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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An installation comprising at least two stationary units (5) each
including a radio transmitter and a radio receiver with a relatively short
range, a plurality of portable, wireless telephone sets (4) including a
radio transmitter and a radio receiver with relatively short range for
respectively exchanging telephone messages with one of the stationary
units, the stationary units (5) each being adapted for simultaneously
exchanging telephone calls with more than one of said portable telephone
sets (4) over radio speech channels, adaptively selected amongst a
plurality of radio speech channels common to all of said radio
transmitters, (9, 31) and radio receivers (10, 32) and a radio exchange
(6), to which said stationary units are connected, adapted for switching a
telephone call with decreasing intelligibility between one of said
portable telephone sets (4B) and one of said stationary units (5) to a
telephone call with increasing intelligibility between the said one
portable telephone set and another of said stationary units (5B).
2. An installation as claimed in claim 1, wherein all of the radio
transmitters (9, 31) include means to send radio signalling on a calling
signal channel common to all of the radio transmitters.
3. An installation as claimed in claim 2, wherein all the radio
transmitters (9, 31) include means to transmit calling signals with time
shift so that adjacent transmitters will not send calling signals
simultaneously.
4. An installation as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portable, wireless
telephone sets include means to give a signal on reception of a calling
signal.
5. An installation as claimed in claim 1, wherein all the radio
transmitters (9, 31) include means to send telephone messages on a radio
speech channel selected from radio speech channels with different
frequencies.
6. An installation as claimed in claim 1 wherein all the radio transmitters
(9, 31) and the radio receivers (10, 32) include means for exchanging
digitally coded telephone messages by means of a compressor (20, 41)
included therein and coacting with each of the radio transmitters (9, 31)
for time compressing of the speech signals and an expander included
therein for (12, 42) coacting with each of the radio receivers (10, 32)
for time expanding the speech signals, all the radio transmitters
including means to send the telephone messages in at least one radio
speech channel selected for each radio transmitter in the form of a time
slot in a repeated time frame, modulated on a radio frequency common to
all the radio transmitters, the time slot being assigned to each
individual radio transmitter as needed.
7. An installation as claimed in claim 6, wherein the radio exchange (6)
includes means to generate and receive on the baseband the combined time
frames containing the digitally coded telephone messages (FIG. 5) and to
transmit and to receive respectively the messages via a line (38) to each
of the stationary units (5), and wherein the stationary units each include
a synchronizer (35), adapted for controlling switching on and off the
stationary unit transmitter (31), and in that the transmitter (31) is
adapted to modulate the radio transmission with the digitally coded
telephone messages and the radio receiver (32) to demodulate the received
radio signals.
8. An installation as claimed in claim 1, wherein the stationary units (5),
include means to transmit calling signals to the wireless telephone sets
(4) on the radio speech channels which are in use for the moment, and in
that the telephone sets include means to be locked, when in an inactive
state, to one of the radio speech channels in use, the transmission of
which is received in the telephone set with sufficient quality for
receiving calling signals on this radio speech channel.
9. An installation as claimed in claim 8, wherein each stationary unit (5)
includes means continuously to send messages on at least one radio speech
channel, each said message being either a genuine telephone message or a
fictitious message.
10. An installation as claimed in claim 9, wherein the portable telephone
sets (4) include means to switch on the receivers (10) for a short
duration during each time frame for receiving the message on one of the
channels and to receive a calling signal and to switch off the receiver
for the rest of the time. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF INVENTION
The invention relates to installations with portable, wireless telephone
sets.
BACKGROUND
Installations are known which include portable, wireless telephones and
which include one or more stationary units connected to a telephone
network, the portable telephones being in radio communication with these
stationary units. In the installation, there are one or more pairs of
portable telephone and stationary units, the rage of radio communication
being limited, for example, to an apartment or house. An installation
built in this way is well suited for use in dwellings, both in
single-family houses and in large apartment houses. Installations of this
kind are described in SE-B-8107663-0.
Adaptive channel selection is described in this publication. In each of the
units, there is selected from a radio speech channel which is idle and is
selected among a plurality of radio speech channels, common to all pairs.
It will thus be unnecessary to plan assigning of frequencies to the
wireless telephone sets.
Even earlier mobile telephone systems are known in which mobile telephones,
often in automobiles, can be put into radio communication with one of a
plurality of fixed radio stations. Such type of fixed station transmits on
a plurality of assigned radio frequencies, adjacent fixed stations being
assigned other frequencies so that disturbance or noise is avoided. Should
a corresponding principle for frequency assigning be used for the
portable, wireless telephones as intended in the present invention, the
administration of the frequency assignment would be extremely cumbersome
and the frequency economy poor.
In a large office block, the concentration of portable telephones tends to
be severe, and there may be the demand that a user of a portable telephone
must carry the telephone with him within the entire office block. The
relation between portable telephone and stationary unit will be looser
than in the case described earlier. A given stationary unit can not
service a portable telephone everywhere in the large block since the
transmitting power of both telephone set and stationary unit must be kept
down in consideration of noise.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
According to the invention, there is arranged in an installation (e.g. in
an office block) at least one stationary unit, preferably several, with a
radio transmitter and a radio receiver, and at least one, and preferably
several, portable, wireless telephone sets with a radio transmitter and a
radio receiver for exchanging telephone communications with one of the
stationay units in the installation. Normally, the number of portable sets
is greater than the number of stationary units. The stationary units are
connected via a radio exchange to an office PABX telephone exchange, and
via this to a telephone network.
The radio transmitters in the stationary units and in the portable
telephone sets have a very short range, e.g., 20-50 m. It is thus possible
to reuse radio speech channels at different places in an installation.
Each radio transmitter has access to all radio speech channels. When the
connection of a radio speech is made, there is selected by automatic
adaptive channel selection a channel which is unoccupied for the moment,
i.e. a channel which is not subject to noise at the location of the
telephone set or the stationary unit. Planning channel distribution to the
portable telephone sets will thus be necessary.
It may be expected that a portable telephone will be carried throughout the
entire office block. If one of these sets is moved while it is being used
for a speech, so that the distance between it and the stationary unit it
was first in communication with increases, the intelligibility of the call
decreases since all radio transmitters and radio receivers only have a
short range. Instead, the portable telephone approaches another stationary
unit which can provide a better connection. The radio exchange is adapted
to monitor the quality of the connections and to switch over the call as
required from a stationary unit to another which can give a better
connection. This process is known as call hand-over.
All the radio transmitters, both those in the stationary units and those in
the portable telephone sets, are adapted to transmit radio signals on a
ringing signalling channel common to all the radio transmitters in the
installation. To insure reception of the calling signals without
interference, they are sent with time lag so that adjacent transmitters
will not send calling signals simultaneously.
All the radio transmitters are adapted to send the telephone messages on a
radio speech channel assigned to each particular radio transmitter as
necessary, this channel having been arranged by frequency division (FDMA)
or by time division (TDMA). In the latter case, the channel is a time slot
among several in a repeated time frame. The time frame contains a
plurality of time slots, each of which may be used as a speech channel for
transmitting a telephone call; and several telephone calls can thus be in
progress at the same time. A time-compresed part of a call is sent in each
time slot and, on reception, the part is expanded to normal time
extension. Time compression and expansion of telephone calls are known per
se, e.g. from the description in SE-A-8204187-2.
In the case where the installation is arranged with time division (TDMA),
all the radio transmitters are adapted to send the time frames modulated
on a radio frequency common to all the radio transmitters. The radio
channel thus used is therefore wideband. By using only one radio
frequency, there is achieved a simplification in the frequency setting of
the transmitters and receivers and a more complicated frequency synthesis
is avoided.
The transmission of time frames from the radio transmitters of the
stationary units is synchronized by signals from the radio exchange, and
the transmission of the time frames from the radio transmitters of the
portable telephone sets is synchronized to the transmission of the
stationary unit radio transmitters with the aid of signals included in the
transmission of these transmitters. All the transmission of time frames in
the entire installation is thus synchronized, which is detected in the
telephone receiver.
Time compression of a telephone call and expanding it is done to advantage
with digital signals. According to one development of the invention, the
radio transmitters and radio receivers are adapted for exchanging
digitally coded telephone messages.
Ringing signals from the stationary units to the portable telephone sets
are sent over the radio transmitters in all stationary units in an
installation. A telephone call can thus reach its receiver anywhere in the
installation. The calling signal process also leads to enabling the
installation to be used for personal paging.
In one development of the invention, portable wireless apparatus of a
second kind may be included in the installation, and adapted solely to
give a signal with a sound generator or the like on receiving a calling
signal.
The radio receivers in the portable telephone sets are adapted to save
current by repeatedly and for short duration connecting the receivers for
receiving calling signals which are repeatedly and for short duration sent
from the stationary units, the connection time of the sets being somewhat
longer than the time for a signalling call.
In accordance with the invention, a system is composed of several
intallations, each installation containing what has been described above
with reference to time division. The installations can be associated with
different offices for different firms. In order that interference in the
boundary zone between adjacent installations may be avoided, the
transmission of time frames in all the installations must be performed
synchronously. For this purpose, a central transmitter is arranged to send
a second synchronizing signal to all installations, and the radio
exchanges of all installations are adapted to receive this second
synchronizing signal for synchronizing the time frames of all the
installations. Each radio exchange is provided with a radio receiver for
receiving the second synchronizing signal sent by radio, in alternative
systems the second synchronizing signal is sent on a line.
By sending the second synchronizing signal to the radio exchanges and
sending the previously mentioned synchronizing signal from the radio
exchanges to the portable telephone sets, there is achieved that all
transmission of time frames in the whole system takes place synchronously
so that disturbances may be avoided.
It has been previously described that the calling signals in an
installation are sent with time lag to insure interference-free reception
of them. However, it is not possible simply to avoid each collision on the
common radio signalling channel in a boundary zone between installations
laying close to each other. The collision risk is, however, very low and
may be estimated as less than 1%. For one percent of all calling signals,
an acknowledgement thereof is thus not obtained immediately, and the
signal must be repeated, which is quite acceptable. During a rush-hour
period, calling signals are sent out in the system approximately three
times. The calling signal channel has a capacity of 30 signals per second.
If, for example, there are as many as 1000 portable telephones in
installations adjacent local installation, the radio signalling channel is
occupied during about 3% of the time. This degree of occupation is only
troublesome in the boundary areas where the transmitters of neighbouring
installations give stronger field strength than the local transmitters,
and this applies in at most 10% of the covering area of the local
intallation. The risk of a calling signal having to be repeated is
estimated at less than 0.3%.
In a further development of the installation in accordance with the
invention, the stationary units are adapted to transmit calling signals to
the wireless telephone sets on the radio speech channels which are in used
for the moment, instead of on the common radio signalling channel, and the
telephone sets are adapted to be locked in the inactive state to one of
the radio speech channels in use for receiving calling signals on this
speech channel. For this reason, the stationary units are adapted
continuously to send messages on at least one radio speech channel and, if
there is no telephone message to send, thay send a fictitious message.
The radio frequency for transmitting the time frames, as well as the radio
signalling channel is to advantage common for all installations in the
entire system. Furthermore, the set of radio speech channels is common to
all installations in the entire system.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
An example of an installation and a system of installations in accordance
with the invention is next described as an example with reference to the
accompanying drawings wherein:
FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C are block diagrams of respective installations
according to the invention;
FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of a wireless telephone set;
FIG. 3 illustrates a chart of a time frame with time slots;
FIG. 4 illustrates a block diagram of a stationary unit;
FIG. 5 illustrates a block diagram of a radio exchange; and
FIG. 6 illustrates a chart of the content of a time slot.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In an example of a system of installations in accordance with the invention
as illustrated in FIGS. 1A, 1B and 1C, there may be included different
numbers of installations with portable radio sets and stationary units.
However, the number of installations is greater than one. In the described
example, there are three installations 1, 2, and 3, as shown respectively
in FIGS. 1A, 1B and 1C. The number of portable telephone sets and
stationary units in each installation may be selected with great freedom
of choice.
What is illustrated in FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C as an installation accommodated
in a house is intended to be useful as an office for a firm, even though
the firm is divided into several office and factory buildings in an area.
What is described in the following concerning the installation 1 in FIG.
1A is applicable to all other installations in the system.
In installation 1 in FIG. 1A in accordance with the invention, there are
included in the illustrated example four portable, wireless telephone sets
4A, 4B, 4C, 4D. The telephone sets may be put into radio communication
with either of two stationary units 5A, 5B. The stationary units are
connected by a line to a radio exchange 6 and this is connected to the
installation PABX subscribers' exchange 7, which is connected by a
telephone line 8 to a public telephone network. In one embodiment, calls
between portable telephones are passed on by the radio exchange 6 without
the intermediary of the PABX 7.
The portable telephone sets 4 and the stationary units 5 are each provided
(see FIG. 2) with a radio transmitter 9 and a radio receiver 10 for
transmitting telephone calls in two directions, in duplex, between
themselves. The radio transmitters and receivers have a short range for
avoiding disturbance on similar peripheral installations, and it is
assumed that the installation 1 in the example has an extension so great
in relation to the range of the transmitters that one stationary unit is
not sufficient for servicing the installation, it being assumed that two
stationary units 5A and 5B are needed for this example.
The number of portable telephone sets 4 in an installation is greater than
the number of statonary units 5. The stationary units are adapted
simultaneously to exchange telephone calls with more than one portable
telephone set.
Each of the telephone sets 4 included in the installation, FIG. 2, is
portable and is implemented such that the handling of it functions as a
normal telephone set, even if it differs from the latter in its
appearance. In the telephone set 4 there is included a microtelephone 11,
a receiver contact 12 and a number selector 13. Further included are the
radio transmitter 9, the radio receiver 10, and an antenna adapter 14 and
an antenna 15. Also part of the set 4 are a channel selector 16, logical
circuits for signalling 17 and for monitoring 18 and a current supply part
19 with batteries. In the described respects the wireless telephone sets
are comparable with the wireless telephone set described in the patent
application mentioned in the introduction.
Further included in the wireless telephone set there is a compressor 20 for
time-compressing speech signals before they are sent by the radio
transmitter, and an expander 21 for time-expanding time-compressed speech
signals received by the radio receiver before these are related by the
micro telephone 11. The speech signals from the micro telephone are
converted to digital form before they are compressed in the compressor 20
and received speech signals compressed in digital form are converted after
the expansion in the expander 21 to analogue signals. The radio
transmitter 9 and radio receiver 10 are adapted to transmit and receive
digitally coded radio signals.
The speech signals are sent from the wireless telephone set (i.e., the set
4A in FIG. 1A), to the stationary unit 5A in time compressed form with
time division TDMA (i.e., in a time slot in a repeated time frame) and, in
a corresponding manner, compressed speech singals are sent from the
stationary unit 5A to the telephone set 4A in another time slot in the
same time frame. All time signals are sent in a corresponding way between
the stationary unit 5A and the telephone set 4B, between the stationary
unit 5B and the telephone set 4C and between the stationary unit 5B and
the telephone set 4D, all calls being in separated time slots in a single
time frame which is common for the entire installation.
All the radio transmitters have a short range, 20-50 m, and it is therefore
practically possible for double use of a time slot in the radio
transmitters situated at a distance from each other.
Fitting the call signals in a suitable time slot in the time frame is
controlled by a time divider 22 arranged in the telephone set, and it has
its time division controlled by a synchronizer 23, which in turn is
adapted to receive synchronizing signals from the radio receiver 10. The
synchronizing signals are sent by radio from the stationary unit 5 and are
originally generated in the radio exchange 5, as will be described
hereinafter.
The repeated time frame has a length which is not longer than the delay it
causes of the speech, and, as will be seen from FIG. 3, it has an
extention T of about 30 ms. The time frame accommodates time slots (e.g.,
10 time slots for sending from the stationary unit and 10 time slots for
sending from the portable telephone) as well as time slots A for sending
calling signals from both stationary units and portable telephones. For 32
kbits/sec real time for digital speech signals, there is required a total
of about 750 kbits/sec transmission rate.
In each of the stationary units 5, as shown in FIG. 4, there are included a
radio transmitter 31 and a radio receiver 32, an antenna adapter 33 and an
antenna 34. Furthermore, there is included a synchronizer 35 which is
adapted to control the connection times of the transmitter 31 in response
to a signal from the radio exchange 6, as well as a current supply part
37. The stationary unit is connected to the radio exchange 6 by a line 38,
on which the time frames with the digital information, as shown in FIG. 3,
are sent on the base band.
The radio transmitter 31 and radio receiver 32 are adapted to modulate and
transmit or receive and demodulate digitally coded signals. Conversion
from digital to analog speech signals and vice versa take place in the
radio exchange which is described hereinafter. In other embodiments of the
invention, all the radio transmitters 9, 31 and radio receivers 10, 32 are
adapted to send and receive radio signals in analog form.
The radio exchange 6, as shown in FIG. 5, includes, for each branch of the
line 8 (there are three here) from the PABX 7, a compressor 41 for time
compression of the speech signals which are going to be sent, an expander
42 for expanding received time compressed speech signals. For each of the
connected stationary units 5 (there are two here) there is a time divisor
43 for directing transmission and reception of speech signals in the
correct assigned time slots in the time frames. There is further included
a control logic with channel selector 46, adapted to process the signals
relating to connection, disconnection and engagement which are normally
exchanged between a telephone exchange and a telephone set connected
thereto, in this case between the PABX 7 and the portable telephone sets
4.
A synchronizer 44 in the radio exchange is adapted to control the
transmission of the time frames so that their transmission is simultaneous
in the entire installation. The signals are exchanged between the radio
exchange 6 and the stationary units 5 via the line 38 B.
A calling signal from the stationary unit 5 to one of the portable
telephone sets 4 is sent from all the radio transmitters in the stationary
units. Accompanying the calling signal, there is an indication of which
stationary unit is sending the calling signal in order to clarify to which
stationary unit the portable apparatus should be connected. In areas where
calling signals from two separate stationary units can be recognized, the
interference could disturb the reception of the calling signal in the
portable telephone set. In order to avoid this interference the calling
signals of the separate stationary units are sent in separate successive
time frames. The time frames have such a short extent in time that the
delay for the calling signals will be insignificant.
If one of the portable telephone sets (i.e., 4B which is used for a
telephone call via the stationary unit 5A) is moved so that the distance
is increased between them, the intelligibility of the speech is decreased
due to the radio transmitters and radio receivers in this station only
having a short range. It is assumed that the portable telephone set 4B
approaches the stationary unit 5B instead so that radio communication
between these two would be acceptable. The radio exchange 6 is adapted,
inter alia with a register 45 for audibility to enable it to monitor
connection quality and in the described case to switch over the call with
the portable telephone set 4B from the stationary unit 5A to the
stationary unit 5B. This function is called "call hand-over", and an
example thereof is described in British patent application GB No.
1,440,620, thus making any exhaustive description here superfluous.
The radio receivers 10 in the portable telephone sets 4 are adapted for
saving current by repeatedly and for short duration switching on the
receivers for receiving calling signals, repeatedly and for short duration
transmitted from the statonary units 5. Such current saving is known,
i.e., in its described patent application SE-C-No. 7,115,641-8, any
further description therefore being superfluous.
In an alternative novel installation, the stationary units 5 are adapted
for sending calling signals to the wireless telephone sets 4 on the radio
speech channels. A time slot in the installation in the example contains,
as will be seen from FIG. 6 a preamble of 32 bits with the help of which
the receiver 10 of the telephone set will be synchronized to the
transmission, an identity section (ID) of 16 bits with information as to
the stationary unit identity, and a message section (DATA) of 1024 bit.
All of this adds up to 1072 bits.
The radio transmitter 31 (see FIG. 4) in each stationary unit 5 is set to
send on at least one radio speech channel, i.e. in at least one time slot
in the time frame. When there is a calling signal to be sent, it is
inserted in the time slot in place of one of the other items of
information. The described transmission leads to the receiver of the
receiving telephone set being synchronized with the time slot so that,
when a calling signal is sent, it will be received immediately.
If there is no telephone message to be sent, a fictitious message is sent
instead, so constructed that it can keep the receiver in synchronization
but is not confused with a true message. The synchronization is also
utilized for current saving in the portable telephone set 4 so that its
receiver 10 is adapted to be switched on only during the reception of the
intended time slot, but is otherwise inactive.
Where several installations of the kind described are situated to close
that they can disturb each other, they are coordinated in accordance with
the present invention in a system of installations as illustrated in FIG.
1. For avoiding disturbance between the installations the repeated time
frames of the separate installations are sent simultaneously, the
requirement of simultaneousness, however, is only moderately severe. For
this purpose, a transmitter (not shown), is arranged, i.e. in a central
location, for transmitting a second synchronizing signal to be received by
a synchronizing receiver 48 (FIG. 5) in each of the radio exchanges 6 via
a connection 49 for synchronizing their time frames. In the example, the
connection 49 is a radio transmission. In alternative systems, the
connection is a wire.
All the radio transmitters in all the portable telephone sets 4 and in all
the stationary units 5 in all installations in the entire system are
adapted to send with the same frequency.
In a development, mobile telephones of a known kind may be used as portable
telephones after they have been placed in a office provided with the
installation described herein. For this, it is required that the mobile
telephone, apart from transmitting and receiving at the frequencies at
which the mobile telephones normally operate is also adapted for
transmitting and receiving at the special frequency which is assigned to
installations of the kind described herein, this special frequency being
the same for all these installations.
Simplified installations with ony one stationary unit, connected directly
to the subscriber line, may be used in dwellings. The same portable
telephone set may be used in a dwelling as in the office should the
telephone have two calling signal addresses.
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Description  |
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