WO2012164531A1 - Frequency hopping in license-exempt/shared bands - Google Patents

Frequency hopping in license-exempt/shared bands Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2012164531A1
WO2012164531A1 PCT/IB2012/052764 IB2012052764W WO2012164531A1 WO 2012164531 A1 WO2012164531 A1 WO 2012164531A1 IB 2012052764 W IB2012052764 W IB 2012052764W WO 2012164531 A1 WO2012164531 A1 WO 2012164531A1
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
license
frequency hopping
exempt
channel
channels
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PCT/IB2012/052764
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Gilles Charbit
Tao Chen
Original Assignee
Renesas Mobile Corporation
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 GB1109289.7A external-priority patent/GB2486926B/en
Priority claimed from US13/151,557 external-priority patent/US8675605B2/en
Application filed by Renesas Mobile Corporation filed Critical Renesas Mobile Corporation
Priority to EP12737346.2A priority Critical patent/EP2715948A1/en
Priority to CN201280035829.4A priority patent/CN103875187B/en
Publication of WO2012164531A1 publication Critical patent/WO2012164531A1/en

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Classifications

    • 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
    • H04B1/7143Arrangements for generation of hop patterns
    • 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
    • H04B1/715Interference-related aspects
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/0001Arrangements for dividing the transmission path
    • H04L5/0003Two-dimensional division
    • H04L5/0005Time-frequency
    • H04L5/0007Time-frequency the frequencies being orthogonal, e.g. OFDM(A), DMT
    • H04L5/0012Hopping in multicarrier systems
    • 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
    • H04W72/12Wireless traffic scheduling
    • H04W72/1263Mapping of traffic onto schedule, e.g. scheduled allocation or multiplexing of flows

Definitions

  • Embodiments relate generally to wireless communication systems, methods, devices and computer programs, and more specifically relate to frequency hopping in unlicensed radio spectrum/bands.
  • E-UTRAN evolved universal terrestrial radio access network
  • WiFi wireless fidelity IEEE 802.11
  • FIG. 1A illustrates such a heterogeneous environment in which a UE 20 is operating at a location at which it can communicate with a macro eNB 22 and also with a home eNB 26. There may also be additional micro and/or pico cells in the same region. Whether or not the micro and pico eNBs are implemented as remote radio heads under control of the macro eNB, such a heterogeneous radio environment presents a challenging interference scenario.
  • Mitigating this interference is now a work item in the 3 GPP [see document RP- 100383, entitled NEW WORK ITEM PROPOSAL: ENHANCED ICIC FOR NON-CA BASED DEPLOYMENTS OF HETEROGENEOUS NETWORKS FOR LTE; RAN#47; Vienna, Austria; 16-19 March 2010]. Briefly, it shall consider techniques used in earlier releases (Release 8/9) and shall ensure backward compatibility for Release 8/9 terminals as well as minimize impact to the physical layer air interface.
  • Unlicensed spectrum goes by several names such as license-exempt and shared bands, and by example include what is known as TV white spaces and the ISM bands (both 2.4 GHz under IEEE 802.1 lb and 802.1 lg; and 5 GHz under IEEE 802.1 la). Interference may arise in the license-exempt bands due to devices operating in co-existing non-cellular systems, such as WiFi (IEEE 802.11), Zigbee (IEEE 802.15), Bluetooth, and USB wireless systems.
  • LTE cellular-traffic offloading to a license-exempt band is attractive for the increased bandwidth it offers, provided communications can be made reasonably reliable.
  • the LTE eNB may be used to set up an LTE connection on the license-exempt band so as to retain control of the offloaded cellular-based traffic. But still there needs to be some solution to minimize interference between the LTE eNB and its device transmissions and any non-cellular devices in the license-exempt band, despite the fact that co-ordination with non-cellular systems on that license-exempt band may not be possible.
  • LTE Long Term Evolution
  • CA carrier aggregation CA
  • Figure IB illustrates the general CA concept for LTE/LTE-A.
  • PCell (alternatively termed a primary component carrier or PCC) which by example is backward-compatible with LTE Release 8/9 UEs (and therefore 20 MHz in bandwidth). That same UE may also have in its assigned set SCell#l, SCell#2 and SCell#3 (alternatively termed secondary component carriers SCCs), which for completeness SCell#3 is exemplarily shown as being non-contiguous in frequency with the other CCs. Any number of the SCells or none of them may be active for that UE at any given time, as coordinated with the macro eNB 22.
  • PCC primary component carrier
  • Every UE 20 is to have its assigned PCell always active, and so the legacy UEs will be assigned one backward-compatible CC (e.g., its PCell) and no others. It is expected for 3 GPP Release 11 (LTE -A) that there will be the capability for cross scheduling across Cells/CCs, and also that the different Cells/CCs may have different UL/DL configurations.
  • LTE -A 3 GPP Release 11
  • the macro eNB 22 of Figure 1 A may be operating on the PCell and one or more SCells while the HeNB 26 of Figure 1A is operating on a different SCell as an interference mitigation scheme.
  • Another scheme in IEEE 802.1 laf is to have the various devices contact a TVWS database to determine the primary systems (i.e. TV broadcasting) and then rely on Carrier Sensing Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) mechanisms to avoid inter- WiFi system interference [see for example document IEEE 802.11-1 l-0089r0 entitled l lAF COEXISTENCE ASSURANCE DOCUMENT, by Cisco Systems and Research In Motion, 19 January 2011].
  • CSMA/CA Carrier Sensing Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance
  • an apparatus for use in controlling an access node comprising a processing system, for example including at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions.
  • a computer program product comprising a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium having computer readable instructions stored thereon, the computer readable instructions being executable by a computerized device to cause the computerized device to perform the method of the second embodiments.
  • Figure 1 A illustrates a heterogeneous network in which a UE is in a region covered by a macro eNB and a home eNB, and is an environment in which embodiments may be practiced with advantage.
  • Figure IB is a schematic frequency diagram showing a carrier aggregation system in which some component carriers lay in a licensed band and some lay in unlicensed bands.
  • Figure 1C is a schematic diagram of a frequency hopping approach under discussion for aperiodic sounding reference signals SRSs in which each transmission follows an individual hop in a pattern but is sent only when a separate SRS trigger is received.
  • Figure 2 is a logic flow diagram illustrating the operation of a method, and a result of execution by an apparatus of a set of computer program instructions embodied on a computer readable memory, in accordance with embodiments.
  • Figure 4 is a schematic diagram illustrating cross scheduling on a SCell in the license-exempt band from a PDCCH sent on a PCell in the licensed band.
  • Figure 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating differences between a standalone component carrier and an extension component carrier.
  • Figure 6 is a simplified block diagram of a UE, a home eNB and a macro eNB with its associated higher network node, which are exemplary electronic devices suitable for use in practicing embodiments.
  • frequency hopping can be used in addition to CC segregation and/or CSMA/CA.
  • LTE transmissions use frequency agility to minimize interference to co-existing WiFi systems on license-exempt bands.
  • the parameters of such transmission may be optimized based on measurements of co-existing WiFi system(s).
  • Frequency hopping has been used in GSM systems on the cellular band, including related concepts such as dynamic channel allocation (DC A) with FH pattern adaptation and dynamic frequency hopping using slow FH and modifying the utilized frequency-hop patterns based on rapid frequency quality measurements [see for example FUNDAMENTALS OF DYNAMIC FREQUENCY HOPPING IN CELLULAR SYSTEMS, by Zoran Kostic, Ivana Marie, and Xiaodong Wang; IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, vol. 19, No. 11; November 2001].
  • DC A dynamic channel allocation
  • the WLAN system IEEE 802.11 series
  • FH on the physical layer in which the whole ISM band is divided for FH purposes into hopping channels of 1 MHz each with a fixed hopping time of 0.4 seconds.
  • the hopping process is restricted to no longer than 224 s per channel hop.
  • FH scheme does not use any selective or intelligent hopping. See for example Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) vs. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) in Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) and Wireless LAN (WLAN) by Sorin M. Schwartz [see http:www//sorin-schwartz.com/white_papers/fhvsds.pdf, undated but last visited April 29, 2011].
  • FHSS Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum
  • DSSS Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum
  • BWA Broadband Wireless Access
  • WLAN Wireless LAN
  • each hop is activated by a separate SRS trigger, conveyed in a separate PDCCH.
  • the LTE device hops to the next bandwidth part determined by the hopping pattern each time a trigger is received.
  • the LTE device sounds the hopping bandwidth based on a single trigger for a multi-shot duration.
  • embodiments include a setup procedure as shown at Figure 2 for an LTE FH system in the license-exempt band in which LTE-band (licensed) resources are used to setup the initial FH LTE system configuration and for updating the parameters based on WiFi measurements on the license-exempt bands.
  • LTE-band licensed
  • WiFi stations conventionally known as non-AP STAs or simply STAs
  • the macro eNB would likely interfere more extensively with APs and STAs in its cell range, given its high-powered wide-area DL transmissions and the UL transmissions it receives from mobile devices.
  • Another assumption is that the LTE (licensed) band for the PCell and the license-exempt band for the SCell may not be frequency- adjacent to one another, which means that the mobile device with CA capability would need a dual-transceiver chain (i.e. one DL receiver / UL transmitter for the PCell, and one DL receiver / UL transmitter for the SCell).
  • the FH channel set size N ⁇ K, where K is the number of WiFi channels in the license exempt band.
  • each variable i, j, u, L, N and K are each positive integers.
  • PRBs Physical Resource Blocks
  • L ⁇ K is the number of FH time intervals per FH pattern
  • u indicates the u h FH pattern
  • j indicates the h FH time interval within the FH pattern.
  • the macro eNB which controls the licensed band (the PCell), may allocate certain transmission opportunities to the HeNB for the DL signaling it is to conduct in the licensed band/PCell as represented by blocks 202 and 204.
  • the below examples utilize the more specific term HeNB without loss of generality.
  • Cross-carrier scheduling has the advantage of not transmitting Layer 1 (LI) control signaling [which includes the physical control format indicator (PCFICH), the PDCCH, and the physical HARQ indicator channel (PHICH)] in the non-data region of the LTE subframe in the SCell on the license-exempt band. This minimizes interference to WiFi systems there.
  • LI Layer 1
  • the FH timing interval may be indicated by RRC signaling as sfx, with sfx a multiple of LTE subframes or LTE radio frames.
  • the cross-carrier scheduler in the HeNB may schedule DL and UL resources for SCell#z in FH WiFi channel, w;, in all the subframes within the FH time interval, T U*L + ] , or in a subset of subframes, depending on the DL and UL traffic of devices on the SCell.
  • the FH channel set W may be activated and/or de-activated and re-configured via RRC signaling within a FH configuration time L*sfx (L multiplied by the FH timing interval).
  • the FH resource block H may be scheduled by the HeNB via MAC signaling with a dynamic scheduler. Whilst semi-persistent scheduling can only be used on the PCell in LTE Release 10, in the event it is allowed on an SCell in future releases then scheduling the FH resource block H via the HeNB's MAC signaling can also be realized by semi-persistent scheduling as opposed to only by dynamic scheduling.
  • the FH parameters may be optimized by the HeNB based on WiFi measurements by the mobile device on the SCell.
  • the FH parameters may be optimized in that:
  • h ; 6, 7, .., 110 PRBs assuming LTE system bandwidth of up to 20 MHz can be used in the WiFi channel w;.
  • FIGS 3A and 3B give example embodiments of the above FH setup mechanisms, in which each row represents a different licensed-exempt channel w; and each column represents a different FH time interval T u .
  • These assume an IEEE WiFi 802.1 1b network in the ISM band in the United States, which has eleven 5 MHz WiFi channel numbers 1-1 1 in the center frequency 2-412 to 2.462 GHz.
  • M PRBs
  • Figure 3A represents the case in which N (the FH channel set size) is less than K (the number of channels in the license-exempt band).
  • L the number of FH time intervals per FH pattern
  • the HeNB scheduled FH resource block in WiFi channel w 4 in T3 in the first N FH time intervals and then at reference number 311 scheduled it in ⁇ + in the second K FH time intervals.
  • the HeNB scheduled FH resource block 13 ⁇ 4 in WiFi channel w 6 in T5 with more PRBs in the second K FH time intervals than at reference number 321 in ⁇ 6 ⁇ +5 at the first K time intervals.
  • the relatively larger number of PRBs is indicated by larger darker shared area, and is an example as noted with respect to Figure 2 of the eNB optimizing the FH by using a larger bandwidth on the SCell in the WiFi channel.
  • the number of PRBs (M) allocated to the FH resource blocks hi for SCell#l, SCell#2, SCell#3, SCell#4, and SCell#5 are respectively up to 25 PRBs, 100 PRBs, 50 PRBs, 50 PRBs, and 50 PRBs, since there are up to 25 PRBs per license-exempt channel.
  • Data is scheduled on FH resource block set h 2 , h 3 , I14, h 5 ) in respective FH time intervals T l s T 2 , T 3 , T 4 , T 5 as shown at Figure 3B.
  • the third (356) and fourth (358) L FH time intervals are similarly illustrated at Figure 3B.
  • reference number 360 shows that the HeNB scheduled FH resource block h 2 in WiFi channel w 2 in T 2 in the first L FH time intervals 352, and then as shown by reference number 361 the HeNB scheduled it in T L + 5 in the second L FH time intervals 354 (and further in Ti 3 in the third L FH time intervals 356 and additionally in Tis in the fourth L FH time intervals 358).
  • the HeNB can exclude some channels from the FH channel set W so that the number N of channels in the FH channel set is less than the total number of channels K in the license-exempt band.
  • reference number 370 shows that the HeNB scheduled FH resource block h 4 in WiFi channel w 4 in T 4 in the first L FH time intervals 352 with more PRBs than reference number 371 in in the second L time intervals 354.
  • the larger number of PRBs is represented as a relatively larger area of darkened shading. This shows that a larger LTE bandwidth on an SCell in the WiFi channel may be scheduled, such as if no competing beacons (or only weak beacons) are present in the area or if there is good WiFi link quality as mentioned above with respect to Figure 2.
  • Figures 3A-B above only show LTE carriers mapped to WiFi channels on the license-exempt band at 2.4 GHz via FH for simplicity. If we assume LTE frequency division duplex FDD SCell, then a DL SCell CC and a UL SCell CC will need to be mapped to separate WiFi channels. If those license-exempt channels are in the ISM band they will need to be at least 40 MHz apart; if they are in the TVWS band they need only be disjoint (non-contiguous in frequency).
  • the ISM band at 5 GHz (802.1 la) has channel numbers
  • the TVWS bands are on channels 14-36 (470-608 MHz) and 38-51 (614-698 MHz), which have respective bandwidths of 138 MHz and 84 MHz. This also allows sufficient usable bandwidth and allows a 40 MHz frequency gap between the UL and the DL CCs.
  • a frequency gap of about 40 MHz between the PCell CC and the SCell CC will be needed if it is further assume that simultaneous transmission and reception is allowed (i.e. a PCell subframe in the DL direction with a corresponding SCell subframe in the UL direction, or vice versa). This still allows a total usable bandwidth of 55 MHz for the SCell, assuming the PCell is on another (e.g., cellular/licensed) band.
  • the FH parameters may be optimized based on measurement reports received from the mobile devices. Since the mobile devices are communicating on a LTE PCell and a WiFi SCell, it is reasonable to assume they are equipped with an LTE modem and a WiFi modem, and that the HeNB is aware that the mobile device has a WiFi modem as indicated during initial LTE cell access via higher layer signaling.
  • the WiFi modem may be used to detect WiFi beacon frames transmitted by nearby WiFi Access Points APs. It is also reasonable to assume that both modems may access common memory address space in the mobile device to allow the LTE modem to read WiFi beacon-based measurements.
  • the HeNB transmits its almost-blank subframes according to a known pattern and at those times the macro eNB can schedule its user devices which are operating in the area of the HeNB without the user device seeing excessive interference from the HeNB.
  • the HeNBs also need to transmit other LI signaling such as the primary/secondary- synchronization channels (P/S-SCH), the broadcast channel (BCCH) and the paging channel (PCH) in the middle six PRBs in the SCells to support standalone SCells with some impact on WiFi, as further analyzed below.
  • P/S-SCH primary/secondary- synchronization channels
  • BCCH broadcast channel
  • PCH paging channel
  • One of the ways the HeNB can optimize the FH parameters is by selecting or de-selecting which WiFi channels w; are to be in the WiFi channel set W.
  • the HeNB may change the number of WiFi channels w; in the FH channel set pseudo-dynamically by the eNB in two ways:
  • the HeNB • explicitly with the HeNB updating the FH channel set W for all the devices configured on SCells (such as if there are multiple devices to detect and report strong beacon signals from a nearby WiFi AP; such reporting to the HeNB can be via RRC signaling, or via MAC signaling of CQI measurement reports adapted for this purpose);
  • This WiFi beacon-based approach is a pro-active method in that it allows the eNB to vary the number of PRBs (M) allocated to a FH resource block (hi) for a WiFi channel (w;) based on some detected WiFi beacon signal strength level threshold (e.g., no beacon; weak beacon; and strong beacon ranges).
  • M PRBs
  • One embodiment to pro-actively reduce that delay is to utilize an LTE-modem in the license-exempt band using either (or some combination of) clear channel assessment/energy detection (CCA/ED) or clear channel assessment/preamble detection (CCA/PD) algorithms.
  • CCA/ED can be carried out anywhere within the physical layer convergence protocol (PLCP) frame or for that matter any frame type (control, management, data).
  • PLCP physical layer convergence protocol
  • CCA/PD algorithms detect the preamble sent at the beginning of the PLCP frame.
  • a larger LTE bandwidth may be scheduled on the SCell in the WiFi channel. This may be done by the HeNB changing the value of M, the number of PRBs assigned to a FH resource block hi.
  • the value of M PRBs assigned to a FH resource block 13 ⁇ 4 on the SCell in a WiFi channel w; may be scheduled by the HeNB in two main ways in order to allow for optimizing the FH pattern frequency parameters:
  • the device can then store the WiFi beacon-based measurements for the WiFi channel w; in a shared local memory within the device, from which the device's LTE modem can access in order to report the measurements to the HeNB.
  • the Ack/Nack approach above is more reactive in that it is based on ACK/NACK messages corresponding to the past transmissions on the specific frequencies.
  • the HeNB can vary the number of PRBs (M) allocated to a FH resource block (hi) for a WiFi channel (w;) based on some Ack/Nack rate threshold (e.g., poor channel quality; average channel quality; and good channel quality).
  • M PRBs
  • w FH resource block
  • some Ack/Nack rate threshold e.g., poor channel quality; average channel quality; and good channel quality.
  • the Ack/Nack approach is faster since it does not require WiFi measurement reports and hence avoids the WiFi measurement delay that is quantified above.
  • the Ack/Nack technique requires use of the WiFi modem only in the device, which saves battery power since the WiFi modem will only be needed during initial setup of the SCell on the license-exempt band for discovery of any neighboring WiFi APs.
  • the HeNB configures the mobile devices for the SCell(s) in the license-exempt band through the use of PCell resources, which can also be used to activate frequency hopping as in the examples above.
  • the LTE devices are attached to the PCell on the LTE (licensed) band and so R C signaling by the HeNB to the UE on the PCell can be used to configure: component carriers for SCells and cross scheduler parameters; FH parameter configurations for the SCells; and activation of cross-carrier scheduling to begin the frequency hopping.
  • Figure 4 is a schematic diagram of cross scheduling which illustrates how resources on the SCell are allocated from the PCell.
  • SCell-specific search spaces SS
  • the mobile devices receive on the PCell from the HeNB their DL and UL grants for resources which lie on the SCells via the PDCCH addressed to specific mobile devices which they find in their SCell-specific search space.
  • LI signaling will also be used for synchronization, for system information, and for paging on the license-exempt band.
  • the HeNBs may need to transmit other LI signaling such as primary and secondary synchronization channel (P/S-SCH), broadcast channel (BCCH) and paging channel (PCH) in the middle six PRBs in the Scells in order to support standalone SCells; that is, to support mobile LTE devices which have the capability to operate in CA but not with extension carriers (CCs without a control channel region and which carry data channels only).
  • Extension CCs are distinguished from standalone CCs below with reference to Figure 5.
  • the LTE transmission power in the mid six PRBs in the license-exempt band (i.e. TVWS band or ISM band) must be within the regulated transmission power to avoid interfering with WiFi transmissions by other devices. Since the transmission of eNB LI signaling over the middle six PRBs is over a relatively small bandwidth (i.e. 6 PRBs span about 1 MHz), it is not likely to cause significant interference on the WiFi channels which use a relatively larger system bandwidth (i.e. 22 MHz for 802.1 lb and 20 MHz for 802.1 la).
  • Such LI signaling might be avoided by releasing the RRC connection or by using an extension carrier, but these are seen to be less desirable than retaining the LI signaling.
  • the RRC Connection can be released for all devices such as when there is a "busy" WiFi cell as detected by the device measurements on the SCell. But this would release the established radio bearers as well as all radio resources and assuming (reasonably) that there may be many APs within the SCell coverage area, all SCell CCs on "busy” WiFi channels will have to be released.
  • Figure 5 illustrates the distinction between a standalone and an extension CC.
  • the extension CC only contains data as illustrated there, due to synchronization requirements assuming a non-adjacent (or large) LTE band for the PCell and license-exempt band for the SCell.
  • the standalone carrier does have a control channel region 502 and so can carry the primary broadcast channel PBCH 504 and synchronization (P-SCH/S-SCH) 506.
  • the standalone CC can support mobility using its own control channel region 502 and can send common reference signals CRSs to the mobile devices, whereas mobility on the extension carrier must lie in another CC and no CRSs are exchanged in an extension carrier. This means that Release 8/9/10 devices without a CA capability can be supported on the license-exempt bands if the SCell is a standalone CC but not if the SCell were an extension carrier.
  • the HeNB can pseudo-dynamically adapt the FH time and frequency parameters (explicitly or implicitly as detailed above with respect to block 206 of Figure 2).
  • the HeNB may configure new blank DL subframes on the SCell to devices via RRC signaling (i.e., the HeNB stops transmitting data or signaling) so as to allow WiFi beacon-based measurements by the WiFi modem in the user device without interference from the HeNB's own transmissions.
  • bladenk subframes may be considered as a coordinated silencing between (macro and micro) eNB transmissions as an inter-cell interference management technique relying on Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) of physical (PHY) channels or signals from different cells.
  • TDM Time-Division Multiplexing
  • PHY physical channels or signals from different cells.
  • interference from the HeNB's middle six PRB transmissions may only partially interfere with a fraction of the WiFi measurements in the frequency domain. In this case it may be that the remainder of the WiFi signal is sufficient for the device to compile a measurement report which is comprehensive enough for the HeNB to properly adapt its FH parameters.
  • the HeNB does not schedule any UL grant for the SCell which would create a measurement gap for the WiFi measurements in the SCell UL subframe on the license-exempt band. So in this case only the HeNB needs to take this into account when allocating to the device their UL and DL resources and there is no specific action the UE needs to do to avoid a measurement gap.
  • the interference from the LTE system to the WiFi system on license-exempt shared bands can be minimized or otherwise mitigated via frequency agility/frequency hopping. It is also a distinct advantage that resources are flexibly allocated to devices on the license-exempt (shared) band via cross-carrier scheduling, based on user device WiFi measurements in that shared band.
  • a method or an apparatus comprising a processing system, for example having at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions, which are configured to cause the apparatus to do the following.
  • the frequency hopping resource block 13 ⁇ 4 contains M physical resource blocks PRBs, scheduled for the (at least one) secondary cell SCell during a frequency hopping time interval T M*L+ / by a downlink resource grant and an uplink resource grant sent on a physical downlink control channel PDCCH of the primary cell PCell, in which M is an integer at least equal to one, u identifies one pattern for the frequency hopping, and j indicates a h frequency hopping time interval within the pattern.
  • the R C signaling to configure the N secondary cells on the license-exempt channels/license exempt band is sent by a HeNB (or more generally a micro access node) on the primary cell PCell, the cross carrier scheduling is also sent by the HeNB on the primary cell PCell, and the primary cell PCell lies within a licensed frequency band.
  • each SCell occupies only one of the license-exempt channels w,; and for the case that N ⁇ K, at least one SCell occupies more than one of the license-exempt channels w;.
  • the RRC signaling further comprises an indication of a frequency hopping time interval T which is an integer multiple of subframes or radio frames used in the primary cell PCell.
  • the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise measurement reports received via radio resource control signaling, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of PRBs allocated to an z 'th FH resource block 13 ⁇ 4 based on whether the received measurement reports indicate a weak beacon, a strong beacon, or no beacon.
  • the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements received via at least some of the license-exempt channels w3 ⁇ 4 and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of PRBs allocated to an z 'th FH resource block 13 ⁇ 4 based on whether a rate of the received acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements indicate poor channel quality, good channel quality or average channel quality.
  • This is detailed above as useful for the case that the user device reports a strong beacon on an z 'th license-exempt channel w;.
  • a macro eNB 22 is adapted for communication over a licensed-band wireless link 21 with an apparatus, such as a mobile terminal or UE 20. While the examples above were in the context of the LTE-A system, the eNB 22 may be any access node (including frequency selective repeaters) of any wireless network such as LTE, LTE-A, GSM, GERAN, WCDMA, and the like.
  • the operator network of which the eNB 22 is a part may also include a network control element such as a mobility management entity MME and/or serving gateway SGW 24 or radio network controller RNC which provides connectivity with further networks (e.g., a publicly switched telephone network PSTN and/or a data communications network/Internet).
  • a network control element such as a mobility management entity MME and/or serving gateway SGW 24 or radio network controller RNC which provides connectivity with further networks (e.g., a publicly switched telephone network PSTN and/or a data communications network/Internet).
  • a network control element such as a mobility management entity MME and/or serving gateway SGW 24 or radio network controller RNC which provides connectivity with further networks (e.g., a publicly switched telephone network PSTN and/or a data communications network/Internet).
  • PSTN Public Switchet Control Network
  • RNC radio network controller
  • the UL traffic from the UE 20 is similarly offloaded to the license-exempt band and the UE sends this UL traffic to the HeNB 26 on the license-exempt band rather than to the macro eNB 22 on the LTE licensed band. It is the HeNB 26 which configures for the UE 20 the SCells, and which sends to the UE 20 on the (licensed band) PCell the cross scheduled (license-exempt band) SCell resources.
  • this UL traffic may or may not pass also from the HeNB 26 to the macro eNB 22 depending on the HeNB's other network connections and/or the destination of that traffic, and/or it is possible that some of the offloaded DL traffic may be ported directly to the HeNB 26 without first passing through the macro eNB 22.
  • the UE 20 includes processing means such as at least one data processor
  • DP storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 20B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 20C or other set of executable instructions, communicating means such as a transmitter TX 20D and a receiver PvX 20E for bidirectional wireless communications with the eNodeB 22 via one or more antennas 20F.
  • MEM computer-readable memory
  • PROG computer program
  • communicating means such as a transmitter TX 20D and a receiver PvX 20E for bidirectional wireless communications with the eNodeB 22 via one or more antennas 20F.
  • TX 20D and RX 20E are shown for clarity of illustration.
  • the eNB 22 also includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 22A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 22B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 22C or other set of executable instructions, and communicating means such as a transmitter TX 22D and a receiver RX 22E for bidirectional wireless communications with the UE 20 via one or more antennas 22F.
  • the eNB 22 stores at block 22G its offload to Home eNB rules/procedures if such offload is implemented in LTE network, and possibly also the macro eNB 22 may track at leave the traffic volume which is being offloaded so it may continue or discontinue traffic offloading as detailed herein as network conditions on the licensed band changes.
  • the HeNB 26 Similar to the eNB 22 but typically operating at a much reduced transmit power level (e.g., up to 2 watts for a HeNB versus a low of about 5 watts for a macro eNB), the HeNB 26 also includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 26A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 26B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 26C or other set of executable instructions, and communicating means such as a transmitter TX 26D and a receiver RX 26E for bidirectional wireless communications on license-exempt channels with the UE 20 via one or more antennas 26F.
  • processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 26A
  • MEM computer-readable memory
  • PROG computer program
  • the HeNB 26 carries out SCell setup rules/procedures as detailed above and the cross scheduling rules for cross scheduling on the license-exempt SCell from the licensed PCell as variously described in the embodiments above. There is also a control and data link 25 between the eNB 22 and the MME/S-GW 24, and there may be an additional control link 27 between the eNB 22 and the HeNB 26.
  • those devices are also assumed to include as part of their wireless communicating means a modem and/or a chipset which may or may not be inbuilt onto an RF front end chip within those devices 22, 26 and which also operates utilizing the cross-scheduling rules according to these teachings.
  • At least one of the PROGs 20C in the UE 20 is assumed to include a set of program instructions that, when executed by the associated DP 20A, enable the device to operate in accordance with embodiments, as detailed above.
  • the eNB 22 and the HeNB 26 also have software stored in their respective MEMs 22B, 26B to implement certain aspects of these teachings.
  • Embodiments may be implemented at least in part by computer software stored on the MEM 20B, 22B, 26B which is executable by the DP 20A of the UE 20 and/or by the DP 22A, 26A of the eNB 22 and HeNB 26 respectively, or by hardware, or by a combination of tangibly stored software and hardware (and tangibly stored firmware).
  • Electronic devices implementing these aspects need not be the entire devices as depicted at Figure 5 or may be one or more components of same such as the above described tangibly stored software, hardware, firmware and DP, or a system on a chip SOC or an application specific integrated circuit ASIC.
  • the various embodiments of the UE 20 can include, but are not limited to personal portable digital devices having wireless communication capabilities, including but not limited to cellular telephones, navigation devices, laptop/palmtop/tablet computers, digital cameras and music devices, and Internet appliances.
  • Various embodiments of the computer readable MEMs 20B, 22B, 26B include any data storage technology type which is suitable to the local technical environment, including but not limited to semiconductor based memory devices, magnetic memory devices and systems, optical memory devices and systems, fixed memory, removable memory, disc memory, flash memory, DRAM, SRAM, EEPROM and the like.
  • Various embodiments of the DPs 20A, 22A, 26 A include but are not limited to general purpose computers, special purpose computers, microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs) and multi-core processors.

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Abstract

RRC signaling is used to configure a user device for N secondary cells SCells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where i=1,2,...N. Then cross-carrier scheduling is sent on a primary cell PCell to schedule a frequency hopping FH resource block hi on the ith license-exempt channel wi. Based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels wi received from at least the user device, parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted. The FH resource block contains M physical resource blocks, scheduled for the SCell during a FH time interval Tu*L+j by a resource grant sent on a PDCCH of the PCell. In an embodiment the RRC signaling is sent by a micro access node/HeNB on the PCell, the cross carrier scheduling is sent also by the micro access node/HeNB on the PCell, and the PCell lies within an LTE licensed frequency band.

Description

Frequency Hopping in License-Exempt/Shared Bands
Technical Field
Embodiments relate generally to wireless communication systems, methods, devices and computer programs, and more specifically relate to frequency hopping in unlicensed radio spectrum/bands.
Background
The following abbreviations that may be found in the specification and/or the drawing figures are defined as follows:
3 GPP third generation partnership project
AP access point
BCCH broadcast channel
CA carrier aggregation
CC component carrier
CQI channel quality information
DCA dynamical channel allocation
DCH dynamical frequency hopping
DL downlink
E-UTRAN evolved universal terrestrial radio access network
FH frequency hopping
HARQ hybrid automatic repeat request
HeNB home eNB
IEEE institute of electronics and electrical engineers
ISM industrial, scientific, medical
LI layer 1
LTE long term evolution (E0— UTRAN)
LTE-A long term evolution advanced
MAC medium access control
OFDM orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
PCFICH physical control format indicator channel
PCH paging channel
PDCCH physical downlink control channel
PHICH physical HARQ indicator channel
PRB physical resource block
PUCCH physical uplink control channel
PCell primary cell
P-SCH primary synchronization channel
PHY physical
RRC radio resource control SCell secondary cell
SPS semi-persistent scheduling
SRS sounding reference signal
ss search space
S-SCH secondary- synchronization channel
STA station
TDM time-division multiplexing
TVBD television band device
TVWS television white space
UE user equipment
UL uplink
WLAN wireless local area network
WiFi wireless fidelity (IEEE 802.11)
In the 3GPP LTE system there are to be heterogeneous networks made up of conventional macro eNBs operating in the same spectrum with home eNBs, micro eNBs and pico eNBs. Figure 1A illustrates such a heterogeneous environment in which a UE 20 is operating at a location at which it can communicate with a macro eNB 22 and also with a home eNB 26. There may also be additional micro and/or pico cells in the same region. Whether or not the micro and pico eNBs are implemented as remote radio heads under control of the macro eNB, such a heterogeneous radio environment presents a challenging interference scenario. Mitigating this interference is now a work item in the 3 GPP [see document RP- 100383, entitled NEW WORK ITEM PROPOSAL: ENHANCED ICIC FOR NON-CA BASED DEPLOYMENTS OF HETEROGENEOUS NETWORKS FOR LTE; RAN#47; Vienna, Austria; 16-19 March 2010]. Briefly, it shall consider techniques used in earlier releases (Release 8/9) and shall ensure backward compatibility for Release 8/9 terminals as well as minimize impact to the physical layer air interface.
There has also been research into 'offloading' traffic from licensed bands to unlicensed bands in such heterogeneous networks, to help prevent traffic bottlenecks in the conventional licensed bands. Unlicensed spectrum goes by several names such as license-exempt and shared bands, and by example include what is known as TV white spaces and the ISM bands (both 2.4 GHz under IEEE 802.1 lb and 802.1 lg; and 5 GHz under IEEE 802.1 la). Interference may arise in the license-exempt bands due to devices operating in co-existing non-cellular systems, such as WiFi (IEEE 802.11), Zigbee (IEEE 802.15), Bluetooth, and USB wireless systems.
LTE cellular-traffic offloading to a license-exempt band is attractive for the increased bandwidth it offers, provided communications can be made reasonably reliable. To this end, the LTE eNB may be used to set up an LTE connection on the license-exempt band so as to retain control of the offloaded cellular-based traffic. But still there needs to be some solution to minimize interference between the LTE eNB and its device transmissions and any non-cellular devices in the license-exempt band, despite the fact that co-ordination with non-cellular systems on that license-exempt band may not be possible.
In the same vein, future deployments of LTE are to include carrier aggregation CA which might be utilized to help mitigate interference [see for example document RP-091440 entitled: CARRIER AGGREGATION FOR LTE, 3GPP RAN #46; Sanya, China; 1-4 December 2009).
Figure IB illustrates the general CA concept for LTE/LTE-A. For a given
UE there is assigned a PCell (alternatively termed a primary component carrier or PCC) which by example is backward-compatible with LTE Release 8/9 UEs (and therefore 20 MHz in bandwidth). That same UE may also have in its assigned set SCell#l, SCell#2 and SCell#3 (alternatively termed secondary component carriers SCCs), which for completeness SCell#3 is exemplarily shown as being non-contiguous in frequency with the other CCs. Any number of the SCells or none of them may be active for that UE at any given time, as coordinated with the macro eNB 22. Every UE 20 is to have its assigned PCell always active, and so the legacy UEs will be assigned one backward-compatible CC (e.g., its PCell) and no others. It is expected for 3 GPP Release 11 (LTE -A) that there will be the capability for cross scheduling across Cells/CCs, and also that the different Cells/CCs may have different UL/DL configurations.
In some deployments, the macro eNB 22 of Figure 1 A may be operating on the PCell and one or more SCells while the HeNB 26 of Figure 1A is operating on a different SCell as an interference mitigation scheme. Another scheme in IEEE 802.1 laf is to have the various devices contact a TVWS database to determine the primary systems (i.e. TV broadcasting) and then rely on Carrier Sensing Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) mechanisms to avoid inter- WiFi system interference [see for example document IEEE 802.11-1 l-0089r0 entitled l lAF COEXISTENCE ASSURANCE DOCUMENT, by Cisco Systems and Research In Motion, 19 January 2011].
While these may be effective in some cases, and in fact may be used in combination with the teachings below, what is needed in the art is a way to offload traffic onto license-exempt bands in a manner that enables the licensed network/eNB to maintain some control over the offloaded traffic and also to reasonably assure that the offloaded traffic will be reliably sent or received on the license-exempt band despite the network not having control over that band.
Summary
In first embodiments there is an apparatus for use in controlling an access node, the apparatus comprising a processing system, for example including at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions. In this embodiment the processing system is arranged to: utilize radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where z=l,2,...N (N is an integer at least equal to one); to utilize cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule on at least one of the N secondary cells a frequency hopping resource block hj on the z'th license-exempt channel w,; and to adapt parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device.
In second embodiments there is a method of controlling an access node, the method comprising: utilizing radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where z=l,2,...N, in which N is an integer at least equal to one; utilizing cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule on at least one of the N secondary cells a frequency hopping resource block 1¾ on the z'th license-exempt channel w,; and adapting parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device.
In third embodiments there is computer software adapted to perform the method of the second embodiments.
In fourth embodiments there is a computer readable memory storing a set of instructions, which when executed by an apparatus for use in controlling an access node, causes the apparatus to: utilize radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where z'=l,2,...N (N is an integer at least equal to one); utilize cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule on at least one of the N secondary cells a frequency hopping resource block 1¾ on the z'th license-exempt channel w,; and adapt parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device.
In fifth embodiments there is apparatus substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In sixth embodiments there is a computer program product comprising a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium having computer readable instructions stored thereon, the computer readable instructions being executable by a computerized device to cause the computerized device to perform the method of the second embodiments.
Further features and advantages will become apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments, given by way of example only, which is made with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 A illustrates a heterogeneous network in which a UE is in a region covered by a macro eNB and a home eNB, and is an environment in which embodiments may be practiced with advantage.
Figure IB is a schematic frequency diagram showing a carrier aggregation system in which some component carriers lay in a licensed band and some lay in unlicensed bands.
Figure 1C is a schematic diagram of a frequency hopping approach under discussion for aperiodic sounding reference signals SRSs in which each transmission follows an individual hop in a pattern but is sent only when a separate SRS trigger is received.
Figure 2 is a logic flow diagram illustrating the operation of a method, and a result of execution by an apparatus of a set of computer program instructions embodied on a computer readable memory, in accordance with embodiments.
Figure 3A is a frequency hopping diagram with license-exempt channels along the vertical axis and time intervals along the horizontal axis in which there are K=l l total channels in the license-exempt band and all are used in a pattern across L=l 1 time intervals.
Figure 3B is similar to Figure 3 A, but where L=5 and only N=5 of the K=l 1 total channels are used for the frequency hopping patterns.
Figure 4 is a schematic diagram illustrating cross scheduling on a SCell in the license-exempt band from a PDCCH sent on a PCell in the licensed band.
Figure 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating differences between a standalone component carrier and an extension component carrier.
Figure 6 is a simplified block diagram of a UE, a home eNB and a macro eNB with its associated higher network node, which are exemplary electronic devices suitable for use in practicing embodiments.
Detailed Description
Unlike segregating component carriers and CSMA/CA techniques noted in the background section above, embodiments of these teachings mitigate interference by frequency hopping. Of course, frequency hopping can be used in addition to CC segregation and/or CSMA/CA. The examples below are in the non-limiting context of an LTE system, and as will be detailed there the LTE transmissions use frequency agility to minimize interference to co-existing WiFi systems on license-exempt bands. The parameters of such transmission may be optimized based on measurements of co-existing WiFi system(s). Frequency hopping has been used in GSM systems on the cellular band, including related concepts such as dynamic channel allocation (DC A) with FH pattern adaptation and dynamic frequency hopping using slow FH and modifying the utilized frequency-hop patterns based on rapid frequency quality measurements [see for example FUNDAMENTALS OF DYNAMIC FREQUENCY HOPPING IN CELLULAR SYSTEMS, by Zoran Kostic, Ivana Marie, and Xiaodong Wang; IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, vol. 19, No. 11; November 2001].
In the WLAN system (IEEE 802.11 series) there is FH on the physical layer in which the whole ISM band is divided for FH purposes into hopping channels of 1 MHz each with a fixed hopping time of 0.4 seconds. When hopping in this system, the hopping process is restricted to no longer than 224 s per channel hop. This
802.11 FH scheme does not use any selective or intelligent hopping. See for example Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) vs. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) in Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) and Wireless LAN (WLAN) by Sorin M. Schwartz [see http:www//sorin-schwartz.com/white_papers/fhvsds.pdf, undated but last visited April 29, 2011].
The examples below outline FH for an LTE system configured on the license-exempt band by LTE resources on the licensed band using CA mechanisms, which are of course beyond any specifications for GSM FH or WLAN FH.
Consider the prior art slot based FH, such as is specified in 3 GPP Release 8 for the PUCCH to provides frequency diversity. Hopping takes place on the band edges, symmetrically over the center frequency. In addition, FH for aperiodic sounding reference signal (SRS) transmissions is now being discussed in 3 GPP Release 10 [see document Rl- 110699 entitled: ON FREQUENCY HOPPING FOR APERIODIC SRS TRANSMISSION by Texas Instruments; RAN WG1 #64; 21-25 Feb 2011] and two somewhat different methods are being considered. First, the LTE device SRS transmissions are hopped according to a predetermined pattern as illustrated at figure 1C, which is derived from the Release 8/9 hopping mechanism. In contrast to the Release 8/9 hopping scheme, each hop is activated by a separate SRS trigger, conveyed in a separate PDCCH. The LTE device hops to the next bandwidth part determined by the hopping pattern each time a trigger is received. In the second approach the LTE device sounds the hopping bandwidth based on a single trigger for a multi-shot duration. These FH techniques only apply to specific PUCCH or SRS signaling in LTE and do not consider FH mechanisms to set up a FH LTE system in any license-exempt bands.
As an overview in the context of the LTE system with HeNB deployments, embodiments include a setup procedure as shown at Figure 2 for an LTE FH system in the license-exempt band in which LTE-band (licensed) resources are used to setup the initial FH LTE system configuration and for updating the parameters based on WiFi measurements on the license-exempt bands. It is reasonably assumed that use of the HeNBs, which have local low-powered LTE transmission on the license-exempt band, will minimize interference to various other WiFi Access Points (conventionally known as APs) and WiFi stations (conventionally known as non-AP STAs or simply STAs) operating on the same license-exempt bands. The macro eNB would likely interfere more extensively with APs and STAs in its cell range, given its high-powered wide-area DL transmissions and the UL transmissions it receives from mobile devices. Another assumption is that the LTE (licensed) band for the PCell and the license-exempt band for the SCell may not be frequency- adjacent to one another, which means that the mobile device with CA capability would need a dual-transceiver chain (i.e. one DL receiver / UL transmitter for the PCell, and one DL receiver / UL transmitter for the SCell).
Figure 2 lists the highlights of this setup procedure. At block 202 the HeNB (or more generally the micro access node) configures via RRC signaling (licensed band) to the mobile device N SCells on WiFi channels (or more generally licensed-exempt channels) Wi, in the FH channel set,
Figure imgf000010_0001
where i=l ,2,..,N. In this case, the FH channel set size N <= K, where K is the number of WiFi channels in the license exempt band. In this description, each variable i, j, u, L, N and K are each positive integers.
Once the mobile device/UE is configured for the license-exempt N SCells, then at block 204 the micro eNB (also referred to as Home eNB or HeNB for short) uses cross-carrier scheduling on the PCell (licensed band) to schedule on at least one of the N secondary cells an FH resource block, hi (of the FH resource block set, H={hi}) which contains FH resource block 1¾=Μ Physical Resource Blocks (PRBs) scheduled by DL grant and UL grant on PDCCH for SCell #i during a FH time interval, Tu*i+j, on the ith WiFi channel w; (license-exempt band). In this case L < K is the number of FH time intervals per FH pattern, u indicates the u h FH pattern and j indicates the h FH time interval within the FH pattern. The macro eNB, which controls the licensed band (the PCell), may allocate certain transmission opportunities to the HeNB for the DL signaling it is to conduct in the licensed band/PCell as represented by blocks 202 and 204. The below examples utilize the more specific term HeNB without loss of generality.
Cross-carrier scheduling has the advantage of not transmitting Layer 1 (LI) control signaling [which includes the physical control format indicator (PCFICH), the PDCCH, and the physical HARQ indicator channel (PHICH)] in the non-data region of the LTE subframe in the SCell on the license-exempt band. This minimizes interference to WiFi systems there.
Initially, the HeNB sets N SCells and M PRBs. Two variants are considered in examples shown below; namely N=K with each SCell occupying a WiFi channel as shown at Figure 3A; and N<K with each SCell occupying one or a multiple of WiFi channels as shown at Figure 3B.
Further for block 204, the FH timing interval may be indicated by RRC signaling as sfx, with sfx a multiple of LTE subframes or LTE radio frames. The cross-carrier scheduler in the HeNB may schedule DL and UL resources for SCell#z in FH WiFi channel, w;, in all the subframes within the FH time interval, TU*L+], or in a subset of subframes, depending on the DL and UL traffic of devices on the SCell. Also, the FH channel set W may be activated and/or de-activated and re-configured via RRC signaling within a FH configuration time L*sfx (L multiplied by the FH timing interval).
The FH resource block H may be scheduled by the HeNB via MAC signaling with a dynamic scheduler. Whilst semi-persistent scheduling can only be used on the PCell in LTE Release 10, in the event it is allowed on an SCell in future releases then scheduling the FH resource block H via the HeNB's MAC signaling can also be realized by semi-persistent scheduling as opposed to only by dynamic scheduling.
Continuing on at Figure 2, at block 206 the FH parameters may be optimized by the HeNB based on WiFi measurements by the mobile device on the SCell. For example, the FH parameters may be optimized in that:
• Some WiFi channels Wk may be excluded from the FH channel set W [i.e., Wj in W= {wi} i^k] which means the number of WiFi channels w; in the FH channel set may become less than the number of WiFi channels in the license-exempt band (N < K). This may be done in two ways - i. Explicitly by the HeNB updating the FH channel set W for all the mobile devices configured on the SCells. This may arise where there are strong beacon signals from some nearby WiFi AP which are detected by many mobile devices and reported to the HeNB via R C signaling or via some CQI reporting mechanism via MAC signaling;
ii. Implicitly by the HeNB disabling use of some WiFi channel w; for some mobile devices based on their WiFi beacon-based measurements.
• A larger LTE bandwidth on the SCell in the WiFi channel w; may be scheduled:
i. if weak or no beacon signals from WiFi AP are detected, or ii. if there is good link quality based on Acknowledgement/Negative Acknowledgement of offloaded DL data sent by the HeNB to the mobile device on a PDSCH of the SCell as reported by the mobile device in an RRC CONNECTED state. Hence, h; = 6, 7, .., 110 PRBs assuming LTE system bandwidth of up to 20 MHz can be used in the WiFi channel w;.
Figures 3A and 3B give example embodiments of the above FH setup mechanisms, in which each row represents a different licensed-exempt channel w; and each column represents a different FH time interval Tu. These assume an IEEE WiFi 802.1 1b network in the ISM band in the United States, which has eleven 5 MHz WiFi channel numbers 1-1 1 in the center frequency 2-412 to 2.462 GHz. There are N SCells configured, with each cell occupying a fixed 5 MHz WiFi channel with the number of PRBs (M) allocated to the FH resource blocks hi being up to 25 PRBs.
Figure 3A represents the case in which N (the FH channel set size) is less than K (the number of channels in the license-exempt band). Figure 3 A divides the columns into two groups of L FH time intervals, where L (the number of FH time intervals per FH pattern) is set to the total number of WiFi channels available on the ISM band (i.e. L=K=11 given the US-based 11 -channel ISM band noted above). In the first L=l 1 FH time intervals 302 per FH pattern, the WiFi channel set with size N=7 is W={wi, w2, w4, W6, ws, wg, wn } as indicated by the shaded blocks within those first L=l 1 FH time intervals 302. Data is scheduled on the FH resource block set h2, ti4, 1¾, h8, h9, hn) in the FH time intervals Ti, Tu, T3, T5, T2, T9, T8, respectively as indicated by the text within the shaded blocks of section 302 at Figure 3A. This is a first FH pattern.
Further, in the second L=l l FH time intervals 304, the WiFi channel set with size N=8 is W={wi, w2, w4, w6, w8, wg, w10, wn } as indicated by the shaded blocks within those second L=l l FH time intervals 304. Similarly, data is scheduled on the FH resource block set
Figure imgf000013_0001
h2, ti4, 1¾, h8, h9, h10, hn) in FH time intervals Τ12=Τκ+ΐ 5
Figure imgf000013_0002
Τΐ9=Τκ+8, respectively as indicated by the text within the shaded blocks of section 304 at Figure 3 A. This is a second FH pattern.
In the example of Figure 3A, there is no ordered mapping between FH resource blocks hi, and the FH timing intervals Tu*L+j. this enables the FH patterns to be specific to HeNBs to minimize inter-cell interference between neighbor HeNB DL transmissions on the SCell. Assuming a UL grant is implicitly based on a DL grant, inter-device interference between mobile devices attached to different neighbor HeNBs will also be minimized when the FH patterns are HeNB-specific.
Note that at reference number 310 the HeNB scheduled FH resource block in WiFi channel w4 in T3 in the first N FH time intervals, and then at reference number 311 scheduled it in Τκ+ in the second K FH time intervals. This is an example as noted with respect to Figure 2 of the HeNB excluding some WiFi channels from the channel set based on the mobile devices' measurement reports.
Further, at reference number 320 the HeNB scheduled FH resource block 1¾ in WiFi channel w6 in T5 with more PRBs in the second K FH time intervals than at reference number 321 in Τι6=Τκ+5 at the first K time intervals. The relatively larger number of PRBs is indicated by larger darker shared area, and is an example as noted with respect to Figure 2 of the eNB optimizing the FH by using a larger bandwidth on the SCell in the WiFi channel.
Now consider the alternate example of the FH LTE setup at Figure 3B, which also assumes the IEEE WiFi 802.1 lb network in the ISM band in the US in Figure 3A. For Figure 3B there are N=5 SCells configured, with each cell occupying one 5 MHz WiFi channel or a multiple of 5 MHz WiFi channels. Hence, SCell#l, SCell#2, SCell#3, SCell#4, and SCell#5 respectively occupy one 5 MHz WiFi channel, four 5 MHz WiFi channels, two 5 MHz WiFi channels, two 5 MHz WiFi channels , and two 5 MHz WiFi channels, as shown along the vertical axis of Figure 3B. The number of PRBs (M) allocated to the FH resource blocks hi for SCell#l, SCell#2, SCell#3, SCell#4, and SCell#5 are respectively up to 25 PRBs, 100 PRBs, 50 PRBs, 50 PRBs, and 50 PRBs, since there are up to 25 PRBs per license-exempt channel.
Figure 3B divides the columns into four groups of L FH time intervals, where L (the number of FH time intervals per FH pattern) is set to 5 and so Figure 5B represents the case in which there are fewer FH time intervals per pattern than the total number of WiFi channels K available on the ISM band (5=L<K=11). In the first L FH time intervals represented by reference number 352, the WiFi channel set is size N=5 (there are 5 SCells despite that some are configured with multiple WiFi channels) and the FH channel set W={wi, w2, w3, w4, w5} . Data is scheduled on FH resource block set
Figure imgf000014_0001
h2, h3, I14, h5) in respective FH time intervals Tl s T2, T3, T4, T5 as shown at Figure 3B.
Further, in the second L FH time intervals represented by reference number 354, the WiFi channel set is of size N=3 and includes W={wi, w2, w4} with data scheduled on FH resource block set
Figure imgf000015_0001
h2, in respective FH time intervals T6=TL+i, Tio=TL+5, T9=TL+4 as shown at Figure 3B.
The third (356) and fourth (358) L FH time intervals are similarly illustrated at Figure 3B. For the third L FH time intervals represented by reference number 356, the WiFi channel set is size N=4 and the FH channel set W={wi, w2, w3, w4} with data scheduled on FH resource block set
Figure imgf000015_0002
h2, h3, !¾) in respective FH time intervals Tn=T2L+i,
Figure imgf000015_0003
Ti4=T2L+4, TI2=T2L+2. For the fourth L FH time intervals represented by reference number 358, the WiFi channel set is size N=5 and the FH channel set W= {wi , w2, w3, w4, w5 } with data scheduled on FH resource block set
Figure imgf000015_0004
Ti7=T3L+2, T20=T3L+5. Ti9=T3L+4.
In the Figure 3B example, there is also no ordered mapping between FH resource blocks hi and the FH timing intervals Tu*L+j, as the FH patterns may be specific to HeNBs to minimize inter-cell interference between neighbor HeNB DL transmissions on a given SCell. Assuming the UL grant is implicitly based on the DL grant, inter-device interference between mobile devices attached to different neighbor HeNBs will also be minimized based on these FH patterns. Note that reference number 360 shows that the HeNB scheduled FH resource block h2 in WiFi channel w2 in T2 in the first L FH time intervals 352, and then as shown by reference number 361 the HeNB scheduled it in TL+5 in the second L FH time intervals 354 (and further in Ti3 in the third L FH time intervals 356 and additionally in Tis in the fourth L FH time intervals 358). This shows that the HeNB can exclude some channels from the FH channel set W so that the number N of channels in the FH channel set is less than the total number of channels K in the license-exempt band.
Further at Figure 3B, reference number 370 shows that the HeNB scheduled FH resource block h4 in WiFi channel w4 in T4 in the first L FH time intervals 352 with more PRBs than reference number 371 in
Figure imgf000015_0005
in the second L time intervals 354. The larger number of PRBs is represented as a relatively larger area of darkened shading. This shows that a larger LTE bandwidth on an SCell in the WiFi channel may be scheduled, such as if no competing beacons (or only weak beacons) are present in the area or if there is good WiFi link quality as mentioned above with respect to Figure 2.
Figures 3A-B above only show LTE carriers mapped to WiFi channels on the license-exempt band at 2.4 GHz via FH for simplicity. If we assume LTE frequency division duplex FDD SCell, then a DL SCell CC and a UL SCell CC will need to be mapped to separate WiFi channels. If those license-exempt channels are in the ISM band they will need to be at least 40 MHz apart; if they are in the TVWS band they need only be disjoint (non-contiguous in frequency).
In the United States, the ISM band at 5 GHz (802.1 la) has channel numbers
36-64 which allows for up to 140 MHz bandwidth. This is a sufficient bandwidth to have both DL and UL CCs for FH LTE systems outlined in the examples above. For example, if we assume the UL CC is mapped to channel numbers 36-50 and the DL CC is mapped to channel numbers 51-64 with a usable bandwidth 50 MHz each respectively, there is sufficient headroom for a 40 MHz frequency gap between the UL and the DL CCs.
In the United States the TVWS bands are on channels 14-36 (470-608 MHz) and 38-51 (614-698 MHz), which have respective bandwidths of 138 MHz and 84 MHz. This also allows sufficient usable bandwidth and allows a 40 MHz frequency gap between the UL and the DL CCs.
If instead we assume an LTE time division duplex TDD SCell with the same TDD UL-DL subframe configuration in the PCell and in the SCell (and further assume half-duplex mobile devices), there will need to be a frequency gap of about 40 MHz between DL and UL in the SCell CC to allow more usable bandwidth. In this case the separation between DL and UL is done in time division multiplexing TDM fashion. In most cases it should be sufficient to have DL and UL in the SCell CCs for FH LTE systems as outlined in the examples above, in the ISM band at 2.4 GHz with a total usable bandwidth of 55 MHz (channels 1-11) and assuming TDD parameters.
However, in the case where different CC-specific TDD configurations are used for the PCell and the SCell with full-duplex devices, a frequency gap of about 40 MHz between the PCell CC and the SCell CC will be needed if it is further assume that simultaneous transmission and reception is allowed (i.e. a PCell subframe in the DL direction with a corresponding SCell subframe in the UL direction, or vice versa). This still allows a total usable bandwidth of 55 MHz for the SCell, assuming the PCell is on another (e.g., cellular/licensed) band.
Now are given further details of block 206 of Figure 2, which notes that the FH parameters may be optimized based on measurement reports received from the mobile devices. Since the mobile devices are communicating on a LTE PCell and a WiFi SCell, it is reasonable to assume they are equipped with an LTE modem and a WiFi modem, and that the HeNB is aware that the mobile device has a WiFi modem as indicated during initial LTE cell access via higher layer signaling. The WiFi modem may be used to detect WiFi beacon frames transmitted by nearby WiFi Access Points APs. It is also reasonable to assume that both modems may access common memory address space in the mobile device to allow the LTE modem to read WiFi beacon-based measurements.
Since cross-carrier scheduling is being used, there is no PCFICH, PDCCH, or PHICH transmitted on the SCell as noted above; those channels are on the PCell and used for scheduling UL and DL radio resources on the SCell. This allows what is known in the art as almost-blank DL subframes to be sent on the PDSCH in case no data is scheduled there. Almost-blank subframes carry reference signals and in some cases also synchronization, paging, or system information, but never any unicast DL user data. They are used as an interference mitigation technique; the HeNB transmits its almost-blank subframes according to a known pattern and at those times the macro eNB can schedule its user devices which are operating in the area of the HeNB without the user device seeing excessive interference from the HeNB. The HeNBs also need to transmit other LI signaling such as the primary/secondary- synchronization channels (P/S-SCH), the broadcast channel (BCCH) and the paging channel (PCH) in the middle six PRBs in the SCells to support standalone SCells with some impact on WiFi, as further analyzed below.
One of the ways the HeNB can optimize the FH parameters is by selecting or de-selecting which WiFi channels w; are to be in the WiFi channel set W. Some WiFi channels Wk may be excluded from the FH channel set W; for example the HeNB can exclude w; in W= {wi}i k as was briefly mentioned in the discussion above concerning block 206 of Figure 2. This allows optimization of the FH pattern time parameters. As discussed with reference to block 206 of Figure 2, the HeNB may change the number of WiFi channels w; in the FH channel set pseudo-dynamically by the eNB in two ways:
• explicitly with the HeNB updating the FH channel set W for all the devices configured on SCells (such as if there are multiple devices to detect and report strong beacon signals from a nearby WiFi AP; such reporting to the HeNB can be via RRC signaling, or via MAC signaling of CQI measurement reports adapted for this purpose);
• implicitly with the HeNB disabling use of some WiFi channel w; for some devices based on their WiFi beacon-based measurements. These devices know that they will not be receiving any DL or UL grants on the corresponding SCell and hence can skip the DL subframes and UL subframes for these WiFi channels (i.e., they may go into a sleep mode during the FH timing interval corresponding to the disabled WiFi channels). This WiFi beacon-based approach is a pro-active method in that it allows the eNB to vary the number of PRBs (M) allocated to a FH resource block (hi) for a WiFi channel (w;) based on some detected WiFi beacon signal strength level threshold (e.g., no beacon; weak beacon; and strong beacon ranges). It is reasonable to expect some delay in these WiFi measurements; assuming a typical beacon interval of 100 Time Units or 0.1s, several beacon transmissions will likely be needed for the measurements. Adding in some further RRC signaling delay for reporting those measurements to the HeNB leaves a total delay on the order of a second or so for the HeNB to receive the WiFi measurements.
One embodiment to pro-actively reduce that delay is to utilize an LTE-modem in the license-exempt band using either (or some combination of) clear channel assessment/energy detection (CCA/ED) or clear channel assessment/preamble detection (CCA/PD) algorithms. By example, CCA/ED can be carried out anywhere within the physical layer convergence protocol (PLCP) frame or for that matter any frame type (control, management, data). CCA/PD algorithms detect the preamble sent at the beginning of the PLCP frame.
Also noted when introducing block 206 of Figure 2 is that a larger LTE bandwidth may be scheduled on the SCell in the WiFi channel. This may be done by the HeNB changing the value of M, the number of PRBs assigned to a FH resource block hi. The value of M PRBs assigned to a FH resource block 1¾ on the SCell in a WiFi channel w; may be scheduled by the HeNB in two main ways in order to allow for optimizing the FH pattern frequency parameters:
• in case the device detects, using its WiFi modem, that there are only weak or no beacon signals from the WiFi AP. The device can then store the WiFi beacon-based measurements for the WiFi channel w; in a shared local memory within the device, from which the device's LTE modem can access in order to report the measurements to the HeNB.
• if there is good link quality based on Acknowledgment/Negative acknowledgement of offloaded DL data sent by the HeNB to the device on the PDSCH of the SCell. Such Acks/NAcks are reported by the device while the device is in the RRC CONNECTED state.
The Ack/Nack approach above is more reactive in that it is based on ACK/NACK messages corresponding to the past transmissions on the specific frequencies. The HeNB can vary the number of PRBs (M) allocated to a FH resource block (hi) for a WiFi channel (w;) based on some Ack/Nack rate threshold (e.g., poor channel quality; average channel quality; and good channel quality). The Ack/Nack approach is faster since it does not require WiFi measurement reports and hence avoids the WiFi measurement delay that is quantified above. In addition, the Ack/Nack technique requires use of the WiFi modem only in the device, which saves battery power since the WiFi modem will only be needed during initial setup of the SCell on the license-exempt band for discovery of any neighboring WiFi APs.
Now referring to block 202 of Figure 2, the HeNB configures the mobile devices for the SCell(s) in the license-exempt band through the use of PCell resources, which can also be used to activate frequency hopping as in the examples above. The LTE devices are attached to the PCell on the LTE (licensed) band and so R C signaling by the HeNB to the UE on the PCell can be used to configure: component carriers for SCells and cross scheduler parameters; FH parameter configurations for the SCells; and activation of cross-carrier scheduling to begin the frequency hopping.
Figure 4 is a schematic diagram of cross scheduling which illustrates how resources on the SCell are allocated from the PCell. First, there is configured SCell-specific search spaces (SS) on the PCell resources. The mobile devices then receive on the PCell from the HeNB their DL and UL grants for resources which lie on the SCells via the PDCCH addressed to specific mobile devices which they find in their SCell-specific search space.
Conventional LTE for CA (Release 10), 3 GPP TS 36.213 vl 0.1.0 (March 2011) states that the PHICH is received from the same cell (or CC) which is used to send the UL grant. This means that in case cross-carrier scheduling is used, there is no PHICH on the SCell. If the mobile device/UE receives a PDCCH granting UL resources which lie on an SCell, and that PDCCH is sent on DL CC #x on the UE's PCell, the UE and the network will map to a PHICH from CC #x on the PCell several subframes later. PCFICH is also transmitted on the same cell (or CC) as the PDCCH.
Therefore, in conventional practice for the case of cross-carrier scheduling there is no LI control signaling (PCFICH, PDCCH, PHICH) transmitted in the non-data region of the LTE subframe on the SCell. The non-data region in this case occupies all the PRBs due to the regular interleaving in the LTE Release-8 system bandwidth in the first 1-3 OFDM symbols, as indicated by the PCFICH on the PCell. Adapting the LTE Release- 10 CA mechanisms, up to 13 OFDM symbols in the LTE subframe can be used for data transmission assuming only one (unused) OFDM symbol for LI control signaling is used.
In an embodiment of these teachings, LI signaling will also be used for synchronization, for system information, and for paging on the license-exempt band. The HeNBs may need to transmit other LI signaling such as primary and secondary synchronization channel (P/S-SCH), broadcast channel (BCCH) and paging channel (PCH) in the middle six PRBs in the Scells in order to support standalone SCells; that is, to support mobile LTE devices which have the capability to operate in CA but not with extension carriers (CCs without a control channel region and which carry data channels only). Extension CCs are distinguished from standalone CCs below with reference to Figure 5.
The LTE transmission power in the mid six PRBs in the license-exempt band (i.e. TVWS band or ISM band) must be within the regulated transmission power to avoid interfering with WiFi transmissions by other devices. Since the transmission of eNB LI signaling over the middle six PRBs is over a relatively small bandwidth (i.e. 6 PRBs span about 1 MHz), it is not likely to cause significant interference on the WiFi channels which use a relatively larger system bandwidth (i.e. 22 MHz for 802.1 lb and 20 MHz for 802.1 la).
Such LI signaling might be avoided by releasing the RRC connection or by using an extension carrier, but these are seen to be less desirable than retaining the LI signaling. The RRC Connection can be released for all devices such as when there is a "busy" WiFi cell as detected by the device measurements on the SCell. But this would release the established radio bearers as well as all radio resources and assuming (reasonably) that there may be many APs within the SCell coverage area, all SCell CCs on "busy" WiFi channels will have to be released. Figure 5 illustrates the distinction between a standalone and an extension CC. The extension CC only contains data as illustrated there, due to synchronization requirements assuming a non-adjacent (or large) LTE band for the PCell and license-exempt band for the SCell. On the contrary, the standalone carrier does have a control channel region 502 and so can carry the primary broadcast channel PBCH 504 and synchronization (P-SCH/S-SCH) 506. Further, the standalone CC can support mobility using its own control channel region 502 and can send common reference signals CRSs to the mobile devices, whereas mobility on the extension carrier must lie in another CC and no CRSs are exchanged in an extension carrier. This means that Release 8/9/10 devices without a CA capability can be supported on the license-exempt bands if the SCell is a standalone CC but not if the SCell were an extension carrier.
Without some aforethought there would likely be measurement gaps in the LTE Scell on the license-exempt band. For WiFi measurements done in DL subframes of the SCell, some interference from LI signaling transmitted by the HeNB in the middle six PRBs can be expected because the HeNB transmits such LI signaling continuously in the middle six PRBs. In the initial LTE system setup phase this is not an issue since the SCells are not yet setup, and devices may carry out WiFi measurements on the license-exempt band as the HeNB configures those devices via RRC signaling on the PCell.
After the initial setup phase, if the HeNB needs WiFi measurements from the user device on SCells, the HeNB can pseudo-dynamically adapt the FH time and frequency parameters (explicitly or implicitly as detailed above with respect to block 206 of Figure 2). However, a solution is still needed to prevent such interference. To this end the HeNB may configure new blank DL subframes on the SCell to devices via RRC signaling (i.e., the HeNB stops transmitting data or signaling) so as to allow WiFi beacon-based measurements by the WiFi modem in the user device without interference from the HeNB's own transmissions. This concept of "blank" subframes may be considered as a coordinated silencing between (macro and micro) eNB transmissions as an inter-cell interference management technique relying on Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) of physical (PHY) channels or signals from different cells. See for example document Rl -094231 entitled TIME SYNCHRONIZATION REQUIREMENTS FOR DIFFERENT LTE-A TECHNIQUES by Qualcomm Europe (3 GPP TSG-RAN WG1 #58 bis; Miyazaki, Japan; 12-16 October 2009).
Some of the issues involved in the "blank" subframe concept above are the impact on the legacy terminal measurements for handover and channel estimation in the user device. For the case that only LTE Release- 11 and later user devices are supported on the license-exempt band, there would then be no legacy user terminal issues with the "blank" subframe. For the case that Release- 8/9/ 10 terminals are also supported, the impact of the LTE HeNB middle six PRB interference on the device WiFi measurements may or may not need to be positively addressed. For example, in practice the interference may not be severe enough to warrant positive mitigation; WiFi signals are transmitted in a relatively larger system bandwidth (i.e. 22 MHz for 802.1 lb and 20 MHz for 802.1 la) and so interference from the HeNB's middle six PRB transmissions (i.e. over about 1 MHz) may only partially interfere with a fraction of the WiFi measurements in the frequency domain. In this case it may be that the remainder of the WiFi signal is sufficient for the device to compile a measurement report which is comprehensive enough for the HeNB to properly adapt its FH parameters.
For WiFi measurements carried out in the DL subframes of the SCell, it is sufficient if the HeNB does not schedule any UL grant for the SCell which would create a measurement gap for the WiFi measurements in the SCell UL subframe on the license-exempt band. So in this case only the HeNB needs to take this into account when allocating to the device their UL and DL resources and there is no specific action the UE needs to do to avoid a measurement gap.
By employing the above techniques, the interference from the LTE system to the WiFi system on license-exempt shared bands can be minimized or otherwise mitigated via frequency agility/frequency hopping. It is also a distinct advantage that resources are flexibly allocated to devices on the license-exempt (shared) band via cross-carrier scheduling, based on user device WiFi measurements in that shared band.
So to summarize some of the above details and examples, there is a method, or an apparatus comprising a processing system, for example having at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions, which are configured to cause the apparatus to do the following.
As outlined at blocks 202, 204 and 206 of Figure 2 which is from the perspective of the HeNB: utilize radio resource control RRC signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells SCells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping FH channel set W={w;} where z=l,2,...N and N is an integer at least equal to one; and to utilize cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell PCell to schedule a frequency hopping FH resource block 1¾ on the z'th license-exempt channel w, on at least one of the N Scells; and to adapt parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device.
Adding further detail to those broad concepts, above it was detailed that the frequency hopping resource block 1¾ contains M physical resource blocks PRBs, scheduled for the (at least one) secondary cell SCell during a frequency hopping time interval TM*L+/ by a downlink resource grant and an uplink resource grant sent on a physical downlink control channel PDCCH of the primary cell PCell, in which M is an integer at least equal to one, u identifies one pattern for the frequency hopping, and j indicates a h frequency hopping time interval within the pattern.
In one embodiment, the R C signaling to configure the N secondary cells on the license-exempt channels/license exempt band is sent by a HeNB (or more generally a micro access node) on the primary cell PCell, the cross carrier scheduling is also sent by the HeNB on the primary cell PCell, and the primary cell PCell lies within a licensed frequency band.
In another embodiment which may be combined with any of those above, there are a total of K license-exempt channels parsed into a frequency hopping channel set of size N; and further for the case that N=K, each SCell occupies only one of the license-exempt channels w,; and for the case that N<K, at least one SCell occupies more than one of the license-exempt channels w;.
In a still further embodiment, the RRC signaling further comprises an indication of a frequency hopping time interval T which is an integer multiple of subframes or radio frames used in the primary cell PCell.
In yet a further embodiment which may but need not be combined with those above, the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise measurement reports received via radio resource control signaling, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of PRBs allocated to an z'th FH resource block 1¾ based on whether the received measurement reports indicate a weak beacon, a strong beacon, or no beacon. Or in an alternative embodiment the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements received via at least some of the license-exempt channels w¾ and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of PRBs allocated to an z'th FH resource block 1¾ based on whether a rate of the received acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements indicate poor channel quality, good channel quality or average channel quality.
In another embodiment to be used in conjunction with either of the two immediately above, the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by explicitly updating the license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} for all user devices configured on the (at least one) secondary cell. This is described above as useful for the case that multiple reports are received which indicate a strong beacon from another access point. In an alternative to this the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by implicitly disabling for the user device the z'th license-exempt channel w; by not further scheduling uplink or downlink grants for the user device on the z'th license-exempt channel w;. This is detailed above as useful for the case that the user device reports a strong beacon on an z'th license-exempt channel w;.
Reference is now made to Figure 6 for illustrating a simplified block diagram of various electronic devices and apparatus that are suitable for use in practicing embodiments. In Figure 6 a macro eNB 22 is adapted for communication over a licensed-band wireless link 21 with an apparatus, such as a mobile terminal or UE 20. While the examples above were in the context of the LTE-A system, the eNB 22 may be any access node (including frequency selective repeaters) of any wireless network such as LTE, LTE-A, GSM, GERAN, WCDMA, and the like. The operator network of which the eNB 22 is a part may also include a network control element such as a mobility management entity MME and/or serving gateway SGW 24 or radio network controller RNC which provides connectivity with further networks (e.g., a publicly switched telephone network PSTN and/or a data communications network/Internet). Normal DL traffic destined for the UE passes initially to the macro eNB 22 but in accordance with these embodiments at least some of that traffic is offloaded by the macro eNB 22 to the HeNB 26 for eventual wireless delivery to the UE 20 via the license-exempt band. UL traffic from the UE 20 is similarly offloaded to the license-exempt band and the UE sends this UL traffic to the HeNB 26 on the license-exempt band rather than to the macro eNB 22 on the LTE licensed band. It is the HeNB 26 which configures for the UE 20 the SCells, and which sends to the UE 20 on the (licensed band) PCell the cross scheduled (license-exempt band) SCell resources. While not particularly germane to embodiments detailed herein, in some implementations this UL traffic may or may not pass also from the HeNB 26 to the macro eNB 22 depending on the HeNB's other network connections and/or the destination of that traffic, and/or it is possible that some of the offloaded DL traffic may be ported directly to the HeNB 26 without first passing through the macro eNB 22.
The UE 20 includes processing means such as at least one data processor
(DP) 20A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 20B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 20C or other set of executable instructions, communicating means such as a transmitter TX 20D and a receiver PvX 20E for bidirectional wireless communications with the eNodeB 22 via one or more antennas 20F. As noted above, it is advantageous if the UE 20 has dual transmit and receive chains, one each for the licensed and the license-exempt bands since traffic is offloaded but the UE 20 remains under control of the macro eNB 22 (and since it may be that still some traffic remains on the licensed band), but only one TX 20D and RX 20E are shown for clarity of illustration. There is also another block 20G representing the dual LTE modem and WiFi modem, and the shared memory for recording and reporting measurement reports as detailed above.
The eNB 22 also includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 22A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 22B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 22C or other set of executable instructions, and communicating means such as a transmitter TX 22D and a receiver RX 22E for bidirectional wireless communications with the UE 20 via one or more antennas 22F. The eNB 22 stores at block 22G its offload to Home eNB rules/procedures if such offload is implemented in LTE network, and possibly also the macro eNB 22 may track at leave the traffic volume which is being offloaded so it may continue or discontinue traffic offloading as detailed herein as network conditions on the licensed band changes.
Similar to the eNB 22 but typically operating at a much reduced transmit power level (e.g., up to 2 watts for a HeNB versus a low of about 5 watts for a macro eNB), the HeNB 26 also includes processing means such as at least one data processor (DP) 26A, storing means such as at least one computer-readable memory (MEM) 26B storing at least one computer program (PROG) 26C or other set of executable instructions, and communicating means such as a transmitter TX 26D and a receiver RX 26E for bidirectional wireless communications on license-exempt channels with the UE 20 via one or more antennas 26F. The HeNB 26 carries out SCell setup rules/procedures as detailed above and the cross scheduling rules for cross scheduling on the license-exempt SCell from the licensed PCell as variously described in the embodiments above. There is also a control and data link 25 between the eNB 22 and the MME/S-GW 24, and there may be an additional control link 27 between the eNB 22 and the HeNB 26.
While not particularly illustrated for the eNB 22 or HeNB 26, those devices are also assumed to include as part of their wireless communicating means a modem and/or a chipset which may or may not be inbuilt onto an RF front end chip within those devices 22, 26 and which also operates utilizing the cross-scheduling rules according to these teachings.
At least one of the PROGs 20C in the UE 20 is assumed to include a set of program instructions that, when executed by the associated DP 20A, enable the device to operate in accordance with embodiments, as detailed above. The eNB 22 and the HeNB 26 also have software stored in their respective MEMs 22B, 26B to implement certain aspects of these teachings. Embodiments may be implemented at least in part by computer software stored on the MEM 20B, 22B, 26B which is executable by the DP 20A of the UE 20 and/or by the DP 22A, 26A of the eNB 22 and HeNB 26 respectively, or by hardware, or by a combination of tangibly stored software and hardware (and tangibly stored firmware). Electronic devices implementing these aspects need not be the entire devices as depicted at Figure 5 or may be one or more components of same such as the above described tangibly stored software, hardware, firmware and DP, or a system on a chip SOC or an application specific integrated circuit ASIC.
In general, the various embodiments of the UE 20 can include, but are not limited to personal portable digital devices having wireless communication capabilities, including but not limited to cellular telephones, navigation devices, laptop/palmtop/tablet computers, digital cameras and music devices, and Internet appliances.
Various embodiments of the computer readable MEMs 20B, 22B, 26B include any data storage technology type which is suitable to the local technical environment, including but not limited to semiconductor based memory devices, magnetic memory devices and systems, optical memory devices and systems, fixed memory, removable memory, disc memory, flash memory, DRAM, SRAM, EEPROM and the like. Various embodiments of the DPs 20A, 22A, 26 A include but are not limited to general purpose computers, special purpose computers, microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs) and multi-core processors.
Various modifications and adaptations to the foregoing embodiments may become apparent to those skilled in the relevant arts in view of the foregoing description. While embodiments have been described above in the context of the LTE and LTE-A system, as noted above embodiments may be used with various other CA-type wireless communication systems.
The above embodiments are to be understood as illustrative examples. Further embodiments are envisaged. It is to be understood that any feature described in relation to any one embodiment may be used alone, or in combination with other features described, and may also be used in combination with one or more features of any other of the embodiments, or any combination of any other of the embodiments. Furthermore, equivalents and modifications not described above may also be employed without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the accompanying claims.

Claims

Claims
1. Apparatus for use in controlling an access node, said apparatus comprising a processing system arranged to:
utilize radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where z=l,2,...N, in which N is an integer at least equal to one;
utilize cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule a frequency hopping resource block 1¾ on the zth license-exempt channel w; on at least one of the N secondary cells; and
adapt parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels wz- received from at least the user device.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1, in which:
the frequency hopping resource block 1¾ contains M physical resource blocks, scheduled for the at least one of the N secondary cells during a frequency hopping time interval TU*L+, by a downlink resource grant and an uplink resource grant sent on a physical downlink control channel PDCCH of the primary cell, in which M is an integer at least equal to one, u identifies one pattern for the frequency hopping, and j indicates a h frequency hopping time interval within the pattern.
3. Apparatus according to claim 1 or 2, in which the radio resource control signaling to configure the N secondary cells on the license-exempt channels is sent by a micro access node on the primary cell by means of cross carrier scheduling, and the primary cell lies within a licensed frequency band.
4. Apparatus according to any preceding claim, in which there are a a total of K license-exempt channels parsed into a frequency hopping channel set size N; and further
for the case that N=K, each SCell occupies only one of the license-exempt channels w,; and
for the case that N<K, at least one SCell occupies more than one of the license-exempt channels w;.
5. Apparatus according to any preceding claim, in which the radio resource control signaling further comprises an indication of a frequency hopping time interval T which is an integer multiple of subframes or radio frames used in the primary cell.
6. Apparatus according to any preceding claim, in which at least one of:
the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise measurement reports received via radio resource control signaling, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of physical resource blocks allocated to an z'th frequency hopping resource block 1¾ based on whether the received measurement reports indicate a weak beacon, a strong beacon, or no beacon; and
the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements received via at least some of the license-exempt channels w,, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of physical resource blocks allocated to an z'th frequency hopping resource block 1¾ based on whether a rate of the received acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements indicate poor channel quality, good channel quality or average channel quality.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6, in which the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by:
explicitly updating the license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} for all user devices configured on the at least one of the N secondary cells, for the case that multiple reports are received which indicate a strong beacon from another access point.
8. Apparatus according to claim 6, in which the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by:
implicitly disabling for the user device the z'th license-exempt channel w; by not further scheduling uplink or downlink grants for the user device on the z'th license-exempt channel w;, for the case that the user device reports a strong beacon on an z'th license-exempt channel w;.
9. Apparatus according to any preceding claim, in which the apparatus comprises a micro eNB operating on the primary cell in an LTE system and on the N secondary cells in a WLAN system.
10. Apparatus according to any preceding claim, wherein said processing system comprises at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions.
11. A method of controlling an access node, said method comprising: utilizing radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set
W={w;} where z'=l,2,...N, in which N is an integer at least equal to one;
utilizing cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule a frequency hopping resource block 1¾ on the z'th license-exempt channel w; on at least one of the
N secondary cells; and
adapting parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels wz- received from at least the user device.
12. A method according to claim 11 , in which:
the frequency hopping resource block 1¾ contains M physical resource blocks, scheduled for the at least one of the N secondary cells during a frequency hopping time interval TU*L+, by a downlink resource grant and an uplink resource grant sent on a physical downlink control channel PDCCH of the primary cell, in which M is an integer at least equal to one, u identifies one pattern for the frequency hopping, and j indicates a h frequency hopping time interval within the pattern.
13. A method according to claim 11 or 12, in which the radio resource control signaling to configure the N secondary cells on the license-exempt channels is sent by a micro access node by means of cross carrier scheduling, and the primary cell lies within a licensed frequency band.
14. A method according to any of claims 11 to 13, in which there are a total of K license-exempt channels parsed into a frequency hopping channel set size N; and further
for the case that N=K, each SCell occupies only one of the license-exempt channels w,; and
for the case that N<K, at least one SCell occupies more than one of the license-exempt channels w;.
15. A method according to any of claims 11 to 14, in which the radio resource control signaling further comprises an indication of a frequency hopping time interval T which is an integer multiple of subframes or radio frames used in the primary cell.
16. A method according to any of claims 11 to 15, in which at least one of:
the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise measurement reports received via radio resource control signaling, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of physical resource blocks allocated to an z'th frequency hopping resource block 1¾ based on whether the received measurement reports indicate a weak beacon, a strong beacon, or no beacon; and
the measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels w; received from at least the user device comprise acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements received via at least some of the license-exempt channels w,, and the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing a number M of physical resource blocks allocated to an z'th frequency hopping resource block 1¾ based on whether a rate of the received acknowledgements/negative acknowledgements indicate poor channel quality, good channel quality or average channel quality.
17. A method according to claim 16, in which the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by:
explicitly updating the license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} for all user devices configured on the at least one of the N secondary cells, for the case that multiple reports are received which indicate a strong beacon from another access point.
18. A method according to claim 16, in which the parameters for the frequency hopping are adapted by changing the number of license-exempt channels w; in the frequency hopping channel set W={w;} by:
implicitly disabling for the user device the z'th license-exempt channel w; by not further scheduling uplink or downlink grants for the user device on the z'th license-exempt channel w;, for the case that the user device reports a strong beacon on an z'th license-exempt channel w;.
19. A method according to any of claims 11 to 18, in which the method is executed by a micro eNB operating on the primary cell in an LTE system and on the N secondary cells in a WLAN system.
20. Computer software adapted to perform the method of any of claims 11 to 19.
21. A computer readable memory storing a set of instructions, which when executed by an apparatus for use in controlling an access node causes the apparatus to:
utilize radio resource control signaling to configure a user device for N secondary cells on license-exempt channels w; in a frequency hopping channel set W={w;} where z=l,2,...N, in which N is an integer at least equal to one;
utilize cross-carrier scheduling on a primary cell to schedule a frequency hopping resource block 1¾ on the zth license-exempt channel w; on at least one of the N secondary cells; and
adapt parameters for the frequency hopping based on measurements of at least some of the license-exempt channels wz- received from at least the user device.
22. A computer readable memory according to claim 21 , in which: the frequency hopping resource block 1¾ contains M physical resource blocks, scheduled for the at least one of the N secondary cells during a frequency hopping time interval TU*L+, by a downlink resource grant and an uplink resource grant sent on a physical downlink control channel PDCCH of the primary cell, in which M is an integer at least equal to one, u identifies one pattern for the frequency hopping, and j indicates a h frequency hopping time interval within the pattern.
23. Apparatus substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
24. A computer program product comprising a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium having computer readable instructions stored thereon, the computer readable instructions being executable by a computerized device to cause the computerized device to perform a method according to any of claims 11 to 19.
PCT/IB2012/052764 2011-06-02 2012-06-01 Frequency hopping in license-exempt/shared bands WO2012164531A1 (en)

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