Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.

IEEE 1932.1-2024

$51.46

IEEE Standard for Licensed/Unlicensed Spectrum Interoperability in Wireless Mobile Networks (Published)

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
IEEE 2024
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Category:

If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to our online customer service team by clicking on the bottom right corner. We’re here to assist you 24/7.
Email:[email protected]

New IEEE Standard – Active. The proliferation of connected users and downloaded applications has driven the development of a new paradigm in wireless mobile networks. Additional air interfaces operating in the unlicensed spectrum serving as supplementary downlinks (SDL) and enhancing end-user throughput are utilized by this paradigm. However, integrating these interfaces into licensed base stations can be challenging, as they are distributed across various domains. WiFi is a key technology for increasing capacity through the user plane interface. Traffic is buffered in WiFi when unlicensed channels become unavailable, and transmissions resume once new radio slots are free. To meet the strict round-time delay requirements of fifth generation (5G) networks, a new virtual controller that resides at the mobile edge cloud is defined in this standard. The multi-connectivity model and traffic sharing between licensed and unlicensed interfaces are coordinated by the controller based on the real-time availability of unlicensed channels for specific user equipment.Two schemes are presented for managing multi-connectivity modes: distributed and centralized. In the distributed scheme, traffic forwarding and steering between distributed radio interfaces across domain sites is managed by the controller. In the centralized scheme, various radio interfaces are co‑located in the same base station, and traffic steering is managed by the controller through a new unified 5G media access control (MAC) design. Traffic sharing between different interfaces is ensured by the controller, given that access to operator-deployed WiFis or any other customer WiFi using separate service level agreements (SLAs) is provided by operators. Multi-connectivity modes imply the provision of efficient new services that may require measuring airtime for each interface and changes to user plane topology.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
1 IEEE Std 1932.1™-2024 Front cover
2 Title page
4 Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents
8 Participants
10 Introduction
11 Contents
12 1. Overview
1.1 Scope
1.2 Word usage
13 2. Normative references
14 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations
3.1 Definitions
3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations
17 4. LUC technology
4.1 General
18 4.2 Network function and interfaces
19 4.3 Enabling components
20 4.4 Associations
21 5. LUC topology registration and NF assignment
5.1 General
22 5.2 Topology update
5.3 Topology deletion
23 6. Licensed and unlicensed controller (LUC)
6.1 General
24 6.2 Specifications
25 6.3 LUC subscriptions
27 6.4 LUC functionality
28 6.5 LUC NF modules
30 6.6 LUC unique ID assignment process
31 6.7 Slice-based LUC
33 6.8 LUC as 5GC NF (TLS1.3)
6.9 Orchestration templates for LUC NF
37 6.10 Lifecycle management for LUC (instantiation, scalability, termination, and modification)
38 6.11 Traffic routing
40 7. Mobile agent
7.1 General
7.2 Requirements and specifications
41 7.3 Introduction to configuration and monitoring interface of the mobile agent
43 7.4 Authenticating a mobile agent
44 7.5 Alarms and events
46 8. Unified air interface for the coordinated LUC model
8.1 General
47 8.2 Cell-side MAC function blocks and interfaces
52 8.3 Lower MAC
59 8.4 UE/device-side MAC function blocks and interfaces
64 8.5 Examples of high-level MAC procedures for eDSA support
68 8.6 eDSA MAC-related signaling procedures
78 Back cover
IEEE 1932.1-2024
$51.46