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System

Femtocells form part of the mobile operator's network, although they are located at home or in the business. This section explains the system architecture, operation and technical issues arising.

Most of the functionality of a complete 3G cellsite has been miniaturised onto a chip, which looks and operates like a WiFi access point, and is connected via broadband DSL back to the mobile operators network. A femtocell is installed at home and connected to mains power and a standard broadband IP connection (typically DSL) through to the mobile operator's core network. Voice calls, text messages and data services are provided by the same systems that are used when outdoors.

Femtocells operate at very low radiation power levels (50 milliwatts peak output during a call, much lower when idle), and typically have a range of 200 metres. The signals do not travel through walls particularly well, but this is a benefit because it allows the frequency to be reused for other calls in nearby buildings. Where users walk outside or out of range, calls are automatically handed over to the external mobile network. Any standard 3G phone can be used on the femtocell if permitted by the mobile operator. Unlike WiFi access points, 3G Femtocells operate using licenced spectrum and thus must be supplied and operated in conjunction with the mobile operator.

Whilst the overall system architecture is broadly the same, there are three competing technical implementations.:

- Modified 3G RAN which reuses existing RNC in the network

- SIP based

- UMA, which was originally designed to handle WiFi hotspots and integrate into the operators core network.

The battle is most likely to be between the modified 3G RAN (which some RAN Network vendors are keen to promote because it reuses their existing RNC products) versus UMA, which has new, custom designed systems architected to handle the much larger number of cells and IP connectivity. SIP based solutions may be of interest where the user wants to bypass the network operator completely, and is happy to operate in a different way to achieve this.

 

Title Filter     Display # 
# Article Title Author
1 3G Femtocells David Chambers
2 Autonomous SIP based Solution David Chambers
3 Categories of data offload locations where Wi-Fi and femtocells could help David Chambers
4 Clock Frequency Accuracy within Femtocells for timing and location David Chambers
5 Competing Cellular Technology David Chambers
6 Crystal Frequency Oscillators in Femtocells David Chambers
7 Does your femtocell like tomato? David Chambers
8 Explaining the competing Standards for Femtocells David Chambers
9 Femtocell Components and Building Blocks David Chambers
10 Femtocell Convergence Server David Chambers
11 Femtocell Gateway components and location David Chambers
12 Femtocell Gateway location and Femtocell Re-Parenting David Chambers
13 Femtocell vendors choose between CDMA and WCDMA David Chambers
14 Femtocell versus Macrocell voice coverage cost calculator David Chambers
15 HetNets - Heterogeneous Networks and Femtocells David Chambers
16 How femtocells work David Chambers
17 Integrated Femtocells David Chambers
18 Iub over IP David Chambers
19 Local data caching using femtocells David Chambers
20 Lowering the cost of femtocells David Chambers
 
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"an excellent introduction to femtocell technology and business issues." - Andy Tiller [ip.access]