METHOD AND DEVICE FOR MINIMIZING INTERFERENCES BETWEEN TDD COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS
20220182194 · 2022-06-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04L5/0073
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/0064
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/0032
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/1461
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04L5/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method and device for optimal coexistence of a first cellular Time-Division Duplex, TDD, system and a second TDD system operating in the same frequency band. The proposed solution is capable of minimizing interferences without modifying the (RF and SW) characteristics of the second system, while at the same time achieving flexibility in UL:DL traffic ratio.
Claims
1. A method for minimizing interferences between a first Time-Division Duplex, TDD, communications system and at least a second TDD communications system wherein each TDD system comprises at least one base station, BS1 and BS2 respectively, in charge of scheduling downlink, DL, and uplink, UL, transmissions and at least one user equipment, wherein the DL and UL transmissions scheduling in the second TDD system is made according to a pre-established fixed UL:DL pattern which indicates which time intervals are reserved for DL transmission and which for UL reception in the base station side, characterized in that the method comprises the following steps performed by BS1: a) scheduling a time interval for transmission of DL packets only if said time interval is contained within the time intervals reserved for DL transmission in said second TDD system and said time interval does not overlap with any UL time interval scheduled by the base station for UL reception; b) scheduling one or more time intervals for transmission of UL packets by a user equipment, wherein said one or more time intervals are at least partially outside the time intervals reserved for UL transmission in said second TDD system.
2. A method according to claim 1, where step b) comprises: BS1 scheduling one or more time intervals for transmission of UL packets which at least partially overlap one or more time intervals reserved for DL reception in said second TDD system.
3. A method according to claim 1, where BS1 schedules a time interval for transmission of UL packets by a user equipment only if said time interval does not overlap with any DL time interval scheduled by BS1 for DL transmission to any other user equipment served by BS1.
4. A method according to claim 1, where the second TDD system follows a strict time synchronization scheme by using a Global Navigation Satellite System, GNSS, or a transport network synchronization protocol, such as Precision Time Protocol, PTP, or any other suitable means for time synchronization.
5. A method according to claim 1, where guard bands are reserved at both edges of the frequency carriers assigned to the base stations and user equipments of the first TDD system.
6. A method according to claim 1, where BS1 schedules the UL time intervals based at least on the transmission traffic requirements of the user equipments served by it and/or on the transmission traffic requirements of the BS1.
7. A method according to claim 1, where BS1 has specific reception filters centered at its carrier frequency.
8. A method according to claim 1, where in order to further minimize the interference between BS2 and BS1, at least one of the following actions are also taken: maximize the separation of the carrier frequencies used by BS2 and BS1, maximize the physical distance between BS1 and BS2, or avoid direct visibility between both base stations by adjusting their relative tilts and azimuth orientations.
9. A method according to claim 1, where the first TDD system further comprises a second Base Station BS′2, where said second base station also performs steps a) and b) for scheduling the transmission of UL and DL packets.
10. A method according to claim 9, where in order to further minimize the interference between BS1 and BS′2, at least one of the following actions are also taken: assign different carrier frequencies to BS1 and BS′2, avoid direct visibility between both base stations by adjusting their relative tilts and azimuth orientations, or reserve guard bands at both edges of the carrier frequencies of BS1 and BS′2.
11. A method according to claim 9, where the base stations BS1 and BS′2 of said first TDD system estimate the round-trip-time between them and the user equipments connected to the respective base station, and said estimated round-trip-time is taken into account when scheduling UL and/or DL transmissions.
12. A method according to claim 1, where in order to further minimize the interferences created by a User Equipment UE1 connected to BS1, UE1 fulfils out-of-band and spurious emission limits requirements.
13. A method according to claim 1, where any of the base stations of the first and second TDD systems are located in different positions or co-located in the same position and, in this second case, the co-located base stations are pointing towards non-overlapping angular regions.
14. A base station, BS1, of a first Time-Division Duplex, TDD, communications system, for minimizing interferences with at least a second TDD system comprising at least one Base Station, BS2, wherein the DL and UL transmissions scheduling in the second TDD system is made following a pre-established fixed UL:DL pattern which indicates which time intervals of each frame are reserved for DL transmission and which for UL reception in the base station side, characterized in that BS1 comprises a base station scheduler in charge of scheduling DL and UL transmissions, the base station scheduler being configured to: a) schedule a time interval for transmission of DL packets from BS1 only if said time interval is contained within the time intervals reserved for DL transmission in the pre-established fixed UL:DL pattern of said second TDD system and said time interval does not overlap with any UL time interval scheduled by BS1 for UL reception; b) schedule one or more time intervals for transmission of UL packets by a user equipment, wherein said one or more time intervals are at least partially outside the time intervals reserved for UL transmissions in the pre-established fixed UL:DL pattern of said second TDD system.
15. A non-transitory computer readable medium encoded with a computer program comprising instructions for carrying out all the steps of the method according to claim 1, when said computer program is executed on a computer system.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0039] For the purpose of aiding the understanding of the characteristics of the invention, according to a preferred practical embodiment thereof and in order to complement this description, the following figures are attached as an integral part thereof, having an illustrative and non-limiting character:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0048] The present invention proposes a method and device to minimize interferences between wireless cellular systems operating in TDD mode (using TDD techniques), where at least one of them is an incumbent system whose radiofrequency (RF) and software (SW) characteristics must not be modified. The proposed synchronization scheme (optionally together with additional filtering stages, guard bands and site engineering actions), can minimize interferences while at the same time achieving flexibility in UL:DL traffic ratio.
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[0050]
[0053] In order to mitigate the above sources of interferences, different coexistence schemes are devised between BS1 and BS2. Two schemes are commonly adopted, full time synchronization and fully asynchronous operation: [0054] Full Time Synchronization
[0055] In this case, both systems are strictly time-synchronized as shown in
[0056] Full time synchronization implies that systems must ensure the following:
[0057] 1. A common time reference that must be shared among the synchronized BS nodes, unambiguously defining the starts of frames, subframes, and slots at the BS side. It can be provided by e.g. Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) or Precision Time Protocol (PTP), as long as it ensures a given precision. As an example, a possible frame structure for 5G NR (New Radio) Technologies in mmWaves may have a subframe duration of 1 ms divided in 8 slots of 125 microseconds each one. With full time synchronization, the beginning of slots and subframes are exactly aligned at all the BSs operating in the same band, by means of a common time reference that must be shared by all the nodes.
[0058] 2. A common UL:DL pattern that specifies the expected (reserved) occasions for DL transmission and UL reception at the BS side (and therefore, for DL reception and UL transmission in the UE side), as well as a guard period for DL-to-UL transition. A possible UL:DL pattern that could be adopted by mmWave 5G NR systems, referred to as DDDSU, with three DL slots (D), then one special (S) slot mainly intended for DL-UL switching and one UL slot (U). In this example each slot will have a duration of 125 microseconds. The special slot can also contain UL (U) symbols, DL (D) symbols and flexible (F) symbols (for example as defined in ETSI TS 138 213: “5G; NR; Physical layer procedures for control 3GPP TS 38.213 version 15.3.0 Release 15)”, 2018. For example, the S slot can include n symbols (e.g. 14) which can be only D symbols, U only symbols or only F symbols or it can include a combination of them (that is some D symbols and some F symbols, some U symbols and some F symbols . . . ). The exact structure of the S slot must also be agreed by all systems operating in the same mmWave band.
[0059] 3. A Timing Advance (TA) value that all UEs must apply according to a common algorithm. TA adjustments are aimed to ensure that UL signals reach the BS at the same time instants, regardless of the UE positions in the cell. TA relies on a closed-loop process, where the BS estimates the time offset that each UE has to apply to the start of all subframes containing UL slots and properly notifies it to the UEs. TA is calculated by means of the following relation:
TA=2δ+t.sub.processing
[0060] where δ is the propagation time between BS and UE, and t.sub.processing is the estimated processing time at the UE.
[0061] It is apparent that full time synchronization has different implications for BSs and UEs: [0062] BSs must strictly follow the transmission and reception instants defined by an a-priori UL:DL pattern, whether agreed or imposed by Regulation (e.g. technology standards) with clearly defined start instants. The time source can be obtained by means of a hardware signal provided by e.g. GNSS or PTP. [0063] UEs acquire synchronization from the received DL signals (e.g. from a special synchronization beacon devised for this) and adjust the start occasions of UL transmissions according to a given TA algorithm. Even if both systems coexisting in the band implement different baseband technologies, with full time synchronization the UEs will have to follow the same TA algorithm to ensure a given agreed UL:DL pattern. [0064] Fully Asynchronous Operation
[0065] In this case systems operate in asynchronous mode (an example shown in
[0066] Fully asynchronous operation can be possible in cellular systems (especially in systems operating in the sub-6 GHz frequency range) provided that:
[0067] 1. BSs and UEs of coexisting systems fulfil strict out of band and spurious emission limits defined by the baseband standards.
[0068] 2. Operator-specific receive filters are included at the BS side to protect each system from the BS-to-BS interference created by the other systems.
[0069] 3. Appropriate guard bands are reserved between the carrier frequencies of all coexisting systems to further reduce in-band interferences. The part of frequency spectrum used by said system should be separated by appropriated guard bands.
[0070] The actual filtering requirements, emission limits and guard bands must be calculated according to the baseband receiver characteristics. Fully asynchronous operation requires special filtering techniques at the transmission and reception stages of all coexisting systems; if any of them does not implement such filters, coexistence will not be possible because the interference would be too high. As an example, the presence of hundreds or even thousands of antenna elements in some mmWave systems generally makes it too challenging, or too costly, to include strict filters after the power amplifiers (PAs) and low-noise amplifiers (LNAs); in such cases, fully asynchronous operation is generally not possible unless extremely large guard bands are reserved to protect the two systems from each other. This can also happen if a new system has to coexist with an incumbent system in the same band and it is not possible to introduce extra filtering on the incumbent equipment.
[0071] In view of the above drawbacks of the existing schemes to mitigate interferences, the present patent application proposes an alternative hybrid synchronization mechanism that accomplishes coexistence between a first (new) system and at least one second (incumbent) system without requiring any modifications to the second system equipment. [0072] Proposed Hybrid Synchronization Scheme
[0073] In a scenario where the proposed solution can be applied, it is assumed that a first TDD system, comprising at least one BS and one or multiple UEs, must coexist with one or more second TDD systems (called incumbent systems) operating in the same band. The incumbent systems must remain unchanged while ensuring that the resulting interferences between systems are minimized to the extent possible.
[0074] In this scenario, the TDD system can be part of any telecommunications network, especially a cellular telecommunication network, for example a 2G, 3G, 4G, 5G mobile telecommunications network or any other type of telecommunications network using TDD technology for communications. The technologies used by the TDD system and the incumbent system are the same or different (in an embodiment, for example, the first system can be a 3GPP or non-3GPP system operating in a mmWave band, and said incumbent TDD system is a 3GPP system operating in the same band).
[0075] The user equipment may be a mobile telephone, a tablet, a smartphone, a laptop, a computer, a PC . . . (and generally any electronic equipment or device that can be connected to the TDD system).
[0076] The proposal considers strictly synchronized DL transmissions but asynchronous operation in UL, as shown in
[0077] The BS scheduler determines the UL transmission durations and start instants of the UL packets, in such a way that no collisions between UEs occur. Usually, the UEs transmit to the BS their traffic requirements and, based at least on said information the BS scheduler assigns to each UE, UL transmission durations and start instants of their UL packets (which may stick or not to the predefined UL slots, that is the UL packets can be transmitted in the predefined UL slots or in predefined DL or S time slots, for example). DL transmissions, however, always stick to the predefined DL slots. That is, to the DL time slots predefined by the UL:DL pattern agreed between all the existing TDD systems in a certain geographical area.
[0078] Whenever an UL transmission from a given UE is active and occupies part of the DL resources, the BS will refrain from initiating any DL transmission until no UL signal intended for said BS is present in the system. That is, as the BS has assigned UL transmission durations and start instants to each UE (some of them occupying part of the pre-assigned DL resources), the BS knows when there is no UL transmission assigned and will only initiate a DL transmission when there is no UL transmission assigned in said time slot. No Timing Advance mechanism is necessary, as UL transmissions do not need to be confined within the limits of the UL occasions defined by the incumbent systems. That is, if the system does not use the hybrid synchronization scheme (e.g. incumbent system) it should perform a Timing Advance algorithm to ensure that all UL signals under control of BS2 are received at the same instants, while no Timing Advance algorithm is needed at said TDD system applying the proposed hybrid synchronization scheme, to achieve coexistence and minimize interferences.
[0079] In order for the BS to keep control of the active UL transmissions from UEs, estimation of the round-trip-time may be needed to avoid any overlap between the active UL transmissions and any DL occasion planned by the BS scheduler. That is, each base station (BS1) estimates the round-trip-time between it and the user equipment connected to that cell, with the intention to avoid any time overlap between received UL signals and transmitted DL signals when radio resources are to be scheduled by the base station. Such estimation can be performed dynamically by the BS (for moving UEs), or statically by the BS or the management system (for static UEs, like in FWA scenarios), without precluding any other possibility.
[0080] The actual UL:DL ratio in the system will therefore be dynamic and dependent on the BS scheduler decisions, which are ultimately determined by the traffic demand and the spectral efficiency of the system. This represents an advantage over traditional fully synchronized TDD networks, where UL:DL ratio is fixed and cannot adapt to the traffic demand.
[0081] The presence of asynchronous UL transmissions generally introduces interferences between the elements of the system. However with the proposed hybrid synchronization scheme said interference is minimized. For example, if the proposed hybrid synchronization scheme is applied at BS1 and UE1 (the first TDD system), the interference from BS2 to BS1 (I5 in
[0082] The base stations BS1 and BS2 may be in different positions or even they can be co-located in the same position (in this latter case, the base stations may be pointing towards non-overlapping angular regions, hence serving different cellular sectors).
[0083] In a preferred embodiment, the following rules are observed in order to minimize interferences between the system with hybrid synchronization and the incumbent system (where this hybrid synchronization scheme may not be applied):
[0084] 1. Whenever BS1 needs to start any DL transmission, it sticks to the predefined DL time intervals, i.e. those defined by the incumbent system (that is, the time interval between the start and end of all DL packets transmitted by the base station of said TDD system, BS1, must be contained within the time intervals established for DL transmission in said incumbent system) and avoids any of the UL time intervals. This will avoid interference I5 from BS1 to BS2 and interference I3 from UE2 to UE1 during the DL transmissions of said TDD system.
[0085] 2. UE1, upon receiving appropriate scheduling indications from BS1, can transmit during the UL slots defined by the incumbent system, but can also “invade” part of the slots reserved for DL in the incumbent system, (if no other DL transmission is active in the cell), if the BS scheduler has allowed it to do it. That is, UE1 can transmit during the time intervals established for UL transmission in said incumbent system, and can also transmit during part, or all, of the time intervals established for DL transmission in said incumbent system, provided that no other DL transmission is active as per the appropriate scheduling indications from BS1. This enables a flexible UL:DL pattern whose actual ratio is controlled by the BS scheduler as a response to the traffic demand (however, the UL:DL ratio in the incumbent system is fixed if not applying the hybrid synchronization scheme). In such a case:
[0086] a) Interference I4 from UE1 to UE2 (which appears specially when UE1 is transmitting, uplink, and UE2 is receiving a downlink transmission) may be minimized by ensuring that (see
[0087] b) Interference I6 from BS2 to BS1 (which appears specially when BS2 is transmitting, downlink, and BS1 is receiving an uplink transmission) may be minimized by additionally ensuring that: BS1 has specific receive filters centred at the carrier frequency to ensure that the unwanted signal levels at BS1 receiver are below thermal noise (see
[0088] Interference can also appear between base stations of the same system in the proposed synchronization scheme.
[0089] 1. The cross BS-to-UE interference terms I′1 and I′2 can be minimized if base stations are assigned different carrier frequencies (as it happens in the previous scenario, where the BS1 and BS2 belong to different TDD systems). Proper out-of-band and spurious emission limits can be defined to ensure that the resulting unwanted signal levels at both BS and UE receivers are below thermal noise.
[0090] 2. Interferences I′5, I′6 between different base stations can be minimized by additionally optimizing the corresponding tilts and azimuth orientations to avoid direct visibility between BSs. Such spatial isolation can ensure that the resulting unwanted signal levels at the receiver side are below thermal noise, by exploiting the signal loss occurring outside the direction of maximum radiation in the transmit and receive antenna patterns.
[0091] 3. Interferences I′3, I′4 between UEs can also be minimized by additionally ensuring that: guard bands are reserved at both edges of the signal carriers, and UEs fulfil the necessary out-of-band and spurious emission limits to ensure that, considering the reserved guard bands, the unwanted signal levels at the receiver side remain below thermal noise.
[0092] The proposed embodiments can be implemented by means of software elements, hardware elements, firmware elements, or any suitable combination of them.
[0093] Note that in this text, the term “comprises” and its derivations (such as “comprising”, etc.) should not be understood in an excluding sense, that is, these terms should not be interpreted as excluding the possibility that what is described and defined may include further elements, steps, etc.
[0094] The matters defined in this detailed description are provided to assist in a comprehensive understanding of the invention. Accordingly, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that variation changes and modifications of the embodiments described herein can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Also, description of well-known functions and elements are omitted for clarity and conciseness. Of course, the embodiments of the invention can be implemented in a variety of architectural platforms, operating and server systems, devices, systems, or applications. Any particular architectural layout or implementation presented herein is provided for purposes of illustration and comprehension only and is not intended to limit aspects of the invention.