LTE Drive Test Parameters PDF
LTE Drive Test Parameters PDF
This is the common key performance parameters for LTE drive test parameter we have to work
out for LTE drive test task.
1. RSRP:
RSRP – The average power received from a single Reference signal, and Its typical range is
around -44dbm (good) to -140dbm(bad).
RSRP (dBm) = RSSI (dBm) – 10*log (12*N)
2. RSRQ:
RSRQ – Indicates quality of the received signal, and its range is typically -19.5dB(bad) to -3dB
(good).
Reference Signal Received Quality (RSRQ) is defined as the ratio N×RSRP/(E-UTRA carrier
RSSI),
where N is the number of RB’s of the E-UTRA carrier RSSI measurement bandwidth.
The measurements in the numerator and denominator shall be made over the same set of
resource blocks.
3. RSSI:
RSSI – Represents the entire received power including the wanted power from the serving cell
as well as all co-channel power and other sources of noise and it is related to the above
parameters through the following formula:
RSRQ=N*(RSRP/RSSI)
Where N is the number of Resource Blocks of the E-UTRA carrier RSSI measurement
bandwidth.
RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indicator) is a parameter which provides information about total
received wide-band power (measure in all symbols) including all interference and thermal noise.
RSSI is not reported to e-NodeB by UE. It can simply be computed from RSRQ and RSRP that
are, instead, reported by UE.
RSSI = wideband power = noise + serving cell power + interference power
So, without noise and interference, we have that 100% DL PRB activity: RSSI=12*N*RSRP
Where:
• RSRP is the received power of 1 RE (3GPP definition) average of power levels received
across all Reference Signal symbols within the considered measurement frequency bandwidth
• RSSI is measured over the entire bandwidth
• N, number of RBs across the RSSI, is measured and depends on the BW
4. SINR:
SINR is the reference value used in the system simulation and can be defined:
• Wide band SINR
• SINR for a specific sub-carriers (or for a specific resource elements)
All measured over the same bandwidth!
Below is a chart that shows what values are considered good and bad for the LTE signal strength
values:
Example for noise limited case (no interference): If all resource elements are active and are
transmitted with equal power, then
• RSRQ = N / 12N = -10.8 dB for 1Tx
• RSRQ = N / 20N = -13 dB for 2Tx taking DTX into account
(because RSRP is measured over 1 resource element and RSSI per resource block is measured over
12 resource elements).
Remember that RSSI is only measured at those symbol times during which RS REs are
transmitted – We do not have to take into the count DTx!!!
So, when there is no traffic, and assuming only the reference symbols are transmitted (there are
2 of them within the same symbol of a resource block) from a single Tx antenna then the RSSI is
generated by only the 2 reference symbols so the result becomes
• RSRQ = N / 2N = -3 dB for 1Tx
• RSRQ = -6dB for 2Tx
SNR vs. RSRP
Lets try to calculate RSRP, RSSI and RSRQ for one very simple case of one resource block with
12 sub carriers and 0.5 ms in time domain. Let’s assume the power of reference symbols (shown
by red square) and power of other symbols carrying other data channels (shown by blue square)
is same i.e. 0.021 watt Since RSRP is linear average of downlink reference signal for given
channel bandwidth therefore
RSRP = 10*log (0.021*1000) = 13.2 dBm
While RSSI is total received wide-band power. Therefore we have to add power of all 12 carriers
in the given resource block
RSSI = 10*log(0.021*1000)+10*log(12) = 24 dBm
RSRQ is now simple ratio of RSRP to RSSI with N=1
RSRQ = 10*log(0.021/(12*0.021)) = -10.79 dB
Understanding dBm vs dB
dB is ratio between two power values while dBm is used to express an absolute value of power.
So when we mention RSRP and RSSI we shall always use dBm since we are talking about
absolute power values but we need to use dB with RSRQ since it is the ratio of RSRP to RSSI
5. CQI:
The Channel Quality Indicator (CQI) contains information sent from a UE to the eNode-B to
indicate a suitable downlink transmission data rate, i.e., a Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS)
value. CQI is a 4-bit integer and is based on the observed signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio
(SINR) at the UE. The CQI estimation process takes into account the UE capability such as the
number of antennas and the type of receiver used for detection. This is important since for the
same SINR value the MCS level that can be supported by a UE depends on these various UE
capabilities, which needs to be taken into account in order for the eNode-B to select an optimum
MCS level for the transmission. The CQI reported values are used by the eNode-B for downlink
scheduling and link adaptation, which are important features of LTE.
In LTE, there are 15 different CQI values randing from 1 to 15 and mapping between CQI and
modulcation scheme, transport block size is defined as follows (36.213)
6. PCI:
Cell ID sets the physical (PHY) layer Cell ID. This PHY-layer Cell ID determines the Cell ID
Group and Cell ID Sector. There are 168 possible Cell ID groups and 3 possible Cell ID sectors;
therefore, there are 3 * 168 = 504 possible PHY-layer cell IDs. When Cell ID is set to Auto, the
demodulator will automatically detect the Cell ID. When Cell ID is set to Manual, the PHY-layer
Cell ID must be specified for successful demodulation.
The physical layer cell id can be calculated from the following formula:
PHY-layer Cell ID = 3*(Cell ID Group) + Cell ID Sector
When Sync Type is set to C-RS, the Cell ID Auto selection will be disabled, and Cell ID must be
specified manually. This is because the demodulator needs to know the values of the C-RS
sequence to use for synchronization and because Cell ID determines these values. See RS-PRS
for more information.
7. BLER:
3GPP TS 34.121, F.6.1.1 defines block error ratio (BLER) as follows: "A Block Error Ratio is
defined as the ratio of the number of erroneous blocks received to the total number of blocks
sent. An erroneous block is defined as a Transport Block, the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) of
which is wrong."
The total approximate overhead for the 5 MHz channel is 17.86% + 4.76% + 2.6% = 25.22%.
The peak data rate is then 0.75 x 50.4 Mbps = 37.8 Mbps.
Note that the uplink would have lower throughput because the modulation scheme for most
device classes is 16QAM in SISO mode only.
There is another technique to calculate the peak capacity which I include here as well for a 2×20
MHz LTE system with 4×4 MIMO configuration and 64QAM code rate 1:
Downlink data rate = 4 x 6 bps/Hz x 20 MHz x (1-14.29%) x (1-10%) x (1-6.66%) x (1-10%) = 298
Mbps.
Uplink data rate:
1 Tx antenna (no MIMO), 64 QAM code rate 1 (Note that typical UEs can support only 16QAM)
• Pilot overhead = 14.3%
• Random access overhead = 0.625%
• CP overhead = 6.66%
• Guard band overhead = 10%
DL
UL