Bit rate, symbol rate and sampling in LTE

In summary, LTE is the long term evolution 4G technology that uses different modulation schemes to carry the same bit rate. This bit rate is determined by the sampling frequency.
  • #1
thavamaran
42
0
Hi guys, I have a problem in understanding LTE. LTE is the long term evolution 4G technology. The LTE requirement is 100 Mbps with 1.3, 2.5, 5, 10, 15 and 20 MHz for 128, 256, 512, 1024, 1536 and 2048 subcarriers.

Each bandwidth corresponds to each number of subcarriers.

My problem here is, it has four types 3 types of modulation schemes, QPSK, 16-QAM and 64-QAM. How can all this 3 modulation schemes carry the same bit rate cause each have different number of bits per symbol.

How does this bit rate work with the bandwidth and subcarriers. Its very complicated.

Say for a normal On-Off keying, if the bit rate 2 Mbps, then the symbol rate is 2Mbps. because its 1 bit per symbol. But QPSK, 16-QAM and 64-QAM carries 2 bit, 4 bit and 6 bit per symbol. How can all this carry the same bit rate?

How does the sampling frequency corresponds to the bit rate?

Say if I want to model define a bit rate if I model this system in Matlab, how can I include the bit rate, what would be the factor or formula I need to include to define a bit rate?

Please someone explain this. Thank you very much!
 
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  • #2
I'm not an expert on this but from the quick look of a few online resources, it seems much of the LTE-Advanced standard is about gluing together the existing CDMA, TDMA and GSM standards together as various physical layers of an ISO stack for legacy reasons (like LAN based on coax vs. twisted pair vs. etc.). By standardizing on the layers above this, existing legacy infrastructure can integrated into a uniform standard at higher layers. So basically the different physical layers will have different capacity per MHz of spectrum.

The actual prior LTE physical layer with picocells seems to have "tunable" bandwidth performance that takes different channel sizes. AFAICT it's all OFDMA as a modulation scheme for picocells but it's using existing 3G cells coupled with picocells to give spatial "tuning" as well. Basically a picocell gets used in spatial areas of congestion and the original 3G base stations simply "know" to not set up with anything within picocell range based on out-of-band wire-line communication and probably based on MIMO direction finding/triangulation.

This is only based on 5 minutes of looking at these docs.

http://www.ericsson.com/res/thecompany/docs/journal_conference_papers/wireless_access/VTC08F_jading.pdf

http://www.qualcomm.com/documents/lte-release-8-and-beyond

http://www.qualcomm.com/products_services/airlinks/lte_advanced.html
 

Related to Bit rate, symbol rate and sampling in LTE

What is bit rate in LTE?

Bit rate in LTE refers to the amount of data that can be transmitted in a given amount of time, typically measured in bits per second (bps). In LTE, the bit rate is used to measure the speed of data transfer between the user's device and the network.

What is symbol rate in LTE?

Symbol rate in LTE refers to the number of symbols that can be transmitted per second. A symbol is a unique combination of amplitude, frequency, and phase that carries information in a digital signal. In LTE, symbol rate is used to measure the transmission speed of the physical layer signals.

What is the relationship between bit rate and symbol rate in LTE?

The bit rate and symbol rate in LTE are related through modulation and coding schemes. Modulation is the process of converting digital data into analog signals, while coding refers to the addition of error correction codes to the data. The higher the modulation and coding schemes used, the higher the bit rate and symbol rate will be in LTE.

How does sampling work in LTE?

Sampling in LTE refers to the process of converting analog signals to digital signals. This is done by taking samples of the analog signal at regular intervals, which are then converted into digital data. The sampling rate in LTE is typically twice the highest frequency in the analog signal to ensure accurate representation of the signal.

Why is bit rate, symbol rate, and sampling important in LTE?

Bit rate, symbol rate, and sampling are important in LTE because they directly affect the quality and speed of data transmission. Higher bit rates and symbol rates allow for faster data transfer, while accurate sampling ensures that the data is transmitted accurately and without errors. These factors are crucial in providing a seamless and reliable LTE network for users.

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