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Release 1 Technical Webinar 30 May 2018 CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

Release 1 Technical Webinar - OnGo Alliance

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Page 1: Release 1 Technical Webinar - OnGo Alliance

Release 1 Technical Webinar30 May 2018

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

Page 2: Release 1 Technical Webinar - OnGo Alliance

Agenda

• Overview: Al Jette (Nokia), Chair of CBRS Alliance Technical Work Group• Radio Aspects: Iwo Angelow (Nokia), Chair of Radio Task Group• Release 1 Coexistence: Dr. Gary Boudreau (Ericsson), Chair of Coexistence

Task Group• Release 1 Network Architectures: Dr. Masoud Olfat (Federated Wireless),

Chair of Network Services Task Group

• Q&A– Best to leave Q&A to the end to ensure we have time to cover all material.

Use the question function in the webinar platform to submit questions during the session. Will try to address clarification questions in real-time, but general questions will be handled after presentations.

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018 2

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Overview

• CBRS Alliance is an industry forum created to champion LTE in the CBRS Band (3550-3700 MHz) in accordance with FCC Part 96 Rules

• Information on FCC Part 96 can be found at:

– The Part 96 rules can be found at: https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/ECFR, select Title 47, Chapter 1, Volume 5, Part 96

– WInnForum webinar: Understanding the New US 3.5 GHz Band at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ2a4ZRjGgE&t=304sNote: This Webinar is from June 2015 and a couple of the FCC rules have since been revised, but webinar remains an excellent overview. WInnForum has additional Webinars on CBRS available on youtube.

3CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Comparing the WInnForum and CBRS Alliance

WInnForum• Official SDO with multiple committees• Spectrum Sharing Committee (SSC) handles

FCC Part 96 rules (CBRS) & working closely with US Government

• Technology Neutral (many members support LTE, but other members support WiMAX & proprietary technology use in the band)

• Developing SAS, CBSD & ESC requirements; Security methods; SAS-CBSD & SAS-SAS protocols; Certification tests for: CBSD & SAS

• Specifying Coexistence across multiple technologies in Release 2 (not yet approved)

4CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

CBRS Alliance• Focus on LTE technology in the CBRS

Band. Builds upon and compliant with WInnForum Standards

• Developing technical specs to support LTE deployments of Private Networks, Neutral Host Networks, Multi-Service Operator Networks, etc

• Focus on LTE coexistence• Addressing LTE commercialization,

business and marketing issues• Broad range of members: manufacturers,

operators, verticals and more

Coexistence work is ongoing in both the WInnForum and CBRS Alliance

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Technical Work Group

• Outputs:

– Specifications, best practices, recommendations, guidelines, etc

• Published Technical Specifications can be found from web site: https://www.cbrsalliance.org/

– Contribute into other fora as appropriate (working with WInnForum, ATIS, MulteFire and 3GPP)

• Task groups

– RF Coexistence TG

– Network Services TG

– Radio TG

Technical WG

Network Svcs TG

Coexistence TG

Radio TG

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CBRS Alliance builds upon the strength of established LTE standards

• 3GPP developed the LTE (Radio access) and the corresponding network Global Standards– 3GPP developed hundreds of standards for LTE and EPS and leverages and/or

references many other industry standards (IETF, ITU, OMA, NIST, ETSI Smart Cards, GPS, and many more)

• US Telecom systems must also comply with relevant FCC Rules and various ATIS Standards (Mobile Alerting, E911, etc)

• CBRS networks must also comply with WInnForum requirements (which include FCC Rules) and we layer on CBRS Alliance specifications

• We are exploiting the strengths of multiple standards bodies to develop a commercial LTE solution in the CBRS Band.

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What makes CBRS different?

• LTE is designed for mobile network operators deploying in exclusive use spectrum.

• CBRS is lightly licensed shared spectrum, and opens opportunities for new use cases not addressed by 3GPP (e.g. Neutral Host Networks)– Also defining use of a shared CBRS HNI

– Device Based Authentication

– Multi-services operator deployments

– And more

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Radio Task GroupIwo Angelow

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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3GPP CBRS Bands

• 3GPP defined a CBRS TD-LTE Band (Band 48)

– 3GPP Standards approved in December 2016 (Rel-14) for PAL and GAA operation

– Covers full CBRS range: 3.55 – 3.7GHz, compliant with FCC emissions requirements

9

* Release independent

Additional E-UTRA BS Spurious emissions limits for Band 48

Frequency range Maximum Level

Measurement Bandwidth

Note

3530MHz – 3720MHz -25dBm 1 MHz Applicable 10MHz from the assigned channel edge

3100MHz – 3530MHz 3720MHz – 4200MHz

-40dBm 1 MHz

35

50

MH

z

37

00

MH

z

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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3GPP CBRS Bands

• Band 48:

– Supports channel bandwidths: 5, 10, 15 and 20MHz

– Signaling defined to indicate UE shall meet additional FCC requirements (UE power reduction for 15 and 20MHz channel bandwidth)

– All 3GPP BS classes (classified by the BS output power) supported by Band 48

– UE Conformance Test Specs (RAN5) approved in June 2017

10

A-MPR for "NS_27“

Parameters

Channel bandwidth [MHz] RBstart RBend LCRB A-MPR

15 0 – 6

≤ 15 ≤ 4 dB 68 – 74 ≥ 0 ≥ 60 ≤ 2 dB

20

0 – 12 ≤ 20 ≤ 4 dB 87 – 99

13 – 15 ≤ 3 ≤ 1 dB 84 – 86

≥ 0 ≥ 60 ≤ 3 dB

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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3GPP CBRS Band combinations

• Band 48 Intra-Band Carrier Aggregation– Downlink aggregated bandwidth up to 100MHz

• DL Peak Rates in excess of 1Gbps (exact rates depend on modulation/coding and MIMO schemes)

• 4 contiguous combinations

• 6 non-contiguous combinations

11

Example: Intra-band contiguous

3550MHz

3700MHz

Example: Intra-band non-contiguous

3550MHz

3700MHz

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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3GPP CBRS Band combinations

• Inter-band combinations with Downlink aggregated bandwidth up to 100MHz*

– 71 combinations across two different bands

– 33 combinations across three different bands

– 3 combinations across four different bands

• One Inter-band 2DL/2UL combination involving Bands 48 and 26 (FDD at 800 MHz)

• Additional CA combinations currently being worked

Inter-band carrier aggregation

Band A Band 48

* depending on modulation and MIMO scheme, DL peak rate can exceed 1Gbps

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Coexistence Task GroupDr. Gary Boudreau

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Published Coexistence Specification, Rel-1

• Legacy LTE networks have been designed for licensed (i.e. exclusive) spectrum use.– Operators acquire exclusive use of spectrum, synchronize their eNBs

transmissions (UL & DL) and plan their network to minimize co-channel interference, allowing for cell re-use= 1.

• CBRS rules defined in FCC Part 96 allow multiple operators, different technologies and unsynchronized transmissions to co-exist in the same frequency channel

• CBRS Coexistence Rel-1 focuses on optimizing co-channel spectrum use for LTE deployments by defining:– Phase sync requirements– LTE-TDD DL/UL configuration requirements– GAA channelization– SAS-CBSD protocol enhancements such as coexistence groupings to allow

coordination of transmissions to minimize co-channel interference.CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Phase Synchronization and TDD Configuration Alignment

15

Desired Signal

Network 1 Network 2

UE1 UE2

UE1 UE2

DL

UL

Interfering signal DL or UL due to co-channel interferenceor phase mismatch / TDDconfiguration mis-alignment

If the networks are not phase synchronized or are mis-aligned on TDD configurations, network 1 (blue) eNB transmits on its DL and interferes with Network 2 (red) eNB reception. Also on the UL the blue UE1 transmits and interferes with the reception of the red eNB transmissions at the receiving UE2.

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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CBRS Alliance Co-existence Concept Definitions

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CxG (Coexistence Group): A group of CBSDs that abide by a common interference management policy which is used to coordinate their interference within the group.

CxM (Coexistence Manager): A logical entity responsible for managing coexistence between GAA users within a CxG in coordination with SAS. A CxM may reside in a SAS.

ICG (Interference Coordination Group): A group of CBSDs belonging to the same CxG indicating that they can manage their own interference within the group, and do not need channel orthogonalization even if they have overlapping coverage.

CCG (Common Channel Group): A group of CBSDs, that are part of the same ICG, requesting a common primary channel assignment.

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Cell Phase Synchronization

• Cell phase synchronization and well-defined alignment of downlink and uplink resources have been identified as necessary requirements for coexistence between two LTE-TDD networks in the CBRS band.

• When several operators deploying LTE-TDD networks have to share a CBRS channel or operate in adjacent CBRS channels, coordination of timing and TDD configuration is important.

• 3GPP defines cell phase synchronization accuracy as “… as the maximum absolute deviation in frame start timing between any pair of cells on the same frequency that have overlapping coverage areas.”

• An LTE-TDD CBSD that belongs to CBRS Alliance CxG shall derive frame timing with the following agreements:

1. Time reference: A time reference traceable to a common time reference. Temps AtomiqueInternational (TAI) shall be used.

2. Initialization time: The use of a common initialization time serves to align the frame boundaries, and indeed the subframe boundaries, within the required timing accuracy.

• Carriers in a CA scenario shall further maintain a common frame reference for all bands and band combinations as per 3GPP specifications

17CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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TDD Configuration for LTE TDD

• The goal of the CBRS Alliance is to allow flexible use of the CBRS band if coexistence of multiple deployments is preserved. It is well known in the industry that multiple overlapping LTE-TDD deployments in the same band can coexist if they align their frame boundaries and use the same TDD configuration.

• Table 1 lists the mandatory E-UTRA TDD Configurations for the CBRS Alliance CxG. The SSFconfiguration for these options is fixed to be SSF Configuration 7.

18

Uplink-Downlink

Configuration

UL:DL ratio Subframe Number

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

1 4:4 D S U U D D S U U D

2 2:6 D S U D D D S U D D

Table 1: Mandatory E-UTRA TDD Configurations for the CBRS Alliance Coexistence Group. The SSF configuration for these options is fixed to be SSF Configuration 7.

• The CBRS Alliance requires all LTE-TDD CBSDs that are part of the same connected set shall use the same TDD configuration.

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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GAA Channelization

• For GAA channel assignments, the SAS shall attempt to assign a minimum channel assignment of 10 MHz to each CBSD

• For CBSDs that are members of the CBRS Alliance CxG, only combinations of 5 MHz channel units can be used for spectrum inquiry and grant request for GAA. Thirty channel units of 5 MHz width are defined with the following frequency ranges (in MHz)

[3550 + (𝑘 − 1) ∗ 5, 3550 + 𝑘 ∗ 5], 𝑘 = 1, 2, … , 30.

• CBSDs shall request a spectrum grant in multiples of these 5 MHz channel units. CxM will follow the above GAA channelization for any guard band allocation in multiples of 5MHz.

19

Band 48PAL and Federal Incumbents GWBL and Federal Incumbents

FSS

3550 370036503600

5 MHz Channelization for GAA

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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SAS to CBSD Protocol Extensions

• To facilitate management of the CBRS Alliance CxG by the CBRS Alliance CxM, all CBSDs that declare themselves to be part of the CBRS Alliance CxG need to exchange information with the CBRS Alliance CxM.

• This is accomplished by including this information on various messages of the SAS-CBSD protocol. In particular, in the direction of CBSD to CxM, the information is contained in the groupInfo object of the groupingParam data object. In the direction of CxM to CBSD, the information is contained in the groupingConfig data object.

• A CBSD can send grouping information to a CxM by including the groupingParam parameter in the RegistrationRequest, the SpectrumInquiryRequest, or the GrantRequest object

• A CxM can suggest a new E-UTRA TDD configuration for a CBSD by assigning an E-UTRA TDD parameter value in the groupingConfig parameter that the SAS can include in the RegistrationResponse, the SpectrumInquiryResponse, the GrantResponse, or the HeartbeatResponse object.

20CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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SAS to CBSD Protocol Extensions

21

SAS /CxM

CBSD

DomainProxy

CBSD’s

SAS-CBSD Interface

CBRS Alliance CxG

Use groupingParamparameter in messages

Spectrum InquiryRegistrationRequestGrantRequest

Set groupType to “Coexistence Group”Set groupId to “CBRS Alliance” CBRSAllianceInfo object

desiredTddConfigEutraTddConfig object

ssfConfigcbrsaGroupType

“CBRSA ICG”“CBRSA CCG”

Use groupingConfig parameterin messages

SpectrumInquiryResponseGrantResponseHeartbeatResponse

groupingConfig object additions

cbrsAllianceConfigcbrsaVersion

eutraTddConfig

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Network Services Task GroupDr. Masoud Olfat

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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• CBRS Network Operator– Deploys a CBRS network with an intention to provide

connectivity and/or enable services to Subscribers of participating service provider(s). Network operator may need to authenticate the subscriber, as well.

• Service Provider (SP) Role– Have service agreement, authenticates, authorizes,

and provides services to subscribers, • MNOs, MSOs, or MVNOs

– A Participating Service Provider (PSP) is a service provider offering services via the specific Neutral Host.

• Subscriber Role– Authenticated and authorized by one or more

service providers. • Could be person or a device;

Roles in CBRS Services

1

Service Provider 1

CBRS Network Operator

Subscriber of SP1 Subscriber of SPn

Service Provider n

1. Subscriber-SP Relationship(Service Agreement)

2. CBRS Network Operator – SP Relationship:

Business Agreement

Service Provider 2

Subscriber of SP2 2

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• SP deploys the CBRS network itself

• SP plays both roles of SP & CBRS Network

• Coverage Extension through CBRS

• SPs could represent traditional MNOs and MSOs, or other traditional types of SPs.

• Uses traditional 3GPP Architectures like S1 interface

• Connection to other SPs through roaming

Service Provider (SP) Use Case

MNO plays the role of both SP and CBRS NW Operator

CBRS Network Deployed by MNO 1

MNO1

Subscriber for MNO1: Access to CBRS NW deployed by MNO1

MSO 1

Subscriber for MSO1: No Access to this

particular CBRS NW

MNO 2

Subscriber for MNO2: No Access to this

particular CBRS NW

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• Business agreement between the NHN Operator and a SP to provide service to participating SP’s subscribers

• NHN operator plays the role of CBRS Network Operator

• MNO1 and MSO play the role of SPs

• Both MNO1 and MSO1 could be Participating Service Providers (PSPs)

• Could be considered as Distributed Antenna System (DAS) Replacement

• CBRS in a venue, public space or a large area providing service to users of multiple MNOs

Neutral Host Network (NHN) Use Case

MNO 2

Subscriber for MNO2: No Access to this particular CBRS

NW deployed by NHN Operator

No Relationship between MNO2 and

CBRS Network Operator (NHN Operator)

CBRS Network Deployed by NHN Operator

MNO1

Subscriber for MNO1: Access to CBRS NW deployed by NHN

Operator

MSO1

Subscriber for MSO1: Access to CBRS NW deployed by NHN

Operator

Business agreement between NHNO

Operator and MNO1

Business agreement between NHNO

Operator and MSO1

NHN Use Case

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• Provides service to employees, machines and other devices, as authorized by the private network provider.

• The private network operator plays roles of both SP and CBRS Network Operator, with no business relationship with MNOs or MSOs.

– industrial, mining, off-shore or other isolated environments.

– Fixed Networks

– Private enterprise Network

– Private residential Networks

– wireless backhaul for connecting eNBs to a 3GPP core network.

– Industrial IOT

Private and Hybrid Network Use Case

MNO 1

CBRS Network Deployed by Enterprise 1

(Enterprise 1 plays a CBRS Network Operator role)

Subscriber of MNO1 :NO Access to this

particular CBRS NW deployed by Enterprise 1

Employee of Enterprise1:

Access to CBRS NW deployed by Enterprise 1

Enterprise 1(Enterprise1 plays an SP role)

MSO 1

Subscriber of MSO1:NO Access to this

particular CBRS NW deployed by Enterprise 1

NO Relationship between MNO1/MSO1 and CBRS Network

Operator (Enterprise1)

Private NW Use Case

MNO 1

CBRS Network Deployed by MNO1

Subscriber of MNO1 :Access to CBRS NW deployed by MNO1

Subscriber of MNO 2NO Access to this

particular CBRS NW

MNO 2

MNO1 plays the role of both SP and CBRS NW Operator

MSO 1

Subscriber of MSO 1Access to CBRS NW deployed by MNO 1

NO Relationship between MNO2 and CBRS Network

Operator (MNO1)

Hybrid Use Case 2 – SP Centric

Business agreement between MNO 1 (as CBRS NW Operator) and MSO 1

1

2 CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018 26

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Multi-Subscription UE Use Case

• UE has two subscriptions– To a Private Network

– To an MNO or MSO

• MNO access used Private Network coverage is unsatisfactory.

• Separate Credentials for Private Network and the MNO’s SP.

• UE first authenticates to Private Network by using Private Network Credentials

• Private Network’s IP connectivity is used then to provide a secure tunnel into the MNO’s network using MNO authentication for MNO services. 1

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018 27

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CBRS NHN Architecture Requirements & Guidelines

• User authentication upon attachment to the NHN shall be performed against Primary Service Provider (PSP) subscriber database systems.

• PSP eligibility control on a per-NHN basis

– dynamically white-list or blacklist NHNs

• Mobility between NHNs and between an NHNs and SP

• Minimized data plane outages during inter-system mobility.

• Minimize changes and customizations to PSP networks and use standardized and available interfaces to PSP

• NHN operationally decoupled from PSP to the extent possible

• Minimize changes to 3GPP-defined behaviors of UEs and other EPC nodes (both in NHN and PSP Network)

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Network Architecture

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SP2 EPC, using 3GPP EPC architecture

Private EPC using 3GPP EPC architecture using a CBRS-I

value as PLMN-IDSP1 EPC, using 3GPP EPC

architecture using a non-CBRS-I

value as PLMN-ID

SP1 3GPP UE- With SP1's PLMN-ID in USIM

EPC using NHN EPC architecture

Non-3GPP AAA

3GPP AAA

HSS

NH-MMENH-GW

Local AAA/Proxy

SGi

cbAAA

STa-N/SWa-N

LTE Radio

SP1 USIM based credentials

S2a

PDN GW

Local Services

Internet

SGi

Private 3GPP UE- With a CBRS-I value as PLMN-ID and private network’s CBRS-NID in USIM

LTE Radio

SP2 NHN-capable UE- With SP2's PLMN-ID in USIM

LTE Radio

Private NHN-capable UE- Configured with CBRS-I, CBRS-NID, and private network’s PSP-ID

LTE Radio

CBRS RAN

eNodeBeNodeB

CBRS RAN

eNodeBeNodeB

Private USIM/Certificate/Username-

password based credentials

Private USIM-based credentials

SP2 USIM based credentials

3GPP AAA

HSS

SWxSTa

SGi

Broadcasts • SP1 PLMN-ID and CBRS-I in SIB1• CBRS-NID in SIB1• PSP-IDs for SP2 and Private

Network in SIB17

SGi

ePDG

S2b

Depicts the network architecture for • Private Network• Neutral Host Network• Hybrid Network (supports both Private

and NHN network)

CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018

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Release 2 and Beyond

Work Items under study in Release 2

• MSO Use Case

• Fixed Network Use Case

• Non-SIM Based Security Framework (3GPP-Based Access Network (Non-EPS-AKA)

Beyond Release 2

• Continue to develop specifications to address CBRS market needs

30CBRS ALLIANCE © 2018