US20140177678A1 - Channel division - Google Patents

Channel division Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20140177678A1
US20140177678A1 US14/126,071 US201214126071A US2014177678A1 US 20140177678 A1 US20140177678 A1 US 20140177678A1 US 201214126071 A US201214126071 A US 201214126071A US 2014177678 A1 US2014177678 A1 US 2014177678A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
frequencies
neighbouring
communication device
communication devices
communication
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US14/126,071
Inventor
William Webb
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Huawei Technologies Co Ltd
Original Assignee
Neul Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB1109854.8A external-priority patent/GB2491837A/en
Priority claimed from GB1109853.0A external-priority patent/GB2491836B/en
Priority claimed from GB1109840.7A external-priority patent/GB2492051B/en
Priority claimed from GBGB1109863.9A external-priority patent/GB201109863D0/en
Priority claimed from GB1109844.9A external-priority patent/GB2491834B/en
Priority claimed from GB1109874.6A external-priority patent/GB2491840B/en
Priority claimed from GB1109850.6A external-priority patent/GB2492052B/en
Priority claimed from GBGB1109836.5A external-priority patent/GB201109836D0/en
Priority claimed from GBGB1109830.8A external-priority patent/GB201109830D0/en
Priority claimed from GB1109829.0A external-priority patent/GB2491832A/en
Priority claimed from GBGB1109837.3A external-priority patent/GB201109837D0/en
Priority claimed from GB201109867A external-priority patent/GB201109867D0/en
Priority claimed from GB1109848.0A external-priority patent/GB2491835A/en
Priority claimed from GBGB1116910.9A external-priority patent/GB201116910D0/en
Application filed by Neul Ltd filed Critical Neul Ltd
Assigned to NEUL LTD. reassignment NEUL LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: WEBB, WILLIAM
Publication of US20140177678A1 publication Critical patent/US20140177678A1/en
Assigned to HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD. reassignment HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: NEUL LTD.
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • H04L27/2647Arrangements specific to the receiver only
    • H04L27/2655Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04L27/2656Frame synchronisation, e.g. packet synchronisation, time division duplex [TDD] switching point detection or subframe synchronisation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W16/00Network planning, e.g. coverage or traffic planning tools; Network deployment, e.g. resource partitioning or cells structures
    • H04W16/02Resource partitioning among network components, e.g. reuse partitioning
    • H04W16/10Dynamic resource partitioning
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W12/00Security arrangements; Authentication; Protecting privacy or anonymity
    • H04W12/06Authentication
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L25/00Baseband systems
    • H04L25/02Details ; arrangements for supplying electrical power along data transmission lines
    • H04L25/06Dc level restoring means; Bias distortion correction ; Decision circuits providing symbol by symbol detection
    • H04L25/061Dc level restoring means; Bias distortion correction ; Decision circuits providing symbol by symbol detection providing hard decisions only; arrangements for tracking or suppressing unwanted low frequency components, e.g. removal of dc offset
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S5/00Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more direction or position line determinations; Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more distance determinations
    • G01S5/02Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more direction or position line determinations; Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more distance determinations using radio waves
    • G01S5/14Determining absolute distances from a plurality of spaced points of known location
    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08CTRANSMISSION SYSTEMS FOR MEASURED VALUES, CONTROL OR SIMILAR SIGNALS
    • G08C17/00Arrangements for transmitting signals characterised by the use of a wireless electrical link
    • G08C17/02Arrangements for transmitting signals characterised by the use of a wireless electrical link using a radio link
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/69Spread spectrum techniques
    • H04B1/713Spread spectrum techniques using frequency hopping
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/24Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts
    • H04B7/26Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile
    • H04B7/2643Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile using time-division multiple access [TDMA]
    • H04B7/2659Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile using time-division multiple access [TDMA] for data rate control
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • H04L27/2602Signal structure
    • H04L27/261Details of reference signals
    • H04L27/2613Structure of the reference signals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L47/00Traffic control in data switching networks
    • H04L47/10Flow control; Congestion control
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/003Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
    • H04L5/0032Distributed allocation, i.e. involving a plurality of allocating devices, each making partial allocation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/50Network services
    • H04L67/56Provisioning of proxy services
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/50Network services
    • H04L67/56Provisioning of proxy services
    • H04L67/568Storing data temporarily at an intermediate stage, e.g. caching
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L69/00Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
    • H04L69/18Multiprotocol handlers, e.g. single devices capable of handling multiple protocols
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • H04L7/04Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • H04L7/04Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals
    • H04L7/041Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals using special codes as synchronising signal
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • H04L7/04Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals
    • H04L7/08Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals the synchronisation signals recurring cyclically
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W24/00Supervisory, monitoring or testing arrangements
    • H04W24/02Arrangements for optimising operational condition
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W28/00Network traffic management; Network resource management
    • H04W28/02Traffic management, e.g. flow control or congestion control
    • H04W28/06Optimizing the usage of the radio link, e.g. header compression, information sizing, discarding information
    • H04W28/065Optimizing the usage of the radio link, e.g. header compression, information sizing, discarding information using assembly or disassembly of packets
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W28/00Network traffic management; Network resource management
    • H04W28/02Traffic management, e.g. flow control or congestion control
    • H04W28/10Flow control between communication endpoints
    • H04W28/14Flow control between communication endpoints using intermediate storage
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/0005Control or signalling for completing the hand-off
    • H04W36/0055Transmission or use of information for re-establishing the radio link
    • H04W36/0066Transmission or use of information for re-establishing the radio link of control information between different types of networks in order to establish a new radio link in the target network
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/16Performing reselection for specific purposes
    • H04W36/22Performing reselection for specific purposes for handling the traffic
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W4/00Services specially adapted for wireless communication networks; Facilities therefor
    • H04W4/06Selective distribution of broadcast services, e.g. multimedia broadcast multicast service [MBMS]; Services to user groups; One-way selective calling services
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W4/00Services specially adapted for wireless communication networks; Facilities therefor
    • H04W4/70Services for machine-to-machine communication [M2M] or machine type communication [MTC]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W56/00Synchronisation arrangements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W56/00Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04W56/001Synchronization between nodes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W56/00Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04W56/001Synchronization between nodes
    • H04W56/0015Synchronization between nodes one node acting as a reference for the others
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W64/00Locating users or terminals or network equipment for network management purposes, e.g. mobility management
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/04Wireless resource allocation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/04Wireless resource allocation
    • H04W72/044Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource
    • H04W72/0446Resources in time domain, e.g. slots or frames
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/12Wireless traffic scheduling
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/12Wireless traffic scheduling
    • H04W72/1215Wireless traffic scheduling for collaboration of different radio technologies
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/50Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
    • H04W72/51Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on terminal or device properties
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/50Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
    • H04W72/56Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria
    • H04W72/566Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria of the information or information source or recipient
    • H04W72/569Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria of the information or information source or recipient of the traffic information
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W8/00Network data management
    • H04W8/18Processing of user or subscriber data, e.g. subscribed services, user preferences or user profiles; Transfer of user or subscriber data
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/12Access point controller devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/18Service support devices; Network management devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/24Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts
    • H04B7/26Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile
    • H04B7/2643Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile using time-division multiple access [TDMA]
    • H04B7/2656Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field for communication between two or more posts at least one of which is mobile using time-division multiple access [TDMA] for structure of frame, burst
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L63/00Network architectures or network communication protocols for network security
    • H04L63/12Applying verification of the received information
    • H04L63/126Applying verification of the received information the source of the received data
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W16/00Network planning, e.g. coverage or traffic planning tools; Network deployment, e.g. resource partitioning or cells structures
    • H04W16/14Spectrum sharing arrangements between different networks
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/04Wireless resource allocation
    • H04W72/044Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource
    • H04W72/0453Resources in frequency domain, e.g. a carrier in FDMA
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/08Access point devices
    • H04W88/10Access point devices adapted for operation in multiple networks, e.g. multi-mode access points
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y04INFORMATION OR COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES HAVING AN IMPACT ON OTHER TECHNOLOGY AREAS
    • Y04SSYSTEMS INTEGRATING TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO POWER NETWORK OPERATION, COMMUNICATION OR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES FOR IMPROVING THE ELECTRICAL POWER GENERATION, TRANSMISSION, DISTRIBUTION, MANAGEMENT OR USAGE, i.e. SMART GRIDS
    • Y04S40/00Systems for electrical power generation, transmission, distribution or end-user application management characterised by the use of communication or information technologies, or communication or information technology specific aspects supporting them
    • Y04S40/20Information technology specific aspects, e.g. CAD, simulation, modelling, system security

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to assigning frequency hopping sequences to cells in a cellular communication network.
  • a wireless network may be configured to operate without having been specifically allocated any part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Such a network may be permitted to operate in so-called whitespace: a part of the spectrum that is made available for unlicensed or opportunistic access. Typically whitespace is found in the UHF TV band and spans 450 MHz to 800 MHz, depending on the country. A large amount of spectrum has been made available for unlicensed wireless systems in this frequency range.
  • Machine-to-machine networks are typically tolerant of delays, dropped connections and high latency communications.
  • Any network operating in the UHF TV band has to be able to coexist with analogue and digital television broadcast transmitters.
  • the density of the active television channels in any given location is relatively low (resulting in the availability of whitespace that can be used by unlicensed systems).
  • the FCC has mandated that systems operating in the whitespace must reference a database that determines which channels may be used in any given location. This is intended to avoid interference with the TV transmissions and certain other incumbent systems such as wireless microphones.
  • TV receivers including those for digital TV (DTV)
  • DTV digital TV
  • the TV receivers may have image frequencies and poor adjacent channel rejection (ACR) on certain frequencies due to spurs on their local oscillators and limitations in their receive filters. These frequencies are often dependent on the specific receiver implementation.
  • ACR adjacent channel rejection
  • Digital TV typically uses a channel bandwidth of 6 to 8 MHz. It also uses OFDM modulation in which the overall channel bandwidth is split into a large number of narrower channels (so-called sub-carriers), each of which is individually modulated.
  • the system is designed so that, if a certain number of sub-carriers are subject to multipath fading, with the result that their signal-to-noise ratio is poor, the overall data can still be recovered. This is typically achieved by using interleaving and error correction codes, which mean that bit errors localised to a limited number of sub-carriers can be corrected. OFDM modulation can therefore achieve considerable robustness to multipath fading.
  • OFDM is only able to recover the transmitted data when the interferer is relatively narrowband compared with the bandwidth of the overall TV signal, such that a limited number of sub-carriers are affected. OFDM does not provide a similar performance benefit when the interferer occupies a relatively large proportion of the DTV channel bandwidth because in this case the error control coding may be incapable of correcting the bit errors due to the higher proportion of bits that may be corrupt. If the bandwidth of the transmitted signal from the terminal can be reduced to a small fraction of the DTV channel bandwidth, there is a lower chance of the DTV receiver being unable to decode the signal correctly. Another perspective on this is that the narrowband whitespace transmitter can be located much closer to the DTV receiver before causing noticeable degradation of the decoded DTV signal. This can be of particular benefit for mobile or portable whitespace devices whose exact location and antenna orientation cannot be easily constrained.
  • Frequency hopping minimises the interference to TV reception, since no communication will be permanently causing interference to any given TV receiver. Frequency hopping also reduces the probability of the terminal being in a long-term fade. It provides a form of interleaving that enables more efficient error correction to be used.
  • the channels used for frequency hopping may be selected by the base station based upon information from the whitespace database on the available channels and associated power levels (which in turn are based upon the licensed spectrum use in the area).
  • the whitespace database does not include information about every possible source of interference.
  • a television transmitter may be intended to broadcast to only a particular coverage area, but may in fact leak into other nearby areas where the use of the frequencies in use by that transmitter are not prohibited in the whitespace database; major TV stations can be well above the thermal noise at distances of 100 km.
  • the signal from this transmitter may not be strong enough to be reliably received by television antennas in those nearby areas, it is often strong enough to cause severe interference to whitespace base stations in those areas, particularly if they have elevated antennas (which they may have in order to increase their own coverage area).
  • reception On nominally free channels, reception is far more likely to be dominated by distant TV broadcasts rather than thermal noise, especially in rural regions. This interference can render many of the whitespace channels unusable or severely compromised.
  • Interference may also be caused by the unintended emissions of devices that are not part of a wireless network, e.g. spurious emissions from faulty electric drills.
  • Neighbouring base stations are likely to have similar whitespace channel assignments. (As the distance between base stations increases, the assignments tend to change as the base stations are located in different TV service areas.) Therefore, if base stations pick their own frequency hopping sequences based on only the frequencies available in the whitespace database, the base stations of neighbouring cells are likely to make similar choices. If neighbouring cells use the same frequency hopping sequences then terminals at cell edges may receive multiple weak signals from both the base station for their own cell, and any neighbouring base stations in range, and have no way of distinguishing between them. Two neighbouring base stations may use the same frequencies on approximately one in ten frames. Each base station is surrounded by a number of others, typically around six, meaning interference is likely to occur somewhere within each cell around fifty percent of the time. This can result in a significant loss in capacity.
  • What is needed is a method and apparatus for optimising the frequencies that are available to cellular communication networks such as those operating in whitespace.
  • a communication device that forms part of a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the communication device being configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in its neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • the communication device may be configured to share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices responsive to a communication from a network controller.
  • the communication device may be configured to share the frequencies responsive to a command from the network controller.
  • the communication device may be configured to determine that it should share the frequencies responsive to a frequency hopping sequence received from the network controller.
  • the communication device may be configured to determine that it should share the frequencies responsive to the number of frequencies comprised in the frequency hopping sequence being below a predetermined threshold.
  • the communication device may be configured to negotiate with its neighbouring communication devices to determine how the insufficient number of frequencies should be shared between them.
  • the communication device may be configured to communicate with the at least one terminal comprised in its cell via a series of frames, each frame comprising a downlink portion and an uplink portion, and share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices by communicating the downlink portion of a frame in one timeslot on a frequency in its frequency hopping sequence and the uplink portion of the same frame in a different timeslot on the same frequency.
  • the communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots arranged such that the time from the start of the timeslot for the downlink portion to the end of the timeslot for the uplink portion is less than or equal to the duration of a frame via which the communication device normally communicates with the at least one terminal.
  • the communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots that are separated by one or more timeslots allocated to its neighbouring communication device(s).
  • the communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink and uplink portions of the frame such that the at least one terminal perceives the one or more timeslots allocated to the neighbouring communication device(s) as being parts of the frame that are allocated to other terminals in the cell.
  • a communication network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell and each communication device being further configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • the communication network may be configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices if the frequency hopping sequences derivable from those available frequencies require two or more neighbouring communication devices to use the same frequency for a length of time that is likely to lead to unacceptable packet loss.
  • the communication network may comprise a controller configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices.
  • the controller may be configured to communicate that there are an insufficient number of frequencies to the two or more communication devices.
  • the controller may be configured to instruct the two or more communication devices to share the insufficient number of frequencies on a time division basis.
  • the communication network may be configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices the same length of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
  • the communication network may be configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices different lengths of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
  • the communication network may be configured such that each of the communication devices communicates with its at least one terminal via frames having the same duration, those communication devices being configured to, when sharing a frequency with a neighbouring communication device, commence transmitting each frame at a different time from the neighbouring communication device so that the frames of one communication device are offset from those of another.
  • the communication network may be configured to operate in whitespace.
  • the communication network may be configured for machine-to-machine communication.
  • a method for communicating in a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the method comprising, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for two or more communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, sharing the insufficient number of frequencies between those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • FIG. 1 shows an example of a machine-to-machine network
  • FIG. 2 shows an example of a frame structure
  • FIG. 3 shows an example of a process that may be implemented by a controller
  • FIGS. 4( a ) to 4 ( c ) show examples of frequency hopping sequences
  • FIG. 5 shows an example of time sharing between four neighbouring communication devices
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a process for sharing frequencies on a time division basis
  • FIG. 7 shows an example of a controller
  • FIG. 8 shows an example of a communication device.
  • a background aspect of the invention relates to gathering information about frequency availability in each cell, and in dependence on that information assigning frequency hopping sequences to the cells in such a way as to reduce message failure caused by interference.
  • the communication network may be a wireless network comprising a number of cells.
  • each cell contains a communication device, such as a base station, and one or more communication terminals with which the communication device is capable of communicating according to a frequency hopping communication sequence.
  • the central controller gathers information relating to the frequency availability in each cell and uses this to determine appropriate frequency hopping sequences for each cell. These frequency hopping sequences are then communicated to the communication devices.
  • the communication devices then suitably communicate the frequency hopping sequence appropriate to their respective cells to the terminals in the cell and subsequently use that hopping sequence in communicating with the terminals.
  • the frequency hopping sequences prefferably be determined in such a way as to minimise (and preferably eliminate) periods of time during which communication devices in neighbouring cells are using the same frequency. Sometimes, however, there may simply not be enough frequencies available for this to be possible. If it is determined that for a particular group of two or more neighbouring communication devices there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide adequate frequency hopping sequences for all of them, the communication devices suitably share the frequencies that are available on a time division basis.
  • the communication devices are base stations.
  • the frequency hopping sequence allocation mechanism described herein may be implemented by any suitable communication devices, irrespective of what particular role those devices play within the network.
  • the controller is an operations centre for the network. It should be understood that this is also for the purposes of example only and the frequency hopping sequence allocation mechanism described herein may be generated and implemented by any suitable device (including, for example, a base station).
  • the network shown generally at 104 , comprises one or more base stations 105 that are each capable of communicating wirelessly with a number of terminals 106 .
  • Each base station may be arranged to communicate with terminals that are located within a particular geographical area or cell.
  • the base stations transmit to and receive radio signals from the terminals.
  • the terminals are suitably entities embedded or machines or similar that communicate with the base stations.
  • the wireless network is arranged to operate in a master-slave mode where the base station is the master and the terminals are the slaves.
  • the base station controller 107 is a device that provides a single point of communication to the base stations and then distributes the information received to other network elements as required. That is, the network is based around a many-to-one communication model.
  • the network may be arranged to communicate with a client-facing portion 101 via the internet 102 . In this way a client may provide services to the terminals via the wireless network.
  • many of the logical network elements may be implemented as databases running software and can be provided on a wide range of platforms.
  • a number of network elements may be physically located within the same platform.
  • a network such as that shown in FIG. 1 may be used for machine-to-machine communications, i.e. communications that do not involve human interaction.
  • Machine-to-machine communications are well-matched to the limitations of operating in whitespace, in which the bandwidth available to the network may vary from one location to another and also from one time instant to the next.
  • the network does not have any specific part of the spectrum allocated to it, even unallocated parts of the spectrum may become unavailable, e.g. due to a device in the vicinity that is operating outside of the network but using the same part of the spectrum.
  • Machines are able to tolerate the delays and breaks in communication that can result from these varying communication conditions. Services can be provided in non real-time; low latency is not important as long as data is reliably delivered.
  • the network may use medium access control (MAC) to share the same radio resource between multiple terminals.
  • MAC medium access control
  • FIG. 2 An example of a suitable frame structure is shown in FIG. 2 .
  • the frame (shown generally at 201 ) comprises time to ramp-up to full output power 202 (T_IFS), a synchronisation burst 203 (DL_SYNC), an information field providing the subsequent channel structure 204 (DL_FCH), a map of which information is intended for which terminal 205 (DL_MAP), a field to allow acknowledgement of previous uplink transmissions 206 (DL_ACK) and then the actual information to be sent to terminals 207 (DL_ALLOC).
  • T_IFS time to ramp-up to full output power 202
  • DL_SYNC synchronisation burst 203
  • DL_FCH information field providing the subsequent channel structure 204
  • DL_MAP map of which information is intended for which terminal 205
  • DL_ACK a field to allow acknowledgement of previous uplink transmission
  • T_SW guard period for ramp-down of the downlink and ramp-up on the uplink 208
  • UL_ALLOC allocated uplink data transmissions 210
  • UL_CA uplink contended access 209
  • a suitable hopping rate for the downlink channels may be the frame rate, so that each frame is transmitted on a different frequency from the preceding frame.
  • the frames for a network designed to operate in whitespace for machine-to-machine communication may be particularly long. In one example the frames may each be 2 seconds long, giving a frequency hop on the downlink every 2 seconds (which is 30 hops per minute).
  • the DL_FCH may include information to enable the terminals to determine the hopping sequence.
  • the DL_FCH may include a list of the frequencies that are included in the sequence. One efficient way of communicating this information is by means of a channel map, with a bit being set if the channel is in use in the base station.
  • the DL_FCH may also include a MAC Frame count (16-bit) enabling terminals to determine where the base station is in its hopping pattern.
  • the DL_MAP informs terminals as to whether there is any information for them in the frame and whether they have an uplink slot reserved for them to transmit information.
  • It comprises a table of terminal identities, the number of slots that their information is spread over and the transmission mode and spreading factors used. All terminals monitoring the frame decode this field to determine whether they need to decode subsequent information.
  • the length of the DL_MAP may be included as part of the DL_FCH.
  • a terminal can determine the position of its assigned slots from the DL_MAP by adding up the number of slots allocated in prior rows in the table.
  • the slots may be numbered from 0 to n on the first FDMA channel, then on the subsequent FDMA channel and so on.
  • the terminal can determine how many slots there are each channel from the length of the frame available for the uplink (that remaining after completion of the downlink) divided by the length of each slot. If a terminal has data requiring multiple slots it would normally be given these consecutively on the same carrier as this both simplifies the terminal transmission and minimises the control information required to describe the slot location. However, it is possible to give the terminal multiple allocations on different carriers (so long as they are not simultaneous) to achieve frequency hopping on the uplink.
  • header This combination of DL_SYNC, DL_FCH and DL_MAP is collectively known as the “header”.
  • the header will typically last between 20 ms and 200 ms of the 2 second frame (depending on the number of allocations to be signalled in the DL-MAP field).
  • a central controller may be provided to make intelligent frequency hopping sequence allocations to cells using analysis of frequency availability information.
  • a suitable process that may be performed by the controller is shown in FIG. 3 .
  • the process commences in step 301 .
  • the controller determines, for each and every cell, which frequencies are permitted for whitespace use. The controller may perform this step by accessing the whitespace database to rule out those frequencies reserved for licensed users. The controller may then determine what frequencies are otherwise excluded as being unsuitable (step 303 ). It may, for example, rule out as being unsuitable frequencies on which an unacceptably high level of interference has been found.
  • the controller produces a finalised list of frequencies that are available to each cell. The controller uses this list to generate a frequency hopping sequence for each cell (step 305 ), which is then communicated to the appropriate base station (step 306 ). The process finishes in step 307 .
  • the controller can start to allocate frequency hopping sequences. It is preferable for the sequences to contain as many frequencies as possible to reduce the impact of fading etc, as discussed above. However, the sequences should also be generated so as to minimise the occasions on which neighbouring cells will be transmitting on the same frequency, as this can cause interference to the terminals in each cell (particularly those located near to a cell boundary).
  • the controller may employ an algorithm to determine every possible frequency sequence across the cells of the network to analyse which arrangement will generate the least amount of overlap between neighbouring cells.
  • the available frequencies can be arranged in a predetermined order, with each cell starting its respective hopping sequence at a different frequency in the order from its neighbouring cells.
  • the predetermined order might be random or worked out according to some rule.
  • the available frequencies might simply be organised into ascending or descending order. An example is shown in FIG. 4( a ).
  • Cells 1 to 3 are neighbouring cells and frequencies 1 to 4 are available in each cell.
  • Each cell is assigned a cyclic-sequence in which frequencies 1 to 4 are used in ascending order.
  • each cell commences its respective sequence at a different offset from its neighbour, so that at any given time each cell is using a different frequency in the sequence from its neighbour. Simulations have shown that such offset, cyclic frequency hopping sequences functions very well, without the unfeasible computational burden associated with looking at all possible frequency hopping sequences across all cells.
  • Generating the sequences to simply comprise a list of available frequencies arranged in a predetermined order and then applying a respective offset for each cell works particularly well in networks arranged to operate in whitespace. This is because the frequencies available for use in whitespace are largely dictated by the frequencies that are already allocated to TV channels. Different TV transmitters may use different frequencies (which is why the spectrum available to whitespace networks is dependent on the location of that network); however, each TV transmitter is associated with a large geographical region. Typically, a transmitter may cover an area having a radius of around 50 miles. This means that neighbouring cells will largely have the same set of frequencies available to them. When this is the case, neighbouring cells can be prevented from overlapping in their frequency hopping sequences simply by applying an offset in each cell.
  • neighbouring cells have the same available frequencies, e.g. where neighbouring cells are located in different TV coverage areas.
  • one cell may have more frequencies available to it than its neighbour, which raises a potential problem that the two cells will eventually cycle round to be identical with each other, despite having commenced their cycles with different offsets.
  • FIG. 4( b ) An example of such a situation is shown in FIG. 4( b ), in which frequencies 1 to 3 are available to cells 1 and 2, but frequency 4 is available only to cell 1. Consequently cell 1 cycles through frequencies 1 to 4, while cell 2 cycles through frequencies 1 to 3 with an offset.
  • the additional frequency in cell 1's hopping sequence means that the two cells inevitably end up using the same frequency for a time period illustrated by the dotted line 401 .
  • a unique feature of machine-to-machine networks is their ability to tolerate delays caused by message clashes.
  • it is usually possible to simply resend data at a later time, with no ill effects, if the first transmission fails. Therefore, for those cells where they will, for some small percentage of the time, be operating on the same frequencies as one or more neighbouring cells, this is not necessarily as problematic as it may first appear.
  • spreading codes may be implemented to minimise the number of packets lost as a consequence of frequency clashes.
  • a preferred implementation is to have the cell with fewer frequencies available to it cycle through those frequencies until its neighbouring cell, with more frequencies at its disposal, has finished one of its cycles.
  • This scenario is illustrated in FIG. 4( c ).
  • frequencies 1 to 3 are available to cells 1 and 2, but frequency 4 is available only to cell 1.
  • the frequency hopping sequence of cell 2 has been extended so that the duration of one cycle matches the duration of one cycle of the frequency hopping sequence of cell 1. This is achieved by extending the set of frequencies through which cell 2 cycles to comprise the same number of frequencies as cell 1. Since four frequencies are not available in cell 2, this requires the first frequency of cell 2's set to be repeated.
  • the frequency hopping sequence of cell 2 essentially comprises two different cycles, each with its own periodicity.
  • cell 2 cycles through frequencies 1 to 3 with its assigned offset.
  • that cycle has a duration that is limited to the duration of the cycle of its neighbouring cell, cell 1.
  • An arrangement such as this may be advantageous in avoiding the overlapping frequencies of the arrangement shown in FIG. 4( b ).
  • TDMA time division multiple access
  • each base station may only use a fraction of a frequency.
  • An example is shown in FIG. 5 in which a single available channel ( 501 ) is split into eight parts and shared between four base stations ( 508 to 511 ) located in neighbouring cells ( 503 to 507 ).
  • Base station 509 might be assigned part 1 of the channel for its downlink and part 5 for its uplink.
  • Base station 510 might be assigned parts 2 for its downlink and part 6 for its uplink, and so on. With this approach, the start of the frames is not synchronised across the base stations.
  • FIG. 5 shows an example in which a single frequency (representing a single available channel) is shared between neighbouring base stations. It may often be the case that more than one frequency is available but still the number of available frequencies is too low for each base station in a group of neighbouring base stations to share them on a purely frequency division basis. This is because the frequency hopping sequences that can be generated using those available frequencies are insufficiently distinct or different from each other, so that implementing them would lead to unacceptably long periods of overlap. Some period of overlap may be acceptable, particularly since machine-to-machine networks are designed to cope well with packet loss. However, periods of overlap lasting longer than a certain threshold are likely to lead to unacceptable levels of packet loss.
  • the number of available frequencies available to a group of neighbouring base stations might be compared with the number of base stations in the group and deemed to be insufficient based on some predetermined formula or threshold. In other circumstances, this determination may be made on the basis that the number of frequencies available is too low for each base station in the group to communicate simultaneously via the same frequency. Another option is for the number of available frequencies to be determined to be insufficient in practice, i.e. if it is found that a partial overlap between neighbouring base stations' individual frequency hopping sequences is leading to unacceptable packet loss.
  • the number of available frequencies may be deemed insufficient by the controller responsible for determining the frequency hopping sequences for the network. In general, it is a central planning system of this kind that will instigate frequency sharing by determining that the frequencies need to be shared and instructing the base stations accordingly. The controller may make this determination based not only on the number of frequencies available, but also information returned by one or more base stations about packet loss, interference from neighbouring base stations etc. Alternatively the number of available frequencies may be deemed insufficient by a base station upon receiving its frequency hopping sequence from the controller, e.g. based on the number of frequencies comprised in that sequence being lower than a predetermined threshold, or on packet loss experienced in the cell when using the frequency hopping sequence. Individual base stations may implement TDMA sharing automatically or after local negotiation with other base stations.
  • a central controller preferably generates a frequency hopping sequence for each base station by means of the principles and mechanisms described above. Neighbouring base stations may then share a group of available frequencies on both a frequency-division and a time-division basis.
  • FIG. 5 shows an example in which a single channel is divided up into timeslots of equal length for allocation to the different base stations.
  • the timeslots would be of equal length, this is not necessary, and different length timeslots may be allocated to different base stations, e.g. if one base station is particularly heavily loaded compared with its neighbours it may be allocated longer timeslots.
  • FIG. 5 also shows each base station being allocated timeslots for their downlink and uplink communications that are separated by timeslots allocated to other base stations.
  • the base stations could be allocated contiguous timeslots, with no such gap between the uplink and downlink sections.
  • an advantage of allocating timeslots that are separated in time is that it enables the uplink and downlink portions of frames from different base stations to be interleaved so that each base station can maintain its normal frame rate.
  • the time from the start of the timeslot allocated to the downlink to the end of the timeslot allocated to the uplink is less than or equal to the normal frame duration (e.g. 2 seconds).
  • each downlink timeslot is at least long enough to accommodate the frame header (so at least 200 ms long).
  • Each base station preferably just does not allocate any communications for the part of its frame when the channel is allocated to one of its neighbours.
  • the frame should appear as a normal since they will perceive the ‘gap’ as simply being a part of the frame that is allocated to other terminals in their cell.
  • Cells and their associated base stations may be considered ‘neighbours’ if they share a boundary. Cells and their associated base stations may also be considered ‘neighbours’ simply if transmissions in one of those cells by the base station or its associated terminals has the capacity to interfere with communications in the other cell.
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a process for sharing a limited number of frequencies between a group of base stations.
  • a group of four base stations are sharing two available frequencies: A and B.
  • the process commences in step 601 .
  • step 602 it is determined that frequencies A and B are available to be used by base stations 1 to 4. This number of frequencies is determined to be insufficient (step 603 ) and the base stations are instructed to share them on a time division basis (step 604 ).
  • base stations 1 and 3 commence their communications on frequencies A and B respectively.
  • the frames of base stations 2 and 4 are offset from those of base stations 1 and 3, and so they commence communications on frequencies A and B in step 606 .
  • Steps 605 and 606 are repeated until different frequency hopping sequences are assigned to the base station.
  • the process finishes in step 607 .
  • the controller may be comprised in the core network, e.g. the OMC used for operational aspects of the network in a central planning role, or it may be comprised elsewhere in the network, e.g. in one of the base stations.
  • the controller shown generally at 701 , comprises a communication unit 703 connected to an antenna 702 for transmitting and receiving messages. The controller might equally communicate the frequency hopping sequences to the communication devices via a wired connection.
  • the controller further comprises an availability unit 704 for determining what frequencies are available in each cell, an analysis unit 705 for analysing when the number of available frequencies is insufficient, and a generation unit 706 for generating the frequency hopping sequences.
  • the communication unit may effectively act as a central controller and may pass information between the other functional blocks.
  • the communication device shown generally at 801 , comprises a communication unit 803 connected to an antenna 802 for transmitting and receiving messages.
  • the communication device further comprises a storage unit 804 for storing its frequency hopping sequence and a time sharing unit 805 for effecting time sharing when too few frequencies are available.
  • the communication device further comprises a negotiation unit 806 for negotiating time sharing arrangements with neighbouring communication devices.
  • the communication unit may effectively act as a central controller and may pass information between the other functional blocks.
  • FIGS. 7 and 8 are shown illustratively as comprising a number of interconnected functional blocks. This is for illustrative purposes and is not intended to define a strict division between different parts of hardware on a chip.
  • the communication device preferably uses a microprocessor acting under software control for implementing the methods described herein.
  • the algorithms may be performed wholly or partly in hardware.

Abstract

A communication device that forms part of a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the communication device being configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in its neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with of those communication devices on a time division basis.

Description

  • The present invention relates to assigning frequency hopping sequences to cells in a cellular communication network.
  • A wireless network may be configured to operate without having been specifically allocated any part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Such a network may be permitted to operate in so-called whitespace: a part of the spectrum that is made available for unlicensed or opportunistic access. Typically whitespace is found in the UHF TV band and spans 450 MHz to 800 MHz, depending on the country. A large amount of spectrum has been made available for unlicensed wireless systems in this frequency range.
  • A problem with operating in whitespace is that the available bandwidth is variable and cannot be guaranteed. These limitations are well-matched to the capabilities of machine-to-machine networks in which there is no human interaction. Machine-to-machine networks are typically tolerant of delays, dropped connections and high latency communications.
  • Any network operating in the UHF TV band has to be able to coexist with analogue and digital television broadcast transmitters. The density of the active television channels in any given location is relatively low (resulting in the availability of whitespace that can be used by unlicensed systems). The FCC has mandated that systems operating in the whitespace must reference a database that determines which channels may be used in any given location. This is intended to avoid interference with the TV transmissions and certain other incumbent systems such as wireless microphones.
  • For TV receivers (including those for digital TV (DTV)), there will inevitably be adjacent channels on which a strong transmission close to the TV receiver will interfere with TV reception. For example, the TV receivers may have image frequencies and poor adjacent channel rejection (ACR) on certain frequencies due to spurs on their local oscillators and limitations in their receive filters. These frequencies are often dependent on the specific receiver implementation.
  • Digital TV typically uses a channel bandwidth of 6 to 8 MHz. It also uses OFDM modulation in which the overall channel bandwidth is split into a large number of narrower channels (so-called sub-carriers), each of which is individually modulated. The system is designed so that, if a certain number of sub-carriers are subject to multipath fading, with the result that their signal-to-noise ratio is poor, the overall data can still be recovered. This is typically achieved by using interleaving and error correction codes, which mean that bit errors localised to a limited number of sub-carriers can be corrected. OFDM modulation can therefore achieve considerable robustness to multipath fading.
  • OFDM is only able to recover the transmitted data when the interferer is relatively narrowband compared with the bandwidth of the overall TV signal, such that a limited number of sub-carriers are affected. OFDM does not provide a similar performance benefit when the interferer occupies a relatively large proportion of the DTV channel bandwidth because in this case the error control coding may be incapable of correcting the bit errors due to the higher proportion of bits that may be corrupt. If the bandwidth of the transmitted signal from the terminal can be reduced to a small fraction of the DTV channel bandwidth, there is a lower chance of the DTV receiver being unable to decode the signal correctly. Another perspective on this is that the narrowband whitespace transmitter can be located much closer to the DTV receiver before causing noticeable degradation of the decoded DTV signal. This can be of particular benefit for mobile or portable whitespace devices whose exact location and antenna orientation cannot be easily constrained.
  • There is a potential issue with reducing the bandwidth occupied by the whitespace device's transmitter: transmitting on a narrow bandwidth channel makes the whitespace device sensitive to poor reception due to multipath fading. This is because the entire bandwidth could be in a long-term fade (lasting multiple frames), resulting in poor signal-to-noise ratio.
  • Both of these problems may be addressed using frequency hopping. Frequency hopping minimises the interference to TV reception, since no communication will be permanently causing interference to any given TV receiver. Frequency hopping also reduces the probability of the terminal being in a long-term fade. It provides a form of interleaving that enables more efficient error correction to be used.
  • The channels used for frequency hopping may be selected by the base station based upon information from the whitespace database on the available channels and associated power levels (which in turn are based upon the licensed spectrum use in the area). However, the whitespace database does not include information about every possible source of interference.
  • For example, a television transmitter may be intended to broadcast to only a particular coverage area, but may in fact leak into other nearby areas where the use of the frequencies in use by that transmitter are not prohibited in the whitespace database; major TV stations can be well above the thermal noise at distances of 100 km. Although the signal from this transmitter may not be strong enough to be reliably received by television antennas in those nearby areas, it is often strong enough to cause severe interference to whitespace base stations in those areas, particularly if they have elevated antennas (which they may have in order to increase their own coverage area). On nominally free channels, reception is far more likely to be dominated by distant TV broadcasts rather than thermal noise, especially in rural regions. This interference can render many of the whitespace channels unusable or severely compromised.
  • Interference from other unlicensed whitespace networks can also be a problem as all whitespace networks compete for use of those frequencies the whitespace database marks as available.
  • Interference may also be caused by the unintended emissions of devices that are not part of a wireless network, e.g. spurious emissions from faulty electric drills.
  • Apart from all these interferers external to the network, there can also be problems for devices located close to the edge of cells. Neighbouring base stations are likely to have similar whitespace channel assignments. (As the distance between base stations increases, the assignments tend to change as the base stations are located in different TV service areas.) Therefore, if base stations pick their own frequency hopping sequences based on only the frequencies available in the whitespace database, the base stations of neighbouring cells are likely to make similar choices. If neighbouring cells use the same frequency hopping sequences then terminals at cell edges may receive multiple weak signals from both the base station for their own cell, and any neighbouring base stations in range, and have no way of distinguishing between them. Two neighbouring base stations may use the same frequencies on approximately one in ten frames. Each base station is surrounded by a number of others, typically around six, meaning interference is likely to occur somewhere within each cell around fifty percent of the time. This can result in a significant loss in capacity.
  • What is needed is a method and apparatus for optimising the frequencies that are available to cellular communication networks such as those operating in whitespace.
  • According to a first embodiment of the invention, there is provided a communication device that forms part of a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the communication device being configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in its neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • The communication device may be configured to share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices responsive to a communication from a network controller.
  • The communication device may be configured to share the frequencies responsive to a command from the network controller.
  • The communication device may be configured to determine that it should share the frequencies responsive to a frequency hopping sequence received from the network controller.
  • The communication device may be configured to determine that it should share the frequencies responsive to the number of frequencies comprised in the frequency hopping sequence being below a predetermined threshold.
  • The communication device may be configured to negotiate with its neighbouring communication devices to determine how the insufficient number of frequencies should be shared between them.
  • The communication device may be configured to communicate with the at least one terminal comprised in its cell via a series of frames, each frame comprising a downlink portion and an uplink portion, and share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices by communicating the downlink portion of a frame in one timeslot on a frequency in its frequency hopping sequence and the uplink portion of the same frame in a different timeslot on the same frequency.
  • The communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots arranged such that the time from the start of the timeslot for the downlink portion to the end of the timeslot for the uplink portion is less than or equal to the duration of a frame via which the communication device normally communicates with the at least one terminal.
  • The communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots that are separated by one or more timeslots allocated to its neighbouring communication device(s).
  • The communication device may be configured to communicate the downlink and uplink portions of the frame such that the at least one terminal perceives the one or more timeslots allocated to the neighbouring communication device(s) as being parts of the frame that are allocated to other terminals in the cell.
  • According to a second embodiment of the invention, there is provided a communication network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell and each communication device being further configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • The communication network may be configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices if the frequency hopping sequences derivable from those available frequencies require two or more neighbouring communication devices to use the same frequency for a length of time that is likely to lead to unacceptable packet loss.
  • The communication network may comprise a controller configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices. The controller may be configured to communicate that there are an insufficient number of frequencies to the two or more communication devices. The controller may be configured to instruct the two or more communication devices to share the insufficient number of frequencies on a time division basis.
  • The communication network may be configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices the same length of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
  • The communication network may be configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices different lengths of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
  • The communication network may be configured such that each of the communication devices communicates with its at least one terminal via frames having the same duration, those communication devices being configured to, when sharing a frequency with a neighbouring communication device, commence transmitting each frame at a different time from the neighbouring communication device so that the frames of one communication device are offset from those of another.
  • The communication network may be configured to operate in whitespace.
  • The communication network may be configured for machine-to-machine communication.
  • According to a third embodiment of the invention, there is provided a method for communicating in a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the method comprising, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for two or more communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, sharing the insufficient number of frequencies between those communication devices on a time division basis.
  • Aspects of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings:
  • FIG. 1 shows an example of a machine-to-machine network;
  • FIG. 2 shows an example of a frame structure;
  • FIG. 3 shows an example of a process that may be implemented by a controller;
  • FIGS. 4( a) to 4(c) show examples of frequency hopping sequences;
  • FIG. 5 shows an example of time sharing between four neighbouring communication devices;
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a process for sharing frequencies on a time division basis;
  • FIG. 7 shows an example of a controller; and
  • FIG. 8 shows an example of a communication device.
  • A background aspect of the invention relates to gathering information about frequency availability in each cell, and in dependence on that information assigning frequency hopping sequences to the cells in such a way as to reduce message failure caused by interference.
  • The communication network may be a wireless network comprising a number of cells. Preferably each cell contains a communication device, such as a base station, and one or more communication terminals with which the communication device is capable of communicating according to a frequency hopping communication sequence. The central controller gathers information relating to the frequency availability in each cell and uses this to determine appropriate frequency hopping sequences for each cell. These frequency hopping sequences are then communicated to the communication devices. The communication devices then suitably communicate the frequency hopping sequence appropriate to their respective cells to the terminals in the cell and subsequently use that hopping sequence in communicating with the terminals.
  • It is preferable for the frequency hopping sequences to be determined in such a way as to minimise (and preferably eliminate) periods of time during which communication devices in neighbouring cells are using the same frequency. Sometimes, however, there may simply not be enough frequencies available for this to be possible. If it is determined that for a particular group of two or more neighbouring communication devices there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide adequate frequency hopping sequences for all of them, the communication devices suitably share the frequencies that are available on a time division basis.
  • One or more embodiments of the invention will now be described with specific reference to a wireless network in which the communication devices are base stations. This is for the purposes of example only and it should be understood that the frequency hopping sequence allocation mechanism described herein may be implemented by any suitable communication devices, irrespective of what particular role those devices play within the network. Also, one or more embodiments are described with specific reference to wireless networks in which the controller is an operations centre for the network. It should be understood that this is also for the purposes of example only and the frequency hopping sequence allocation mechanism described herein may be generated and implemented by any suitable device (including, for example, a base station).
  • An example of a wireless network is shown in FIG. 1. The network, shown generally at 104, comprises one or more base stations 105 that are each capable of communicating wirelessly with a number of terminals 106. Each base station may be arranged to communicate with terminals that are located within a particular geographical area or cell. The base stations transmit to and receive radio signals from the terminals. The terminals are suitably entities embedded or machines or similar that communicate with the base stations. Suitably the wireless network is arranged to operate in a master-slave mode where the base station is the master and the terminals are the slaves.
  • The base station controller 107 is a device that provides a single point of communication to the base stations and then distributes the information received to other network elements as required. That is, the network is based around a many-to-one communication model. The network may be arranged to communicate with a client-facing portion 101 via the internet 102. In this way a client may provide services to the terminals via the wireless network.
  • Other logical network elements shown in this example are:
      • Core network. This routes traffic information between base stations and client networks.
      • Billing system. This records utilisation levels and generates appropriate billing data.
      • Authentication system. This holds terminal and base station authentication information.
      • Location register. This retains the last known location of the terminals.
      • Broadcast register. This retains information on group membership and can be used to store and process acknowledgements to broadcast messages.
      • Operations and maintenance centre (OMC). This monitors the function of the network and raises alarms when errors are detected. It also manages frequency and code planning, load balancing and other operational aspects of the network.
      • Whitespace database. This provides information on the available whitespace spectrum.
      • Client information portal. This allows clients to determine data such as the status of associated terminals, levels of traffic etc.
  • In practice, many of the logical network elements may be implemented as databases running software and can be provided on a wide range of platforms. A number of network elements may be physically located within the same platform.
  • A network such as that shown in FIG. 1 may be used for machine-to-machine communications, i.e. communications that do not involve human interaction. Machine-to-machine communications are well-matched to the limitations of operating in whitespace, in which the bandwidth available to the network may vary from one location to another and also from one time instant to the next. As the network does not have any specific part of the spectrum allocated to it, even unallocated parts of the spectrum may become unavailable, e.g. due to a device in the vicinity that is operating outside of the network but using the same part of the spectrum. Machines are able to tolerate the delays and breaks in communication that can result from these varying communication conditions. Services can be provided in non real-time; low latency is not important as long as data is reliably delivered.
  • The network may use medium access control (MAC) to share the same radio resource between multiple terminals. An example of a suitable frame structure is shown in FIG. 2. The frame (shown generally at 201) comprises time to ramp-up to full output power 202 (T_IFS), a synchronisation burst 203 (DL_SYNC), an information field providing the subsequent channel structure 204 (DL_FCH), a map of which information is intended for which terminal 205 (DL_MAP), a field to allow acknowledgement of previous uplink transmissions 206 (DL_ACK) and then the actual information to be sent to terminals 207 (DL_ALLOC). There is then a guard period for ramp-down of the downlink and ramp-up on the uplink 208 (T_SW), followed by the allocated uplink data transmissions 210 (UL_ALLOC) in parallel with channels set aside for uplink contended access 209 (UL_CA).
  • A suitable hopping rate for the downlink channels may be the frame rate, so that each frame is transmitted on a different frequency from the preceding frame. The frames for a network designed to operate in whitespace for machine-to-machine communication may be particularly long. In one example the frames may each be 2 seconds long, giving a frequency hop on the downlink every 2 seconds (which is 30 hops per minute).
  • The DL_FCH may include information to enable the terminals to determine the hopping sequence. The DL_FCH may include a list of the frequencies that are included in the sequence. One efficient way of communicating this information is by means of a channel map, with a bit being set if the channel is in use in the base station. The DL_FCH may also include a MAC Frame count (16-bit) enabling terminals to determine where the base station is in its hopping pattern.
  • The DL_MAP informs terminals as to whether there is any information for them in the frame and whether they have an uplink slot reserved for them to transmit information.
  • It comprises a table of terminal identities, the number of slots that their information is spread over and the transmission mode and spreading factors used. All terminals monitoring the frame decode this field to determine whether they need to decode subsequent information. The length of the DL_MAP may be included as part of the DL_FCH. A terminal can determine the position of its assigned slots from the DL_MAP by adding up the number of slots allocated in prior rows in the table.
  • On the uplink the slots may be numbered from 0 to n on the first FDMA channel, then on the subsequent FDMA channel and so on. The terminal can determine how many slots there are each channel from the length of the frame available for the uplink (that remaining after completion of the downlink) divided by the length of each slot. If a terminal has data requiring multiple slots it would normally be given these consecutively on the same carrier as this both simplifies the terminal transmission and minimises the control information required to describe the slot location. However, it is possible to give the terminal multiple allocations on different carriers (so long as they are not simultaneous) to achieve frequency hopping on the uplink.
  • This combination of DL_SYNC, DL_FCH and DL_MAP is collectively known as the “header”. In an M2M system, with lower data rates achieved through spreading, the header will typically last between 20 ms and 200 ms of the 2 second frame (depending on the number of allocations to be signalled in the DL-MAP field).
  • In order to increase the number of messages that are reliably delivered, a central controller may be provided to make intelligent frequency hopping sequence allocations to cells using analysis of frequency availability information. A suitable process that may be performed by the controller is shown in FIG. 3. The process commences in step 301. In step 302, the controller determines, for each and every cell, which frequencies are permitted for whitespace use. The controller may perform this step by accessing the whitespace database to rule out those frequencies reserved for licensed users. The controller may then determine what frequencies are otherwise excluded as being unsuitable (step 303). It may, for example, rule out as being unsuitable frequencies on which an unacceptably high level of interference has been found. In step 304 the controller produces a finalised list of frequencies that are available to each cell. The controller uses this list to generate a frequency hopping sequence for each cell (step 305), which is then communicated to the appropriate base station (step 306). The process finishes in step 307.
  • Once the controller has established which frequencies are available for use in each cell it can start to allocate frequency hopping sequences. It is preferable for the sequences to contain as many frequencies as possible to reduce the impact of fading etc, as discussed above. However, the sequences should also be generated so as to minimise the occasions on which neighbouring cells will be transmitting on the same frequency, as this can cause interference to the terminals in each cell (particularly those located near to a cell boundary). The controller may employ an algorithm to determine every possible frequency sequence across the cells of the network to analyse which arrangement will generate the least amount of overlap between neighbouring cells.
  • If the number of available frequencies is high, and the network relatively large, a computation such as the one described above can rapidly require an unworkable level of resource. A preferred option is for the available frequencies to be arranged in a predetermined order, with each cell starting its respective hopping sequence at a different frequency in the order from its neighbouring cells. The predetermined order might be random or worked out according to some rule. For example, the available frequencies might simply be organised into ascending or descending order. An example is shown in FIG. 4( a). Cells 1 to 3 are neighbouring cells and frequencies 1 to 4 are available in each cell. Each cell is assigned a cyclic-sequence in which frequencies 1 to 4 are used in ascending order. However, each cell commences its respective sequence at a different offset from its neighbour, so that at any given time each cell is using a different frequency in the sequence from its neighbour. Simulations have shown that such offset, cyclic frequency hopping sequences functions very well, without the unfeasible computational burden associated with looking at all possible frequency hopping sequences across all cells.
  • Generating the sequences to simply comprise a list of available frequencies arranged in a predetermined order and then applying a respective offset for each cell works particularly well in networks arranged to operate in whitespace. This is because the frequencies available for use in whitespace are largely dictated by the frequencies that are already allocated to TV channels. Different TV transmitters may use different frequencies (which is why the spectrum available to whitespace networks is dependent on the location of that network); however, each TV transmitter is associated with a large geographical region. Typically, a transmitter may cover an area having a radius of around 50 miles. This means that neighbouring cells will largely have the same set of frequencies available to them. When this is the case, neighbouring cells can be prevented from overlapping in their frequency hopping sequences simply by applying an offset in each cell.
  • It will not always be the case that neighbouring cells have the same available frequencies, e.g. where neighbouring cells are located in different TV coverage areas. Often, one cell may have more frequencies available to it than its neighbour, which raises a potential problem that the two cells will eventually cycle round to be identical with each other, despite having commenced their cycles with different offsets. An example of such a situation is shown in FIG. 4( b), in which frequencies 1 to 3 are available to cells 1 and 2, but frequency 4 is available only to cell 1. Consequently cell 1 cycles through frequencies 1 to 4, while cell 2 cycles through frequencies 1 to 3 with an offset. However, in this instance, the additional frequency in cell 1's hopping sequence means that the two cells inevitably end up using the same frequency for a time period illustrated by the dotted line 401. The overlap still occurs for a much lower percentage of the time than would be expected if the base stations chose their own frequency hopping sequences, but any overlap will nonetheless cause messages to clash. A solution to this problem would be for cell 1 to remove frequency 4 from its hopping sequence. However, this is not an ideal solution as it is preferred for the hopping sequence of each cell to make use of all the frequencies available to it.
  • A unique feature of machine-to-machine networks is their ability to tolerate delays caused by message clashes. In a machine-to-machine network, it is usually possible to simply resend data at a later time, with no ill effects, if the first transmission fails. Therefore, for those cells where they will, for some small percentage of the time, be operating on the same frequencies as one or more neighbouring cells, this is not necessarily as problematic as it may first appear. In addition, spreading codes may be implemented to minimise the number of packets lost as a consequence of frequency clashes.
  • A preferred implementation, however, is to have the cell with fewer frequencies available to it cycle through those frequencies until its neighbouring cell, with more frequencies at its disposal, has finished one of its cycles. This scenario is illustrated in FIG. 4( c). In this example, frequencies 1 to 3 are available to cells 1 and 2, but frequency 4 is available only to cell 1. In this example, the frequency hopping sequence of cell 2 has been extended so that the duration of one cycle matches the duration of one cycle of the frequency hopping sequence of cell 1. This is achieved by extending the set of frequencies through which cell 2 cycles to comprise the same number of frequencies as cell 1. Since four frequencies are not available in cell 2, this requires the first frequency of cell 2's set to be repeated. Another way to view this is that the frequency hopping sequence of cell 2 essentially comprises two different cycles, each with its own periodicity. In the first cycle, cell 2 cycles through frequencies 1 to 3 with its assigned offset. However, that cycle has a duration that is limited to the duration of the cycle of its neighbouring cell, cell 1. In other words, when cell 1 finishes its cycle, the cycle of cell 2 is essentially terminated and reset, so that it recommences its cycle from the beginning. An arrangement such as this may be advantageous in avoiding the overlapping frequencies of the arrangement shown in FIG. 4( b).
  • In some circumstances there may be insufficient frequencies available to enable neighbouring base stations to be allocated different frequencies frequently enough. For a typical group of base stations, anything fewer than four frequencies may be insufficient. This is because each cell will typically have four neighbours, so that anything fewer than four frequencies makes it impossible for each neighbouring cell to use a different frequency at any given time instant. This may be addressed by having neighbouring base stations share the available frequencies, suitably by using time division multiple access (TDMA).
  • By sharing the available frequencies between them, each base station may only use a fraction of a frequency. An example is shown in FIG. 5 in which a single available channel (501) is split into eight parts and shared between four base stations (508 to 511) located in neighbouring cells (503 to 507). Base station 509 might be assigned part 1 of the channel for its downlink and part 5 for its uplink. Base station 510 might be assigned parts 2 for its downlink and part 6 for its uplink, and so on. With this approach, the start of the frames is not synchronised across the base stations.
  • FIG. 5 shows an example in which a single frequency (representing a single available channel) is shared between neighbouring base stations. It may often be the case that more than one frequency is available but still the number of available frequencies is too low for each base station in a group of neighbouring base stations to share them on a purely frequency division basis. This is because the frequency hopping sequences that can be generated using those available frequencies are insufficiently distinct or different from each other, so that implementing them would lead to unacceptably long periods of overlap. Some period of overlap may be acceptable, particularly since machine-to-machine networks are designed to cope well with packet loss. However, periods of overlap lasting longer than a certain threshold are likely to lead to unacceptable levels of packet loss.
  • In some circumstances, the number of available frequencies available to a group of neighbouring base stations might be compared with the number of base stations in the group and deemed to be insufficient based on some predetermined formula or threshold. In other circumstances, this determination may be made on the basis that the number of frequencies available is too low for each base station in the group to communicate simultaneously via the same frequency. Another option is for the number of available frequencies to be determined to be insufficient in practice, i.e. if it is found that a partial overlap between neighbouring base stations' individual frequency hopping sequences is leading to unacceptable packet loss.
  • The number of available frequencies may be deemed insufficient by the controller responsible for determining the frequency hopping sequences for the network. In general, it is a central planning system of this kind that will instigate frequency sharing by determining that the frequencies need to be shared and instructing the base stations accordingly. The controller may make this determination based not only on the number of frequencies available, but also information returned by one or more base stations about packet loss, interference from neighbouring base stations etc. Alternatively the number of available frequencies may be deemed insufficient by a base station upon receiving its frequency hopping sequence from the controller, e.g. based on the number of frequencies comprised in that sequence being lower than a predetermined threshold, or on packet loss experienced in the cell when using the frequency hopping sequence. Individual base stations may implement TDMA sharing automatically or after local negotiation with other base stations.
  • Where more than one frequency is available to each base station, a central controller preferably generates a frequency hopping sequence for each base station by means of the principles and mechanisms described above. Neighbouring base stations may then share a group of available frequencies on both a frequency-division and a time-division basis.
  • FIG. 5 shows an example in which a single channel is divided up into timeslots of equal length for allocation to the different base stations. Although generally the timeslots would be of equal length, this is not necessary, and different length timeslots may be allocated to different base stations, e.g. if one base station is particularly heavily loaded compared with its neighbours it may be allocated longer timeslots.
  • FIG. 5 also shows each base station being allocated timeslots for their downlink and uplink communications that are separated by timeslots allocated to other base stations. The base stations could be allocated contiguous timeslots, with no such gap between the uplink and downlink sections. However, an advantage of allocating timeslots that are separated in time is that it enables the uplink and downlink portions of frames from different base stations to be interleaved so that each base station can maintain its normal frame rate. Preferably the time from the start of the timeslot allocated to the downlink to the end of the timeslot allocated to the uplink is less than or equal to the normal frame duration (e.g. 2 seconds). Preferably each downlink timeslot is at least long enough to accommodate the frame header (so at least 200 ms long). Each base station preferably just does not allocate any communications for the part of its frame when the channel is allocated to one of its neighbours. To the terminals, the frame should appear as a normal since they will perceive the ‘gap’ as simply being a part of the frame that is allocated to other terminals in their cell.
  • Cells and their associated base stations may be considered ‘neighbours’ if they share a boundary. Cells and their associated base stations may also be considered ‘neighbours’ simply if transmissions in one of those cells by the base station or its associated terminals has the capacity to interfere with communications in the other cell.
  • FIG. 6 shows an example of a process for sharing a limited number of frequencies between a group of base stations. In this example a group of four base stations are sharing two available frequencies: A and B. The process commences in step 601. In step 602 it is determined that frequencies A and B are available to be used by base stations 1 to 4. This number of frequencies is determined to be insufficient (step 603) and the base stations are instructed to share them on a time division basis (step 604). In step 605, base stations 1 and 3 commence their communications on frequencies A and B respectively. The frames of base stations 2 and 4 are offset from those of base stations 1 and 3, and so they commence communications on frequencies A and B in step 606. Steps 605 and 606 are repeated until different frequency hopping sequences are assigned to the base station. The process finishes in step 607.
  • An example of the functional blocks that may be comprised in a controller according to one embodiment of the invention are shown in FIG. 7. The controller may be comprised in the core network, e.g. the OMC used for operational aspects of the network in a central planning role, or it may be comprised elsewhere in the network, e.g. in one of the base stations. The controller, shown generally at 701, comprises a communication unit 703 connected to an antenna 702 for transmitting and receiving messages. The controller might equally communicate the frequency hopping sequences to the communication devices via a wired connection. The controller further comprises an availability unit 704 for determining what frequencies are available in each cell, an analysis unit 705 for analysing when the number of available frequencies is insufficient, and a generation unit 706 for generating the frequency hopping sequences. The communication unit may effectively act as a central controller and may pass information between the other functional blocks.
  • An example of the functional blocks that may be comprised in a communication device according to one embodiment of the invention are shown in FIG. 8. The communication device, shown generally at 801, comprises a communication unit 803 connected to an antenna 802 for transmitting and receiving messages. The communication device further comprises a storage unit 804 for storing its frequency hopping sequence and a time sharing unit 805 for effecting time sharing when too few frequencies are available. The communication device further comprises a negotiation unit 806 for negotiating time sharing arrangements with neighbouring communication devices. The communication unit may effectively act as a central controller and may pass information between the other functional blocks.
  • The apparatus in FIGS. 7 and 8 are shown illustratively as comprising a number of interconnected functional blocks. This is for illustrative purposes and is not intended to define a strict division between different parts of hardware on a chip. In practice, the communication device preferably uses a microprocessor acting under software control for implementing the methods described herein. In some embodiments, the algorithms may be performed wholly or partly in hardware.
  • The applicant hereby discloses in isolation each individual feature described herein and any combination of two or more such features, to the extent that such features or combinations are capable of being carried out based on the present specification as a whole in the light of the common general knowledge of a person skilled in the art, irrespective of whether such features or combinations of features solve any problems disclosed herein, and without limitation to the scope of the claims. The applicant indicates that aspects of the present invention may consist of any such individual feature or combination of features. In view of the foregoing description it will be evident to a person skilled in the art that various modifications may be made within the scope of the invention.

Claims (30)

1. A communication device that forms part of a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the communication device being configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in its neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
2. A communication device as claimed in claim 1, configured to share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices responsive to a communication from a network controller.
3. A communication device as claimed in claim 2, configured to share the frequencies responsive to a command from the network controller.
4. A communication device as claimed in claim 2, configured to determine that it should share the frequencies responsive to a frequency hopping sequence received from the network controller, responsive to the number of frequencies comprised in the frequency hopping sequence being below a predetermined threshold.
5. (canceled)
6. A communication device as claimed in claim 1, configured to negotiate with its neighbouring communication devices to determine how the insufficient number of frequencies should be shared between them.
7. A communication device as claimed in claim 1, configured to:
communicate with the at least one terminal comprised in its cell via a series of frames, each frame comprising a downlink portion and an uplink portion; and
share the insufficient number of frequencies with its neighbouring communication devices by communicating the downlink portion of a frame in one timeslot on a frequency in its frequency hopping sequence and the uplink portion of the same frame in a different timeslot on the same frequency.
8. A communication device as claimed in claim 67, configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots arranged such that the time from the start of the timeslot for the downlink portion to the end of the timeslot for the uplink portion is less than or equal to the duration of a frame via which the communication device normally communicates with the at least one terminal.
9. A communication device as claimed in claim 6, configured to communicate the downlink portion and the uplink portion of the frame in timeslots that are separated by one or more timeslots allocated to its neighbouring communication device(s), such that the at least one terminal perceives the one or more timeslots allocated to the neighbouring communication device(s) as being parts of the frame that are allocated to other terminals in the cell.
10. (canceled)
11. A communication network comprising:
a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell;
each communication device being further configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
12. A communication network as claimed in claim 9, comprising, in each of the plurality of cells, a communication device that forms part of a network comprising a plurality of cells, each comprising a communication device configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the communication device being configured to, responsive to a determination that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for it and the communication devices in its neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other, share the insufficient number of frequencies with those communication devices on a time division basis.
13. A communication network as claimed in claim 9, configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices if the frequency hopping sequences derivable from those available frequencies require two or more neighbouring communication devices to use the same frequency for a length of time that is likely to lead to unacceptable packet loss.
14. A communication network as claimed in claim 9, comprising a controller configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices.
15. A communication network as claimed in claim 11, wherein the controller is configured to communicate that there are an insufficient number of frequencies to the two or more communication devices wherein the controller is configured to instruct the two or more communication devices to share the insufficient number of frequencies on a time division basis.
16. (canceled)
17. A communication network as claimed in claims 9, configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices the same length of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
18. A communication network as claimed in claims 9, configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices different lengths of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
19. A communication network as claimed in claims 9, configured such that each of the communication devices communicates with its at least one terminal via frames having the same duration, those communication devices being configured to, when sharing a frequency with a neighbouring communication device, commence transmitting each frame at a different time from the neighbouring communication device so that the frames of one communication device are offset from those of another.
20. (canceled)
21. (canceled)
22. (canceled)
23. A controller for determining a frequency hopping sequence for a communication device that is configured to communicate with at least one terminal via a frequency hopping sequence associated with its respective cell, the controller being configured to:
determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available to provide frequency hopping sequences for two or more communication devices in neighbouring cells that are sufficiently distinct from each other; and
instruct those two or more communication devices to share the insufficient number of frequencies between them on a time division basis.
24. A controller as claimed in claim 17, configured to determine that there are an insufficient number of frequencies available for a group of two or more neighbouring communication devices if the frequency hopping sequences derivable from those available frequencies require two or more neighbouring communication devices to use the same frequency for a length of time that is likely to lead to unacceptable packet loss.
25. A controller as claimed in claim 17, configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices the same length of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
26. A controller as claimed in claim 17, configured to allocate neighbouring communication devices different lengths of time on each of the insufficient number of frequencies.
27. (canceled)
28. (canceled)
29. (canceled)
30. (canceled)
US14/126,071 2011-06-13 2012-06-13 Channel division Abandoned US20140177678A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (31)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1109829.0 2011-06-13
GBGB1109830.8A GB201109830D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Allocation of whitespace spectrum
GBGB1109863.9A GB201109863D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Slot flexibility
GB1109844.9A GB2491834B (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Acknowledgment mechanism
GB1109874.6A GB2491840B (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Inter-device communication
GB1109836.5 2011-06-13
GB1109854.0 2011-06-13
GB1109850.6A GB2492052B (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Interference mitigation
GB1109863.9 2011-06-13
GB1109837.3 2011-06-13
GB1109840.7 2011-06-13
GB1109867.0 2011-06-13
GB1109853.0 2011-06-13
GB1109848.0 2011-06-13
GB1109850.6 2011-06-13
GBGB1109836.5A GB201109836D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Broadcast mechanism
GB1109854.8A GB2491837A (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Whitespace channel allocations in dependence on geographical location and an estimated coverage area of a communications station
GB1109840.7A GB2492051B (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Channel bandwidth
GB201109867A GB201109867D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Signal acquisition from cold start
GBGB1109837.3A GB201109837D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Transmission mode
GB1109848.0A GB2491835A (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Communication using time frames of at least one second duration
GB1109874.6 2011-06-13
GB1109830.8 2011-06-13
GB1109853.0A GB2491836B (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Frequency planning
GB1109844.9 2011-06-13
GB1109829.0A GB2491832A (en) 2011-06-13 2011-06-13 Antenna nulling
GB1115379.8A GB2491907A (en) 2011-06-13 2011-09-06 Channel division
GB1115379.8 2011-09-06
GB1116910.9 2011-09-30
GBGB1116910.9A GB201116910D0 (en) 2011-06-13 2011-09-30 Communication network
PCT/EP2012/061149 WO2012171932A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-13 Channel division

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20140177678A1 true US20140177678A1 (en) 2014-06-26

Family

ID=44764551

Family Applications (12)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/126,072 Active 2032-09-20 US9374753B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-05-11 Static terminals
US14/126,069 Active US10582434B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-05-23 Device and method for deriving alignment information
US14/126,073 Active 2033-07-10 US9591540B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-11 Data caching in a communication network
US14/126,063 Abandoned US20140219245A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Terminal location using forced handover of m2m device in white space
US14/126,064 Active 2032-11-03 US9351215B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Terminal handover
US14/126,074 Active 2033-08-09 US9374754B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Synchronization mechanism
US14/126,071 Abandoned US20140177678A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-13 Channel division
US14/126,068 Active US9215617B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-13 DC offset compensation
US13/916,955 Active US8923130B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Communication controller controlling frame rate to provide frame response time
US13/916,972 Abandoned US20130272156A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Calibration mode
US13/916,959 Active 2032-06-14 US9432898B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Unscheduled messages
US16/805,328 Abandoned US20200267620A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2020-02-28 Device and Method For Deriving Alignment Information

Family Applications Before (6)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/126,072 Active 2032-09-20 US9374753B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-05-11 Static terminals
US14/126,069 Active US10582434B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-05-23 Device and method for deriving alignment information
US14/126,073 Active 2033-07-10 US9591540B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-11 Data caching in a communication network
US14/126,063 Abandoned US20140219245A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Terminal location using forced handover of m2m device in white space
US14/126,064 Active 2032-11-03 US9351215B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Terminal handover
US14/126,074 Active 2033-08-09 US9374754B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-12 Synchronization mechanism

Family Applications After (5)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/126,068 Active US9215617B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2012-06-13 DC offset compensation
US13/916,955 Active US8923130B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Communication controller controlling frame rate to provide frame response time
US13/916,972 Abandoned US20130272156A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Calibration mode
US13/916,959 Active 2032-06-14 US9432898B2 (en) 2011-06-13 2013-06-13 Unscheduled messages
US16/805,328 Abandoned US20200267620A1 (en) 2011-06-13 2020-02-28 Device and Method For Deriving Alignment Information

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (12) US9374753B2 (en)
EP (4) EP2710845B1 (en)
JP (2) JP6073300B2 (en)
GB (18) GB201114079D0 (en)
WO (15) WO2012171715A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9967130B2 (en) * 2012-05-21 2018-05-08 Sony Corporation Devices and methods for dynamic broadcast
CN104428761B (en) * 2012-07-11 2017-08-15 英派尔科技开发有限公司 The reduction of network congestion
CN104756568A (en) * 2012-12-03 2015-07-01 富士通株式会社 Machine-type communication resource configuration method and device
US9166839B2 (en) * 2013-02-13 2015-10-20 Aviat U.S., Inc. Systems and methods for reducing effects of local oscillator leakage
US9577811B2 (en) 2013-05-03 2017-02-21 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and systems for frequency multiplexed communication in dense wireless environments
US9537642B2 (en) * 2014-02-03 2017-01-03 Apple Inc. Method and apparatus for frequency hopping coexistence in unlicensed radio frequency bands for mobile devices
US10536386B2 (en) * 2014-05-16 2020-01-14 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. System and method for dynamic resource allocation over licensed and unlicensed spectrums
US10813043B2 (en) 2014-05-16 2020-10-20 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. System and method for communicating wireless transmissions spanning both licensed and un-licensed spectrum
US10873941B2 (en) 2014-05-16 2020-12-22 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. System and method for joint transmission over licensed and unlicensed bands using fountain codes
US10548071B2 (en) 2014-05-16 2020-01-28 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. System and method for communicating traffic over licensed or un-licensed spectrums based on quality of service (QoS) constraints of the traffic
WO2015178937A1 (en) * 2014-05-23 2015-11-26 Fujitsu Limited Mtc event detection and signaling
CN104408519B (en) * 2014-10-29 2017-09-15 广州艾若博机器人科技有限公司 A kind of method that robot knowledge is backed up and learnt
CN105578607B (en) 2014-11-05 2019-12-10 电信科学技术研究院 Method and equipment for carrying out carrier scheduling
US10763977B2 (en) * 2015-03-09 2020-09-01 Sony Corporation Device and method for determining a DC component
US20160295426A1 (en) * 2015-03-30 2016-10-06 Nokia Solutions And Networks Oy Method and system for communication networks
KR102422082B1 (en) * 2015-11-12 2022-07-15 코르보 인터내셔널 피티이. 엘티디. Simultaneous Multi-Radio Receiver
WO2017166549A1 (en) * 2016-03-31 2017-10-05 Intel IP Corporation Measurement gap configuration
US9948383B1 (en) * 2016-08-08 2018-04-17 Rockwell Collins, Inc. Network synchronization system and method
US10484102B2 (en) 2016-09-02 2019-11-19 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling mechanism to enable local operation for multi-antenna wireless communication systems
US10542543B2 (en) * 2016-11-02 2020-01-21 Qualcomm Incorporated Wireless communication between wideband ENB and narrowband UE
WO2018141354A1 (en) * 2017-01-31 2018-08-09 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method for improving the scan time for low energy, sub-noise-floor signals by interleaving scans across multiple channels
WO2018176375A1 (en) * 2017-03-31 2018-10-04 Zte Corporation Method and apparatus for low power device synchronization
US11071074B2 (en) 2017-06-08 2021-07-20 Qualcomm Incorporated Techniques and apparatuses for configuring resources for synchronization in a wireless backhaul network
CN107360142B (en) * 2017-06-26 2019-10-08 京信通信系统(中国)有限公司 Multi-standard mixed networking Transmission system and transmission method based on CPRI framework
US11363674B2 (en) * 2017-12-12 2022-06-14 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Processing delay tolerant communications
CN108234198B (en) * 2017-12-19 2020-07-07 清华大学 Base station flow prediction method and equipment
EP3864873A4 (en) * 2018-10-08 2022-06-08 Nokia Technologies OY Communication system
CN109743757B (en) * 2018-12-29 2022-04-12 深圳和而泰数据资源与云技术有限公司 Data processing method and device, wireless module and Internet of things equipment
US11540141B2 (en) 2020-05-15 2022-12-27 Microsoft Technology Licensing, Llc Channel control for communication using dynamic spectrum access
US11632762B2 (en) 2020-05-15 2023-04-18 Microsoft Technology Licensing, Llc Communication using dynamic spectrum access based on channel selection
US10992338B1 (en) * 2020-06-19 2021-04-27 Microsoft Technology Licensing, Llc Secure wireless IOT platform
CN114760598B (en) * 2022-04-13 2024-01-30 东南大学 Performance optimization scheme for parallel transmission coding cache

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070053351A1 (en) * 2005-07-14 2007-03-08 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Wireless ad-hoc network formation
US20070249341A1 (en) * 2006-04-25 2007-10-25 Stmicroelectronics, Inc. Synchronized, semi-dynamic frequency hopping method for wran and other wireless networks
WO2009127690A1 (en) * 2008-04-18 2009-10-22 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Adaptive coexistence between different wireless communication systems
WO2010111006A1 (en) * 2009-03-25 2010-09-30 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for scheduling shared resource parameters
US7873018B2 (en) * 2005-06-16 2011-01-18 Nokia Corporation Scheduling data transmissions to improve power efficiency in a wireless network

Family Cites Families (284)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3286785A (en) 1965-05-24 1966-11-22 Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp High temperature resistant acoustical board
US5189411A (en) 1985-11-27 1993-02-23 Seiko Corp. Radio signal data transmission synchronization
JP2663582B2 (en) 1988-11-24 1997-10-15 ソニー株式会社 Radio receiver
US5748147A (en) 1992-03-04 1998-05-05 Motorola Inc Position locating rescue transceiver
US5404355A (en) 1992-10-05 1995-04-04 Ericsson Ge Mobile Communications, Inc. Method for transmitting broadcast information in a digital control channel
US5490203A (en) * 1993-07-26 1996-02-06 Bell Communications Research Inc. Method and system utilizing a location caching strategy to locate nomadic users in a communication services system
US5515375A (en) 1993-07-30 1996-05-07 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for multiplexing fixed length message data and variably coded speech
TW294867B (en) 1994-12-23 1997-01-01 Qualcomm Inc
US5613205A (en) * 1995-03-31 1997-03-18 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson System and method of locating a mobile terminal within the service area of a cellular telecommunication system
US5748676A (en) 1995-05-01 1998-05-05 Norand Corporation Network utilizing modified preambles that support antenna diversity
US6005884A (en) 1995-11-06 1999-12-21 Ems Technologies, Inc. Distributed architecture for a wireless data communications system
US5748104A (en) 1996-07-11 1998-05-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Wireless remote telemetry system
KR100269195B1 (en) 1996-08-01 2000-10-16 가네꼬 히사시 Radio selective calling receiver having battery saving function
WO1998020689A1 (en) 1996-11-06 1998-05-14 Sanielevici, Lucia Apparatus and method for reducing low-frequency distortion in frequency converted signals
US6107910A (en) * 1996-11-29 2000-08-22 X-Cyte, Inc. Dual mode transmitter/receiver and decoder for RF transponder tags
GB9625094D0 (en) * 1996-12-03 1997-01-22 Ensigma Ltd Apparatus and methods for measuring coarse frequency offset of a multi-carrier signal
US5818872A (en) 1996-12-31 1998-10-06 Cirrus Logic, Inc. Timing offset error extraction method and apparatus
US5883886A (en) 1997-01-03 1999-03-16 Motorola, Inc. Utility meter readings on a reverse channel of a two-way paging system
WO1998035458A1 (en) * 1997-02-06 1998-08-13 At & T Wireless Services, Inc. Method of synchronizing a remote station with a base station in a discrete multitone spread spectrum communications system
US5896425A (en) * 1997-02-24 1999-04-20 At&T Wireless Services Inc Non-uniformly spaced tones for synchronization waveform
US6359923B1 (en) 1997-12-18 2002-03-19 At&T Wireless Services, Inc. Highly bandwidth efficient communications
US6128276A (en) 1997-02-24 2000-10-03 Radix Wireless, Inc. Stacked-carrier discrete multiple tone communication technology and combinations with code nulling, interference cancellation, retrodirective communication and adaptive antenna arrays
US5872814A (en) * 1997-02-24 1999-02-16 At&T Wireless Services Inc. Method for linearization of RF transmission electronics using baseband pre-distortion in T/R compensation pilot signals
US6073169A (en) 1997-04-08 2000-06-06 Abb Power T&D Company Inc. Automatic meter reading system employing common broadcast command channel
US5914672A (en) 1997-06-13 1999-06-22 Whisper Communications Incorporated System for field installation of a remote meter interface
FI104143B1 (en) * 1997-07-31 1999-11-15 Nokia Networks Oy A method for controlling communications resources
WO1999057934A1 (en) * 1998-04-30 1999-11-11 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Method and apparatus for control of soft handoff usage in radiocommunication systems
WO1999057697A1 (en) * 1998-05-01 1999-11-11 Abb Power T & D Company Inc. Wireless area network communications module for utility meters
US6216002B1 (en) * 1998-05-11 2001-04-10 Ericsson Inc. Method for selecting base transceiver stations for gathering data to determine a mobile station's location in a wireless network
US6862449B1 (en) 1998-05-14 2005-03-01 Fujitsu Limited Reducing interference in cellular mobile communications networks
US6914893B2 (en) 1998-06-22 2005-07-05 Statsignal Ipc, Llc System and method for monitoring and controlling remote devices
US6310866B1 (en) * 1998-10-09 2001-10-30 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Medium access control protocol with automatic frequency assignment
US6321090B1 (en) 1998-11-06 2001-11-20 Samir S. Soliman Mobile communication system with position detection to facilitate hard handoff
AU4018300A (en) 1999-03-24 2000-10-09 Conectisys Corporation A wireles amr network
GB2349043A (en) * 1999-04-16 2000-10-18 Siemens Ag Radio communications apparatus using fixed or mobile networks
US7006530B2 (en) 2000-12-22 2006-02-28 Wi-Lan, Inc. Method and system for adaptively obtaining bandwidth allocation requests
EP1058473A1 (en) 1999-05-26 2000-12-06 Motorola, Inc. Group handover in a cellular communications network
US6393285B1 (en) * 1999-05-28 2002-05-21 Nortel Networks Limited Method of and system for dynamically registering and paging mobile units in a wireless system
US7342897B1 (en) 1999-08-07 2008-03-11 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network verification tool
US6490456B1 (en) * 1999-10-12 2002-12-03 Lucent Technologies Inc. Locating a mobile unit in a wireless time division multiple access system
US7315257B2 (en) 1999-10-16 2008-01-01 Datamatic, Ltd. Automated meter reader having high product delivery rate alert generator
KR100364078B1 (en) 1999-12-21 2002-12-12 주식회사 블루맥스 커뮤니케이션 System and method for wireless automatic meter reading
US7379981B2 (en) 2000-01-31 2008-05-27 Kenneth W. Garrard Wireless communication enabled meter and network
US6954465B2 (en) 2000-03-22 2005-10-11 At&T Corp. Dynamic channel assignment
US6340928B1 (en) 2000-06-22 2002-01-22 Trw Inc. Emergency assistance system using bluetooth technology
GB0015621D0 (en) 2000-06-27 2000-08-16 Koninkl Philips Electronics Nv Multicast radio communication system and apparatus
GB2364207B (en) * 2000-06-30 2004-03-03 Motorola Inc Radio access traffic management
US6411608B2 (en) 2000-07-12 2002-06-25 Symbol Technologies, Inc. Method and apparatus for variable power control in wireless communications systems
EP2381586A1 (en) 2000-07-21 2011-10-26 Itron, Inc. Spread spectrum meter reading system utilizing low speed frequency hopping
AU1143602A (en) * 2000-10-06 2002-04-15 Aryya Communications Inc Systems and methods for interference mitigation among multiple wlan protocols
US6889040B1 (en) * 2000-10-11 2005-05-03 Lucent Technologies Inc. Service restriction control for mobile communications
US6785511B1 (en) 2000-10-25 2004-08-31 Tyco Electronics Corporation Wireless vehicular repeater system
US6725024B1 (en) 2000-11-07 2004-04-20 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Offset local oscillator frequency
EP1220557A1 (en) 2000-12-29 2002-07-03 Motorola, Inc. Communication system and method of sharing a communication resource
US7027418B2 (en) 2001-01-25 2006-04-11 Bandspeed, Inc. Approach for selecting communications channels based on performance
US8233091B1 (en) * 2007-05-16 2012-07-31 Trueposition, Inc. Positioning and time transfer using television synchronization signals
US6930470B2 (en) * 2001-03-01 2005-08-16 Nortel Networks Limited System and method for code division multiple access communication in a wireless communication environment
US7177294B2 (en) * 2001-03-22 2007-02-13 Oxford Semiconductor, Inc. Collision rectification in wireless communication devices
US8990334B2 (en) * 2001-04-26 2015-03-24 Nokia Corporation Rule-based caching for packet-based data transfer
US6621454B1 (en) 2001-05-10 2003-09-16 Vectrad Networks Corporation Adaptive beam pattern antennas system and method for interference mitigation in point to multipoint RF data transmissions
US7009530B2 (en) 2001-09-13 2006-03-07 M&Fc Holding, Llc Modular wireless fixed network for wide-area metering data collection and meter module apparatus
CN100336353C (en) 2001-10-03 2007-09-05 自由度半导体公司 Method of operating a media access controller
US7512094B1 (en) 2001-10-30 2009-03-31 Sprint Communications Company L.P. System and method for selecting spectrum
KR20030042396A (en) * 2001-11-22 2003-05-28 삼성전자주식회사 Method for performing registration adaptively in mobile station
US7193982B2 (en) 2002-01-11 2007-03-20 Cingular Wireless Ii, Llc System and method for providing flexible data rate transmission in a telecommunication system
US6985087B2 (en) 2002-03-15 2006-01-10 Qualcomm Inc. Method and apparatus for wireless remote telemetry using ad-hoc networks
US6714605B2 (en) * 2002-04-22 2004-03-30 Cognio, Inc. System and method for real-time spectrum analysis in a communication device
US7400903B2 (en) * 2002-04-16 2008-07-15 Texas Instruments Incorporated Wireless communications system using both licensed and unlicensed frequency bands
US7424268B2 (en) 2002-04-22 2008-09-09 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for management of a shared frequency band
US7151966B1 (en) 2002-06-04 2006-12-19 Rockwell Automation Technologies, Inc. System and methodology providing open interface and distributed processing in an industrial controller environment
EP1401226A1 (en) * 2002-09-20 2004-03-24 Lucent Technologies Inc. A method, and apparatus, for addressing a message to mobile user terminals
US7302266B1 (en) * 2002-10-17 2007-11-27 Sprint Spectrum L.P. Method and system for frequency usage
US7447236B2 (en) 2002-11-14 2008-11-04 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and apparatus for determining an arrival time associated with a synchronization burst
US7444401B1 (en) 2002-11-18 2008-10-28 Arkion Systems Llc Method and apparatus for inexpensively monitoring and controlling remotely distributed appliances
AU2003282424A1 (en) 2002-12-24 2004-07-22 Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute Frequency hopping method in orthogonal frequency division multiplexing system
KR100640344B1 (en) 2003-03-08 2006-10-30 삼성전자주식회사 System and method for handover of base station in a broadband wireless access communication system
US7894468B2 (en) 2003-03-20 2011-02-22 Alcatel-Lucent Usa Inc. Transmission methods for communication systems supporting a multicast mode
US7203254B2 (en) 2003-03-25 2007-04-10 Motorola, Inc. Method and system for synchronizing in a frequency shift keying receiver
JP4279027B2 (en) 2003-03-31 2009-06-17 株式会社ルネサステクノロジ OFDM demodulation method and semiconductor integrated circuit
US6830213B1 (en) 2003-05-21 2004-12-14 Lucent Technologies Inc. Wireless guidance system
RU2313912C2 (en) 2003-06-27 2007-12-27 Нокиа Корпорейшн Method and device for aggregation of packets in wireless communication network
KR100526184B1 (en) * 2003-07-18 2005-11-03 삼성전자주식회사 Method of multimedia data transmssion in wireless network
KR100689508B1 (en) 2003-09-04 2007-03-02 삼성전자주식회사 Method for performing handover in a communication system
US20080129497A1 (en) 2003-09-11 2008-06-05 Jon Woodard Reconfigurable alarm apparatus
CA2483117C (en) 2003-09-29 2013-10-29 Xianbin Wang Multi-symbol encapsulated ofdm system
GB0323245D0 (en) 2003-10-03 2003-11-05 Fujitsu Ltd Soft handover techniques
US7421005B2 (en) * 2003-10-09 2008-09-02 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Frequency offset hopping for telecommunications
US7447148B2 (en) 2003-10-28 2008-11-04 Ntt Docomo, Inc. Method for supporting scalable and reliable multicast in TDMA/TDD systems using feedback suppression techniques
JP2005142766A (en) * 2003-11-05 2005-06-02 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Base station apparatus and method for allocating resource of base station apparatus
US7095739B2 (en) * 2003-11-25 2006-08-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Reliable multicast communication
US20050143123A1 (en) 2003-12-31 2005-06-30 Black Greg R. Method and apparatus for a communication system operating in a licensed RF and an unlicensed RF band
GB0403128D0 (en) 2004-02-12 2004-03-17 Koninkl Philips Electronics Nv Multicast transmission
US7480490B2 (en) * 2004-02-12 2009-01-20 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Coexistence of multiple radio systems in unlicensed bands
US20050250497A1 (en) 2004-05-05 2005-11-10 Amitava Ghosh Acknowledgement method for ACK/NACK signaling to facilitate UE uplink data transfer
US8588203B2 (en) * 2004-06-04 2013-11-19 Qualcomm Incorporated Wireless communication system with improved broadcast coverage
US7519351B2 (en) 2004-07-09 2009-04-14 Lucent Technologies Inc. Emergency mode operation in a wireless communication network
US7496099B2 (en) * 2004-07-30 2009-02-24 Fisher-Rosemount Systems, Inc. Communication controller for coordinating transmission of scheduled and unscheduled messages
US7379791B2 (en) 2004-08-03 2008-05-27 Uscl Corporation Integrated metrology systems and information and control apparatus for interaction with integrated metrology systems
KR100929103B1 (en) * 2004-08-17 2009-11-30 삼성전자주식회사 Frequency allocating apparatus and method for supporting high speed forward packet data service in orthogonal frequency multiplexing mobile communication system
WO2006027672A2 (en) 2004-09-10 2006-03-16 Nortel Networks System and method for adaptive frame size management in a wireless multihop network
US7590589B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2009-09-15 Hoffberg Steven M Game theoretic prioritization scheme for mobile ad hoc networks permitting hierarchal deference
US7961828B2 (en) * 2004-10-06 2011-06-14 Motorola Mobility, Inc. Sync bursts frequency offset compensation
US7725796B2 (en) 2004-12-27 2010-05-25 Lg Electronics Inc. Allocating data bursts and supporting hybrid auto retransmission request in orthogonal frequency division multiplexing access radio access system
US20060140117A1 (en) 2004-12-29 2006-06-29 Naveen Aerrabotu Apparatus and method for cell selection
KR100689410B1 (en) * 2005-01-07 2007-03-08 삼성전자주식회사 Semi-automatic sliding device for sliding type mobile phone
JP4517866B2 (en) 2005-01-28 2010-08-04 株式会社日立製作所 Sensor data processing method
US7680456B2 (en) 2005-02-16 2010-03-16 Texas Instruments Incorporated Methods and apparatus to perform signal removal in a low intermediate frequency receiver
JP4594771B2 (en) 2005-03-18 2010-12-08 富士通株式会社 Network QoS control system and control method
US7702343B2 (en) * 2005-04-04 2010-04-20 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient gap allocation for cell measurements in asynchronous communication networks
US8243779B2 (en) 2005-04-29 2012-08-14 Alcatel Lucent Method of quality-based frequency hopping in a wirelesscommunication system
WO2006129166A1 (en) * 2005-05-31 2006-12-07 Nokia Corporation Method and apparatus for generating pilot sequences to reduce peak-to-average power ratio
JP4501786B2 (en) 2005-06-08 2010-07-14 パナソニック電工株式会社 Fire alarm system
JP4675167B2 (en) 2005-06-14 2011-04-20 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ Channel allocation method, radio communication system, base station apparatus, user terminal
US8363603B2 (en) * 2005-06-16 2013-01-29 Qualcomm Incorporated User separation in space division multiple access for a multi-carrier communication system
US20060284784A1 (en) 2005-06-17 2006-12-21 Norman Smith Universal antenna housing
WO2007005030A2 (en) * 2005-07-05 2007-01-11 Carrier Iq, Inc. Rule based data collection and management in a wireless communications network
WO2007009043A1 (en) 2005-07-08 2007-01-18 Bandspeed, Inc. Wireless communications approach using background monitoring
KR100728279B1 (en) * 2005-07-13 2007-06-13 삼성전자주식회사 Bandwidth management system and method for quality of service in voice over internet protocal network
US20070026868A1 (en) 2005-07-26 2007-02-01 Schulz Gary D Licensed/unlicensed frequency management in a wireless wide-area network
US20080219201A1 (en) * 2005-09-16 2008-09-11 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. Method of Clustering Devices in Wireless Communication Network
CN1941666B (en) 2005-09-30 2014-07-30 华为技术有限公司 Method and system for realizing bandwith distribution and dispatch management
US8396041B2 (en) 2005-11-08 2013-03-12 Microsoft Corporation Adapting a communication network to varying conditions
US8126473B1 (en) 2005-11-30 2012-02-28 At&T Intellectual Property Ii, Lp Wireless network using hybrid of licensed and unlicensed spectrum
DE602006009750D1 (en) 2005-12-03 2009-11-26 Samsung Electronics Co Ltd A method and apparatus for suppressing adjacent cell noise in an orthogonal frequency division multiple access system
JP4731572B2 (en) * 2005-12-08 2011-07-27 富士通株式会社 Radio control apparatus and control method thereof in mobile communication system
WO2007072814A1 (en) 2005-12-19 2007-06-28 Nippon Telegraph And Telephone Corporation Terminal identification method, authentication method, authentication system, server, terminal, radio base station, program, and recording medium
US20070155318A1 (en) 2006-01-04 2007-07-05 Globalstar, Inc. Satellite communication system employing a combination of time slots and orthogonal codes
US20070183352A1 (en) 2006-02-08 2007-08-09 Mustafa Muhammad Methods and apparatus for providing a shared server system for a platform of multiple wireless communication devices
ATE495598T1 (en) 2006-02-21 2011-01-15 Qualcomm Inc FEEDBACK CHANNEL DESIGN FOR COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS WITH MULTIPLE INPUTS AND OUTPUTS (MIMO)
JP4644619B2 (en) * 2006-03-27 2011-03-02 富士通株式会社 Base station apparatus, terminal and bandwidth control method
US7844286B1 (en) 2006-03-31 2010-11-30 At&T Mobility Ii Llc Emergency notification system for a portable device
US20070248076A1 (en) * 2006-04-21 2007-10-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method and system for improving frame synchronization, channel estimation and access in wireless communication networks
US8081996B2 (en) 2006-05-16 2011-12-20 Honeywell International Inc. Integrated infrastructure for coexistence of WI-FI networks with other networks
KR100871854B1 (en) 2006-06-05 2008-12-03 삼성전자주식회사 Channel allocation management method for transferring asynchronous data, asynchronous data transferring method, and apparatus thereof
US20080056218A1 (en) 2006-08-29 2008-03-06 Motorola, Inc. Method for transmitting multi-frame handover or assignment messages
KR100810489B1 (en) 2006-09-27 2008-03-07 삼성전자주식회사 Method for handover by user decision
JP4946316B2 (en) 2006-09-28 2012-06-06 富士通株式会社 Wireless communication system, base station apparatus and mobile terminal apparatus
US20080096518A1 (en) 2006-10-23 2008-04-24 Motorola, Inc. Overriding telecommunication quiet zone defaults for emergency contact list communications
US8958810B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2015-02-17 Alcatel Lucent Method and apparatus for spectrum allocation in wireless networks
FI119712B (en) * 2006-11-07 2009-02-13 Timo D Haemaelaeinen Energy efficient neighbors detection in mobile wireless sensor networks
US8306060B2 (en) 2006-11-07 2012-11-06 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. System and method for wireless communication of uncompressed video having a composite frame format
US20100232327A1 (en) * 2006-11-16 2010-09-16 Electronics And Telecommunications Research Instiu Method for handover procedure of user terminal during power saving operation in cellular system
US7876786B2 (en) 2006-12-01 2011-01-25 Microsoft Corporation Dynamic time-spectrum block allocation for cognitive radio networks
US9635680B2 (en) * 2006-12-28 2017-04-25 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for multiplexing signals having different protocols
US20080188225A1 (en) 2007-02-07 2008-08-07 Lg Electronics Inc. Performing handover and network connection in wireless communication system
US20080219239A1 (en) 2007-03-05 2008-09-11 Grid Net, Inc. Policy-based utility networking
US7773991B2 (en) 2007-04-02 2010-08-10 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Reducing access latency while protecting against control signaling data processing overload
KR101108718B1 (en) 2007-04-27 2012-02-29 엘지전자 주식회사 Method of transmitting broadcast information in wireless communication system
US8223908B2 (en) 2007-05-02 2012-07-17 Qualcomm Incorporated Selection of acquisition sequences for optimal frequency offset estimation
CN100550808C (en) 2007-06-14 2009-10-14 北京泛亚创知科技发展有限公司 Utilize the method for extended superframe transmission data in a kind of short-distance radio territory net
JP4806665B2 (en) 2007-06-19 2011-11-02 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ Base station apparatus, transmission method, and communication system
KR101331742B1 (en) 2007-06-25 2013-11-20 삼성전자주식회사 A method and an apparatus for synchronising a receiver timing to transmitter timing
US8014424B2 (en) 2007-06-25 2011-09-06 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for using an unique index set for PSC sequence in a wireless communication system
US20090041166A1 (en) 2007-08-09 2009-02-12 Mbit Wireless, Inc. Method and apparatus to improve information decoding when its characteristics are known a priori
JP4728301B2 (en) 2007-08-14 2011-07-20 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ User apparatus, transmission method, and communication system
JP2009049704A (en) 2007-08-20 2009-03-05 Toshiba Corp Wireless communication device
CN101374133A (en) 2007-08-23 2009-02-25 华为技术有限公司 Method and apparatus for distributing multi-district pilots, method and apparatus for transmitting data
US20090060001A1 (en) 2007-08-27 2009-03-05 Waltho Alan E Cognitive frequency hopping radio
US8218468B2 (en) 2007-09-12 2012-07-10 Broadcom Corporation Method and system for multicast retry in a communication network
US7974637B1 (en) * 2007-09-24 2011-07-05 Mikael Bror Taveniku Passive mode tracking through existing and future wireless networks
KR100932268B1 (en) * 2007-11-01 2009-12-16 한국전자통신연구원 Static user detection system, method and method for controlling call admission using wireless communication system
US8184201B2 (en) * 2007-11-04 2012-05-22 Analog Devices, Inc. Method and apparatus for automatic audio standard detection in terrestrial broadcast signals employing frequency scanning
US8068454B2 (en) * 2007-11-07 2011-11-29 Motorola Solutions, Inc. System for enabling mobile coverage extension and peer-to-peer communications in an ad hoc network and method of operation therefor
US8121144B2 (en) 2007-11-20 2012-02-21 Altair Semiconductor Ltd. Multi-function wireless terminal
WO2009068799A1 (en) 2007-11-23 2009-06-04 France Telecom Creation of a pilot channel in an opportunistic radio communication system
KR101418362B1 (en) 2007-11-29 2014-07-11 삼성전자주식회사 Apparatus and method for improvementing of transmitting/receiving performance based on coordinaties information of terminal in mobile communication system
FI121133B (en) * 2007-12-10 2010-07-15 Jari Mattila Communication and access control arrangements
JP4538046B2 (en) * 2007-12-10 2010-09-08 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ MOBILE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM, POSITION REGISTRATION PERIOD SPECIFIC NODE, MOBILE DEVICE, AND MOBILE COMMUNICATION POSITION REGISTER
US20090170472A1 (en) * 2007-12-28 2009-07-02 Chapin John M Shared network infrastructure
US7961554B2 (en) 2008-01-11 2011-06-14 Cellnet Innovations, Inc. Methods and systems for accurate time-keeping on metering and other network communication devices
US7953028B2 (en) 2008-01-14 2011-05-31 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Methods and apparatus for improved receiver performance in half-duplex wireless terminals
KR101559320B1 (en) 2008-02-18 2015-10-13 삼성전자주식회사 Mobile system and base station system for effectively using licensed spectrum and shared spectrum
CN101946552B (en) 2008-02-27 2016-06-15 日本电信电话株式会社 Wireless communications method, base station apparatus and wireless communication system
US8681762B2 (en) * 2008-03-12 2014-03-25 Texas Instruments Incorporated Sorting frequency arrays to account for multi-protocol frequencies
US8825092B2 (en) 2008-03-27 2014-09-02 At&T Mobility Ii Llc Multi-mode provision of emergency alerts
US8805415B2 (en) 2008-03-28 2014-08-12 At&T Mobility Ii Llc Systems and methods for determination of mobile devices in or proximate to an alert area
US8897394B1 (en) 2008-04-08 2014-11-25 Marvell International Ltd. Methods and apparatus for adaptively selecting a communications mode in high frequency systems
US8218487B2 (en) 2008-04-09 2012-07-10 Texas Instruments Incorporated System and method of adaptive frequency hopping with look ahead interference prediction
US8064454B2 (en) * 2008-04-28 2011-11-22 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Protocol incompatibility detection
US8254855B2 (en) 2008-05-07 2012-08-28 Qualcomm, Incorporated Frequency spur detection and suppression
WO2009136724A2 (en) 2008-05-09 2009-11-12 Lg Electronics Inc. Device and method for multicast in wireless local access network
US7948991B1 (en) 2008-05-09 2011-05-24 Cisco Technology, Inc. Broadcast and multicast transmissions with acknowledgement scheduling
US8064374B2 (en) 2008-05-09 2011-11-22 Nokia Corporation Power save mechanism for wireless communication devices
CN102100094A (en) 2008-05-20 2011-06-15 爱立信电话股份有限公司 Method of controlling user equipment in wireless telecommunications network
US8594028B2 (en) 2008-05-30 2013-11-26 George Mason Intellectual Properties, Inc. Cognitive channel assignment in wireless networks
US8223737B2 (en) 2008-06-12 2012-07-17 Motorola Mobility, Inc. Adaptive DC sub-carrier handling in a receiver
US20090312010A1 (en) 2008-06-16 2009-12-17 Steven Hall Method and system for bluetooth and wimax coexistence
US7991043B2 (en) 2008-06-17 2011-08-02 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Hybrid polyphase and joint time-frequency detection
CN102067655A (en) 2008-06-19 2011-05-18 夏普株式会社 Communication system, base station device and mobile station device
US8576931B2 (en) 2008-06-24 2013-11-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and systems for overhead reduction in a wireless communication network
US8599767B2 (en) * 2008-06-26 2013-12-03 Netgear, Inc. Method and apparatus for scanning multi-mode wireless communication environments
US8055234B2 (en) 2008-06-27 2011-11-08 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Methods and apparatus for suppressing strong-signal interference in low-IF receivers
WO2010002130A2 (en) 2008-07-03 2010-01-07 Lg Electronics Inc. Method for processing ndi in random access procedure and a method for transmitting and receiving a signal using the same
KR20100004766A (en) 2008-07-04 2010-01-13 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for performing coexistence commmunication with frame allocation
US8948731B2 (en) 2008-07-18 2015-02-03 Qualcomm Incorporated Rating of message content for content control in wireless devices
JP2010034625A (en) 2008-07-25 2010-02-12 Fujitsu Ltd Radio base station, mobile station, radio communication system and radio communication method
JP5153507B2 (en) 2008-08-04 2013-02-27 三菱電機株式会社 Wireless communication device
US8654710B2 (en) 2008-08-12 2014-02-18 Panasonic Corporation Base station device and terminal device
GB2453622B (en) 2008-08-21 2009-09-16 Cambridge Silicon Radio Ltd Tuneable filter
US8141024B2 (en) * 2008-09-04 2012-03-20 Synopsys, Inc. Temporally-assisted resource sharing in electronic systems
US8150328B2 (en) * 2008-09-17 2012-04-03 Motorola Solutions, Inc. Method and apparatus for distributed sensing management and control within a cognitive radio network
KR101471085B1 (en) 2008-09-18 2014-12-09 삼성전자주식회사 Apparatus and method for automatic searching a low-power bs supporting an access of registered user in mobile communication system
US8780828B2 (en) 2008-09-29 2014-07-15 Koninklijke Philips N.V. Cognitive radio device and method for determining channel occupancy
US8274885B2 (en) 2008-10-03 2012-09-25 Wi-Lan, Inc. System and method for data distribution in VHF/UHF bands
US20100099432A1 (en) * 2008-10-21 2010-04-22 Enfora, Inc. Wireless device provisioning tool
KR101152955B1 (en) 2008-11-12 2012-06-08 한국전자통신연구원 Handover apparatus and method with carrier members included in a carrier aggregation
US9155014B2 (en) 2008-11-17 2015-10-06 Qualcomm Incorporated Conditional access terminal initiation of delayed handover
US8666358B2 (en) 2008-11-18 2014-03-04 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for delivering and receiving enhanced emergency broadcast alert messages
JP2010124229A (en) * 2008-11-19 2010-06-03 Kyocera Corp Base station device, mobile station device, mobile communication system, and data transmission method
US8547989B2 (en) * 2008-12-01 2013-10-01 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and systems for LTE-WIMAX coexistence
US7995493B2 (en) 2008-12-23 2011-08-09 Airvana, Corp. Estimating bandwidth in communication networks
US20100172310A1 (en) 2009-01-06 2010-07-08 Fang-Chen Cheng Method to improve mobile station reception of downlink transmission from a non-serving cell
WO2010093647A2 (en) 2009-02-10 2010-08-19 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Spectrum management across diverse radio access technologies
US8381301B1 (en) * 2009-02-11 2013-02-19 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Split-flow attack detection
KR101651681B1 (en) * 2009-02-19 2016-08-29 엘지전자 주식회사 Apparatus and method for performing handover in wireless communication system
US8391885B2 (en) * 2009-03-25 2013-03-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Scheduling location update reports of access terminals to an access network within a wireless communications system
US9094991B2 (en) 2009-03-26 2015-07-28 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for supporting communication in low SNR scenario
US9025536B2 (en) * 2009-03-26 2015-05-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Apparatus and methods of whitespace communication
ES2608667T3 (en) 2009-04-01 2017-04-12 Qualcomm Incorporated Management of transmissions between the nodes that communicate through a shared means of communication
US8213874B2 (en) 2009-04-06 2012-07-03 Progeny Lms, Llc System and method for dynamic frequency assignment
US8086174B2 (en) 2009-04-10 2011-12-27 Nextivity, Inc. Short-range cellular booster
US8811903B2 (en) 2009-05-28 2014-08-19 Microsoft Corporation Spectrum assignment for networks over white spaces and other portions of the spectrum
US8937872B2 (en) 2009-06-08 2015-01-20 Wi-Lan, Inc. Peer-to-peer control network for a wireless radio access network
US8638834B2 (en) * 2009-07-15 2014-01-28 Cisco Technology, Inc. Signal sequence detection techniques for OFDM/OFDMA systems
ES2670371T3 (en) * 2009-07-17 2018-05-30 Koninklijke Kpn N.V. Transmission of information in a telecommunications network between machines
ATE529992T1 (en) 2009-07-28 2011-11-15 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M TECHNIQUE FOR DETERMINING A FREQUENCY OFFSET
US20110039578A1 (en) 2009-08-14 2011-02-17 Qualcomm Incorporated Assistance data for positioning in multiple radio access technologies
ES2676292T3 (en) * 2009-08-26 2018-07-18 Nokia Technologies Oy A processor, an apparatus and associated methods for use without a white space license
US8824364B2 (en) * 2009-09-16 2014-09-02 At&T Mobility Ii Llc Targeting communications in a femtocell network
GB2466540B (en) 2009-09-24 2010-11-17 Nokia Corp Multicast service
US8396086B1 (en) 2009-09-30 2013-03-12 Google Inc. Scalable association scheme for TV white-space MIMO wireless system
PL2309800T3 (en) * 2009-10-08 2018-11-30 Gemalto Sa Prevention of congestion at radio access in a mobile or wireless communication system
US8644851B2 (en) 2009-10-20 2014-02-04 Nokia Corporation Channel availability for white-space devices, associated apparatus and methods
US8299939B2 (en) 2009-10-23 2012-10-30 Verizon Patent And Licensing Inc. Method and apparatus for utility usage monitoring
US9374713B2 (en) 2009-10-29 2016-06-21 Avago Technologies General Ip (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. Method and device for intelligent frequency hopping in a shared frequency band
JP4894076B2 (en) 2009-11-10 2012-03-07 横河電機株式会社 Relay device and wireless control network management system using the same
WO2011060376A1 (en) * 2009-11-16 2011-05-19 Interdigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Coordination of silent periods for dynamic spectrum manager (dsm)
US8224364B2 (en) * 2009-11-23 2012-07-17 Motorola Solutions, Inc. Method for quieting and sensing in a secondary communications system
KR101682930B1 (en) * 2009-11-26 2016-12-07 삼성전자 주식회사 Method and apparatus for generating allowed list of wireless terminal based on region in communication system
US20120243509A1 (en) 2009-11-29 2012-09-27 Universität Ulm Method for communicating information
US8806044B2 (en) * 2011-11-29 2014-08-12 Maxlinear, Inc. Method and system for cross-protocol time synchronization
US8749714B2 (en) 2010-01-05 2014-06-10 Qualcomm Incorporated Distinguishing and communicating between white space devices transmitting ATSC-compatible signals
EP2522096A2 (en) 2010-01-08 2012-11-14 InterDigital Patent Holdings, Inc. Method and apparatus for channel resource mapping in carrier aggregation
KR101142344B1 (en) 2010-01-25 2012-06-13 티더블유모바일 주식회사 Emergency signal transmission system using of a mobile phone and method of the same
EP3703408B1 (en) 2010-02-02 2023-06-28 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Method and apparatus of transmit power control in wireless local area network
JP2013520100A (en) * 2010-02-12 2013-05-30 インターデイジタル パテント ホールディングス インコーポレイテッド Access control and congestion control in machine-to-machine communication
US9185455B2 (en) * 2010-02-16 2015-11-10 Thomson Licensing Method and apparatus for using 802.11 WLANs in TV white space
KR101760912B1 (en) 2010-03-01 2017-07-24 인터디지탈 패튼 홀딩스, 인크 Machine-to-machine gateway architecture and functionality
US8594120B2 (en) 2010-03-12 2013-11-26 Disney Enterprises, Inc. Cellular wireless LAN with frequency division multiplex in TV white space
GB201004380D0 (en) 2010-03-17 2010-04-28 Vodafone Intellectual Property Mechanisms for load balancing between eNB/RNC and h(e)NB
US8185120B2 (en) 2010-03-26 2012-05-22 Microsoft Corporation Cellular service with improved service availability
US8787907B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2014-07-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Frequency selection and transition over white space
US20130042011A1 (en) 2010-04-14 2013-02-14 Panasonic Corporation Communication nodes and network nodes
JP5138723B2 (en) * 2010-04-15 2013-02-06 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ Mobile terminal and mobile terminal control method
CN102223729B (en) 2010-04-16 2016-06-29 中兴通讯股份有限公司 Control machine type communication device and access the method and system of network
GB201007012D0 (en) 2010-04-27 2010-06-09 Vodafone Ip Licensing Ltd Improving data rate in mobile communication network
KR101651717B1 (en) * 2010-04-27 2016-08-26 닛본 덴끼 가부시끼가이샤 Mobile communication system
US8868743B2 (en) * 2010-04-30 2014-10-21 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Modified access classes for machine type communication (MTC) devices during emergencies
US8908659B2 (en) 2010-05-11 2014-12-09 Thomson Licensing Method and apparatus for coexistence of different bandwidth systems in TV white space
US8509802B2 (en) * 2010-05-26 2013-08-13 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus supporting load balancing in a wireless communications system
US8320304B2 (en) * 2010-06-04 2012-11-27 Alcatel Lucent Method and access point for allocating whitespace spectrum
US8451789B2 (en) 2010-06-15 2013-05-28 Nokia Corporation Method to request resources in TV white spaces type environment
EP2398151A1 (en) 2010-06-21 2011-12-21 Nxp B.V. Radio receiver apparatus and method for operating the apparatus
KR101840336B1 (en) 2010-06-22 2018-03-20 톰슨 라이센싱 Methods and apparatus for access, enablement and control by devices in tv white space
EP2403306B1 (en) * 2010-07-02 2016-06-29 Vodafone Holding GmbH Coordinated integration of secondary wireless communication terminals into a primary wireless communication network
WO2012003566A1 (en) 2010-07-09 2012-01-12 Wilan Inc. Tv white space devices using structured databases
US8462874B2 (en) * 2010-07-13 2013-06-11 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus for minimizing inter-symbol interference in a peer-to-peer network background
US8977276B2 (en) 2010-07-15 2015-03-10 Nokia Corporation Method and apparatus for device initiated offloading to unlicensed bands
US8861452B2 (en) 2010-08-16 2014-10-14 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for use of licensed spectrum for control channels in cognitive radio communications
JP2012085011A (en) * 2010-10-07 2012-04-26 Sony Corp Base station, radio communication method, and radio communication system
US9247454B2 (en) 2010-12-23 2016-01-26 Intel Corporation Grouping small burst transmissions for downlink machine-to-machine communications
US20120190379A1 (en) * 2011-01-25 2012-07-26 T-Mobile Usa, Inc. Intelligent Management of Location Sensor
US8483301B2 (en) * 2011-03-10 2013-07-09 The Boeing Company Multitone signal synchronization
CN105188033B (en) 2011-03-17 2019-04-19 Lg电子株式会社 Method and apparatus for executing channel availability inquiry for multiple positions
US9445334B2 (en) 2011-04-20 2016-09-13 Qualcomm Incorporated Switching between radio access technologies at a multi-mode access point
KR101479895B1 (en) 2011-04-29 2015-01-06 엘지전자 주식회사 Method for processing data associated with session management and mobility management
JP5845340B2 (en) * 2011-05-20 2016-01-20 アップル インコーポレイテッド Apparatus and method for priority-based task scheduling in hybrid network operation
US8675605B2 (en) 2011-06-02 2014-03-18 Broadcom Corporation Frequency hopping in license-exempt/shared bands
US8615253B2 (en) * 2011-06-03 2013-12-24 Apple Inc. State estimation using motion context and multiple input observation types
JP2012254121A (en) 2011-06-07 2012-12-27 Olympus Corp Wireless communication system
US9173228B2 (en) * 2011-06-28 2015-10-27 Qualcomm Incorporated Bluetooth packet scheduling rules for LTE coexistence
US9369944B2 (en) 2011-08-05 2016-06-14 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Methods of modifying communication network access and related network nodes, and wireless terminals
US9125036B2 (en) * 2011-11-21 2015-09-01 Cellco Partnership Accessory with integrated display controlled by connected device
US9171450B2 (en) 2013-03-08 2015-10-27 Qualcomm Incorporated Emergency handling system using informative alarm sound

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7873018B2 (en) * 2005-06-16 2011-01-18 Nokia Corporation Scheduling data transmissions to improve power efficiency in a wireless network
US20070053351A1 (en) * 2005-07-14 2007-03-08 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Wireless ad-hoc network formation
US20070249341A1 (en) * 2006-04-25 2007-10-25 Stmicroelectronics, Inc. Synchronized, semi-dynamic frequency hopping method for wran and other wireless networks
EP1850611A1 (en) * 2006-04-25 2007-10-31 STMicroelectronics, Inc System, apparatus and methods for synchronized semi-dynamic frequency hopping in a wireless network
WO2009127690A1 (en) * 2008-04-18 2009-10-22 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) Adaptive coexistence between different wireless communication systems
WO2010111006A1 (en) * 2009-03-25 2010-09-30 Motorola, Inc. Method and apparatus for scheduling shared resource parameters

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB201209407D0 (en) 2012-07-11
GB201322015D0 (en) 2014-01-29
GB201114420D0 (en) 2011-10-05
US20130281102A1 (en) 2013-10-24
GB2491911A (en) 2012-12-19
WO2012171932A1 (en) 2012-12-20
EP2710848B1 (en) 2017-12-27
US10582434B2 (en) 2020-03-03
GB2491912A (en) 2012-12-19
GB2491912B (en) 2015-08-12
GB2491906A (en) 2012-12-19
GB201114079D0 (en) 2011-09-28
WO2012171910A1 (en) 2012-12-20
WO2012171909A1 (en) 2012-12-20
EP2710848A1 (en) 2014-03-26
GB2509611A (en) 2014-07-09
GB201203068D0 (en) 2012-04-04
GB201115379D0 (en) 2011-10-19
US20130272204A1 (en) 2013-10-17
WO2012171906A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2491924B (en) 2015-05-20
GB201203258D0 (en) 2012-04-11
WO2012171945A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2491924A (en) 2012-12-19
GB201116909D0 (en) 2011-11-16
GB201115528D0 (en) 2011-10-26
GB201122036D0 (en) 2012-02-01
GB201115996D0 (en) 2011-10-26
JP2014519782A (en) 2014-08-14
GB201322109D0 (en) 2014-01-29
GB2505607B (en) 2015-09-09
EP2719242B1 (en) 2018-02-21
WO2012171866A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2492182A (en) 2012-12-26
US9374753B2 (en) 2016-06-21
GB2491923A (en) 2012-12-19
US20130272156A1 (en) 2013-10-17
US20200267620A1 (en) 2020-08-20
US20140269669A1 (en) 2014-09-18
GB201115997D0 (en) 2011-10-26
US20140219268A1 (en) 2014-08-07
GB201516126D0 (en) 2015-10-28
GB2492624A (en) 2013-01-09
GB201204494D0 (en) 2012-04-25
US20140308967A1 (en) 2014-10-16
WO2012171716A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2527442A (en) 2015-12-23
WO2012171908A1 (en) 2012-12-20
WO2012171763A1 (en) 2012-12-20
WO2012171715A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2491923B (en) 2015-05-20
GB201203067D0 (en) 2012-04-04
GB2505607A (en) 2014-03-05
WO2012171904A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2494724A (en) 2013-03-20
EP2710845A1 (en) 2014-03-26
WO2012171931A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2492180A (en) 2012-12-26
GB2492192A (en) 2012-12-26
GB2492192B (en) 2016-06-15
US9351215B2 (en) 2016-05-24
WO2012171944A1 (en) 2012-12-20
GB2492194A (en) 2012-12-26
GB2527442B (en) 2016-07-20
US9591540B2 (en) 2017-03-07
GB2491907A (en) 2012-12-19
JP6073300B2 (en) 2017-02-01
WO2012171731A1 (en) 2012-12-20
US8923130B2 (en) 2014-12-30
GB2492180B (en) 2015-09-30
JP6108317B2 (en) 2017-04-05
WO2012171932A4 (en) 2013-03-14
GB2494724B (en) 2013-08-07
EP2719242A1 (en) 2014-04-16
US20140307834A1 (en) 2014-10-16
WO2012171746A1 (en) 2012-12-20
US9374754B2 (en) 2016-06-21
US9432898B2 (en) 2016-08-30
GB2492182B (en) 2013-06-12
JP2014517638A (en) 2014-07-17
US20140219245A1 (en) 2014-08-07
EP2719241A1 (en) 2014-04-16
GB2509611B (en) 2020-02-19
US9215617B2 (en) 2015-12-15
US20140219092A1 (en) 2014-08-07
GB201115527D0 (en) 2011-10-26
GB201116330D0 (en) 2011-11-02
US20140219187A1 (en) 2014-08-07
EP2710845B1 (en) 2018-09-19

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20140177678A1 (en) Channel division
EP3823369A1 (en) Physical channel and method for transmitting and receiving signals in wireless communication system, and apparatus using same
CA2500246C (en) Spectrum sharing between wireless systems
US9544816B2 (en) Combined frame of two communication protocols on same carrier for machine-to-machine and for broadband communication
US9774366B2 (en) Interference mitigation
US9301206B2 (en) Channel bandwidth
JP2020534755A (en) Subframe CSI-RS scrambling in multi-subframe DRS
KR20210010320A (en) Method for allocating and reserving resource for sidelink communication, and apparartus therefor
KR102476055B1 (en) Channel access method for performing transmission in an unlicensed band and apparatus using the same
US9749772B2 (en) Very long frame in a machine to machine communication network
WO2012171723A1 (en) Frequency planning
KR20210134357A (en) Channel access method for performing transmission in unlicensed band and apparatus using the same
WO2012171710A1 (en) Antenna nulling
GB2491908A (en) Calibration mode in whitespace networks
US20140302882A1 (en) Reducing interference
WO2020063936A1 (en) Maximize power boosting using an interlace design based on resource blocks

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: NEUL LTD., UNITED KINGDOM

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:WEBB, WILLIAM;REEL/FRAME:032267/0214

Effective date: 20140214

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION

AS Assignment

Owner name: HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD., CHINA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:NEUL LTD.;REEL/FRAME:042940/0732

Effective date: 20170707