1 / 14

TIA: Inside the Network 2012

TIA: Inside the Network 2012. Making the Right Technology Choice: Femtocells and Distributed Antenna Systems TIA: Inside the Network 2012. Home/Small Office - Wireless. Home/Small Office - Wireline. Picocell. Dist’d Antenna System + RRU. Private Enterprise - Wireless Office Sys.

Download Presentation

TIA: Inside the Network 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TIA: Inside the Network 2012 Making the Right Technology Choice: Femtocells and Distributed Antenna SystemsTIA: Inside the Network 2012

  2. Home/Small Office - Wireless Home/Small Office - Wireline Picocell Dist’d Antenna System + RRU PrivateEnterprise - Wireless Office Sys. Targeted Coverage Microcell Public “Hotspot” Macrocell Public Campus Simplicity, Low costs Large Scale Coverage Site Engineering Professional Installation Site Lease I’connect Facilities Lease Special Handset Trouble shooting Complimentary Wireless Technologies Femtocell Wi-Fi Lo-Power Repeater Hi-Power Repeater

  3. Small Cell Types Source: Ceragon Networks, Wireless Backhaul Solutions for Small Cells

  4. Small-Cell Types (cont.) Source: Ceragon Networks, Wireless Backhaul Solutions for Small Cells DAS/ RRU Wi-Fi

  5. Small-Cell Solution Architecture Small Cell Distributed Antenna Systems Remote Radio Unit Microcell Picocell Femtocell Wi-Fi

  6. Qualcomm – Crown Castle Small-Cell Trial Summary • Small cells improved system capacity • The new small cells increased the number of sectors in the system by 29% and covered only 18% of the geographic area but increased the total system forward-link throughput by 61%. • Small cells can effectively offload traffic in all coverage scenarios • The small cell placed directly below a much higher power macro sector effectively offloaded traffic and created its own unique dominance region. • Excessive soft handoff was not observed at either of the small cells • Throughput within the coverage areas created by both small cells increase significantly • Small cells can improve in-building performance, even in areas with dense macro coverage • The small cell broadcasting near the street level improved in-building throughput and coverage even though there was strong existing coverage from a macro sector.

  7. Overview of the DAS Forum • Mission: • The DAS Forum (a membership section of PCIA—The Wireless Infrastructure Association) is a broad-based organization dedicated to the development of the distributed antenna system (DAS) component of the nation’s wireless network. • About The DAS Forum: • Founded in 2006, The DAS Forum is the only national network of leaders focused exclusively on shaping the future of DAS as a viable complement to traditional macro cell sites and a solution to the deployment of wireless services in challenging environments. • DAS Forum members own and manage all of the neutral host and many of the carrier-owned outdoor DAS installations in the U.S. • The DAS Forum’s membership includes all of the major outdoor DAS infrastructure providers, as well as major carriers, equipment manufacturers, and professional services firms.

  8. Our Members Designers, Systems Integrators and Distributors • Advanced RF Technologies • AJ Telecom Group • ArchComm • BL Companies • Connectivity Wireless • CCI Systems • Dynamic Environmental Associates • Green Mountain Communications • Haymaker Technologies • Henkels & McCoy • InnerWireless • INOC • Integra Systems • Isotrope • JN Partners • Lord & Company Technologies • Microlab – A division of Wireless Telecom Group • TechNel Electric • Tempest Telecom • TESSCO • Vinculums • Westell • Wireless Partners • University of Western Ontario Others • Cozen O’Conner • Cuddy & Feder • Davis Wright Tremaine • Pennington Law Firm • Phillips Lytle • Texas Christian University Operators • AT&T Wireless • Sprint Nextel • T-Mobile USA Neutral-Host Providers • American Tower • Anziva • Crown Castle International • ExteNetSystems • Global Tower Partners • Insite Wireless • Mobilitie • SBA Software and Equipment Providers • 3M • CommScope • Corning Mobile Access • DeltaNode • Errigal • Galtronics • iBWave • Powerwave • SOLiD • TE Connectivity

  9. What is DAS? A distributed antenna system (DAS) is a network of spatially separated antenna nodes connected to a common source via a transport medium that provides wireless service within a geographic area or structure. DAS antenna elevations are generally at or below the clutter level of nearby trees and buildings.

  10. Benefits of DAS • Coverage: DAS architecture provides coverage in areas that cannot be effectively addressed with traditional sites. • Capacity: DAS can closely align capacity to actual market requirements, managing available radio resources. • Spectrum: DAS uses available frequency spectrum efficiently through multiple low-power transmission points. • Interference: DAS reduces interference through low radiation centers and lower output power. • Data: DAS provides better data throughput given signal strength and proximity of transmission points to user equipment. • Scalability: DAS is a scalable network that can meet future capacity requirements, or additional carriers, by adding additional nodes. • Adaptability: DAS can respond to market dynamics, equipment architecture changes and new technologies.

  11. DAS Drivers • Healthcare: • 78% of Americans expressed interest in mobile health(Harris Interactive & CTIA) • By 2012, mobile health monitoring will be one of the 10 most popular mobile applications(Gartner Research) • Clinicians are early adopters of wireless devices like smartphones and tablets • Physicians, staff, patients and visitors expect and rely on cellular/PCS for communications (mobile workforce) • Mobile access to patients’ electronic medical records (EMR) • Mobile monitoring of patient vitals, lab results, imaging exams

  12. DAS Drivers • Higher Education: • Student and faculty multi-carrier cellphone coverage is a matter of convenience and safety • Demand for coverage in stadiums • Parents want instant access to their kids • Students use wireless as primary mode of voice and data communications • Colleges/universities are decommissioning land lines in dorms and buildings • 26% of wireless users are wireless-only • (no landlines)

  13. DAS Drivers • Hospitality: • Unlike a university or hospital, hotel or casino customers can stay/go elsewhere if they experience poor cellular coverage. • • Travelers rely on smart phones, tablets and data cards • • Customer satisfaction and retention is driving DAS in the hospitality sector • • A meeting planner that books a • conference at a hotel with poor cellular coverage will only make that mistake once

  14. TIA: Inside the Network 2012 Thank YouTIA: Inside the Network 2012

More Related