US20010041569A1 - Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit - Google Patents

Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20010041569A1
US20010041569A1 US09/324,177 US32417799A US2001041569A1 US 20010041569 A1 US20010041569 A1 US 20010041569A1 US 32417799 A US32417799 A US 32417799A US 2001041569 A1 US2001041569 A1 US 2001041569A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
wireless unit
macrodiversity
fixed
wireless
base station
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
US09/324,177
Other versions
US6434390B2 (en
Inventor
Mohamed Anisur Rahman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
RPX Corp
Nokia USA Inc
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Assigned to LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC. reassignment LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: RAHMAN, MOHAMED ANISUR
Priority to US09/324,177 priority Critical patent/US6434390B2/en
Priority to EP00304338A priority patent/EP1058408B1/en
Priority to DE60045019T priority patent/DE60045019D1/en
Priority to BR0003100-3A priority patent/BR0003100A/en
Priority to CA002309467A priority patent/CA2309467A1/en
Priority to AU37794/00A priority patent/AU3779400A/en
Priority to CN00108785A priority patent/CN1276655A/en
Priority to KR1020000030388A priority patent/KR100696899B1/en
Priority to JP2000166159A priority patent/JP3954284B2/en
Publication of US20010041569A1 publication Critical patent/US20010041569A1/en
Publication of US6434390B2 publication Critical patent/US6434390B2/en
Application granted granted Critical
Assigned to CREDIT SUISSE AG reassignment CREDIT SUISSE AG SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC.
Assigned to ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC. reassignment ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC. RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CREDIT SUISSE AG
Assigned to NOKIA USA INC. reassignment NOKIA USA INC. SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC
Assigned to CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC reassignment CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP, LLC
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ALCATEL LUCENT SAS, NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS BV, NOKIA TECHNOLOGIES OY
Assigned to ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC. reassignment ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC. CHANGE OF NAME (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC.
Assigned to NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC. reassignment NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC. ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT Assignors: NOKIA USA INC.
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC
Assigned to RPX CORPORATION reassignment RPX CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/02Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/02Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas
    • H04B7/022Site diversity; Macro-diversity
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/02Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas
    • H04B7/04Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas
    • H04B7/0491Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas using two or more sectors, i.e. sector diversity
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/16Performing reselection for specific purposes
    • H04W36/18Performing reselection for specific purposes for allowing seamless reselection, e.g. soft reselection
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W84/00Network topologies
    • H04W84/02Hierarchically pre-organised networks, e.g. paging networks, cellular networks, WLAN [Wireless Local Area Network] or WLL [Wireless Local Loop]
    • H04W84/10Small scale networks; Flat hierarchical networks
    • H04W84/14WLL [Wireless Local Loop]; RLL [Radio Local Loop]

Definitions

  • This invention relates to wireless communications and, more particularly, to a cellular communications system with wireless units of different operating categories.
  • FIG. 1 depicts a diagram of a portion of a typical wireless communications system 10 , which provides wireless communications service to a number of wireless or mobile units 12 a - c , that are situated within a geographic region.
  • the geographic region serviced by a wireless communications system is divided into spatially distinct areas called “cells.”
  • Each cell is schematically represented by one hexagon in a honeycomb pattern; in practice, however, each cell has an irregular shape that depends on the topography of the terrain surrounding the cell and other factors.
  • a conventional cellular telephone system comprises a number of cell sites or base stations 14 a - d , geographically distributed to support transmission and receipt of voice-based communication signals to and from cellular telephones, often referred to as mobile units or wireless units.
  • Each cell site handles voice communications over a cell, and the overall coverage area for the cellular telephone system is defined by the union of cells for all of the cell sites, where the coverage areas for nearby cell sites overlap to some degree to ensure (if possible) contiguous communications coverage within the outer boundaries of the system's coverage area.
  • One cell site may sometimes provide coverage for several sectors.
  • cells and sectors are referred to interchangeably.
  • a base station 14 a - d comprises the radios and antennas that the base station uses to communicate with the mobile units in that cell and also comprises the transmission equipment that the base station uses to communicate with a Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 16 .
  • the Mobile Switching Center 16 is responsible for, among other things, establishing and maintaining calls between the mobile units and calls between a mobile unit and a wireline unit (e.g., wireline unit 18 ), which wireline unit 18 is connected to the Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 16 via a public switched telephone network (PSTN) 20 .
  • PSTN public switched telephone network
  • the Mobile Switching Center 16 is connected to a plurality of base stations, such as base stations 14 a - d , that are dispersed throughout the geographic region serviced by the MSC 16 and to the PSTN 20 and/or a packet data network (PDN) 22 , such as the Internet.
  • the MSC 16 is connected to several databases, including a home location register (HLR) 24 .
  • the HLR 24 contains subscriber information and location information for all mobile units which reside in the geographic region of the MSC 16 .
  • the HLR 24 stores a mobile identification number (MIN) or International Mobile Subscriber Identification Number (IMSI), the mobile directory or phone number (MDN), and/or an electronic serial number (ESN).
  • MIN mobile identification number
  • IMSI International Mobile Subscriber Identification Number
  • MDN mobile directory or phone number
  • ESN electronic serial number
  • a mobile unit When active, a mobile unit receives forward-link signals from and transmits reverse-link signals to (at least) one cell site or base station. Each active mobile unit is assigned a forward link on which it receives its forward-link signals on at least one forward link channel and a reverse link on which it transmits reverse link signals on at least one reverse link channel.
  • TDMA time-division multiple access
  • FDMA frequency-division multiple access
  • CDMA code-division multiple access
  • different channels are distinguished by different spreading sequences that are used to encode different voice-based streams, which may then be modulated at one or more different carrier frequencies for simultaneous transmission.
  • a receiver can recover a particular voice-based stream from a received signal using the appropriate spreading sequence to decode the received signal.
  • a detailed sequence of activities are typically followed before the mobile unit can access the wireless communications system to establish or receive a call.
  • calls between a CDMA mobile unit and a base station typically employ several kinds of channels. Initially, a pilot channel is employed to continually broadcast certain system synchronization and timing information to all mobile units in an area. After initial synchronization is achieved at a mobile unit, a sync channel is used to establish more specific time and frame synchronization at the mobile unit.
  • the sync channel message also provides information about another class of channels, the paging channels. Paging channels are used to broadcast a variety of control information, including access channel information, contained in the access parameter message. This access parameter message contains parameters and other information of interest to mobile units seeking access to the base station.
  • Other overhead messages are sent between the mobile unit and the base station to facilitate communications over forward and reverse link traffic channels between the mobile unit and the base station over which voice and/or data information is transmitted.
  • CDMA systems being developed use macrodiversity to improve the performance or quality of reception.
  • the macrodiversity concept as is used in CDMA involves two or more simultaneous links from two or more base stations.
  • the mobile and cell receivers employ a number of parallel correlators.
  • Receivers using parallel correlators (sometimes called RAKE receivers) allow individual path arrivals to be tracked independently and the sum of their received signal strengths is then, used to demodulate the signal. While there is fading on each arrival, the fades are independent. Demodulation based on sum of the signals is then much more reliable. But in this process it might use a lot of resources/equipment of a cell site. Moreover, it is expected that quite a high percentage of the calls will use macrodiversity.
  • the mobile unit searches for pilot signals of base stations on a candidate list which are not currently servicing the wireless unit.
  • the wireless unit measures the signal strengths, for example using a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) of the pilot signals.
  • RSSI received signal strength indicator
  • the wireless unit detects a pilot of sufficient strength which is associated with a base station not assigned to the wireless unit, a pilot measurement message including the pilot signal measurements is provided to the MSC 16 .
  • the MSC 16 determines whether to assign a traffic channel from another base station to the wireless unit.
  • the wireless unit is said to be in macrodiversity state if it is assigned traffic channels from more than one base station.
  • the MSC 16 switches calls from one base station to another in real time as the mobile unit moves between cells, referred to as call handoff.
  • All base stations connected to a given wireless unit define the active set of that mobile, and an active set update function controls, i.e, evaluates and updates, this active set based on pilot strength measurements.
  • the strongest pilots are detected and measured by the measurement process.
  • the signal strength values are then collected into the pilot measurement report, which is sent to the MSC 16 .
  • the active set update function invoked, the base stations within the active set from which the strongest and weakest pilot are received are identified. If the difference is greater than the system desired value (called active set window there after), the weakest base station will be removed from the active set.
  • a base station is added to the active set window, if it received pilot signal strength is within the window above an active set threshold value, provided the active set size (no. of RAKE fingers in the receiver) is not exceeded. If the active set size is full, the weakest base station in the active set will be replaced by the new base station if the corresponding pilot signal strength is higher than the weakest base station.
  • Some wireless cellular communications systems involve fixed wireless units.
  • the fixed cellular concept is getting a lot of attention and is a substitute for the public switched telephone network (PSTN), where the terrain is difficult and the infrastructure cost is too high to implement the PSTN.
  • PSTN public switched telephone network
  • the fixed cellular concept involves wireless units where the mobility of the wireless unit is very limited within the home cell (limited or no mobility at all). Macrodiversity is not normally used and no handoffs are allowed between the base stations.
  • Macrodiversity as used in the CDMA system has the advantage that it improves the quality of reception in the cellular or PCS system, but if the cellsite is fully loaded (all the transceivers are being used up), the capacity of the system suffers. Thus, macrodiversity needs to be coordinated, especially in a system using both fixed and mobile units, to more efficiently use the resources of the wireless communications system.
  • the present invention involves a macrodiversity control system, for a wireless communication system, which provides a wireless unit using a macrodiversity mode depending on the operating category of the wireless unit.
  • a wireless communications system can have wireless units operating in categories related to the mobility of the wireless unit, such as fixed, limited fixed (mobility within the home cell) and/or fully mobile.
  • the macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit can be established depending on the operating category for the wireless unit. Where the wireless unit is fixed and has good reception from a home base station, particularly in regions close to the home base station, macrodiversity for the wireless unit can be restricted.
  • the mobility of the wireless unit is restricted in the fixed (or limited fixed) mode, the fading of signals between the home base station and the wireless unit should not be severe, thereby macrodiversity is disabled. Where the reception is poor, particularly in a region near the edge of the cell, the macrodiversity for the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is enabled.
  • the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit at the edge of the cell can benefit from macrodiversity, but because the wireless unit is fixed (or limited fixed), the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is not handed off to another base station (or can only be handed off to a limited set of base stations).
  • FIG. 1 shows a general diagram of a cellular communications system in which the wireless communications system according to the principles of the present invention can be used;
  • FIG. 2 shows a diagram of a cellular system using the principles of the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of an embodiment of the macrodiversity control system according to the principles of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 shows a base station 30 for a cell 32 .
  • the cell 32 is shown with a macrodiversity region 34 and a non-macrodiversity region 36 for wireless units in the fixed category.
  • wireless units can be rigidly fixed, such as a wireless unit 40 with an antenna on the roof directed towards the base station.
  • the antenna has a fairly high height gain, and the directional antenna helps reception. Since the position of the antenna is known, the macrodiversity/handoff mode or operation of the wireless unit can be established and set during installation/RF optimization by adjusting the antenna position or direction.
  • a limited fixed operating category can be established where mobility is restricted (for example, a limited fixed wireless unit may be limited to walking speed because the wireless unit is in a home or premises), as such the fading scenarios are not as severe as a fully mobile wireless unit.
  • wireless units can operate using a different macrodiversity mode or operation than the mode used by the fixed wireless units.
  • a dashed line 37 can designate a boundary between the macodiversity and non-macrodiversity regions for the limited fixed category.
  • the different macrodiversity regions can be defined by macrodiversity triggering values used by the macrodiversity control system in comparisons with signal quality measurements, such as the signal strength measurements of the forward and/or reverse traffic or pilot channels to determine the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversitry/handoff operation for a particular wireless unit is determined by individual macrodiversity trigger values and/or handoff threshold values for the particular wireless unit.
  • the operating category for the wireless unit can be the basis for establishing the macrodiversity/handoff operation for the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit can be established at subscription or installation/RF optimization and maintained, or in some embodiments, the macrodiversity/handoff mode of the wireless unit can be changed, for example based on a change in operating category or a change by the system in how the macrodiversity modes for particular operating categories, particular mobiles, particular cells or the system are defined. Furthermore, the macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit can be determined using certain operating parameter(s), such as signal quality measurements of signal to and/or from the base station and/or the traffic load of the cell and/or surrounding cells. Prior traffic patterns and/or prior handoff or macrodiversity characteristics for the wireless unit can also be used to determine the macrodiversity operation for the wireless unit. For example, the wireless unit can be in a macrodiversity region in the summer and a non-macrodiversity region in the winter. Depending on the embodiment, the boundary 37 can change.
  • a fixed wireless unit 38 has macrodiversity enabled because the reception from the base station 30 is poor, for example below a fixed macrodiversity trigger value, such as a signal quality value measured by signal strength, signal to noise ratio (such as Ec/Io), bit error rate (BER), and/or frame error rate (FER).
  • the macrodiversity region 34 is typically at the edge of the cell 32 or in a hand off region, but can extended for a wireless unit with poor reception due to location or other interference scenarios (although physically close to the base station 30 such as area 39 ).
  • the wireless unit 38 can receive signals from the base stations of other cells to improve reception, but the wireless unit 38 will not be handed off to the other cells when in a fixed operating category.
  • the fixed wireless unit can use macrodiversity without being handed off to another cell by blocking or bypassing the handoff procedure, for example by blocking a hand off parameter measurement request message and/or a hand off direction message for the fixed wireless unit 38 used in a typical system to initiate a handoff.
  • handoff parameter values or thresholds used to initiate handoff procedures in comparisons with signal quality measurements of received signals from the serving and/or other base stations can be set on a per wireless unit basis to prevent the wireless unit from being handed off and/or to be handed off only under limited conditions, such as when the wireless unit is in a limited fixed mode and receiving signals below a threshold value different from the threshold value determining a handoff for a mobile wireless unit.
  • a restricted list of candidate base stations can be examined for macrodiversity and/or handoffs, and the active set could be limited when compared to a fully mobile wireless unit.
  • Another parameter to determine whether a fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit can enable macrodiversity and/or handoffs is the load on the cell 32 and/or of the surrounding cells. For example, when the traffic load is below a threshold, macrodiversity and/or handoffs can be enabled by setting the active set threshold values and/or handoff related parameters to enable macrodiversity and/or handoffs.
  • a fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit 40 or 42 has macrodiversity disabled in a non-macrodiversity region 36 where the reception is good from the serving base station 30 , for example above a fixed (or limited fixed) macrodiversity threshold value, such as a signal quality measurement value of a signal from the serving base station 30 , for example a measurement of signal strength, frame error rate (FER), or bit error rate (BER).
  • a fixed (or limited fixed) macrodiversity threshold value such as a signal quality measurement value of a signal from the serving base station 30 , for example a measurement of signal strength, frame error rate (FER), or bit error rate (BER).
  • FER frame error rate
  • BER bit error rate
  • Such a non-macrodiversity region 36 is typically close to the base station 30 but can be extended to areas, such as area 43 , where the wireless unit has good reception although located close to the edge of the cell.
  • wireless resources can be used more efficiently.
  • Establishing the wireless unit 40 or 42 as fixed and operating with macrodiversity disabled saves wireless system resources, such as traffic channels which would be used for macrodiversity as well as resources required in registering wireless units with other base stations. Additionally, the interference in the wireless system is reduced due to the avoidance of multiple base stations transmitting the same information. Even if macrodiversity is enabled, active set threshold values, a restricted or limited active set(s) and/or other macrodiversity/handoff parameters could be used for macrodiversity while handoffs are prevented (or limited).
  • a wireless unit 40 or 42 can be designated as fixed and assigned a home cell 32 where calls are to be originated.
  • the macrodiversity control system can retrieve a home cell identification corresponding to the wireless unit 40 or 42 .
  • the home cell identification can be retrieved from the home location register 24 (FIG. 1) of the MSC 16 (FIG. 1) and/or from the wireless unit. If access is attempted by the wireless unit 40 or 42 (in the fixed or limited fixed mode) at some other base station 30 , the system can respond with a directed retry message.
  • the base station 30 can send a directed retry message to instruct the wireless unit that service is not supported in the cell where access was attempted and try access elsewhere or with different operating category or parameters.
  • the system could simply deny access to the wireless unit, or change the operating category of the wireless unit from fixed or limited fixed to mobile.
  • the wireless units can be designated at subscription as fixed or limited fixed within the home cell. As such, the fixed or limited fixed wireless units will not have to register with the base station 30 . Registration is the process by which the wireless unit notifies the base station of its location, and identification so that the base station can page the base station when establishing a wireless terminated call.
  • ANSI J-STD-008 dated Mar. 24, 1995 entitled Personal Station-Base Station Compatibility Requirements for 1.8 to 2.0 GHz Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) Personal Communications Systems (ANSI J-STD-008)
  • various forms of registration are described.
  • the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit can be charged at a discount rate because the fixed units will need less system capability and resources than a mobile wireless unit.
  • the system can determine the operating category or macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit (fixed, limited fixed or mobile).
  • the macrodiversity control system can determine the mode for the wireless unit by receiving the operating category from the wireless unit and/or by retrieving the operating category and/or macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit from a database accessible to the macrodiversity control system.
  • the current operating category and/or the macrodiversity mode which is determined or defined by the macrodiversity trigger values, active set threshold values, limited or restricted active set, limited or restricted candidate set and/or the handoff thresholds or parameters can be stored in a database accessible to the MSC 16 of the base station 30 , such as the HLR 24 (FIG. 1).
  • the wireless unit operating category and/or macrodiversity mode or parameters thereof can be stored in other databases, such as a stand-alone HLR (SHLR).
  • SHLR stand-alone HLR
  • the operating category and/or macrodiversity mode and parameters thereof can be stored in association with a wireless unit, in association with the operating category and/or in association with the home cell id.
  • the home cell id and/or the operating category can be stored in association with the wireless unit and the corresponding macrodiversity modes and parameters thereof can be stored in association with operating category and/or home cell id.
  • the capability of the wireless unit is established at subscription or installation/RF optimization and maintained.
  • the wireless unit can switch between the fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile modes.
  • the wireless unit could plug into a docking station which includes a wireless network interface unit (NIU), including amplification circuitry, connected to an antenna, such as an antenna on the roof of a house.
  • NIU wireless network interface unit
  • the wireless unit can be in the fixed operating category using the fixed macrodiversity mode defined by the fixed macrodiversity trigger values, active set thresholds, active set or candidate set, other parameters and/or by whether handoffs are prevented for the particular fixed wireless unit configuration or for those fixed wireless units in the cell.
  • the amplification and antenna circuitry in the wireless unit can be bypassed by the network interface unit (NIU) circuitry and antenna connected to the docking station.
  • NIU network interface unit
  • the wireless unit can use amplification circuitry and the antenna integrated with the wireless unit and switch to a limited fixed operating category by sending a message to the base station.
  • a switch on the wireless unit can change the operating category for the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversity control system can be capable of changing the operating category of the wireless unit 40 from fixed (or limited fixed) to mobile, whereby the wireless unit 40 can be handed off between base stations when the wireless unit 40 .
  • the wireless unit can send in a message to the base station a home cell id and/or operating category for the wireless unit. If the home cell id and the base station at which access to the wireless communications system is being requested match, then the wireless unit remains in the fixed (or limited fixed) operating category. Otherwise, depending on the embodiment, the base station can change the operating category for the wireless unit or the wireless unit requests a category change if a home cell id stored in the wireless unit or at the HLR 15 does not match a home cell of the base station at which access to the system is being attempted.
  • the macrodiversity control system or portion thereof receives at the wireless unit a home cell id of the base station to compare with the home cell id stored at the wireless unit.
  • the Access Parameter Message (APM) sent over the access channel from the base station to the wireless unit can be modified to include a field called the home cell ID.
  • the wireless unit simply identifies itself (from which the macrodiversity control system obtains the home cell id of the wireless unit) or provides its home cell id to the base station and the home cell id associated with the wireless unit is compared with the home cell id of the base station which the wireless unit is attempting to access. If the home cell id associated with the wireless unit matches the home cell id of the base station being accessed, the operating category can remain as fixed (or limited fixed). If not, the operating category for the wireless unit can be changed to fully mobile.
  • the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit can change.
  • the base station can send corresponding macrodiversity trigger values, active set thresholds, limited, fixed or restricted candidate list, limited, fixed or restricted active set and/or other macrodiversity and handoff parameters or thresholds.
  • the mode is changed, different macrodiversity and/or handoff thresholds can be used.
  • the call could be dropped.
  • the charges for the wireless unit 40 can be cheaper when operating in fixed (no mobility) mode or limited fixed (mobility restricted within the home cell) than in mobile mode.
  • macrodiversity modes depending on the operating category, and the corresponding parameters, thresholds, candidate lists, procedures, values and/or other information or macrodiversity/handoff processes, can be used on a wireless unit basis, on a cell-wide basis or on a system wide basis.
  • the fixed wireless communications system enables increased capacity in a wireless communications system of fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile units by more efficiently using wireless resources for the wireless system.
  • the fixed wireless system can be used for improving the performance of a stand-alone fixed wireless system or a mixed wireless system having fixed (or limited fixed) wireless units and mobile wireless units.
  • FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of an embodiment of the macrodiversity control system depending on the operating categories of fixed, limited fixed or mobile for the wireless unit. More or less operating categories for the wireless units are possible.
  • the macrodiversity control system determines the operating category for the wireless unit.
  • the operating category for the wireless unit can be established at subscription or installation and stored at the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system in association with the subscriber information of the wireless unit, such as electronic serial number, mobile identification number (MIN or IMSI) and directory or phone number (DN).
  • a home cell id can be stored at the HLR 24 (FIG. 1) and/or in the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversity control system and portions thereof can be implemented at the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system, such as the base station and/or the MSC 16 (FIG. 1)
  • the macrodiversity control system can be informed of the operating category for the wireless unit (fixed, limited fixed or mobile), for example in a message to the base station and/or a message from the base station to the wireless unit.
  • the operating category (and corresponding macrodiversity/handoff mode parameters) for the wireless unit can be stored in the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system, for example in the base station or HLR 24 .
  • the operating category and/or macrodiversity/handoff mode can be maintained until a change in the subscription occurs.
  • the operating category and/or the macrodiversity/handoff mode and the parameters thereof can be updated periodically, dynamically or depending on other operating parameters, such as received signal strength of a channel on the reverse and/or forward links.
  • the macrodiversity control system can determine the operating category and/or macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit at every attempt to access the wireless system by the wireless unit or established initially and maintained. Other embodiments are possible.
  • the macrodiversity control system determines whether the wireless unit is in a fixed operating category. If the wireless unit is operating as a fixed unit, the macrodiversity control system determines macrodiversity trigger values for wireless units operating as fixed or for that particular wireless unit as shown in block 54 .
  • the macrodiversity trigger value can be different for each wireless unit or for each operating category.
  • the macrodiversity control system can set the macrodiversity trigger levels. After the macrodiverity trigger value is determined, the macrodiversity control system establishes the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversity/handoff control system performs a signal quality measurement using for example a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) at the wireless unit. If the macrodiversity trigger is less than the signal strength measurement at block 56 , the macrodiversity for the wireless unit is disabled as shown at block 58 .
  • RSSI received signal strength indicator
  • the macrodiversity for the wireless unit is disabled as shown at block 58 .
  • transmission to a particular wireless unit can be limited to the serving base station.
  • Macrodiversity can be disabled by restricting the active set to the serving base station, for example by setting active set threshold values or other parameters at RF optimization relative to the home base station. As such, the wireless unit can only communicate with the home base station.
  • macrodiversity is enabled.
  • active set threshold values for the wireless unit and/or a restrictive or limited set of candidate base stations for example of certain cells neighboring the home cell, can be established for the wireless unit.
  • the wireless unit can receive signals from the base stations on the active sets but will not be handed off from the home base station. As such, handoffs are disabled.
  • the macrodiversity/handoff control system can accomplish this in different ways, for example by preventing the wireless unit from requesting handoffs, ignoring handoff requests and/or setting handoff parameters to achieve desired operation.
  • the trigger values, active set threshold values and/or handoff parameters can be the same and/or different.
  • the macrodiversity control system can include additional operating categories, such as limited fixed, fully mobile and others, for example categories based on speed.
  • the operating category can be established at subscription or installation and maintained or changed, for example from fixed to limited fixed by removing the wireless unit from a fixed docking station or by using a switch on the wireless unit to switch between operating categories.
  • the macrodiversity control system determines at block 62 whether the operating category of the wireless unit is limited fixed. If not, the wireless unit operates as a fully mobile wireless unit operating for example as described in ANSI J-STD-008 with handoffs and macrodiversity enabled as shown in block 64 . Otherwise, if the control system determines that the wireless unit is operating as limited fixed, the control system determines at block 66 the macrodiversity trigger value for the wireless unit.
  • the macrodiversity trigger value for the limited fixed wireless unit can be the same or different than the macrodiversity trigger value of the fixed wireless unit or of other limited fixed wireless units.
  • the control system compares the limited fixed macrodiversity trigger value with a signal quality measurement using for example a received signal strength indicator (RSSI). If the signal quality measurement at the wireless unit (or at the base station depending on the embodiment) is greater than the macrodiversity trigger value, then the control system disables macrodiversity, thereby disabling handoffs at block 70 . Otherwise, macrodiversity is enabled at block 72 . Additionally, active set threshold values for the wireless unit and/or a restricted or limited set of candidate base stations, for example of certain cells neighboring the home cell, can be established for the wireless unit. With macrodiversity enabled, the wireless unit can receive signals from the base stations on the active sets but will not be handed off from the home base station. As such, handoffs are disabled. The macrodiversity control system can accomplish this in different ways, for example by preventing the wireless unit from requesting handoffs, ignoring handoff requests and/or setting handoff parameters.
  • RSSI received signal strength indicator
  • the wireless system can enable/disable handoffs or set the handoff parameters to different levels.
  • a fixed wireless unit can have no handoff capability or no macrodiversity capability;
  • a limited fixed wireless unit can have no or limited handoff capability or no, limited or full macrodiversity capability;
  • a mobile wireless unit can have full handoff capability and full macrodiversity capability.
  • the macrodiversity and/or handoff parameters defining the macrodiversity mode can be established on a per wireless unit basis and/or on a call by call basis.
  • a limited fixed wireless unit can have limited handoff when the traffic load is light capability which is subsequently switched to no or even more restrictive handoff capability when load is heavier.
  • the registration procedure is different for wireless units operating in different modes. For example, where fixed (or limited fixed) wireless units do not have handoff capability, registration procedures for those wireless units can be eliminated.
  • the wireless communications system with a fixed mode can be used with different cellular systems and configurations which omit and/or add components and/or use variations or portions of the described system.
  • the macrodiversity control system is described with particular reference to a cellular network architecture using ANSI-STD-J-008, but other wireless systems using different multiple access techniques, such as TDMA can be used and systems for sending data and/or voice. It should be understood that different notations, references and characterizations of the various architecture blocks can be used.
  • the wireless system using fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile modes has been described using a particular wireless system, but it should be understood that the system and portions thereof and of the described architecture can be implemented in different locations, such as the wireless unit, the base station and/or the MSC, or in application specific integrated circuits, software-driven processing circuitry, firmware or other arrangements of discrete components as would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of this disclosure.
  • What has been described is merely illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize that these and various other modifications, arrangements and methods can be made to the present invention without strictly following the exemplary applications illustrated and described herein and without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.

Abstract

A macrodiversity control system provides a wireless unit with a macrodiversity mode depending on the operating category of the wireless unit. For example, a wireless communications system can have wireless units operating in categories related to the mobility of the wireless unit, such as fixed, limited fixed (mobility within the home cell) and/or fully mobile. For a wireless unit, the macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit can be established depending on the operating category for the wireless unit. Where the wireless unit is fixed and has good reception from a home base station, particularly in regions close to the home base station, macrodiversity for the wireless unit can be restricted. Because the mobility of the wireless unit is restricted in the fixed (or limited fixed) mode, the fading of signals between the home base station and the wireless unit should not be severe, thereby macrodiversity is disabled. Where the reception is poor, particularly in a region near the edge of the cell, the macrodiversity for the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is enabled. The fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit at the edge of the cell can benefit from macrodiversity, but because the wireless unit is fixed (or limited fixed), the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is not handed off to another base station (or can only be handed off to a limited set of base stations).

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of The Invention [0001]
  • This invention relates to wireless communications and, more particularly, to a cellular communications system with wireless units of different operating categories. [0002]
  • 2. Description of Related Art [0003]
  • FIG. 1 depicts a diagram of a portion of a typical [0004] wireless communications system 10, which provides wireless communications service to a number of wireless or mobile units 12 a-c, that are situated within a geographic region. The geographic region serviced by a wireless communications system is divided into spatially distinct areas called “cells.” Each cell is schematically represented by one hexagon in a honeycomb pattern; in practice, however, each cell has an irregular shape that depends on the topography of the terrain surrounding the cell and other factors. A conventional cellular telephone system comprises a number of cell sites or base stations 14 a-d, geographically distributed to support transmission and receipt of voice-based communication signals to and from cellular telephones, often referred to as mobile units or wireless units. Each cell site handles voice communications over a cell, and the overall coverage area for the cellular telephone system is defined by the union of cells for all of the cell sites, where the coverage areas for nearby cell sites overlap to some degree to ensure (if possible) contiguous communications coverage within the outer boundaries of the system's coverage area. One cell site may sometimes provide coverage for several sectors. In this specification, cells and sectors are referred to interchangeably.
  • A base station [0005] 14 a-d comprises the radios and antennas that the base station uses to communicate with the mobile units in that cell and also comprises the transmission equipment that the base station uses to communicate with a Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 16. The Mobile Switching Center 16 is responsible for, among other things, establishing and maintaining calls between the mobile units and calls between a mobile unit and a wireline unit (e.g., wireline unit 18), which wireline unit 18 is connected to the Mobile Switching Center (MSC) 16 via a public switched telephone network (PSTN) 20. The Mobile Switching Center 16 is connected to a plurality of base stations, such as base stations 14 a-d, that are dispersed throughout the geographic region serviced by the MSC 16 and to the PSTN 20 and/or a packet data network (PDN) 22, such as the Internet. The MSC 16 is connected to several databases, including a home location register (HLR) 24. The HLR 24 contains subscriber information and location information for all mobile units which reside in the geographic region of the MSC 16. Typically, for each of the mobile units, the HLR 24 stores a mobile identification number (MIN) or International Mobile Subscriber Identification Number (IMSI), the mobile directory or phone number (MDN), and/or an electronic serial number (ESN).
  • When active, a mobile unit receives forward-link signals from and transmits reverse-link signals to (at least) one cell site or base station. Each active mobile unit is assigned a forward link on which it receives its forward-link signals on at least one forward link channel and a reverse link on which it transmits reverse link signals on at least one reverse link channel. There are many different schemes for defining forward and reverse link channels for a cellular telephone system, including TDMA (time-division multiple access), FDMA (frequency-division multiple access), and CDMA (code-division multiple access) schemes. In CDMA communications, different channels are distinguished by different spreading sequences that are used to encode different voice-based streams, which may then be modulated at one or more different carrier frequencies for simultaneous transmission. A receiver can recover a particular voice-based stream from a received signal using the appropriate spreading sequence to decode the received signal. [0006]
  • In order to avoid interference between signals transmitted to and from mobile units in a CDMA system, all active mobile units within a particular cell are assigned different CDMA spreading sequences. Since cellular telephone systems are dynamic systems in which mobile units become active and inactive at different (and possibly random) times and since mobile units can move from one cell to another, the assignment of channels to the various mobile units is made by the cellular system in real time. In order to assign bandwidth resources to mobile units so as to avoid interference between mobile units in neighboring cells, the resource-assignment activities of neighboring cell sites are coordinated. [0007]
  • A detailed sequence of activities are typically followed before the mobile unit can access the wireless communications system to establish or receive a call. As is known in the art, calls between a CDMA mobile unit and a base station typically employ several kinds of channels. Initially, a pilot channel is employed to continually broadcast certain system synchronization and timing information to all mobile units in an area. After initial synchronization is achieved at a mobile unit, a sync channel is used to establish more specific time and frame synchronization at the mobile unit. The sync channel message also provides information about another class of channels, the paging channels. Paging channels are used to broadcast a variety of control information, including access channel information, contained in the access parameter message. This access parameter message contains parameters and other information of interest to mobile units seeking access to the base station. Other overhead messages are sent between the mobile unit and the base station to facilitate communications over forward and reverse link traffic channels between the mobile unit and the base station over which voice and/or data information is transmitted. [0008]
  • Conventional CDMA systems being developed use macrodiversity to improve the performance or quality of reception. The macrodiversity concept as is used in CDMA involves two or more simultaneous links from two or more base stations. The mobile and cell receivers employ a number of parallel correlators. Receivers using parallel correlators (sometimes called RAKE receivers) allow individual path arrivals to be tracked independently and the sum of their received signal strengths is then, used to demodulate the signal. While there is fading on each arrival, the fades are independent. Demodulation based on sum of the signals is then much more reliable. But in this process it might use a lot of resources/equipment of a cell site. Moreover, it is expected that quite a high percentage of the calls will use macrodiversity. [0009]
  • Once a system is designed, the number of transceiver elements are fixed, and as the number of users increase, macrodiversity will use up the wireless resources. For the macrodiversity to operate, the mobile unit searches for pilot signals of base stations on a candidate list which are not currently servicing the wireless unit. The wireless unit measures the signal strengths, for example using a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) of the pilot signals. When the wireless unit detects a pilot of sufficient strength which is associated with a base station not assigned to the wireless unit, a pilot measurement message including the pilot signal measurements is provided to the MSC [0010] 16. Using the pilot signal measurements, the MSC 16 determines whether to assign a traffic channel from another base station to the wireless unit. The wireless unit is said to be in macrodiversity state if it is assigned traffic channels from more than one base station. Within the geographic region, the MSC 16 switches calls from one base station to another in real time as the mobile unit moves between cells, referred to as call handoff.
  • All base stations connected to a given wireless unit define the active set of that mobile, and an active set update function controls, i.e, evaluates and updates, this active set based on pilot strength measurements. At the wireless unit, the strongest pilots are detected and measured by the measurement process. The signal strength values are then collected into the pilot measurement report, which is sent to the MSC [0011] 16. When the active set update function is invoked, the base stations within the active set from which the strongest and weakest pilot are received are identified. If the difference is greater than the system desired value (called active set window there after), the weakest base station will be removed from the active set. A base station is added to the active set window, if it received pilot signal strength is within the window above an active set threshold value, provided the active set size (no. of RAKE fingers in the receiver) is not exceeded. If the active set size is full, the weakest base station in the active set will be replaced by the new base station if the corresponding pilot signal strength is higher than the weakest base station.
  • Some wireless cellular communications systems involve fixed wireless units. The fixed cellular concept is getting a lot of attention and is a substitute for the public switched telephone network (PSTN), where the terrain is difficult and the infrastructure cost is too high to implement the PSTN. The fixed cellular concept involves wireless units where the mobility of the wireless unit is very limited within the home cell (limited or no mobility at all). Macrodiversity is not normally used and no handoffs are allowed between the base stations. [0012]
  • Macrodiversity as used in the CDMA system has the advantage that it improves the quality of reception in the cellular or PCS system, but if the cellsite is fully loaded (all the transceivers are being used up), the capacity of the system suffers. Thus, macrodiversity needs to be coordinated, especially in a system using both fixed and mobile units, to more efficiently use the resources of the wireless communications system. [0013]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention involves a macrodiversity control system, for a wireless communication system, which provides a wireless unit using a macrodiversity mode depending on the operating category of the wireless unit. For example, a wireless communications system can have wireless units operating in categories related to the mobility of the wireless unit, such as fixed, limited fixed (mobility within the home cell) and/or fully mobile. For a wireless unit, the macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit can be established depending on the operating category for the wireless unit. Where the wireless unit is fixed and has good reception from a home base station, particularly in regions close to the home base station, macrodiversity for the wireless unit can be restricted. Because the mobility of the wireless unit is restricted in the fixed (or limited fixed) mode, the fading of signals between the home base station and the wireless unit should not be severe, thereby macrodiversity is disabled. Where the reception is poor, particularly in a region near the edge of the cell, the macrodiversity for the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is enabled. The fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit at the edge of the cell can benefit from macrodiversity, but because the wireless unit is fixed (or limited fixed), the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit is not handed off to another base station (or can only be handed off to a limited set of base stations).[0014]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • Other aspects and advantages of the present invention may become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings in which: [0015]
  • FIG. 1 shows a general diagram of a cellular communications system in which the wireless communications system according to the principles of the present invention can be used; [0016]
  • FIG. 2 shows a diagram of a cellular system using the principles of the present invention; and [0017]
  • FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of an embodiment of the macrodiversity control system according to the principles of the present invention.[0018]
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • Illustrative embodiments of the macrodiversity/handoff control system (“macrodiversity control system”) are described with respect to a cellular system of wireless units having different operating categories, such as fixed (no mobility), limited fixed (limited fixed mobility within the home cell) and/or fully mobile wireless units. In some embodiments, the wireless unit can switch between fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile categories. FIG. 2 shows a [0019] base station 30 for a cell 32. For illustrative purposes, the cell 32 is shown with a macrodiversity region 34 and a non-macrodiversity region 36 for wireless units in the fixed category. In the fixed operating category, wireless units can be rigidly fixed, such as a wireless unit 40 with an antenna on the roof directed towards the base station. In such a case, the antenna has a fairly high height gain, and the directional antenna helps reception. Since the position of the antenna is known, the macrodiversity/handoff mode or operation of the wireless unit can be established and set during installation/RF optimization by adjusting the antenna position or direction.
  • In some embodiments, a limited fixed operating category can be established where mobility is restricted (for example, a limited fixed wireless unit may be limited to walking speed because the wireless unit is in a home or premises), as such the fading scenarios are not as severe as a fully mobile wireless unit. For the limited fixed category, wireless units can operate using a different macrodiversity mode or operation than the mode used by the fixed wireless units. For example, a dashed [0020] line 37 can designate a boundary between the macodiversity and non-macrodiversity regions for the limited fixed category. The different macrodiversity regions can be defined by macrodiversity triggering values used by the macrodiversity control system in comparisons with signal quality measurements, such as the signal strength measurements of the forward and/or reverse traffic or pilot channels to determine the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit. In alternative embodiments, the macrodiversitry/handoff operation for a particular wireless unit is determined by individual macrodiversity trigger values and/or handoff threshold values for the particular wireless unit. The operating category for the wireless unit can be the basis for establishing the macrodiversity/handoff operation for the wireless unit.
  • The macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit can be established at subscription or installation/RF optimization and maintained, or in some embodiments, the macrodiversity/handoff mode of the wireless unit can be changed, for example based on a change in operating category or a change by the system in how the macrodiversity modes for particular operating categories, particular mobiles, particular cells or the system are defined. Furthermore, the macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit can be determined using certain operating parameter(s), such as signal quality measurements of signal to and/or from the base station and/or the traffic load of the cell and/or surrounding cells. Prior traffic patterns and/or prior handoff or macrodiversity characteristics for the wireless unit can also be used to determine the macrodiversity operation for the wireless unit. For example, the wireless unit can be in a macrodiversity region in the summer and a non-macrodiversity region in the winter. Depending on the embodiment, the [0021] boundary 37 can change.
  • In the macrodiversity region [0022] 34, a fixed wireless unit 38 has macrodiversity enabled because the reception from the base station 30 is poor, for example below a fixed macrodiversity trigger value, such as a signal quality value measured by signal strength, signal to noise ratio (such as Ec/Io), bit error rate (BER), and/or frame error rate (FER). The macrodiversity region 34 is typically at the edge of the cell 32 or in a hand off region, but can extended for a wireless unit with poor reception due to location or other interference scenarios (although physically close to the base station 30 such as area 39). When macrodiversity is enabled, the wireless unit 38 can receive signals from the base stations of other cells to improve reception, but the wireless unit 38 will not be handed off to the other cells when in a fixed operating category. In certain embodiments, the fixed wireless unit can use macrodiversity without being handed off to another cell by blocking or bypassing the handoff procedure, for example by blocking a hand off parameter measurement request message and/or a hand off direction message for the fixed wireless unit 38 used in a typical system to initiate a handoff.
  • Alternatively, handoff parameter values or thresholds used to initiate handoff procedures in comparisons with signal quality measurements of received signals from the serving and/or other base stations can be set on a per wireless unit basis to prevent the wireless unit from being handed off and/or to be handed off only under limited conditions, such as when the wireless unit is in a limited fixed mode and receiving signals below a threshold value different from the threshold value determining a handoff for a mobile wireless unit. In such a scenario, a restricted list of candidate base stations can be examined for macrodiversity and/or handoffs, and the active set could be limited when compared to a fully mobile wireless unit. Another parameter to determine whether a fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit can enable macrodiversity and/or handoffs is the load on the [0023] cell 32 and/or of the surrounding cells. For example, when the traffic load is below a threshold, macrodiversity and/or handoffs can be enabled by setting the active set threshold values and/or handoff related parameters to enable macrodiversity and/or handoffs.
  • A fixed (or limited fixed) [0024] wireless unit 40 or 42 has macrodiversity disabled in a non-macrodiversity region 36 where the reception is good from the serving base station 30, for example above a fixed (or limited fixed) macrodiversity threshold value, such as a signal quality measurement value of a signal from the serving base station 30, for example a measurement of signal strength, frame error rate (FER), or bit error rate (BER). Such a non-macrodiversity region 36 is typically close to the base station 30 but can be extended to areas, such as area 43, where the wireless unit has good reception although located close to the edge of the cell. By properly coordinating the macrodiversity region (where macrodiversity between different cells and sites are allowed as shown in FIG. 2), wireless resources can be used more efficiently. Establishing the wireless unit 40 or 42 as fixed and operating with macrodiversity disabled saves wireless system resources, such as traffic channels which would be used for macrodiversity as well as resources required in registering wireless units with other base stations. Additionally, the interference in the wireless system is reduced due to the avoidance of multiple base stations transmitting the same information. Even if macrodiversity is enabled, active set threshold values, a restricted or limited active set(s) and/or other macrodiversity/handoff parameters could be used for macrodiversity while handoffs are prevented (or limited).
  • In certain embodiments, a [0025] wireless unit 40 or 42 can be designated as fixed and assigned a home cell 32 where calls are to be originated. When the wireless unit 40 or 42 attempts to gain access to the wireless system, the macrodiversity control system can retrieve a home cell identification corresponding to the wireless unit 40 or 42. The home cell identification can be retrieved from the home location register 24 (FIG. 1) of the MSC 16 (FIG. 1) and/or from the wireless unit. If access is attempted by the wireless unit 40 or 42 (in the fixed or limited fixed mode) at some other base station 30, the system can respond with a directed retry message. The base station 30 can send a directed retry message to instruct the wireless unit that service is not supported in the cell where access was attempted and try access elsewhere or with different operating category or parameters. The system could simply deny access to the wireless unit, or change the operating category of the wireless unit from fixed or limited fixed to mobile.
  • In a wireless system with fixed (no mobility at all), limited fixed (mobility within the home cell) and fully mobile units, the wireless units can be designated at subscription as fixed or limited fixed within the home cell. As such, the fixed or limited fixed wireless units will not have to register with the [0026] base station 30. Registration is the process by which the wireless unit notifies the base station of its location, and identification so that the base station can page the base station when establishing a wireless terminated call. For example, in American National Standards (ANSI) J-STD-008 dated Mar. 24, 1995 entitled Personal Station-Base Station Compatibility Requirements for 1.8 to 2.0 GHz Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) Personal Communications Systems (ANSI J-STD-008), various forms of registration are described. Fixed (or limited fixed) wireless units will always be registered with the same home cell, thereby relieving the wireless system of registration-related processing which is very significant in a cellular environment. For the wireless units designated as filly mobile, the registration should be handled and processed as described in current standards, such as ANSI J-STD-008.
  • As such, the fixed (or limited fixed) wireless unit can be charged at a discount rate because the fixed units will need less system capability and resources than a mobile wireless unit. At call origination, page response or registration by the wireless unit, the system can determine the operating category or macrodiversity mode of the wireless unit (fixed, limited fixed or mobile). The macrodiversity control system can determine the mode for the wireless unit by receiving the operating category from the wireless unit and/or by retrieving the operating category and/or macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit from a database accessible to the macrodiversity control system. For example, the current operating category and/or the macrodiversity mode, which is determined or defined by the macrodiversity trigger values, active set threshold values, limited or restricted active set, limited or restricted candidate set and/or the handoff thresholds or parameters can be stored in a database accessible to the MSC [0027] 16 of the base station 30, such as the HLR 24 (FIG. 1). The wireless unit operating category and/or macrodiversity mode or parameters thereof can be stored in other databases, such as a stand-alone HLR (SHLR). The operating category and/or macrodiversity mode and parameters thereof can be stored in association with a wireless unit, in association with the operating category and/or in association with the home cell id. The home cell id and/or the operating category can be stored in association with the wireless unit and the corresponding macrodiversity modes and parameters thereof can be stored in association with operating category and/or home cell id.
  • In some embodiments, the capability of the wireless unit is established at subscription or installation/RF optimization and maintained. In other embodiments, the wireless unit can switch between the fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile modes. For example, the wireless unit could plug into a docking station which includes a wireless network interface unit (NIU), including amplification circuitry, connected to an antenna, such as an antenna on the roof of a house. When engaged with the docking station, the wireless unit can be in the fixed operating category using the fixed macrodiversity mode defined by the fixed macrodiversity trigger values, active set thresholds, active set or candidate set, other parameters and/or by whether handoffs are prevented for the particular fixed wireless unit configuration or for those fixed wireless units in the cell. When engaged with the docking station, the amplification and antenna circuitry in the wireless unit can be bypassed by the network interface unit (NIU) circuitry and antenna connected to the docking station. When the wireless unit is disengaged from the docking station, the wireless unit can use amplification circuitry and the antenna integrated with the wireless unit and switch to a limited fixed operating category by sending a message to the base station. Alternatively, a switch on the wireless unit can change the operating category for the wireless unit. Depending on the embodiment, the macrodiversity control system can be capable of changing the operating category of the [0028] wireless unit 40 from fixed (or limited fixed) to mobile, whereby the wireless unit 40 can be handed off between base stations when the wireless unit 40.
  • Alternatively, at system access, the wireless unit can send in a message to the base station a home cell id and/or operating category for the wireless unit. If the home cell id and the base station at which access to the wireless communications system is being requested match, then the wireless unit remains in the fixed (or limited fixed) operating category. Otherwise, depending on the embodiment, the base station can change the operating category for the wireless unit or the wireless unit requests a category change if a home cell id stored in the wireless unit or at the HLR [0029] 15 does not match a home cell of the base station at which access to the system is being attempted. For example, in one embodiment, the macrodiversity control system or portion thereof receives at the wireless unit a home cell id of the base station to compare with the home cell id stored at the wireless unit. In ANSI J-STD-008 , the Access Parameter Message (APM) sent over the access channel from the base station to the wireless unit can be modified to include a field called the home cell ID. In other embodiments, the wireless unit simply identifies itself (from which the macrodiversity control system obtains the home cell id of the wireless unit) or provides its home cell id to the base station and the home cell id associated with the wireless unit is compared with the home cell id of the base station which the wireless unit is attempting to access. If the home cell id associated with the wireless unit matches the home cell id of the base station being accessed, the operating category can remain as fixed (or limited fixed). If not, the operating category for the wireless unit can be changed to fully mobile.
  • In response to any change in operating category, the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit can change. Accordingly, depending on the embodiment, the base station can send corresponding macrodiversity trigger values, active set thresholds, limited, fixed or restricted candidate list, limited, fixed or restricted active set and/or other macrodiversity and handoff parameters or thresholds. Once the mode is changed, different macrodiversity and/or handoff thresholds can be used. Alternatively, if mode changes are not permitted by the wireless system, the call could be dropped. In cellular systems described herein, the charges for the [0030] wireless unit 40 can be cheaper when operating in fixed (no mobility) mode or limited fixed (mobility restricted within the home cell) than in mobile mode. The use of macrodiversity modes depending on the operating category, and the corresponding parameters, thresholds, candidate lists, procedures, values and/or other information or macrodiversity/handoff processes, can be used on a wireless unit basis, on a cell-wide basis or on a system wide basis.
  • Thus, the fixed wireless communications system enables increased capacity in a wireless communications system of fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile units by more efficiently using wireless resources for the wireless system. The fixed wireless system can be used for improving the performance of a stand-alone fixed wireless system or a mixed wireless system having fixed (or limited fixed) wireless units and mobile wireless units. [0031]
  • FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of an embodiment of the macrodiversity control system depending on the operating categories of fixed, limited fixed or mobile for the wireless unit. More or less operating categories for the wireless units are possible. At block [0032] 50, the macrodiversity control system determines the operating category for the wireless unit. The operating category for the wireless unit can be established at subscription or installation and stored at the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system in association with the subscriber information of the wireless unit, such as electronic serial number, mobile identification number (MIN or IMSI) and directory or phone number (DN). Additionally, a home cell id can be stored at the HLR 24 (FIG. 1) and/or in the wireless unit. Depending on the embodiment, the macrodiversity control system and portions thereof can be implemented at the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system, such as the base station and/or the MSC 16 (FIG. 1)
  • The macrodiversity control system can be informed of the operating category for the wireless unit (fixed, limited fixed or mobile), for example in a message to the base station and/or a message from the base station to the wireless unit. The operating category (and corresponding macrodiversity/handoff mode parameters) for the wireless unit can be stored in the wireless unit and/or in the wireless communications system, for example in the base station or [0033] HLR 24. Depending on the embodiment, the operating category and/or macrodiversity/handoff mode can be maintained until a change in the subscription occurs. Moreover, in some embodiments, the operating category and/or the macrodiversity/handoff mode and the parameters thereof can be updated periodically, dynamically or depending on other operating parameters, such as received signal strength of a channel on the reverse and/or forward links. As such, the macrodiversity control system can determine the operating category and/or macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit at every attempt to access the wireless system by the wireless unit or established initially and maintained. Other embodiments are possible.
  • At block [0034] 52, the macrodiversity control system determines whether the wireless unit is in a fixed operating category. If the wireless unit is operating as a fixed unit, the macrodiversity control system determines macrodiversity trigger values for wireless units operating as fixed or for that particular wireless unit as shown in block 54. The macrodiversity trigger value can be different for each wireless unit or for each operating category. Depending on the macrodiversity mode and/or other parameters related to the home cell, such as traffic load of the cell or surrounding cells, and/or the wireless unit, such as signal quality or speed of the wireless unit, as well as other parameters, the macrodiversity control system can set the macrodiversity trigger levels. After the macrodiverity trigger value is determined, the macrodiversity control system establishes the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit.
  • In the embodiment of FIG. 3, the macrodiversity/handoff control system performs a signal quality measurement using for example a received signal strength indicator (RSSI) at the wireless unit. If the macrodiversity trigger is less than the signal strength measurement at [0035] block 56, the macrodiversity for the wireless unit is disabled as shown at block 58. Depending on the embodiment, from the system side, transmission to a particular wireless unit can be limited to the serving base station. Macrodiversity can be disabled by restricting the active set to the serving base station, for example by setting active set threshold values or other parameters at RF optimization relative to the home base station. As such, the wireless unit can only communicate with the home base station. If the macrodiversity trigger value is greater than the signal strength measurement at block 56, macrodiversity is enabled. As shown in block 60, active set threshold values for the wireless unit and/or a restrictive or limited set of candidate base stations, for example of certain cells neighboring the home cell, can be established for the wireless unit. With macrodiversity enabled, the wireless unit can receive signals from the base stations on the active sets but will not be handed off from the home base station. As such, handoffs are disabled. The macrodiversity/handoff control system can accomplish this in different ways, for example by preventing the wireless unit from requesting handoffs, ignoring handoff requests and/or setting handoff parameters to achieve desired operation. Depending on the embodiment, the trigger values, active set threshold values and/or handoff parameters can be the same and/or different.
  • Besides a fixed operating category, the macrodiversity control system can include additional operating categories, such as limited fixed, fully mobile and others, for example categories based on speed. As previously mentioned, the operating category can be established at subscription or installation and maintained or changed, for example from fixed to limited fixed by removing the wireless unit from a fixed docking station or by using a switch on the wireless unit to switch between operating categories. [0036]
  • In any event, if at block [0037] 52, the macrodiversity control system determines that the operating category of the wireless unit is not fixed, the macrodiversity control system determines at block 62 whether the operating category of the wireless unit is limited fixed. If not, the wireless unit operates as a fully mobile wireless unit operating for example as described in ANSI J-STD-008 with handoffs and macrodiversity enabled as shown in block 64. Otherwise, if the control system determines that the wireless unit is operating as limited fixed, the control system determines at block 66 the macrodiversity trigger value for the wireless unit. Depending on the embodiment, the macrodiversity trigger value for the limited fixed wireless unit can be the same or different than the macrodiversity trigger value of the fixed wireless unit or of other limited fixed wireless units.
  • At [0038] block 68, the control system compares the limited fixed macrodiversity trigger value with a signal quality measurement using for example a received signal strength indicator (RSSI). If the signal quality measurement at the wireless unit (or at the base station depending on the embodiment) is greater than the macrodiversity trigger value, then the control system disables macrodiversity, thereby disabling handoffs at block 70. Otherwise, macrodiversity is enabled at block 72. Additionally, active set threshold values for the wireless unit and/or a restricted or limited set of candidate base stations, for example of certain cells neighboring the home cell, can be established for the wireless unit. With macrodiversity enabled, the wireless unit can receive signals from the base stations on the active sets but will not be handed off from the home base station. As such, handoffs are disabled. The macrodiversity control system can accomplish this in different ways, for example by preventing the wireless unit from requesting handoffs, ignoring handoff requests and/or setting handoff parameters.
  • Moreover, depending on the macrodiversity mode for the wireless unit, the wireless system can enable/disable handoffs or set the handoff parameters to different levels. For example, a fixed wireless unit can have no handoff capability or no macrodiversity capability; a limited fixed wireless unit can have no or limited handoff capability or no, limited or full macrodiversity capability; and a mobile wireless unit can have full handoff capability and full macrodiversity capability. Depending on the operating mode and/or parameters, such as signal quality measurements, speed of mobile and/or traffic load of the [0039] cell 32 and/or surrounding cells, the macrodiversity and/or handoff parameters defining the macrodiversity mode can be established on a per wireless unit basis and/or on a call by call basis. For example, a limited fixed wireless unit can have limited handoff when the traffic load is light capability which is subsequently switched to no or even more restrictive handoff capability when load is heavier. Furthermore, in some embodiments, the registration procedure is different for wireless units operating in different modes. For example, where fixed (or limited fixed) wireless units do not have handoff capability, registration procedures for those wireless units can be eliminated.
  • In addition to the embodiment(s) described above, the wireless communications system with a fixed mode according to the principles of the present invention can be used with different cellular systems and configurations which omit and/or add components and/or use variations or portions of the described system. For example, the macrodiversity control system is described with particular reference to a cellular network architecture using ANSI-STD-J-008, but other wireless systems using different multiple access techniques, such as TDMA can be used and systems for sending data and/or voice. It should be understood that different notations, references and characterizations of the various architecture blocks can be used. For example, the wireless system using fixed, limited fixed and/or mobile modes has been described using a particular wireless system, but it should be understood that the system and portions thereof and of the described architecture can be implemented in different locations, such as the wireless unit, the base station and/or the MSC, or in application specific integrated circuits, software-driven processing circuitry, firmware or other arrangements of discrete components as would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of this disclosure. What has been described is merely illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize that these and various other modifications, arrangements and methods can be made to the present invention without strictly following the exemplary applications illustrated and described herein and without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. [0040]

Claims (11)

1. A method of communicating within a wireless communications system including a base station and a wireless unit, said method comprising:
operating said wireless unit in a macrodiversity mode depending on an operating category for said wireless unit and said operating category related to the mobility of said wireless unit.
2. The method of
claim 1
wherein said operating comprising:
operating said wireless unit in said macrodiversity mode depending on said wireless unit operating as fixed and on the quality of reception from said base station.
3. The method of
claim 2
wherein said operating including:
disabling macrodiversity for said wireless unit if the quality of reception from said base station is above a threshold.
4. The method of
claim 2
wherein said operating including:
enabling macrodiversity for said wireless unit if the quality of reception from said base station is below a threshold.
5. The method of
claim 4
further including:
disabling handoffs for said wireless unit.
6. The method of
claim 5
wherein said disabling further including:
setting handoff parameters for said wireless unit.
7. The method of
claim 5
further including:
blocking handoff messages for said wireless unit.
8. The method of
claim 5
further including:
switching said wireless unit from said fixed category to a limited fixed category; and
operating said wireless unit in a limited fixed macrodiversity mode for said wireless unit.
9. The method of
claim 5
further including:
switching said wireless unit from said fixed category to a mobile category; and
operating said wireless unit in a mobile macrodiversity mode for said wireless unit.
10. The method of
claim 9
further including:
enabling handoffs for said wireless unit.
11. The method of
claim 2
further including:
storing a home cell id associated with the home base station of said wireless unit; and
using said home cell id in accessing said wireless communications system.
US09/324,177 1999-06-03 1999-06-03 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit Expired - Lifetime US6434390B2 (en)

Priority Applications (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/324,177 US6434390B2 (en) 1999-06-03 1999-06-03 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
EP00304338A EP1058408B1 (en) 1999-06-03 2000-05-23 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
DE60045019T DE60045019D1 (en) 1999-06-03 2000-05-23 Macrodiversity control system for activating the macrodiversity mode depending on the operating mode of a wireless device
BR0003100-3A BR0003100A (en) 1999-06-03 2000-05-24 Macrodiversity control system having a macrodiversity mode based on the wireless unit's operating category
CA002309467A CA2309467A1 (en) 1999-06-03 2000-05-25 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
AU37794/00A AU3779400A (en) 1999-06-03 2000-05-30 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
CN00108785A CN1276655A (en) 1999-06-03 2000-06-02 Macro diversity control system having macro diversity mode based on work class
KR1020000030388A KR100696899B1 (en) 1999-06-03 2000-06-02 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
JP2000166159A JP3954284B2 (en) 1999-06-03 2000-06-02 Macro diversity control system having macro diversity mode based on operation category of wireless unit

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/324,177 US6434390B2 (en) 1999-06-03 1999-06-03 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20010041569A1 true US20010041569A1 (en) 2001-11-15
US6434390B2 US6434390B2 (en) 2002-08-13

Family

ID=23262438

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/324,177 Expired - Lifetime US6434390B2 (en) 1999-06-03 1999-06-03 Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit

Country Status (9)

Country Link
US (1) US6434390B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1058408B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3954284B2 (en)
KR (1) KR100696899B1 (en)
CN (1) CN1276655A (en)
AU (1) AU3779400A (en)
BR (1) BR0003100A (en)
CA (1) CA2309467A1 (en)
DE (1) DE60045019D1 (en)

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20020098843A1 (en) * 2001-01-19 2002-07-25 Struhsaker Paul F. Apparatus, and an associated method, for providing WLAN service in a fixed wireless access communication system
US6434390B2 (en) * 1999-06-03 2002-08-13 Lucent Technologies Inc. Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
US6701150B1 (en) * 2000-10-13 2004-03-02 Nortel Networks Limited Network driven cell switching and handoff with load balancing for wireless systems
US20040097233A1 (en) * 2002-11-18 2004-05-20 Pecen Mark E. Method and apparatus for predicting a cell change
US20040095905A1 (en) * 2002-11-18 2004-05-20 Mark Pecen Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
US20040166860A1 (en) * 2003-02-25 2004-08-26 Neufeld Arthur James Method and apparatus for controlling operation of an access terminal in a communication system
WO2004073322A3 (en) * 2003-02-05 2005-06-23 Motorola Inc Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
US20050143080A1 (en) * 2001-08-20 2005-06-30 Ragulan Sinnarajah Method and system for signaling in broadcast communication system
US20060046735A1 (en) * 2004-08-27 2006-03-02 Gross Jonathan H Adaptive power control method for cellular systems
US20090137237A1 (en) * 2005-09-26 2009-05-28 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Wireless communication system, base station device, mobile station device, and macrodiversity selection method
US20090163237A1 (en) * 2007-12-21 2009-06-25 Fujitsu Limited Communications Systems
US20090163215A1 (en) * 2007-12-21 2009-06-25 Fujitsu Limited Communications Systems
US20110019644A1 (en) * 2009-07-22 2011-01-27 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. Method for switching session of user equipment in wireless communication system and system employing the same
US20110149926A1 (en) * 2007-05-16 2011-06-23 Zexian Li Method and structures for mobility policy in a wimax communications system
US20130109398A1 (en) * 2010-12-02 2013-05-02 At&T Intellectual Property I, L.P Method and apparatus for planning mobile switching centers in a wireless network
US20140045501A1 (en) * 2012-08-08 2014-02-13 Benjamin Cheung Manifold network wireless communication system
US8837364B2 (en) 2009-06-05 2014-09-16 Fujitsu Limited Base station device, terminal device and communication system
US9225555B2 (en) 2000-11-15 2015-12-29 Access Solutions, Ltd. Wireless communication system and device for coupling a base station and mobile stations

Families Citing this family (45)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1041850A1 (en) * 1999-04-01 2000-10-04 Nortel Matra Cellular Method and apparatus for changing radio link configurations in a mobile telecommunications system with soft handover
GB2352586B (en) 1999-06-07 2004-03-10 Nec Corp Handover between mobile networks
US7664492B1 (en) * 1999-07-27 2010-02-16 Cellco Partnership Network engineering in a wireless network
JP3293599B2 (en) * 1999-07-28 2002-06-17 日本電気株式会社 CDMA mobile communication system and inter-system handoff control method
JP3525828B2 (en) * 1999-11-01 2004-05-10 株式会社日立製作所 Location registration control method and mobile station device using the same
EP1145463B1 (en) * 1999-11-26 2010-07-21 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method of providing site selection diversity in mobile communication system
US8670390B2 (en) 2000-11-22 2014-03-11 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Cooperative beam-forming in wireless networks
SE0004326D0 (en) * 2000-11-24 2000-11-24 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Base station identification
US6853840B2 (en) * 2001-03-02 2005-02-08 Csi Wireless Llc System and method for enabling and disabling devices based on RSSI analysis
US10931338B2 (en) 2001-04-26 2021-02-23 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Coordinated multipoint systems
US9819449B2 (en) 2002-05-14 2017-11-14 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Cooperative subspace demultiplexing in content delivery networks
US10355720B2 (en) 2001-04-26 2019-07-16 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Distributed software-defined radio
US6731936B2 (en) * 2001-08-20 2004-05-04 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and system for a handoff in a broadcast communication system
JP4604432B2 (en) * 2001-08-29 2011-01-05 日本電気株式会社 MOBILE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM, MOBILE DEVICE USED FOR THE SAME, ITS CONTROL METHOD AND PROGRAM
US20030142647A1 (en) * 2002-01-31 2003-07-31 Prathima Agrawal Discrete soft handoff in CDMA wireless networks
US9136931B2 (en) * 2002-05-14 2015-09-15 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Cooperative wireless networks
US9628231B2 (en) 2002-05-14 2017-04-18 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Spreading and precoding in OFDM
US10644916B1 (en) 2002-05-14 2020-05-05 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Spreading and precoding in OFDM
US10142082B1 (en) 2002-05-14 2018-11-27 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Pre-coding in OFDM
ATE337690T1 (en) * 2002-05-22 2006-09-15 Siemens Ag METHOD AND DEVICE FOR MOBILITY CONTROL IN A COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
US7656846B2 (en) * 2002-11-18 2010-02-02 Ge Fanuc Automation North America, Inc. PLC based wireless communications
US7167504B1 (en) * 2003-01-27 2007-01-23 L-3 Communications Corporation System and method for fast data rate discovery from PN codes
US7912485B2 (en) * 2003-09-11 2011-03-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and system for signaling in broadcast communication system
US11431386B1 (en) 2004-08-02 2022-08-30 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Transmit pre-coding
US11184037B1 (en) 2004-08-02 2021-11-23 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Demodulating and decoding carrier interferometry signals
US11552737B1 (en) 2004-08-02 2023-01-10 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Cooperative MIMO
US8570880B2 (en) * 2004-08-05 2013-10-29 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for receiving broadcast in a wireless multiple-access communications system
US20060098676A1 (en) * 2004-11-08 2006-05-11 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus to facilitate macrodiversity reception
EP2252106B1 (en) 2005-03-28 2019-12-25 Sony Corporation Mobile communications system, handover controlling method, radio network controller, and mobile terminal
EP1761091B1 (en) * 2005-08-30 2012-11-07 LG Electronics, Inc. Method for performing admission control in a cellular network
WO2007066399A1 (en) * 2005-12-08 2007-06-14 Fujitsu Limited Wireless control device in mobile communication system and method of controlling the same
JP2007324646A (en) * 2006-05-30 2007-12-13 Kyocera Corp Communication system, and data processing method
KR100820928B1 (en) * 2006-12-07 2008-04-11 한국전자통신연구원 Method for pre-subscribing resource of wireless internet system
CA2676950C (en) * 2007-01-31 2015-10-13 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Mobile communication system, base station apparatus, and mobile station apparatus regarding an allocation of transmission resource
KR20090055786A (en) * 2007-11-29 2009-06-03 삼성전자주식회사 Terminal and the control method that applies channel special quality and achieves handover
US8923125B2 (en) * 2008-10-24 2014-12-30 Qualcomm Incorporated Wireless network resource adaptation
US8175594B2 (en) * 2008-10-24 2012-05-08 Qualcomm Incorporated Active set management with hotspot carriers
US9008647B2 (en) 2010-05-03 2015-04-14 Intel Mobile Communications GmbH Mobile radio communication network device, mobile terminal, and method for transmission/reception of control information
US9794840B1 (en) * 2014-05-27 2017-10-17 Sprint Sprectrum LP Systems and methods for determining access node candidates for handover of wireless devices
US10637705B1 (en) 2017-05-25 2020-04-28 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Peak-to-average-power reduction for OFDM multiple access
US10243773B1 (en) 2017-06-30 2019-03-26 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Efficient peak-to-average-power reduction for OFDM and MIMO-OFDM
CN113454964A (en) 2019-01-25 2021-09-28 珍吉斯科姆控股有限责任公司 Orthogonal and non-orthogonal multiple access
US11343823B2 (en) 2020-08-16 2022-05-24 Tybalt, Llc Orthogonal multiple access and non-orthogonal multiple access
US11917604B2 (en) 2019-01-25 2024-02-27 Tybalt, Llc Orthogonal multiple access and non-orthogonal multiple access
WO2020242898A1 (en) 2019-05-26 2020-12-03 Genghiscomm Holdings, LLC Non-orthogonal multiple access

Family Cites Families (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FI106824B (en) * 1993-07-05 2001-04-12 Nokia Networks Oy The base station
GB2282731C (en) * 1993-10-08 2006-09-06 Nokia Telecommunications Oy Dual mode subscriber terminal and a handover procedure of the dual mode subscriber terminal in a mobile telecommunications network
US5701585A (en) * 1994-12-12 1997-12-23 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Mobile assisted handoff
US5737702A (en) * 1995-03-08 1998-04-07 Northern Telecom Limited Cellular radio communications system
AU5519396A (en) 1995-04-28 1996-11-18 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) System and method for restricting mobility of subscribers as signed to fixed subscription areas in a cellular telecommuni cations network
US6073010A (en) * 1995-04-28 2000-06-06 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) System and method for restricting mobility of subscribers assigned to fixed subscription areas in a cellular telecommunications network
RU2201656C2 (en) * 1995-07-12 2003-03-27 Телефонактиеболагет Лм Эрикссон (Пабл) Method and device providing for cellular communications using stationary equipment
US5913166A (en) * 1995-12-29 1999-06-15 Lucent Technologies Inc. Arrangement for providing a call hand-off for a mobile station from a land-line supported private base station to a cellular base station operating in a cellular system
US5765103A (en) * 1996-08-16 1998-06-09 Northern Telecom Limited Spatially-oriented subscriber configuration in a fixed wireless system
US5920808A (en) * 1996-12-12 1999-07-06 Glenayre Electronics, Inc. Method and apparatus for reducing key-up distortion by pre-heating transistors
US6078817A (en) * 1997-04-24 2000-06-20 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson System and method of dynamically increasing the capacity of a code division multiple access radio telecommunications network
FI972396A (en) 1997-06-05 1998-12-06 Nokia Telecommunications Oy Channel switching in a mobile communication system
US6434390B2 (en) * 1999-06-03 2002-08-13 Lucent Technologies Inc. Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
KR100329111B1 (en) * 2000-01-28 2002-03-18 오길록 Diversity Control of Multicarrier CDMA Systems in Cellular Environments

Cited By (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6434390B2 (en) * 1999-06-03 2002-08-13 Lucent Technologies Inc. Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
US6701150B1 (en) * 2000-10-13 2004-03-02 Nortel Networks Limited Network driven cell switching and handoff with load balancing for wireless systems
US9225555B2 (en) 2000-11-15 2015-12-29 Access Solutions, Ltd. Wireless communication system and device for coupling a base station and mobile stations
US9426794B2 (en) 2000-11-15 2016-08-23 Access Solutions, Ltd. Wireless communication system and device for coupling a base station and mobile stations
US7346347B2 (en) * 2001-01-19 2008-03-18 Raze Technologies, Inc. Apparatus, and an associated method, for providing WLAN service in a fixed wireless access communication system
US9379916B2 (en) 2001-01-19 2016-06-28 Access Solutions, Ltd. Wireless communication system and device for coupling a base station and mobile stations
US10264562B2 (en) 2001-01-19 2019-04-16 Access Solutions, Ltd. TDD FDD communication interface
US20020098843A1 (en) * 2001-01-19 2002-07-25 Struhsaker Paul F. Apparatus, and an associated method, for providing WLAN service in a fixed wireless access communication system
US20080254801A1 (en) * 2001-01-19 2008-10-16 Raze Technologies, Inc. Method and apparatus for establishing a priority call in a fixed wireless access communication system
US20050143080A1 (en) * 2001-08-20 2005-06-30 Ragulan Sinnarajah Method and system for signaling in broadcast communication system
US7940724B2 (en) * 2002-11-18 2011-05-10 Motorola Mobility, Inc. Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
US20040097233A1 (en) * 2002-11-18 2004-05-20 Pecen Mark E. Method and apparatus for predicting a cell change
US20040095905A1 (en) * 2002-11-18 2004-05-20 Mark Pecen Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
EP1590971A4 (en) * 2003-02-05 2010-05-19 Motorola Inc Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
WO2004073322A3 (en) * 2003-02-05 2005-06-23 Motorola Inc Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
EP1590971A2 (en) * 2003-02-05 2005-11-02 Motorola Inc. Network assisted cell reselection in wireless communications systems and methods
US8099095B2 (en) * 2003-02-25 2012-01-17 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling operation of an access terminal in a communication system
US20040166860A1 (en) * 2003-02-25 2004-08-26 Neufeld Arthur James Method and apparatus for controlling operation of an access terminal in a communication system
WO2006025948A3 (en) * 2004-08-27 2008-02-07 Motorola Inc Adaptive power control method for cellular systems
US20060046735A1 (en) * 2004-08-27 2006-03-02 Gross Jonathan H Adaptive power control method for cellular systems
US7239886B2 (en) * 2004-08-27 2007-07-03 Motorola, Inc. Adaptive power control method for cellular systems
US20090137237A1 (en) * 2005-09-26 2009-05-28 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Wireless communication system, base station device, mobile station device, and macrodiversity selection method
US8219042B2 (en) 2005-09-26 2012-07-10 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Wireless communication system, base station device, mobile station device, and macrodiversity selection method
US20110149926A1 (en) * 2007-05-16 2011-06-23 Zexian Li Method and structures for mobility policy in a wimax communications system
US8644274B2 (en) * 2007-05-16 2014-02-04 Nokia Corporation Method and structures for mobility policy in a WiMAX communications system
US20090163215A1 (en) * 2007-12-21 2009-06-25 Fujitsu Limited Communications Systems
US20090163237A1 (en) * 2007-12-21 2009-06-25 Fujitsu Limited Communications Systems
US8694035B2 (en) * 2007-12-21 2014-04-08 Fujitsu Limited Communications system and method for determining an exclusion zone in proximity to a wireless communications system
US8837364B2 (en) 2009-06-05 2014-09-16 Fujitsu Limited Base station device, terminal device and communication system
US20110019644A1 (en) * 2009-07-22 2011-01-27 Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. Method for switching session of user equipment in wireless communication system and system employing the same
US8687592B2 (en) 2009-07-22 2014-04-01 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for switching session of user equipment in wireless communication system and system employing the same
WO2011010869A3 (en) * 2009-07-22 2011-04-28 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for switching session of user equipment in wireless communication system and system employing the same
WO2011010869A2 (en) * 2009-07-22 2011-01-27 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for switching session of user equipment in wireless communication system and system employing the same
US8897795B2 (en) * 2010-12-02 2014-11-25 At&T Intellectual Property I, L.P. Method and apparatus for planning mobile switching centers in a wireless network
US20130109398A1 (en) * 2010-12-02 2013-05-02 At&T Intellectual Property I, L.P Method and apparatus for planning mobile switching centers in a wireless network
US20140045501A1 (en) * 2012-08-08 2014-02-13 Benjamin Cheung Manifold network wireless communication system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1058408B1 (en) 2010-09-29
US6434390B2 (en) 2002-08-13
DE60045019D1 (en) 2010-11-11
BR0003100A (en) 2001-01-30
JP3954284B2 (en) 2007-08-08
KR100696899B1 (en) 2007-03-21
AU3779400A (en) 2000-12-07
KR20010007207A (en) 2001-01-26
CN1276655A (en) 2000-12-13
CA2309467A1 (en) 2000-12-03
EP1058408A1 (en) 2000-12-06
JP2001016633A (en) 2001-01-19

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6434390B2 (en) Macrodiversity control system having macrodiversity mode based on operating category of wireless unit
US6151512A (en) Communication system having optimum resource arrangements in a multi-sectored environment and method therefor
US6233455B1 (en) Method for utilizing negative T—COMP to improve handoff reliability
US7680497B2 (en) Method and system for optimizing system-access and soft-handoff parameters based on location information
US7072656B2 (en) Handover in a shared radio access network environment using subscriber-dependent neighbor cell lists
US6625132B1 (en) Idle intersystem roaming determination and system reselection in a CDMA wireless communication system
EP1360861B1 (en) Handover in a shared radio access network environment using subscriber-dependent neighbour cell lists
US6266531B1 (en) System and method for adaptive thresholds for cell load sharing
AU746818B2 (en) Centralized radio network control in a mobile communications system
US7260401B2 (en) Method and apparatus for flexible call recovery in a wireless communication system
JP4643103B2 (en) Method for controlling wireless network using transmission power information in uplink of mobile unit
US20060111108A1 (en) System and method for performing inter-layer handoff in a hierarchical cellular system
US20030040314A1 (en) Method and apparatus for location area updating in cellular communications
US20020123348A1 (en) Partial support of mobility between radio access networks
JP2003500909A (en) Event-based mobile station measurement report
JP2001512951A (en) Method and apparatus for controlling transmission signal power of a communication signal in a communication system
CN101061741B (en) Enhanced dedicated-channel reporting for UMTS
JP2003511927A (en) Method and apparatus for paging and its response in a mobile radio communication system
JP2003516695A (en) Mobile station transmission power control
EP1615459B1 (en) Method and system for managing handoff in a mobile station.
US20060258354A1 (en) Method for restricting mobility in wireless mobile systems
EP1192830A1 (en) Network-evaluated handover assisted by both mobile and base-stations
KR100704978B1 (en) Reporting Communication Link Information
US20050096052A1 (en) System and method for providing reliable hard handoffs between wireless networks

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC., NEW JERSEY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:RAHMAN, MOHAMED ANISUR;REEL/FRAME:010012/0982

Effective date: 19990603

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 8

AS Assignment

Owner name: CREDIT SUISSE AG, NEW YORK

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC.;REEL/FRAME:030510/0627

Effective date: 20130130

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 12

AS Assignment

Owner name: ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC., NEW JERSEY

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CREDIT SUISSE AG;REEL/FRAME:033950/0261

Effective date: 20140819

AS Assignment

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:NOKIA TECHNOLOGIES OY;NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS BV;ALCATEL LUCENT SAS;REEL/FRAME:043877/0001

Effective date: 20170912

Owner name: NOKIA USA INC., CALIFORNIA

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC;PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC;REEL/FRAME:043879/0001

Effective date: 20170913

Owner name: CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC, ILLINOIS

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC;PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP, LLC;REEL/FRAME:043967/0001

Effective date: 20170913

AS Assignment

Owner name: ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC., NEW JERSEY

Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC.;REEL/FRAME:049887/0613

Effective date: 20081101

AS Assignment

Owner name: NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC., NEW JERSEY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA USA INC.;REEL/FRAME:048370/0682

Effective date: 20181220

AS Assignment

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC;REEL/FRAME:058983/0104

Effective date: 20211101

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC;REEL/FRAME:058983/0104

Effective date: 20211101

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.;REEL/FRAME:058363/0723

Effective date: 20211129

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.;REEL/FRAME:058363/0723

Effective date: 20211129

AS Assignment

Owner name: RPX CORPORATION, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC;REEL/FRAME:059352/0001

Effective date: 20211129