Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

An On Filed Measurement Example

An On Field Measurement Example: In other words, of the 300 subcarriers, 100 transmit periodic reference signals.

An Lte Downlink is divided into Subcarriers.  A 5 Mhz Bandwidth Downlink, contains 300 subcarriers.  Those subcarriers, one in three carry LTE reference signals.

The LTE downlink graph comes from a Sprint site in the Kansas City area in late April, well before Sprint stopped blocking devices from live LTE sites.  So, the sector depicted here exhibits no data traffic; it is transmitting only the periodic reference signals on 100 subcarriers, which you can clearly count in the graph.

Field Measurement

Now, Rssi is the more traditional metric that has long been used to display signal strength for GSM, CDMA1X, etc., and it integrates all of the RF power within the channel passband.  

 In other words, for LTE, RSSI measurement bandwidth is all active subcarriers. As before RSSI = wideband power = noise + serving cell power + interference power

If we take the above RF sweep of a Sprint 5 MHz Bandwidth downlink, RSSI measures the RF power effectively of what is highlighted in yellow:

Field Measurement

RSRP is an LTE specific metric that averages the RF power in all of the reference signals in the pass-band.  Remember those aforementioned and depicted 100 sub-carriers that contain reference signals?
To calculate RSRP, the power in each one of those sub-carriers is averaged.

As such, RSRP measurement bandwidth is the equivalent of only a single subcarrier.  And using the graph once more, RSRP measures the RF power effectively of what is highlighted in red:

Field Measurement

Since the logarithmic ratio of 100 sub-carriers to one sub-carrier is 20 dB (e.g. 10 × log 100 = 20), RSSI tends to measure about 20 dB higher than does RSRP. 

RSRP measures about 20 dB lower than what we are accustomed to observing for a given signal level

Thus, that superficially weak -102 dBm RSRP signal level that we saw previously would actually be roughly -82 dBm if it were converted to RSSI.

To conclude, here are a few takeaways about RSSI and RSRP as signal strength measurement techniques for LTE:

  • RSSI varies with LTE downlink bandwidth.  For example, even if all other factors were equal, VZW 10 MHz LTE bandwidth RSSI would measure 3 dB greater than would Sprint 5 MHz LTE bandwidth RSSI.  But that does not actually translate to stronger signal to the end user
  • RSSI varies with LTE subcarrier activity — the greater the data transfer activity, the higher the RSSI.  But, again, that does not actually translate to stronger signal to the end user
  • RSRP does a better job of measuring signal power from a specific sector while potentially excluding noise and interference from other sectors
  • RSRP levels for usable signal typically range from about -75 dBm close in to an LTE cell site to -120 dBm at the edge of LTE coverage


* Sources: 3GPP, author’s graphs

L'articolo An On Filed Measurement Example sembra essere il primo su laroccasolutions.



This post first appeared on Tech LTE Blog Laroccasolutions, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

An On Filed Measurement Example

×

Subscribe to Tech Lte Blog Laroccasolutions

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×