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GSM LINK BUDGET

Naveen Jakhar, ITS


Content
What is a link budget?
Objectives

Commonly used terms

Calculations
Link Budget
It is a way of quantifying the link performance

It includes analysis of all losses and gains in a


transmission system ( from the transmitter
through the medium to the receiver)
why link budget ?
Link budget is calculated in design of mobile
communication system for the proper call
establishment.
Quality of call establishment is based on received
signal strength. The received signal strength
depends on the path loss and the parameters of the
transmitter and receiver. Signal strength also varies
based on the environment and the intermediate
losses
OBJECTIVES

to estimate the maximum allowable path loss

to compute the required EIRP for a balanced


path

to estimate the coverage design threshold

to evaluate technology performance


Parameters
The link budget includes the following key parameters.

Transmitted power
Antenna gains (both transmitter antenna gain and
receiver antenna gain)
Antenna feeder losses
Path loss
Receiver sensitivity
ERP vs EiRP
ERP (Effective Radiated Power)
the Radiated power (transmit power times antenna
gain) with respect to a dipole antenna

EiRP (Effective isotropic Radiated Power)


the radiated power from an isotropic antenna

EiRP = ERP + 2.15 (dB)


Antenna Gain
A relative measure of an antenna's ability to direct or
concentrate radio frequency energy in a particular direction or
pattern.

describes how much power is transmitted in the direction


of peak radiation to that of an isotropic source

A transmitting antenna with a gain of 3 dB means that the


power received far from the antenna will be 3 dB higher
(twice as much) than what would be received from a
lossless isotropic antenna with the same input power.
Units for Antenna Gain
dB - decibels, ratio of power levels. 10 dB means 10 times the energy
relative to an isotropic antenna in the peak direction of radiation

dBi - "decibels relative to an isotropic antenna". This is the same as dB . 3


dBi means twice (2x) the power relative to an isotropic antenna in the peak
direction

dBd - "decibels relative to a dipole antenna.


A half-wavelength dipole antenna has a gain of 2.15 dBi. Hence, 7.85 dBd
means the peak gain is 7.85 dB higher than a dipole antenna; this is 10 dB
higher than an isotropic antenna.

gain in dBd = gain in dBi 2.15 d


Diversity Gain
Diversity gain is the increase in signal-to-interference
ratio due to some diversity scheme
A diversity scheme refers to a method for improving
the reliability of a message signal by using two or
more communication channels with different
characteristics. Diversity is mainly used in radio
communication and is a common technique for
combating fading and co-channel interference and
avoiding error bursts. It is based on the fact that
individual channels experience different levels of
fading and interference
Rx Sensitivity
Receiver sensitivity is a measure of how well the
receiver performs and is defined as the power of
the weakest signal the receiver can detect
Path Loss
The path loss is the unwanted reduction in the signal strength
during the propagation of the transmitted signal from the
transmitter to the receiver.
It may be due to many effects, such as free-space
loss, refraction, diffraction, reflection,aperture-
medium coupling loss, and absorption.
It is also influenced by terrain contours, environment (urban or
rural, vegetation and foliage), propagation medium (dry or
moist air), the distance between the transmitter and the
receiver, and the height and location of antennas
HATA model is the most widely used radio frequency
propagation model for predicting the behaviour of cellular
transmission.
Feeder loss
ALL feeders have loss

the longer the feeder the greater the loss


Body Loss
Body loss indicates the loss generated due to signal
blocking and absorption when a terminal antenna is
close to the body. This affects handsets in particular.

An Node B antenna is mounted at a height of tens of


meters, in which case body loss can be ignored as the
body loss value is 0 dB. For mobile terminals, body
loss must be considered and in this instance, the body
loss is about 3 dB.
Penetration loss
an extra signal attenuation associated to building
penetration
Fade margin

Fade Margin is an expression for how much margin - in


dB - there is between the received signal strength level
and the receiver sensitivity of the radio.
A design allowance that provides for sufficient system
gain or sensitivity to accommodate expected fading, for
the purpose of ensuring that the required quality of
service is maintained.
The amount by which a received signal level may be
reduced without causing system performance to fall
below a specified threshold value.
Link Budget Element of a GSM Network

Max. Path Loss


BTS Antenna Gain Fade Margin
(PLmax)

LNA
(optional) Penetration Loss

Feeder Loss MS Antenna Gain,


Body and Cable
ACE Diversity Loss
Loss Gain

BTS Transmit BTS Receiver Mobile Mobile Receiver


Power Sensitivity Transmit Power Sensitivity
Link Budget Equation
In order to formulate a link budget equation, it is required to look into all the
areas where gains and losses may occur between the transmitter and the
receiver.
PRX = PTX + GTX + GRX - LTX - LFS - LFM LRX

PRX= received power (dBm)


PTX= transmitter output power (dBm)
GTX = transmitter antenna gain (dBi)
GRX= receiver antenna gain (dBi)
LTX = transmitter feeder and connector losses (dB)
LFS = free space loss or path loss (dB)
LFM = many-sided signal propagation losses (dB)
LRX = receiver feeder connector losses (dB)
Link Budget calculation
Link budget calculation involves both uplink and
downlink calculation.
In uplink, the signal transmission is from MS to the
BTS. Here MS acts as a transmitter and the BTS acts
as receiver.
In downlink, the signal transmission is from the BTS
to the MS. Here BTS acts as a transmitter and the
MS acts as a receiver.
z
RF LINK BUDGET
RF LINK BUDGET UL DL
TRANSMITTING END MS BTS

Tx RF Output 33 dBm 43 dBm


Body Loss -2.0dB 0dB
Combiner Loss 0dB 0dB
Feeder Loss (@2dB/100m) 0dB 1.5dB
Connector Losses 0dB 2dB
Tx Antenna Gain 0dB 17.5dB
EIRP 31dBm (A) 57dBm ( C)

RECEIVING END BTS MS


Rx sensitivity -107 dBm -102 dBm

Rx. Antenna gain 17.5dB 0dB


Diversity Gain 3dB 0dB
Connector Loss 2dB 0dB
Feeder Loss 1.5dB 0dB
Interference Degradation Margin 3dB 3dB
Body Loss 0dB 3dB
Duplexer Loss 0dB 0dB
Rx Power -121dBm -96dBm
Fade Margin 4dB 4dB
Required Isotropic Rx .Power -117dBm (B) -92dBm ( D)

Maximum Permissible Path 148dB 149dB


Types of Coverage

Indoor Coverage : RSS -65 dBm

In-Car Coverage : RSS -75 dBm

Outdoor Coverage: RSS -85 dBm

21
Radio coverage requirements

Indoor Coverage: Signal level measured at street level shall be better than
65dBm.
In car coverage: Signal level measured at street level shall be better than
75 dBm.
Outdoor Coverage: At least 95% of the remaining coverage area. Signal
level measured at street level shall be better than 85 dBm.
The indoor coverage shall be provided in all the commercial areas, Multi-
storied housing complexes, star hotels, industrial areas, software/Hardware
technology parks, airports, railway stations etc.
The coverage shall be provided in all the residential areas, tourist spots,
roads, lanes, high ways, bypasses and rail routes.
The remaining areas shall be provided with out-door coverage.
THANK YOU

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