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LEVEL II TECHNICAL ANALYSISQOS Department
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5 Major RAN Complaint Heads• Coverage Outdoor / Indoor • Congestion • Distortion• Call Drop • GPRS / EDGE
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CONGESTION / COVERAGE / DISTORTION ANALYSIS & ACTIONS
Day 02
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CONGESTIONIntroduction and Analysis
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Traffic is total number of incoming and outgoing CS or PS calls per unit time.
Unit of Traffic is Earlings.
Introduction to Traffic
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Congestion• When Traffic increase more than what number of resources can
support then it is called congestion.• Congestion can be Temporary and Permanent both have
different scope of analysis and solution.• Temporary Congestion is sometimes called Soft Congestion• Permanent Congestion is sometimes called Hard Congestion
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Soft Congestion• Sudden increase in traffic due to some unseen incident,
hardware failure, fluctuations, outage or any unforeseen circumstances causes congestion that is called soft congestion.
• Soft congestion is temporary so there is no need to perform any expansion or parametric change as it will die down.
• Any emergency situation, match, political marches can cause extra load on our network and cause soft congestion.
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Soft Congestion
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Hard Congestion• When increase in Traffic becomes permanent and our
existing network is not able to support the Traffic then it is called Hard Congestion.
• All decisions regarding Hard Congestion is taken upon Busy Hour Trend of at least 7 days.
• Hard Congestion can be catered through Network Expansion and Capacity Sites Induction.
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Hard Congestion
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SDCCH & TCH Blocking• As we already know SDCCH Channel is responsible for
preliminary signaling.• SMS in idle mode are also delivered on SDCCH channel.• However we have limited number of resources so
sometimes we face SDCCH congestion.• Because of SDCCH congestion TCH cannot be allocated
and blocking occurs.• SDCCH blocking can be catered either by adding static or
dynamic SDCCH or through other methods.
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SDCCH Blocking
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TCH Blocking• TCH Blocking is different from SDCCH Blocking. TCH
blocking is actually called CALL BLOCK.• TCH Blocking can be from variety of reasons such as
Hard Blocking, Soft Blocking and Low TCH availability.• Apart from Hard Blocking none other types are in domain
of RAN.
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Statistical Analysis• Step 1
• Extraction of stats from INSPUR.
• Step 2• Identification of the problem.
• Step 3• Suggest appropriate action.
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Network Limitations• In Hard Congestion we can propose network expansion
but we have limitations such as on one cell only S_444 configuration is currently being used.
• On half rate, one TRx can carry 9E traffic at most theoretically. This means one cell is able to carry 36E of traffic at Half rate during BH.
• If a cell is carrying more than 36E traffic during BH and has congestion trend (more than 2%) for at least 1 week than expansion is not possible. For this we need a new capacity site.
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Capacity Sites• Capacity sites are planned especially for congestion.• The criteria of capacity site is that site is at maximum
configuration.• When no further Hardware Expansion can be performed
than we plan new site called Capacity Sites
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Case Studies
Case A
Customer is facing Congestion from yesterday.
Case B
Customer is facing Congestion from last one week
Case C
Customer is facing congestion from last one year
Case D
Customer is facing congestion indoor but not outdoor
Case E
Customer is facing congestion indoor but only in some parts of house
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COVERAGE INDOOR / OUTDOORIntroduction and Analysis
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Radiation Pattern• Radiation Pattern is the pattern of Antenna’s Radiations• Horn Antennas have directional Radiation Pattern and
High Antenna Gain• Gain of Horn Antenna often increases and Beam Width
decreases as the frequency of operation increases• GSM Antennas are Horn Antennas
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Radiation Pattern of Horn Antenna
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Theoretical Pattern
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Types of Fading
• Fast Fading Fast fading occurs if the channel impulse response changes rapidly within the symbol duration. Fast fading occurs when the coherence time of the channel TD is smaller than the symbol period of the
transmitted signal
Fast Fading is due to reflections of local objects and the motion of the objects relative to those objects.
• Slow Fading Slow fading is the result of shadowing by buildings, mountains, hills, and other objects. Slow fading arises when the coherence time of the channel is large relative to the delay constraint of the channel The average within individual small areas also varies from one small area to the next in an apparently random manner .
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Signal Strength
(dB)
Distance
Path Loss
Slow Fading (Long-term fading)
Fast Fading (Short-term fading)
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Two independent fading issues
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Doppler Effect• When a wave source and a receiver are moving towards each other, the
frequency of the received signal will not be the same as the source.• When they are moving toward each other, the frequency of the received signal is
higher than the source.• When they are opposing each other, the frequency decreases.
Thus, the frequency of the received signal is
where fC is the frequency of source carrier,
fD is the Doppler frequency.• Doppler Shift in frequency:
where v is the moving speed, is the wavelength of carrier.
cosv
fD
DCR fff
MS
Signal
Moving speed v
θ
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Null Zone • The area between two main lobes where EM field
intensity is negligible due to slow fading is called null zone.
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Shadowing• Shadowing is the effect that the received signal power
fluctuates due to objects obstructing the propagation path between transmitter and receiver. These fluctuations are experienced on local-mean powers, that is, short-term averages to remove fluctuations due to multipath fading.
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Tunnel effect• The ability of a particle to pass through a region of finite
extent in which the particle's potential energy is greater than its total energy; this is a quantum-mechanical phenomenon which would be impossible according to classical mechanics. Also known as tunneling.
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Case StudyCASE A
Customer is in service area but has indoor coverage issue.CASE B
Customer is in guaranteed coverage area but has weak outdoor coverage.CASE C
Customer has no service outdoor.CASE D
Customer is far away from operational site.
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DistortionA distortion is the alteration of the original shape (or other characteristic) of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of signal
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DISTORTIONIntroduction and Analysis
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Power ControlRF power control is a process of adjusting the power level of a mobile radio as it moves closer and further away from a base station. RF power control is typically accomplished by the sensing of the received signal strength level and the relaying of power control messages from a transmitter to the mobile device with commands that are used to increase or decrease the mobile device's output power level. GSM RF power adjustments occur in 2 dB steps.
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Power Control & Distortion• Distortion may occur due to power control as we have limited band so if mobile
or BTS transmits at full power it may become interferer for some other cell.• Distortion can also occur due to low battery of mobile station because with low
battery mobile may or may not transmit at full power as required.
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Case StudyCASE A
Customer located near a frequency jammer.CASE B
Customer is located in congested area.CASE C
Customer’s mobile battery is unstable.
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Thank You