DocumentCode
1408404
Title
Effect of soft and softer handoffs on CDMA system capacity
Author
Lee, Chin-Chun ; Steele, Raymond
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Chung Cheng Inst. of Technol., Taoyuan, Taiwan
Volume
47
Issue
3
fYear
1998
fDate
8/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
830
Lastpage
841
Abstract
The effect of soft and softer handoffs on code-division multiple-access (CDMA) system capacity is evaluated for unsectorized and sectorized hexagonal cells according to an average bit energy-to-interference power spectral density, which corresponds to a bit-error rate (BER) of 10-3. The effect of imperfect sectorization on sectorization efficiency is also considered. On the reverse link, there is no capacity loss as no extra channels are needed to perform soft handoff, while the macrodiversity provided by soft handoff can improve the reverse-link quality and extend the cell coverage. On the forward link, when soft handoff is employed in unsectorized cells, the capacity loss due to two traffic channels assigned to a user in the handoff zone is 0.2% or 1.1% for a voice activity factor of 3/8 or 1/2, respectively. As the forward-link capacity is higher than that of the reverse link, this small capacity loss does not affect the system capacity. For sectorized cells having three sectors per cell, there are overlapping coverage areas between sectors, where mobiles in these areas are subjected to an increase in cochannel interference. For an overlapping angle of 5°, the sectorization efficiency is 0.96 and 0.7 for the reverse-link and forward-link systems, respectively. When soft and softer handoffs are employed, the forward-link sectorization efficiency is improved to 0.97. We find the application of soft and softer handoff improves not only the forward-link capacity, but also the signal-to-interference ratio (SIR) for mobiles near the cell and sector boundaries
Keywords
cellular radio; channel capacity; cochannel interference; code division multiple access; coding errors; diversity reception; error statistics; land mobile radio; radio links; BER; CDMA system capacity; SIR; bit energy-to-interference power spectral density; bit-error rate; capacity loss; cell coverage; cochannel interference; code-division multiple-access; forward-link capacity; imperfect sectorization; macrodiversity; overlapping angle; overlapping coverage areas; reverse link; reverse-link quality; sectorization efficiency; sectorized hexagonal cells; signal-to-interference ratio; soft handoff; softer handoff; unsectorized hexagonal cells; voice activity factor; Base stations; Bit error rate; Communications technology; Computer science; Interchannel interference; Matched filters; Mobile communication; Multiaccess communication;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9545
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/25.704838
Filename
704838
Link To Document