Transcript
Slide 1
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Backhaul on demand
v2 6thOctober 2010
LTE Traffic WebinarC:\\Users\\juliusr\\Documents\\_JR_Documents\\Activities\\Career\\06 Portraits Passport\\JuliusRobson_v2_300x400.jpg
Lance Hiley,
VP Marketing
Julius Robson
Wireless Technology Consultant
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Cambridge Broadband Networks
Founded in 2000, Headquarters,
Research and product design in
Cambridge UKMarket-driven, world classtechnology:
more than $100M shipped to dateDelivery logistics by Benchmark
Electronics Inc, a Fortune 500 contract
manufacturerLargest carrier-class PMP vendor, four-
fold increase in sales 2007 to 2009:
Further growth expected in 2010First backhaul vendor to join the NGMN
Alliancecbnl_shouse_plinth
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Some Questions....
LTEWhy do we need yet another generation of mobile technology?
What are the key drivers to change?
How much traffic will LTE base stations generate?
What are its characteristics?
What are the different options for backhauling LTE traffic?
How do they compare?
Backhaul
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Drivers for LTE: Increased Demand
.Smartphones, donglesand
flat rate tariffs have catalysed
adoption of mobile broadband
.Forecasts show demand will
continue to grow
exponentially.
.Demand is created by1) More users2) More traffic per user
.Extra capacity will be provided
through a combination of:
.More spectrum
.Smaller cells
.A new technology: LTE
1.1 Exabyte/month0.5 Exabyte/month
Demand for Global Mobile Broadband
EB = Exabyte (1000 PB) PB = Petabyte (1000 TB)
TB = Terabyte (1000 GB)
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Drivers for LTE: £Price Per Bit
How much do we pay per bit?
Service
Data Volume
Price*
Price per MB, £
Voice
10 kbit/sec
20p/min
£ 2.67
SMS
160 Bytes
10p
£ 625.00
Video
384 kbit/sec
35p/min
£ 0.12
Data
-
£20for 3GB
£ 0.01
.Today.s cellular systems were designedto deliver bitswhich can
be sold profitably for at least £2.50 (4$) per MB
.Consumers aren.t prepared to pay more than 1p per MB for data
.LTE needs to significantly reduce cost per delivered bit
*source: UK operator tariffs
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What do you think....
What is the most important reason to
deploy LTE?
Is it:
.Faster download speeds for consumers
.Higher spectral efficiency
.Lower Cost-per-bit for operators
.All equally important
.Another reason
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Overview of LTE / EPC Solution
More Spectrally Efficient = more capacity per cell site per Hz of spectrum
.OFDM helps system to make the most of different radio conditions
.Native MIMO and Adaptive ModulationLower Cost Per Bit
.Flatter core architecture = fewer boxes
.All IP, can use low cost Ethernet transport
.Separate User and Control Plane: independent scaling of connections & trafficHigher Performance = better broadband user experience
.Faster connection, lower E2E latency, higher peak data rates
.E2E QoSenables real time services during congestion
eNodeB
Serving
GatewayPDNGatewayMobility Management Entity
HSS
UserEquipment
External
Packet Data
Networks
Last Mile
Ethernet Backhaul
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How Much Backhaul Traffic will LTE Generate?
S1 User plane traffic(for 3 cells)
+Control Plane
+X2 U and C-plane+OA&M, Sync, etc+Transport protocol overhead
+IPsecoverhead (optional)
Backhaul
pipe
Core networkLTE RAN
.User traffic is the largest component, which we will now analyse...
.We will assume a .vanilla. 10MHz bandwidth 2x2 MIMO downlink
.Each LTE eNodeB generates a number of
traffic components to be backhauled:
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What determines Cell Traffic?
User Throughput is determined by:
1) Quality of Radio Link to eNodeB
.Near in LTE Devices with high signal quality can
use 64QAM and MIMO to transfer more bits/sec per Hz
.Cell edge LTE Devices with poor signal quality can only transfer at low rates per
Hz
2) Other users sharing the cell
.Spectrum is divided amongst users in a cell
CellThroughputis the sum of all User Throughputs
Note: A typical Macro eNodeBcontrols 3 cells
eNodeB
cell
UE
cell
backhaul
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Cell Traffic during busy & quiet times...
Busy Time
Many
UEs
Quiet Time
UE1
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Cell Traffic during busy & quiet times...
Spectral
Efficiency
bps/Hz
Bandwidth, Hz
64QAM
16QAM
QPSK
cell
average
Busy TimeMore averaging
UE1
UE2
UE3
:
:
:
Many
UEs
Quiet TimeMore variation
UE1
a) Many LTE Devices
/ cell
.At busy time, cell Throughput is averaged over many LTE
Devices
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Busy Time
Many
UEs
Quiet Time
UE1Cell Traffic during busy & quiet times...
Spectral
Efficiency
bps/Hz
Bandwidth, Hz
64QAM
16QAM
QPSK
cell
average
UE1
UE2
UE3
:
:
:
64QAM
Cell average
UE1
bps/Hz
QPSK
Cell average
UE1
bps/Hz
HzHz
a) Many LTE Devices / cellb) One LTE Device with a
good link
c) One LTE Device,
weak link
.At busy time, cell Throughput is averaged over many UEs
.At quiet times, cell Throughput varies more
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Cell Traffic during busy & quiet times...
time
Cell Tput
Busy timeSeveral active UEs
sharing the cellQuiet timeOne UE at a timeCell Tput=UE Tput
During busy times several users will be sharing each cell, there will be
small variations about the busy time mean cell throughput
During quiet times, one user may have the whole cell to themselves.
This is when peak LTE Deviceand cell throughput will occur
.There will also be less other cell interference at these times
peakBusy timemean
For illustration purposes only
peak
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0102030405060024681012User Throughput, MbpsLoad: Average Served Cell Tput, Mbps95%ile (Peak)
Mean5%ile (Cell edge)
Results from NEC Simulations
.The higher the load, the less throughput each individual user gets
.At the maximum capacity of 12Mbps/cell, users get close to zero
throughput
.A more sensible operating point would be 10Mbps
.During quiet times, peak throughputs of 55Mbps are possible
Source:
“A Simulation Study to Examine
Various Deployment Scenarios
for LTE”, Dr H. Falaki, NEC
Europe, LTE World Summit,
May 2010
Assumptions:
2.1GHz carrier
10MHz bandwidth
Downlink 2x2 MIMO
Fixed filesizeFTP traffic
(not full buffers)
BusytimeQuiet
time
Operating
point
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Adding it all Up: Backhaul per eNodeB
S1 User plane traffic(for 3 cells)
+Control Plane
+X2 U and C-plane+OA&M, Sync, etc+Transport protocol overhead
+IPsecoverhead (optional)
Backhaul
pipe
Mean 3x10Mbps
Peak: 55Mbps
Negligible3% of S1 (does not apply to peak)
+10%
+14%
Negligible
Mean 34 Mbps
Peak: 61 Mbps
Mean 39 Mbps
Peak: 69 Mbps
Backhaul rates are ~13% more than user trafficIPsecincreases the overhead to ~30%
(assumes largeIP packets)
LTE RAN
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Backhaul Provisioning for Multiple eNodeBs
Provisioning for N eNodeBs = Max (N x busy time mean, peak)
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50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
0
1
2
345
678910
TricelleNodeBs, N
DL 2x2, 10MHz IPsec
DL 2x2, 10MHz no IPsec
LTE2x2 DL, 10MHz eNodeBs = Max (N x 34Mbps, 61 Mbps)
Backhaul
Traffic
Mbps
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Backhaul Options
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150
200
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2
3
4
5
Backhaul Traffic MbpsTricell eNodeBs
LTE Traffic for One or More eNodeBs
What are the options for
Backhauling LTE Traffic?
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Microwaveand the backhaul challenge
.Microwave connects 50% of the world\'s base
stations
.Copper has low cost but becomes unwieldy
for higher bandwidth connections
.Fibre build costs are high and deployment
time is often an issue. Low cost leased fibre
is not available in many markets
.Microwave is a low-cost option that is quickly
deployable and meets future network
capacity requirements
.Microwave hybrid network support can be a
key part of an all-IP network migration
strategy
.Microwave is small in size and is energy
efficient
.Cost effective
Microwave continues to increase
share while Fibre backhaul grows
at the expense of copper
(Source: Infonetics2010)
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
CY06CY07CY08CY09CY10CY11CY12CY13Percent of Mobile Backhaul ConnectionsAirFiberCopper
(Source: Infonetics2010)
Mobile Backhaul Market Share
Fibre
Microwave
Copper20062013
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What do you think....
What do you think is the fastest way to get
backhaul to new cellsitesor to upgrade old
ones?
Will it be:
.Leased fibre
.Leased copper
.Microwave
.Managed service
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Microwave Backhaul Options
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Point to PointProvision4x61 Mbps = 244Mbps
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100
150
200
0
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2
3
4
5
Mbps
Tricell eNodeBs
PTP
4x61Mbps
Transport capacity provisioning
eNodeBs
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Microwave Backhaul Options
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Point to Point
Provision4x61 Mbps = 244Mbps
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Provision1x136Mbps
Point-to-Multipoint
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50
100
150
200
0
1
2
3
4
5
Mbps
Tricell eNodeBs
PMP:
1x136Mbps
PTP
4x61Mbps
Transport capacity provisioning
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Microwave Backhaul Options
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Point-to-Point
Provision4x61 Mbps = 244Mbps
0
50
100
150
200
0
1
2
3
4
5
Mbps
Tricell eNodeBs
PMP:
1x136Mbps
PTP
4x61Mbps
Transport capacity provisioning
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Provision1x136Mbps
Point-to-Multipoint
Point-to-Multipoint is more efficient at backhauling
bursty LTE traffic than Point-to-Point
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Unique PMP Radios:
Highest spectral efficiency
5 bits/s/Hz net throughput (data)
All outdoor zero footprint design
Powerful integrated processor
Hitless Dynamic Adaptive Modulation
Incorporates trellis-code modulation
Supports PtP& PMP architectures
Hardware acceleration ensures low
latency
VectaStar Terminal
.150Mb/s Ethernet
.Gigabit interface
.Hybrid support via indoor unit
.LTE Ready
VectaStar Hub
.Gigabit Ethernet
.Hybrid and Optimisation
support via radio controller
.Deploy as PtP or PMP
.LTE Ready
PMP Backhaul by VectaStar
Extremely simple, cost effective microwave backhaul platform
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Gigabit Ethernet ODU
Outdoor
Indoor
-48V DC
Supply
IP/Ethernet
Network
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IP/Ethernet
Network
Gigabit Ethernet Sector
Outdoor
Indoor
-48V DC
Supply
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The Topology of VectaStar Backhaul
The LTE Radio Access Network:
LTE devicesare served by cellswhich are controlled by eNodeBs.
LTE Devices (UEs)
LTE cell
eNodeB
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The Topology of VectaStar Backhaul
The LTE Radio Access Network:
LTE devicesare served by cellswhich are controlled by eNodeBs.
The Backhaul Network:
eNodeB traffic is backhauled from the VectaStarTerminalto an AccessPoint
A VectaStarHubcontrols multiple AccessPoints, each covering a sector
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LTE cell
eNodeB
Sector
VectaStar Hub
(Aggregation point)
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VectaStar Terminal
One per eNodeB
Access Points
LTE Devices (UEs)
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Dimensioning VectaStar Backhaul for LTE
Number of 10MHz eNodeBs
Supported by a VectaStar Sector
Each VectaStar sector already supports four 10MHz eNodeBs
As LTE rollout gathers momentum, higher capacities will be available
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Previous PMP
systems
Single VectaStar
Sector
Protected VectaStar
Sector
Future VectaStar
4
8
17
Sector
Capacity
Mbps
sector
Each hub sitecan support
multiple sectors
terminals
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Case Study: LTE backhaul for London
Home
LTE-ready PMP Backhaul
solution for London:
.400 sq. Km
.112MHz spectrum
.364 Cell sites
.28 Hub sites
.150Mb/s Peak
.30Mb/s Mean
.Comparison showed that at
100Mbps, PtP exhausted
available spectrum.
.VectaStar used less than
half the spectrum needed
for PtP
.Entire network is single
hop for lowest and most
reliable latency
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Another angle: The Informa Cost Analysis
The LTE traffic analysis shows PMP is more efficient than PTP.
Now we consider a completely different approach, and look at a cost
modelling exercise performed recently by infoma....
Western European Operators .Grading of Principle Backhaul OptionsGrading 1 .5 where 1 is very poor and 5 is excellent
Informa Telecoms and Media: “Last Mile Backhaul Options for
West European Mobile Operators”
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Results of Informa Cost Analysis
PMP has the lowest
microwave OPEX
PMP has the
lowest CAPEX
Informa Telecoms and Media: “Last Mile Backhaul Options for
West European Mobile Operators”
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
Backhaul Performance
Cost of Installation
Cost of Operation
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Conclusions
10
AP bluesky.JPG
.LTE has been designed for lower cost per bit,
and copes with bursty broadband traffic with
a fully packet switched access, where many
users share a fat pipe
.The shift to broadband data has affected
backhaul traffic in a similar way:
LTE backhaul traffic is also very bursty
.Applying the shared fat pipe concept to the
backhaul gives us Point-to-Multipoint,
microwave which is more efficient than Point
to Point for backhauling LTE traffic
.The VectaStar system can today support 8 x
10MHz eNodeBs per sector, with further
capacity increases planned as LTE rollout
gathers momentum
.A cost modelling exercise by Informa comes
from a different angle, but arrives at the same
result: PMP is a very low cost option for
backhauling LTE.
Slide 31
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Thank you for listening
Any Questions?
A recording of this webinar will be made available on the Eurocommswebsite within 24 hours
For further information please contact Lance, or visit www.cbnl.com
C:\\Users\\juliusr\\Documents\\_JR_Documents\\Activities\\Career\\06 Portraits Passport\\JuliusRobson_v2_300x400.jpg
Lance Hiley,
VP Marketing
Lhiley@cbnl.com
Julius Robson
Wireless Technology Consultant
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