top button
Flag Notify
Site Registration

ENodeB transmit Power

+3 votes
914 views

AFAIK we have a concept of power saving at UE and it adjust the power requirement based on signal strength. Is there similar concept of eNode B and also is there any impact of the frequency band of eNodeB in which it is operating.

posted Aug 13, 2013 by Salil Agrawal

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button
Energy Saving of ENB is also there as part of SON feature in LTE

1 Answer

+3 votes

At eNodeB it can be achieved by discontinuous reception

Detailed info: http://tech.queryhome.com/41614/how-discontinuous-reception-works-in-lte-connected-mode

There is a document where this is also discussed about Energy saving and How to minimize the radiations use: Was not able to upload document here so going to paste the abstract here.
You can find out the details in mentioned link.
Here is the Link: Power-Aware ON/OFF Switching Strategies of ENodeB for Green LTE Networks

ON/OFF Switching Strategies of eNodeB for Green LTE Networks:

Abstract:

The enormous growth in broadband communications over the last decade has propelled the ICT sector to become one of the main industries that drain a large percentage of annual global energy consumption. This has coincided with an era which is witnessing declining availability of traditional energy resources and proactive research for renewable green/clean sources of energy. In cellular communications, base stations are typically responsible for nearly 60% of the energy demand associated with cellular services. Accordingly, recent research on energy efficient strategies to manage base station operation has become of the ultimate essence. In this contribution, the aim is to investigate optimal switching ON/OFF strategies of eNodeB for green LTE networks. The approach adopted formulates the problem as an optimization algorithm that minimizes the number of ON base stations within a given area in correspondence to active traffic loads and transmission power requirements while maintaining individual subscribers’ QoS constraints.

Over the last decade, energy consumption of the information and communication technologies (ICT) sector has become a key issue due to both economic and environmental reasons. ICT has been claimed to be responsible for 2% - 10% of annual worldwide consumption. Moreover, on the environmental side, ICT is responsible for an insignificant percentage of global C02 emissions. With projections for 2013 that indicate more than 1.82 billion smart phone units representing the most common alternative for web access (exceeding PCs), the future of ICT envisions a predominant expansion in cellular/wireless infrastructures with significantly large percentage of ICT energy demands. Statistics show that base stations drain the highest amount of energy within the network of mobile operators (nearly 57% of operators’ consumption). Accordingly, research on energy savings techniques of base station operation has become of significant importance over the last couple of years.

Due to the alternating nature of cellular traffic demand between day and night as well as office and residential areas, strategies for switching ON/OFF the radio base stations (eNodeB in LTE) has been one of the main active topics among the techniques of energy saving in base stations operations. This could be particularly evident if the maximum base station power transmission power at the scale of 30W-40W is compared to base station operations cost at the scale of 1500 W.

Strategies of switching ON/OFF the appropriate eNodeB in response to active traffic demand variations have varied form load-based to UE distance-based techniques. In the load-based approach, the eNodeB depends on a set of traffic thresholds that are predefined during configuration and eNodeB with active traffic load below the preset thresholds are switched OFF. In UEs distance-based approach, eNodeB are ranked based on the average distance between them and their active served mobile subscribers. The eNodeB with the highest average distances are selected to have priority for switch OFF. In both approaches, active users of the switched OFF eNodeB must be diverted to the next nearest eNodeB without jeopardizing their QoS requirements.

In this contribution, the problem of ON/OFF switching strategies in LTE networks will be formulated as an optimization algorithm that considers both the power transmission requirements of eNodeB to serve active mobiles users within its coverage range as well as the average power requirements for eNodeB to support mobiles users that are served by neighbor base stations. The addition to include the relation between eNodeB and mobile users served by neighbor base station in the process of selection of eNodeB that should be switched OFF contributes in providing guarantees that traffic of switched OFF eNodeB could have a better chance of being supported at their QoS requirements. Furthermore, the research in this contribution shall also incorporate the effect of fractional reuse in LTE on ON/OFF switching strategies which has been overlooked in the literature

answer Jun 10, 2014 by Hiteshwar Thakur
Similar Questions
+4 votes

As we know the data rates in LTE is 50 times than 3G but the UE's battery size is still same. So how LTE is taking care of this?

0 votes

Say bandwidth is getting half in some band (i.e. from 20 MHz to 10 MHz in the same band), should we reduce transmit power to half to keep same coverage?

...