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| United States Patent | 5193101 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5193101.html |
| Inventor(s) | McDonald; James A. (Buffalo Grove, IL);
Comroe; Richard A. (Dundee, IL);
Sobti; Arun (Wheaton, IL);
Bocci; Paul M. (Roselle, IL);
Furtaw; Robert W. (Arlington Heights, IL);
Hiben; Bradley M. (Glen Ellyn, IL) |
| Abstract | A way of allowing small, low-power communication units to reuse trunked
system communication resources within the service coverage area of the
larger trunked system without experiencing significant interference from
the trunked system. The low power units (requestors and targets) avoid
interference through spread spectrum transmissions. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5193101 |
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On-site system frequency sharing with trunking systems using spread
spectrum |
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| Publication Date |
March 9, 1993 |
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| Filing Date |
February 4, 1991 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to the field of communication systems and more
specifically to on-site systems.
BACKGROUND
Trunked mobile communication systems are known. Such systems typically
allocate frequency pairs (transmit and receive) upon receipt of a request
for a communication resource from a requesting communication unit. The
requesting communication unit then tunes to the granted frequencies and
begins transceiving. Such systems are termed frequency division multiple
access (FDMA) systems.
Repeaters are provided at the trunked communication system base sites to
receive signals from transmitting communication units and to re-transmit
the signal. Repeaters are typically provided with relatively tall antenna
and are capable of receiving signals from the extremes of the service
coverage area. Also in part because of the tall antenna, a signal
re-transmitted by the repeater is capable of being received by a target
communication unit substantially anywhere within the service coverage area
of the trunked communication system.
Once a frequency has been allocated for use, the communication transaction
normally occurs through encoding of an audio signal onto a carrier signal
consisting of the assigned frequency. Encoding of the audio signal may
occur through a variety of methods. Simple encoding techniques include
amplitude modulation (AM) and frequency modulation (FM). Trunked systems,
in general, operate under FM encoding techniques. AM, on the other hand,
is seldom used in trunking systems.
With the advent of digital signal processing (DSP) and associated digital
techniques more sophisticated signal encoding methodologies have been
developed and used in nontrunked radio systems. One of the developed
methodologies is termed spread spectrum. As the name implies, spread
spectrum is an encoding technique involving the use of a relatively broad
range of frequencies to avoid interference.
Code division multiple access (CDMA) is one of the spread spectrum
methodologies. CDMA, on the other hand, is comprised of two separate
methodologies, direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) and frequency
hopping. Frequency hoppers avoid interference by hopping through a range
of frequencies, only transmitting on a particular frequency for a short
period of time and transmitting redundant or error correction coding with
the information signal.
DSSS, on the other hand, utilizes a high rate binary sequence to spread the
bandwidth of the desired signal at the transmitter. The same sequence is
then used at the receiver to reduce the bandwidth and recover the
transmitted signal. The process of bandwidth reduction at the receiver
provides suppression of undesired signals or noise thus providing similar
rejection of interference as frequency hop spread spectrum signals.
Because spread spectrum systems disperse signals across a range of
frequencies, interference is less a problem in such systems. Radio
communication systems, in general, suffer from a variety of problems
associated with interference from loss of system access to signal
blocking. A need exists for a method to apply spread spectrum technology
to conventional radio communication systems.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Pursuant to one embodiment of the invention a limited range (small-cell)
spread spectrum communication system is constructed for use within the
service coverage area of a larger (large-cell) trunked communication
system. The large-cell system has a number of frequencies (communication
resources) allotted for use within the large-cell system and which are
allocated from time-to-time among requesting large-cell communication
units. The small-cell communication system is constructed with a way of
determining that a small-cell communication unit requires the
establishment of a communication link between the communication unit and a
small-cell transceiver. The small-cell system then allocates a number of
communication resources to the small-cell unit for use in a sequential
manner (automatic frequency hop basis) notwithstanding the simultaneous
use of the communication resources by large-cell communication units.
The identity of re-used communication resources within the small-cell
system is determined by a code entered into the small-cell resource
controller. The code determines the communication resources to be used and
in what order. Because the code may be changed at will, a number of
small-cell communication systems may use the same communication resources
simultaneously without mutual interference. The code used by small-cell
communication systems in this embodiment is generated by reference to
communication resource use within the large-cell system. It should be
readily apparent that the code may be generated using any mathematical
equation or operational algorithm.
The small-cell communication system is constructed to transmit and receive
in time division duplex (TDD) format on the same communication resource
used by a transmitting trunked communication unit (inbound resources). The
sharing of inbound resources is possible whenever the trunked base site
receives a sufficiently strong signal from trunked communication units
relative to the small-cell systems user.
Pursuant to one embodiment of the invention small-cell communication units
are constructed to operate on a multitude of communication resources in a
sequential manner (frequency hopping) and indexed under control of the
small-cell resource controller. A requesting small-cell communication unit
(and target small-cell communication units) are allocated an initial
communication resource (initial indexed communication resource) by the
small-cell resource controller. The requesting small-cell unit (and any
target units) immediately tune to the initially assigned resource and
begin operation for an index interval. At the end of the index interval
the requesting small-cell (and target units automatically index to the
next resource on an indexing table of communication resources.
Synchronization of requesting and target communication units is maintained
by the small-cell controller.
Use of the frequency hopping technique allows a small-cell communication
unit to operate in close proximity to a trunked communication unit without
complete blocking of the small-cell unit's signal. If a communication
resource is being shared by a nearly trunked communication unit then the
small-cell signal is blocked only for the interval during which the
small-cell unit operates on the shared resource. The result may be a
momentary interference in the received small-cell signal. The use of
redundancy or error correction coding may be utilized to eliminate
disruption of communications by the momentary interference.
During each index, under the frequency hopping technique, a packet of
information is transmitted from requestor to target and visa versa.
Pursuant to one embodiment of the invention the audio signal transmitted
between communication units is subjected to audio compression techniques.
Audio compression, as known in the art, is a technique by which a
continuous audio signal may be compressed into short, intermittent
information packets. The information packets transmitted between
communication units during each index interval under the invention may be
comprised of two components. The first component may be a packet
containing the most recently generated audio information transmitted
between small-cell communication units. The second packet may be a
duplicate of at least part of the audio information transmitted during the
previous index interval. Other coding techniques may also be used in audio
compression.
The repeated transmission of audio information allows for the successful
transmission of audio signals even though alternate hops are completely
blocked, without loss of audio information. For a listener to a small-cell
communication to become aware of interference, at least two successive
hops must be blocked through interference.
The indexing table of communication resources is maintained by the
small-cell resource controller. Where a weak signal condition is detected
by the trunked base site on a resource allocated to a trunked
communication unit, notification of such weak signal condition is
immediately communicated to the small-cell resource controller. Upon
receipt the small-cell resource controller immediately removes the
resource from the indexed list of communication resources (precluding use
of the resource by small-cell units).
Removal of the resource from the indexed list of communication resources
within the small-cell system prevents interference in trunked system
operation by the small-cell system. When the weak-signal trunked
communication unit terminates use of the resource, or, the trunked base
site again detects a strong signal from the communication unit the
resource is again included in the indexed list of communication resources
available for use by small-cell communication units
Pursuant to another embodiment of the invention a small-cell communication
system is constructed using DSSS encoding techniques. In such a system at
least one small-cell communication unit transmitting a DSSS signal would
share at least some of the communication resources used by the large-cell
system.
At least one receiving small-cell communication unit constructed to receive
and decode the DSSS signal would receive the signal over the shared
resource.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 comprises a block diagram of a single cell of a trunked
communication system with two requesting communication units communicating
with two target units within the same cell.
FIG. 2 depicts a single cell of a large cell system in a geographical
context showing two sets of communication units in contact.
FIG. 3 comprises a block diagram of a single cell of a small-cell
communication system.
FIG. 4 depicts a representation of indexed communication resource use by a
frequency hopping communication system.
FIG. 5 comprises a flow chart for the transfer of signal quality factors to
the small-cell system.
FIG. 6 comprises a flow chart for the determination of communication
resource availability within the small-cell system.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Referring now to FIG. 1, a single, large system cell of a trunked
communication system is depicted generally by the number 10. The cell (10)
generally includes a plurality of communication units (12 through 15) (as
used herein "communication units" refers to mobile, units, or portable
units), transceivers (20 through 22), and a site resource controller (25).
The system also includes a control resource transceiver (23) to allow
two-way transmission of system control information.
In general, to establish a call between two communication units operating
in such a cell (10) a requesting unit (12) sends a data packet called an
inbound signalling word (ISW) (31) on the inbound frequency allocated to
the control resource transceiver (23). The ISW (31) typically contains the
requesting communication unit's unique ID code plus the ID number of the
target party (or parties) or group. The site resource controller (25)
decodes the request, and transmits on the control resource transceiver
(23) an appropriate resource grant outbound signalling word (OSW) (32) to
the requesting communication unit (12). The requesting communication
unit's (12) frequency grant OSW (32) causes it to move to the designated
transmit frequency. If the target party is another mobile communication
unit (15) located within the same cell, the resource controller at the
same time also transmits an OSW (33) to the target unit identifying the
receive frequency. When the requesting unit (12) initiates a voice
transmission (34) the base site transceiver (20) receives the transmission
(34) and re-transmits the voice signal on the receive frequency (35) to
the target part (15).
If another communication unit (13) were to request service after initiation
of the conversation between the two moblie communication units (12 and 15)
then the situation shown in dotted lines in FIG. 1 would exist. FIG. 1
shows a requesting communication unit (13) tranmitting an ISW (36) to the
site resource controller and receiving an OSW (37) defining a frequency
grant through another transceiver (21). The target party (14) for the
requesting communication unit (13) maybe (for example) in another area of
the cell. The requesting communication unit (13) moves to the designated
frequency and begins transmitting on the assigned frequency (38). The
target communication unit (14) receives the frequency grant (37), moves to
the designated frequency, and begins receiving the transmitted signal
(39).
Shown in FIG. 2 is the situation substantially described in the previous
example. The requesting communication unit (12) is shown to be at the edge
of the service coverage area (11) of the cell (10). As shown, an on going
conversation exists between the orginal two communication units (12 and
15). Also shown in the ongoing conversation between the second requesting
communication unit (13) and a target (14) within the same cell. This
second requesting communication unit (13) is shown to be in close
proximity to the large-cell base site transceiver (20 in FIG. 1).
Pursuant to one embodiment of the invention, transceivers (or other
dedicated receivers (50, FIG. 2)) at (or proximal to) the base sites are
equipped for measuring the received signal strength from communication
units. Where the received signal strength from nearby communication units
(for example communication unit 13) exhibits sufficient strength, a
control algorithm allows low-power small-cell communication systems
located within the same cell to operate on certain shared frequencies.
A small-cell communication system (FIG. 3) has a similar functionality to
the larger cellular system (10) but operates at a substantially reduced
power level. Small-cell communication units (112 through 115), small-cell
transceivers (120 through 122), and the small-cell control resources
transceiver (123) operate in the region of typically ten milliwatts.
Transceivers within the small-cell system (120 through 122) are also
equipped for the transmission of control bits for synchronization of
small-cell communication units. Communication units (112 through 115) as
well as small-cell resource controller (125) are constructed to transmit
and receive in a time division duplex mode on a communication resource
selected from an indexed table of communication resources and indexed on
an index interval.
Upon activation (from a deactivated state) a small-cell communication unit
selects a communication resource from the sequencing table to monitor for
control activity. Sequencing, at this point, is not appropriate because
the small-cell communication unit has no way to determine the location of
the sequencing control resource within the sequencing table. On the other
hand, if the small-cell unit statically monitors a resource, the
sequencing control resource will eventually sequence through the resource
identifying its presence to the small-cell unit by its transmissions.
Upon detecting a sequencing control resource of which the small-cell unit
is a part, the small-cell unit immediately begins to sequence in coarse
synchronization with the sequencing control resource.
Complete synchronization of the small-cell unit is achieved through the use
of a repetitive code transmitted by the small-cell resource controller and
through which the small-cell unit first achieves clock synchronization.
The small-cell communication unit then achieves complete synchronization
through the use of a sliding correlator. The small-cell unit verifies
synchronization to the small-cell resource controller by echoing a code
transmitted by the small-cell resource controller
Once synchronized with the sequencing control resource the small-cell unit
remains in that state until the small-cell unit initiates a call and
receives an allocation or is notified by the sequencing resources
controller that it is the target of a call.
Upon initiating a call the small-cell unit transmits to the sequencing
resource controller, under a TDD format, a resource request over the
sequencing control resource. The small-cell resource controller on the
sequencing control resource (also under a TDD format) responds with the ID
of a resource within the sequencing table (initial indexed communication
resource). The requesting small-cell unit moves to the resource and after
an index interval begins sequencing through the sequencing table.
Transmissions can begin as soon as the small-cell unit moves to the
initial indexed communication resource (b).
A requesting small-cell communication unit (112, FIG. 3) transmits an ISW
(131) to receives a frequency grant OSW (132) from a small-cell resource
controller (125), substantially as described above. Two-way transmissions
(133 and 134) between a requesting unit (112) and a target communication
unit (115) also occurs substantially as described above.
As previously mentioned one difference between the small-cell system and
the trunked system is that in the small-cell system a requesting
communication unit and any target communication units operate on a single
frequency using time division multiplexing. Time division multiplexing in
a small-cell system allows a requestor and a target to share a single
frequency. As contemplated a requesting small-cell communication unit
occupies the first of two slots in a TDM format on an indexing resource
and a target occupies the second. (Where a small-cell requestor (112) and
target (115) are serviced from the same small-cell transceiver 120 then
the transceiver acts as a repeater.) The small-cell control resource is
similarly divided with control resource transmissions (allocations)
occupying the first slot and communication unit transmissions (resource
requests) occupying the second.
Small-cell communication units, because of the reduced powder levels, are
constructed to transmit from a few feet to a few hundred feet to service
communication needs within a limited geographic area such as a
manufacturing facility, a shopping mall, or other commercial or
residential facility.
Shown in FIG. 2 is a small-cell communication system having a service
coverage area (20) operating within the previously described trunked
communication system. Communication units (12 and 15) and (13 and 14) are
engaged in a two-way conversation supported by larger system
infrastructure. The site resource controller (25) periodically measures a
signal quality factor (signal strength) of all communication units
transmitting via larger system infrastructure and transfers the results of
those measurements by wireline (52 in FIGS. 1 and 3), or otherwise, to the
small-cell communication controller (125).
In the example (FIG. 2) one communication unit (13) is approximately
equidistant with the small-cell system to the base site (25). Because of
the approximate equidistant locations and the power level of the mobile
being several orders magnitude larger than the small-cell system,
simultaneous re-use of the resource can occur withou interference. The
re-use of the resource (38) granted to communication unit (13) by the
small-cell system would not interfere with reception by the base size of
communication signals transmitted by the communication unit (13). The
small-cell controller under these conditions may re-allocate the granted
resource within the samll-cell system. In FIG. 3 re-use of the resource
(38) is shown in a simultaneous conversation between small-cell units (112
and 115) over re-used communication resources (133 and 134). Different
reference numbers (38, 133, and 134) are used in the drawing (FIG. 2) for
the same communication resource because two of the communication resources
(133 and 134) are time division mulitplexed and the third communication
resource (38) is not.
In some cases re-use of resources within the small-cell system may not be
appropriate. One exmple of this is the control resource used by the
resource controller in the large system. Another example is the previously
mentioned situation where a communication unit is transmitting in the
large system with a signal strength below a minimum threshold.
To allow for the selective re-use of frequencies within the small-cell
system a number os strategies are used. On start-up of the small-cell
system the ID numbers of available communication resources are manually
entered into a table of communication resources within a memory (FIG. 3,
127). Resources that become unusable during normal operation because of
weak signal conditions, or otherwise, are deleted from the table in memory
(FIG. 3, 127) by the small-cell resource controller.
The indentification of communication resources available to the small-cell
system begins with the periodic measurement of the signal quality factor
(signal strength) within each transceiver in the large system by a
received signal strength indicator (RSSI). As previously mentioned the
value of the RSSI is then transferred to a receiving means within the
small-cell system by wireline (52 in FIGS. 1 and 3) or otherwise. The RSSI
transfer to the small-cell system is in the form of a digital word
identifying the communication resource and the RSSI value associated with
the resource. An indication of the value transferred in shown in the large
cell flow chart (FIG. 5).
As shown (FIG. 5), if the resource was previously allocated the measured
signal strength value, RSSI, is transferred (FIG. 5, 202, 203). If, on the
other hand, the resource is being used as a control resource, then a
minimum value is transferred (FIG. 5, 204, 205). The minimum value is used
to prevent operation on the resource by any unit within a small-cell
system.
If a resource is about to be allocated (FIG. 5, 206) then the measured RSSI
of the ISW requesting service is transferred (FIG. 5, 207). If the
communication resource is not being used by the large system (FIG. 5) than
a maximum RSSI value is transferred (FIG. 5, 208) to the small-cell
system. The maximum value indicates to the small-cell system that the
resource may be used at will.
Upon receipt of the RSSI (FIG. 6, 220) by the resource controller in the
small-cell system a determination of availability to the small-cell system
is made. Shown (FIG. 6) is a flow chart of the process steps in
determining small-cell availability. As shown, if the RSSI does not exceed
the threshold value (FIG. 6, 222) then an entry is immediately made in the
resource table within the small-cell resource controller to perclude use
within the small-cell system (FIG. 6, 221).
Updates to the resource table within small-cell communication units, in one
embodiment, are made under one of two possible procedures. First, inactive
small-cell communication units monitoring the small-cell resource
controller receive updates over the control channel and immediately
implement the update to the internal resource table. Active small-cell
communication units, monitoring locations on the indexing resource are
notified of updates through the use embedded signaling tansmitted through
active small-cell transceivers. Active small-cell communication units,
upon receiving updates, complete the current sequence before implementing
the update to the internal resource table. Completion of the current
sequence by active units avoids the problem of a small-cell unit
sequencing through a vacant (nonexistent) channel.
In another embodiment of the invention the requesting communication unit
(112) may transmit an OSW (131) identifying a target (not shown) in
another small-cell system or a target accessed through a PSTN interconnect
(not shown). In such a case the indexed resource over which communication
would occur between the requestor (112) and the target (not shown) would
occur in a full duplex mode of operation through the transceiver (120).
In another embodiment of the invention small-cell communication units are
constructed using DSSS signal processing technology. The use of DSSS
transmissions within the small-cell system somewhat limits frequency
re-use with the large-cell system. Since DSSS transmissions result in
simultaneous transmissions on a contiguous block of frequency spectrum
then a block of spectrum must be reserved for re-use by the small-cell
system. One method of achieving re-use with the large-cell system is to
reserve a block of spectrum for small-cell DSSS use and to reserve a
second block of spectrum for use by the large-cell control communication
resource and for weak signal large-cell communication units.
Construction of the small-cell communication system (FIG. 4), on the other
hand, becomes less complex. In one embodiment of the invention the DSSS
system comprises a transceiver (120) and a number of communication units
(112 through 115). Communication units (112 through 115) are constructed
with substantially identical pseudo random number generators for encoding
before transmission as are transceivers (120 through 122). The transceiver
(120) is equipped with a receiver with a substantially identical generator
as in the transmitter of communication unit (112). A signal (133)
transmitted by a requesting communication unit (112) is received and
decoded by the receiver within transceiver (120). The signal is then
re-encoded within the transceiver (120) using a second pseudo random
number generator. The received signal (133) is then retransmitted (134) to
a receiving communication unit (113). The receiving communication unit
(113) is equipped with a receiver containing a substantial identical
pseudo random number generator as the transmitter within the transceiver
(120).
Since the ability to decode DSSS signals is dependent upon having the
proper pseudo random number generator a number of transceivers (120
through 122) could be in simultaneous operation transceiving signals
between different communication groups within the small cell system. In
this case transceivers (120 through 122) each contain a differently coded
pseudo random number generator for operation with a different small-cell
communication group.
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Description  |
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