radio installation, configuration, and operation prior to commissioning. It verifies the physical infrastructure based on coax or fiber cables, retrieves a radio s model, operating band, and configuration parameters, and controls a radio to transmit over-the-air, ensuring there are no interferences or PIM. It also ensures that modulation distortion is not going to reduce bandwidth to mobile users. CellAdvisior dramatically reduces OpEx and time-to-market when deploying cell sites. 11 Optimize Cell-Site Deployments

Contact Us +1 844 GO VIAVI (+1 844 468 4284) To reach the Viavi office nearest you, visit viavisolutions.com/contacts. 2016 Viavi Solutions Inc. Product specifications and descriptions in this document are subject to change without notice. bbuemulation-an-nsd-nse-ae 30179642 000 0316 viavisolutions.com