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Subscriber RF telephone system for providing multiple speech and/or data signals simultaneously over either a single or a plurality of RF channels    
United States Patent4817089   
Link to this pagehttp://www.wikipatents.com/4817089.html
Inventor(s)Paneth; Eric (Givataijm, IL); Handzel; Mark J. (San Diego, CA); Morley; Steven A. (San Diego, CA); Avis; Graham M. (San Diego, CA)
AbstractA system for the wireless transmission of multiple information signals utilizing digital time division circuits between a base station and a plurality of subscriber stations. The subscriber stations may be fixed or movable. The number of time division circuits is determined by the transmission quality of the signals. The base station is interconnected with an external information network, which may be analog and/or digital. The information signals are selected from the group consisting of voice, data, facsimile, video, computer and instrumentation signals. The modulation level of the signals and the power applied to the system are adjusted in accordance with signal error detection in the system. The system is provided with spatial diversity by using a plurality of antennas selectively spaced from each other to provide relatively high signal reception despite signal fading. The base station operates over a plurality of RF channel pairs. Each channel pair operation is implemented by the combination of a transmit channel circuit for processing a given plural number of information signals received simultaneously over telephone company trunk lines for simultaneous transmission to different subscriber stations over a given RF channel, and a receive channel circuit for processing a plurality of signals received simultaneously over a given RF channel from different subscriber stations to provide information signals for transmissions over the trunk lines.
   














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Drawing from US Patent 4817089
Subscriber RF telephone system for providing multiple speech and/or data

     signals simultaneously over either a single or a plurality of RF

     channels - US Patent 4817089 Drawing
Subscriber RF telephone system for providing multiple speech and/or data signals simultaneously over either a single or a plurality of RF channels
Inventor     Paneth; Eric (Givataijm, IL); Handzel; Mark J. (San Diego, CA); Morley; Steven A. (San Diego, CA); Avis; Graham M. (San Diego, CA)
Owner/Assignee     International Mobile Machines Corporation (Philadelphia, PA)
Patent assignment
All assignments
Publication Date     March 28, 1989
Application Number     07/031,045
PAIR File History     Application Data   Transaction History
Image File Wrapper   Patent Term   Fees
Litigation
Filing Date     March 27, 1987
US Classification     370/280 370/344 370/347 370/521
Int'l Classification     H04J 003/16
Examiner     Olms; Douglas W.
Assistant Examiner    
Attorney/Law Firm     Jacobs; Arthur A.
Address
Parent Case     This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 713, 925 filed Mar. 20, 1985, now abandoned.
Priority Data    
USPTO Field of Search     370/95 370/104 370/109 375/54 375/53
Patent Tags     subscriber rf telephone providing multiple speech data signals simultaneously over either single plurality rf channels
   
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Levy
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Gray
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Karlstrom
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Nov,1983

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Sep,1977

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We claim:

1. A digital wireless system comprising a base station in communication with telephone lines and a plurality of subscriber stations for the simultaneous transmission of information signals over radio frequency (RF) channels between the base station and each of said plurality of subscriber stations, comprising

conversion means at said base station for respective connection to said telephone lines for converting the analog information signals received from said telephone lines into digital signal samples and for converting digital signals received from said subscriber stations into analog signals for transmission to said telephone lines;

signal compression means connected to said conversion means for simultaneously compressing separate digital signal samples derived from said conversion means to provide separate compressed signals;

channel control means connected to said signal compression means for sequentially combining the compressed signals into a single transmit bit stream, with each of the respective compressed signals occupying a repetitive sequential position in the transmit bit stream;

transmitter and receiver means both at said base stations and at said subscriber for providing direct communication between said base stations and said subscriber stations over the said radio frequency (RF) channels; and

each subscriber station operating in a half-duplex mode within a time division multiple access frame wherein it transmits in one portion of said frame and receives in another portion of said frame.

2. The system of claim 1 wherein said base station operates full duplex channels and accommodates a plurality of simultaneous signals on each channel, each of said channels comprising separate receive and transmit frequencies, one of said frequencies being assigned to the base station for transmission to said subscriber stations and for reception from said subscriber stations when not transmitting, and the other of said frequencies being assigned to the subscriber stations for transmission to said base station and for reception from said base station when not transmitting.

3. The system of claim 1 wherein said compression means provides voice digitization with a coding rate of 14.6 Kbps and is combined with 16-level DPSK modulation to provide four simultaneous full-duplex conversations on a single pair of 20 Khz channels.

4. The system of claim 1 wherein each subscriber station includes a three branch diversity network comprising three modems and a diversity combiner circuit which gathers demodulated receive information from the demods of each of the three modems and combines the three streams to form a single symbol stream which is then passed to said channel control means.

5. The system of claim 1, wherein said information signals are selected from the group consisting of voice, data, facsimile, video, computer and instrumentation signals.

6. The system of claim 1, wherein said system is provided with spatial diversity, said spatial diversity comprising a plurality of antennas selectively spaced from each other to provide relatively high signal reception despite signal fading.

7. The system of claim 1 wherein at the subscriber stations there is a simulated simultaneous two-way transmission of multiple signals on a single pair of channels.

8. The system of claim 1 wherein means are provided for modulating said information signals by phase shift keying prior to transmission thereof.

9. The system of claim 8 wherein the modulation is multiphase phase shift keying.

10. The system of claim 8 wherein the modulation is applied on 25 KHz spaced full duplex channels in the 454 to 460 MHz band.

11. The system of claim 8 wherein the modulation is four level QPSK.

12. The system of claim 1 wherein the compression is effected by a residual excited linear predictive codec.

13. The system of claim 1 wherein the compression is effected by a subband coding codec.

14. The system of claim 1 wherein the modulation is multiphase phase shift keying and wherein the compressed information signals are voice transmissions at a coding rate of 14.6 Kbps.

15. The system of claim 1 including means for transmitting synchronizing information from said base station to said subscribed stations to align the signals arriving at the base station from said subscriber stations to accommodate variations in distances between the individual subscriber stations and the base station.
 Description Submit all comments and votes
 


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally pertains to communications systems and is particularly directed to a subscriber telephone system for providing multiple information signals simultaneously over one or more radio frequency (RF)channels.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a system for the wireless transmission of multiple information signals utilizing digital time division circuits between a base station and a plurality of subscriber stations. The subscriber stations may be fixed or movable. The number of time division circuits is determined by the transmission quality of the signals. The base station is interconnected with an external information network, which may be analog and/or digital. The information signals are selected from the group consisting of voice, data, facsimile, video, computer and instrumentation signals.

The movable subscriber stations may be selectively relatively fast and relatively slow moving.

The modulation level of the the signals and the power applied to the system are adjusted in accordance with signal error detection in the system.

The system is provided with spatial diversity by using a plurality of antennas selectively spaced from each other to provide relatively high signal reception despite signal fading.

The base station operates over a plurality of RF channel pairs. Each channel pair operation is implemented by the combination of a transmit channel circuit for processing a given plural number of information signals received simultaneously over telephone company trunk lines for simultaneous transmission to different subscriber stations over a given radio frequency (RF) channel, and a receive channel circuit for processing a plurality of signals received simultaneously over a given RF channel from different subscriber stations to provide information signals for transmission over the trunk lines.

Separate conversion devices are respectively connected to each of the trunk lines for converting the information signals received over the trunk lines into digital signal samples.

The transmit channel circuit includes a given plural number of separate signal compression devices for simultaneously compressing the digital signal samples respectively derived from separate ones of the conversion devices to provide the given number of separate compressed signals; a channel control unit connected to the compression devices for sequentially combining the compressed signals into a single transmit channel bit stream, with each of the respective compressed signals occupying a repetitive sequential slot position in the transmit channel bit stream associated with a predetermined one of the separate compression devices and a unit for providing a transmit channel signal for transmission over the predetermined RF channel in response to the transmit channel bit stream.

An exchange couples the respective separate conversion devices to indicated ones of the separate compression devices.

A remote-connection processor unit is coupled to the trunk lines and responds to an incoming call request signal received over one of the trunk lines by providing a slot assignment signal indicating which one of the separate compression devices the exchange is to connect to the one of the separate conversion devices connected to the one trunk line, and thereby assigns to the one trunk line the slot in the transmit channel bit stream associated with the one of the separate compression devices that is so connected by the exchange. The remote-connection processor maintains a memory of which slots are so assigned and consults such memory upon receipt of an incoming call request and then provides the slot assignment signal that effects the connection to a compression device associated with one of the slots that is not assigned to another trunk line.

A call processor is connected to the remote-connection processor and responds to the slot assignment signal by causing the exchange to complete the connection indicated by the slot assignment signal.

The receive channel circuit includes a receiver unit for receiving a receive channel signal and for processing the receive channel signal to provide a receive channel bit stream containing separate compressed signals in different respective repetitive sequential slot positions; a given plural number of separate signal synthesis devices each associated with a different slot position in the receive channel bit stream for reconstructing digital signal samples from separate compressed signals contained in the associated respective slot positions of the receive channel bit stream; and a control control unit for segregating the separate compressed signals from the receive channel bit stream and distributing the segregated signals to the separate synthesis devices associated with the respective time slots from which the signals are segregated.

Separate reconversion devices are respectively connected to each of the trunk lines for reconverting digital signal samples to information signals for transmission over the respective trunk lines. Each of the separate reconversion means is associated with one of the separate conversion means and is connected to a common one of the trunk lines with the associated separate conversion means.

The exchange couples the respective separate reconversion devices to indicated ones of the separate synthesis devices.

The remote-connection processor responds to the incoming call request signal received over the one trunk line by providing a slot assignment signal for indicating which one of the separate synthesis devices the exchange is to connect to the one of the separate reconversion devices connected to the one trunk line and thereby assigns to the one trunk line the slot in the receive channel bit stream associated with the one of the separate synthesis devices that is so connected by the exchange means. The remote-connection processor maintains a memory of which slots in the receive channel bit stream are so assigned and consults such memory upon receipt of the incoming call request and then provides to the call processor the slot assignment signal for effecting the connection to a synthesis device associated with one of the slots that is not assigned to another trunk line.

The system of the present invention makes use of advanced digital and large-scale-integration electronics techniques to bring low-cost, reliable, high-quality communications to various market segments. One preferred embodiment uses a fixed base station installation centrally located to communicate with a large number of subscriber stations placed in the nearby geographic area. The central base station may be connected to a central office of a public switched telephone company (Telco) network through a private branch exchange switch (PBX) connected to incoming telephone trunks. The subscriber stations in the system may be either fixed-base portable or mobile in nature, and may be operational in either relatively slow or fast motion. The subscriber stations communicate with the base station via UHF radio channels and with the user via standard two-wire DTMF touchtone telephone equipment or via RS-232C or via non-standard phone stations (e.g., 4-wire). The system may be used to replace existing hard-wired local subscriber loops or to provide quality telephone service to areas where wired connections are not feasible or economical.

One feature of the system of the present invention is the ability to use time division multiple access (TDMA) and digital speech encoding to allow simultaneous multiple use of frequencies within a given network. Any feasible number of high-quality voice circuits may be operating on a given frequency channel (with 25 KHz channel spacing) at a time. Four such circuits are used for illustrative purposes. This provides both a spectral and an economic advantage over existing analog radio-phone systems which can provide for only one conversation at a time on a given frequency channel.

Features which bring about the lower-cost fixed, mobile and portable service are the use of low-rate digital voice coding (less than 16 Kbps) combined with spectral-efficient digital modulation techniques. For example, the combined use of a 14.6 Kbps voice coding technique and 16-level DPSK modulation allows four simultaneous full-duplex conversations to be supported on a single pair of 20 Hz Bw channels that are spaced 25 KHz apart in the entire spectrum, and particularly in the 400-500 MHz and 800-950 MHz segments. This combination provides good quality speech over a distance of at least 20 Km.

To be competitive with wireline service, a much larger population of subscribers must be accommodated than can be supported simultaneously on a given pair of 25 KHz channels. For example, a 12-channel-pair system which supported 47 simultaneous calls might have a total off-hook plus on-hook population of 500 subscribers (with the maximum constrained by the desired peak-hour blocking probability). Thus, a subscriber call-request control scheme which provides reasonable call-connection delays is also an important feature of the present invention.

Additional features of the present invention are described in relation to the description of the preferred embodiments.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is block diagram generally showing the RF subscriber telephone system of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a representative preferred embodiment of the base station in the system of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of a subscriber station in the system of FIG. 1.

FIG. 4 illustrates the sequence of messages generated by the subscriber stations and the base station to establish a connection between two subscriber stations.

FIG. 5 illustrates various data processing modules implemented in the remote-control processor unit (RPU) in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 6 illustrates the processing of incoming and outgoing BCC messages by the RPU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 7 illustrates the processing of incoming and outgoing PBX messages by the RPU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 8 illustrates the processing of logger messages by the RPU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 9 illustrates a memory map of the RPU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 10 illustrates the processing of messages relating to the RCC state by the message processing module (MPM) shown in FIG. 5.

FIG. 11 illustrates the processing of messages relating to the channel state by the message processing MPM shown in FIG. 5.

FIG. 12 is a block diagram of the subscriber terminal interface unit (STU) in the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 13 shows the signal interface between the PBX and the VCU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 14 (on sheet 1) shows the signal interface between the STU and the VCU in the subscriber station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 15 shows the timing relationships for the PBX-VCU interface signals shown in FIG. 13 and for the STU-VCU interface signals shown in FIG. 14.

FIG. 16 (on sheet 11) shows the signal interface between the VCU and the CCU in both the base station of FIG. 2 and the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 17 shows the timing relationship for the transmit channel signals of the VCU-CCU signal interface shown in FIG. 16.

FIG. 18 shows the timing relationship for the receive channel signals of the VCU-CCU signal interface shown in FIG. 16.

FIGS. 19A and 19B respectively show the timing relationships for the transmit and receive speech blocks that are transferred between the VCU and CCU for 16-level PSK modulation.

FIG. 20A shows the input and output data timing and content for the receive channel between the VCU and the PBX (or STU) for 16-level PSK modulation.

FIG. 20B shows the input and output data timing and content for the transmit channel between the VCU and the PBX (or STU) for 16-level PSK modulation.

FIG. 21 (on Sheet 5) is a block diagram of the CCU of both the base station of FIG. 2 and the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 22 shows the software-implemented functional architecture of the CCU of FIG. 21.

FIG. 23 is a timing diagram for transferring RCC and 16-level PSK voice data on the transmit bus of the CCU of FIG. 22.

FIG. 24 is a timing diagram for transferring RCC and 16-level PSK voice data on the receive bus of the CCU of FIG. 23.

FIG. 25 (on sheet 3) is a block diagram of the modem of the base station of FIG. 2 and the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 26 shows the signal interface between the CCU, the modem and the STIMU in the base station of FIG. 2.

FIG. 27 shows the signal interface between the modem and the RFU in the base station of FIG. 2 and in the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 2 a block diagram of the antenna interface circuit for the subscriber station of FIG. 3.

FIG. 29 is a block diagram of the antenna interface circuit for the base station of FIG. 2.

______________________________________ GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS Glossary of acronyms used in the Specification ACRONYM DEFINITION ______________________________________ A/D Analog-to-Digital Converter ADPCM Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation AGC Automatic Gain Control AM Amplitude Modulation BCC Baseband Control Channel BPSK Binary Phase Shift Keying Modulation BW Bandwidth CCU Channel Control Unit CODEC Combined Coder and Decoder DEMOD Demodulator (Receive Portion of Modem) D/A Digital-to-Analog Converter dB Decibels DID Direct Inward Dial DMA Direct Memory Access DPSK Differential Phase Shift Keying Modulation DTMF Dual Tone Multi-Frequency signalling scheme ECL Emitter-coupled Logic FCC United States Federal Communications Commission FIFO First-in First-out Memory FIR Finite-Duration Impulse-Response filter Hz Hertz (cycles per second) I In-phase IF Intermediate Frequency Kbps Kilobits per second KHz KiloHertz Km Kilometer LSB Least Significant Bit MDPSK Multi-phase Differential Phase Shift Keying modulation MHz MegaHertz MODEM Combined Modulator and Demodulator MPM Message Processing Module ms milliseconds OCXO Oven Controlled Crystal Oscillator PBX Private Branch Exchange or Automatic Switch PCM Pulsed Coded Modulation PSN Public Switched Network PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network or other interconnecting carrier (typically Telco) Q Quadrature QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying Modulation RBTG Ringback Tone Generator RAM Random Access Memory RCC Radio Control Channel RELP Residual Excited Linear Prediction RF Radio Frequency RFU Radio Frequency Unit RPU Remote-Connection Processor Unit ROM Read-only Memory RX Receive SBC Subband Coding SHF Super High Frequency (3,000-30,000 MHz) SIN Subscriber Identification Number SLIC Subscriber Loop Interface Circuit STIMU System Timing Unit STU Subscriber Station Telephone Interface Unit SUBTU Subscriber Timing Unit TDM Time Division Multiplexing TDMA Time Division Multiple Access Telco Telephone Company TX Transmit UHF Ultra-High Frequency UTX-250 Switch that includes processing and interfacing and which may be but is not necessarily a PBX UW Unique Word VCU Voice Codec Unit VCXO Voltage Controller Crystal Oscillator VHF Very High Frequencies (30-350 MHz) ______________________________________

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

In this description, it is to be noted that where a particular band (e.g., 454 to 460 MHz) is used in the described embodiment, the invention is equally applicable to at least the entire VHF, UHF and SHF bands.

Referring to FIG. 1 the system of the present invention provides local-loop telephone service using UHF radio between subscriber stations (S) 10 and a base station 11. The base station 11 provides call connections directly between the radio-based subscriber stations 10 and is connected to a telephone company (Telco) central office 12 for calls to or from points outside the system.

For example, the illustrated system operates on common carrier frequency channel pairs within the 454 MHz to 460 MHz band. This particular set of frequencies contains 26 specified channels. The channels are spaced 25 KHz apart with an authorized bandwidth of 20 KHz. Spacing between transmit and receive channels is 5 MHz with the center frequency of the lower of the two frequencies being assigned to the base station transmissions. As indicated previously, the system may also operate on other UHF channel pairs.

The mode of transmission from the base station to the subscriber station (the transmit channel) is time division multiplexed (TDM). The transmission from the subscriber station to base station (the receive channel) is time division multiple access (TDMA).

All systems are designed to be compatible with 47 CFR FCC Parts 21, 22 and 90, as well as with other relevant rules.

Communication between the base station 11 and the subscriber stations 10 is accomplished digitally by filtered multiphase differential phase shift keying (MDPSK) modulation on 25 KHz spaced full duplex channels in the 454 to 460 MHz band, thereby satisfying the requirements of 20 KHz bandwidth such as designated in FCC rule Parts 21, 22 and 90 (e.g., 21.105, 22.105 and 90.209). This system may also be used for other band widths and spacings within any feasible portion of the VHF, UHF and SHF spectrums.

The symbol rate on each 25 KHz FCC channel is 16 kilosymbols/second in each direction. Voice transmission is accomplished using 16 level PSK modulation and voice digitization with a coding rate of 14.6 Kbps. Alternatively, the modulation may be two-level (BPSK) or four-level (QPSK). A mixture of different modulations levels may be used on the same channel simultaneously. With time division multiplexing, the system provides one conversation for each multiple-of-two phases at the 14.6 Kbps rate (4 phases provides two conversations, 16 phases provides four conversations, etc.) or more as appropriate for lower rates. This is, of course, only one example since, as shown by the following chart, many different combinations of modem bits/symbols or phases and Codec rates may be used:

______________________________________ Chart I 2-Way Conversations or Duplex Circuits Using Codec Rates of: Phases Modulation 14.4 Kbps 6.4 Kbps 2.4 Kbps ______________________________________ 4 2 4 8 8 3 6 12 16 4 8 16 32 5 10 20 64 6 12 24 128 7 14 28 ______________________________________

The base station is capable of transmitting and receiving on any or all of the available FCC 25 KHz spaced frequency channels in the 454 to 460 MHz band wherein the channels are selectable. Channel frequency selection for each voice channel is accomplished automatically by the base station, one at a time, but may be overridden at an operator console interface provided at the base station.

The base station may have a transmitter power output of, typically, 100 watts for each frequency channel.

The base station provides modulation control, and time slot and frequency channel assignments to the subscriber stations. In addition, adaptive power control over the subscriber stations is exercised by the base station to minimize sequential time slot differences and adjacent channel interference.

Switching among Telco (telephone company) trunk lines and the TDM slots on the selected channel is accomplished by the base station using preferably a digital switch, although it is possible to substitute an analog switch.

The base station provides triple spatial diversity capability on the receive channels.

The subscriber station is capable of operating with three branch diversity. The transmitter power is typically adjustable between 0.1 and 25 watts, but it can be adjusted over other ranges of power. While voice communications through the subscriber station are perceived as being real time full-duplex, the RF system operates at half-duplex by utilizing appropriate time division multiplex timing methods.

The subscriber station interfaces with any telephone instrument for voice communications, or the telephone may be built into the system. In addition, a data connection such as an RS-232C standard 25-pin connection is provided for 9600 band rate data transmission between subscribers. The base station and the subscriber station may obtain operating power from any feasible source, either internal or external.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an embodiment of the base station that supports the simultaneous operation of two pairs of transmit and receive frequency channels. Each channel can process up to four phone connections simultaneously. In the preferred embodiment, there are many transmit and receive channel pairs. There are several time slots in each channel.

One of the several available time slots is required for a radio control channel (RCC).

Connection between the PSTN and the subscriber stations are established and maintained in the private branch exchange (PBX) 15 which is resident in the base station. The PBX 15 is a model UTX-250 system, an off-the-shelf product developed by the United Technologies Building Systems Group. Many of the existing features of the generic PBX system are utilized in the control of Telco interfaces required in the system of the present invention. The PBX 15 also converts voice information to/from the PSTN to 64 Kbps .mu.-law companded pulse coded modulation (PCM) digital samples. From this point on, the voice information is processed in a digital format throughout the base station and the subscriber stations, right up to the interface circuitry connecting to the subscriber telephone, or as far as the subscriber transmitter and receiver permits.

Digital voice information from the PBX 15 is next processed by a voice compression system known as a codec 16, which reduces the voice information rate from 64 Kbps to approximately 14.6 Kbps or less. The codec 16 uses either a Residual Excited Linear Predictive (RELP) algorithm, as described in International Application No. PCT/US85/02168 which corresponds to co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 667,446 entitled "RELP Vocoder Implemented in Digital Signal Processors", filed Nov. 2, 1984 and incorporated herein by reference, or an SBC encoder-decoder, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,048,443, to perform this voice rate compression. Typically, four codecs 16 reside in a single voice codec unit (VCU) 17 for performing voice compression for the four or more time slots in each frequency channel. Each base station VCU 17 can process four or more full-duplex voice connections for both the transmit channel and the receive channel of each channel pair. Connections by the PBX 15 determine which voice call is processed by which VCU 17 and by which codec 16 in the selected VCU 17. The circuits of each VCU 17 are hardware-mapped such that a voice call on a specific frequency and slot assignment in the base station is always processed by the same VCU codec 16.

Each VCU 17 is connected to a channel control unit (CCU) 18. The CCU 18 controls the TDMA function and also functions as a link-level protocol processor. Each CCU 18 takes the transmit channel outputs of the codecs 16 in the corresponding VCU 17 and transmits the data in the proper time slot and in the proper format to a modem unit 19. Each CCU 18 determines the modulation levels, as directed by a remote-control processor unit RPU 20, to be used for the broadcast (such as 2, 4 or 16 level PSK modulation). Each CCU 18 also processes control information for communication to the subscriber stations through the radio control channel (RCC) time slot and during overhead control bits in the voice channels. Each channel pair contains a series-connected combination of a VCU 17, a CCU 18 and a modem 19.

Properly formatted transmit data from each CCU 18 is transferred at a 16 K symbol/second rate to the modem corresponding 19. Each modem 19 takes these synchronous symbols and converts them to a Gray-coded multi-level phase shift keyed (PSK) format. The transmit channel output of the modem 19 is a modulated IF signal. This signal is fed into the RF/IF processing unit (RFU) 21 which then converts the IF signal to the RF UHF signal in the 450 MHz range. Control signals for the modem 19 and the RFU 21 are provided by the corresponding CCU 18, working under the overall control of the RPU 20. The UHF signal is amplified by power amplifiers in the RFU 21 and transferred through an antenna interface unit 22 to a transmit antenna 23 for open-air broadcast.

The receive function of the base station is essentially the reverse of the transmit function. Each RFU 21, modem 19, CCU 18, VCU 17 and the PBX 15 are full-duplex in nature.

The remote-control processor unit (RPU) 20 is the central control processor which conveys connection data and general-purpose computer based on a Model 6800 microprocessor which performs the sophisticated system management functions and control mechanisms for call setup, teardown, and maintenance. The RPU 20 also communicates with a call processor 24 in the PBX 15 to control the interconnections between the codecs 16 and the Telco trunks accomplished by a switch matrix 25 of the PBX 15.

Each subscriber station is a relatively small unit which is located at each user site in the system. The subscriber station connects the user's standard telephone set and/or data terminal or integrated acoustical transmitter/receiver to the base station through the UHF radio channel. The subscriber station's function is very similar to that of the base station. However, whereas the base station can operate on one or more frequency channels simultaneously, each offering the capacity to support several voice circuits, the subscriber station normally operates on only one frequency at a time.

FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a subscriber station. The functional partitioning is very similar to that of the base station (FIG. 2). The user interface function is performed by the subscriber telephone interface unit (STU) in the subscriber station. The associated function in the base station is performed by the PBX module. The STU in the subscriber station also performs all control functions of the subscriber station just as the RPU functions in the base station. The subscriber stations act as slaves to the master base station in the overall system control architecture. The STU may interface with an external instrument or may transmit and receive acoustically.

Following the data flow through the subscriber station, the user voice or data information is first processed by a subscriber terminal unit (STU) 27. The voice signal inputs from the user telephone are received and digitized in the VCU 28. The format for the digitized voice signals is identical to the format used by the PBX 15 in the base station. The subscriber station includes a VCU 28, CCU 29, modem 30a and a RFU 31a that perform similar functions as the like units described above in the base station architecture description related to FIG. 2. One difference in the subscriber station operation is that usually it is limited to only one voice channel at a time. The subscriber station essentially operates in the half-duplex mode, transmitting in a portion of the TDMA frame and receiving in a different portion of the TDM frame. With a frame size of 45 msec the half-duplex characteristic of the subscriber station is transparent to the user, who hears continuous voice input from the party at the other end of the call connection. The STU 27 and VCU 28, as well as the modem 30a, may be duplicated to permit more than one subscriber conversation.

The half-duplex operation of the subscriber station offers opportunity to make more efficient use of the available subscriber station hardware. The subscriber station VCU and CCU function in essentially identical manner as in the base station, at least as far as voice data handling is concerned. However, the modem 30a is set up to operate in a half-duplex mode so that either the receive or transmit portion of the modem are used, but not at the same time. The primary savings here is that the RFU 31a need only operate in half-duplex mode. This saves power in that the RF power amplifier is active for no more than half the time. Also, the RF transmit antenna 32a can be switched to operate as a second receive antenna during the receive portions of the frame using an RF antenna switch function. Furthermore, no duplexer is required.

Each subscriber station also includes a diversity network including three modems and a diversity combiner circuit 33. The diversity combine circuit 33 gathers demodulated receive information from each of the demods of the three modems 30a, 30b, 30c and combines the three streams to form a single "best-guess" symbol stream which is then sent on to the CCU 29 to process. The demodulation circuits or demods in the three modems 30a, 30b, 30c are connected to separate RX RFUs 31a, 31b, 31c and thereby to separate antennas 32a, 32b, 32c.

In the base station, three receiver antennas 34a, 34b and 34c are placed an appropriate distance from each other to provide uncorrelated spatially diverse signals to be processed by a diversity network. The operation of the diversity network is transparent to the CCU function and therefore can be replaced by a single modem function at any time that the diversity function is not required.

The base station also includes a spatial diversity network for each transmit and receive channel pair. Although the diversity network is not shown, the base station diagram of FIG. 2 is the same as that shown in the subscriber station diagram of FIG. 3, which shows the connection of the diversity network for a single transmit and receive channel pair. Thus, each transmit and receive channel pair in the base station actually contains three demods and one modem connected to a diversity combiner circuit as shown in FIG. 3.

Accurate timing synchronization between base station and the subscriber stations is critical in the overall system. The master timing base for the entire system is provided by the base station. All subscriber units in a given system must synchronize to this time base, in terms of frequency, symbol timing and frame timing.

The base station includes a system timing unit (STIMU) 35 which provides a high accuracy timing reference clock signal at 80.000 MHz. This 80 MHz reference clock signal is divided down to produce a 16 KHz clock signal and a 22.222 Hz (45 msec duration) frame strobe marker signal. All base station transmit timing is generated from these three synchronous master references. The 80 MHz clock signal is used by the modems 19 and the RFUs 21 for accurate IF and RF frequency bases. The 16 KHz clock signal provides the symbol rate timing for transmissions on all base station frequencies. The 45 msec marker signal is used to denote the first symbol in a new frame. This marker is active for a period of one symbol time (62.5 microseconds, equal to 1/16000 Hz). All frequency channels in the base station use the same time reference for transmission. The three timing signals (80 MHz, 16 KHz and start of frame {SOF} marker) are provided to each modem 19 in the base station. The modem 19 distributes the appropriate clock signals to the CCU 18 and RFU 21 in same series-connected transmit and receive channel pair. The 16 KHz and SOF marker are used by the CCU 18 to time the transmission of voice and control symbols according to the current frame structure on that frequency.

The receive timing in the base station is ideally identical to the base station transmit timing. That is, the SOF marker and symbol clock signals should be exactly lined up between the transmit and receive signals. However, since perfect timing synchronization cannot be expected from the subscriber station transmission, the base station modem's 19 receive timing must match the incoming symbols from the subscriber station. This is required so that the sampling period in the base station modem 19 receive function provides the best estimate of the symbol being received from the subscriber station. A small elastic buffer in the CCU 18 interfaced with the modem 19 receive function compensates for this slight timing skew.

The subscriber stations in the overall system synchronize their time references to the master time base in the base station. This synchronization is achieved through a multiple step procedure whereby the subscriber station initially acquires the base station time reference through the use of the RCC messages from the base station. This procedure is described below.

Once the subscriber station has initially acquired the time reference from the base station, a tracking algorithm in the demods of the subscriber station modems 30a, 30b, 30c keeps the subscriber station receive timing accurate. The subscriber station advances its own transmissions back to the base station by a small amount of time to offset the transmission round-trip delay due to the subscriber station ranging. This method results in the transmission from all subscriber stations being received by the base station in proper phase in relation to each other.

The system timing unit (STIMU) 35 provides the time base for all transmissions in the base station. The STIMU 35 includes a high-accuracy (3.times.10-9) ovenized crystal oscillator operating at a fixed frequency of 80 MHz. This basic clock frequency is divided by 5000 in the STIMU 35 to form the 16 KHz symbol clock signal and again by 720 to form a start of frame (SOF) marker signal. These three time references are buffered and provided to each of the base station modems.

The subscriber timing unit (SUBTU) (not shown in FIG. 3) provides a 80 MHz clock signal, a 16 KHz symbol timing signal and a 45 msec duration frame marker signal for the subscriber stations. These signals are identical to those in the base station STIMU, except that the 16 KHz clock signal is used as the receive symbol timing in the subscriber station. The 16 KHz clock signal is used for transmit timing in the base station. Transmit timing in the subscriber station is provided by a delayed version of the subscriber station receive timing. The delay is a variable amount determined by the ranging computation performed between the base station and the subscriber station.

The timing reference signal for the subscriber station is provided by a voltage controlled crystal oscillator (VCXO) operating at a nominal 80 MHz frequency. The actual frequency is adjusted by the subscriber station modem to be frequency locked to the base station timing reference as received at the subscriber RF unit input.

Protocols

The following protocols specify the