W. Yu, G.Ginis, J. Cioffi Information Systems Laboratory Stanford University Stanford, CA Phone: ; Fax:

Similar documents
COMMITTEE T1 TELECOMMUNICATIONS Working Group T1E1.4 (DSL Access) Ottawa, Canada; June 7, 1999

Optimal Transmit Spectra for Communication on Digital Subscriber Lines

CONTRIBUTION ABSTRACT

COMMITTEE T1 TELECOMMUNICATIONS Working Group T1E1.4 (DSL Access) Costa Mesa, California, March 8 12, 1999

VDSL2 A feasible Solution for Last Mile

RADIO FREQUENCY INTERFERENCE AND CAPACITY REDUCTION IN DSL

Proposal: Option for in-band POTS and ISDN. Mikael Isaksson, Tomas Stefansson, Per Ödling, Frank Sjöberg, Kate Wilson

Broadband access. Nils Holte, NTNU. NTNU Department of Telecommunications Kursdagene ved NTNU, Digitale telenett, 9. januar

VDSL: The Next Step in the DSL Progression

Network Requirements for DSL systems, (ADSL through G.Fast) (A summarized view)

An Adaptive Multiuser Power Control Algorithm for VDSL

TELECOMMUNICATIONS STANDARDS ADVISORY COMMITTEE WORKING GROUP ON COMMON CONNECTION STANDARDS (CCS)

HIGH CAPACITY DSL-SYSTEMS

ITU-T xdsl Standards Study Group 15 Question 4

Broadcast digital subscriber lines using discrete multitone for broadband access

Optimal Signaling Strategies for Symmetric and Asymmetric Bit-Rate Communication Services in the Presence of Crosstalk

Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) Transmission Methods

Intel System Engineers Documents. DSL General Overview

Orion2+ SHDSL.bis Solution with 11Mbit/s and 15Mbit/s per Copper Pair

Dynatel Advanced Modular System 965AMS 30-Megahertz Spectrum Analyzer

How To Write A Network Power Plan

How DSL Works. by Curt Franklin

APPLICATION NOTE 182 WIDEBAND TESTING. Telecom Test and Measurement. The Need for Speed

Next Generation of High Speed. Modems8

Evolution from Voiceband to Broadband Internet Access

xdsl Technology and Applications:

(Refer Slide Time: 2:10)

Introduction to Digital Subscriber s Line (DSL)

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R SM Measuring sideband emissions of T-DAB and DVB-T transmitters for monitoring purposes

Broadband 101: Installation and Testing

Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)

Digital Subscriber Line

Black Box Explains: DSL

DSL: An Overview. By M. V. Ramana Murthy. All Rights Reserved

Analysis of xdsl Technologies

Evaluation Criteria for ADSL AFE1302

Public Switched Telephone System

Detecting Bridged Tap and Noise Interference in VDSL2 Access Networks using the JDSU SmartClass TPS

Access to Data & Computer Networks Physical Level

Module: Digital Communications. Experiment 784. DSL Transmission. Institut für Nachrichtentechnik E-8 Technische Universität Hamburg-Harburg

SHDSL in Ericsson ENGINE Access Ramp

Installation Effects Upon Alien Crosstalk and Equal Level Far End Crosstalk

TECHNICAL INFORMATION FOR FREQUENCY PLANNING IN-BUILDING COAXIAL CABLE DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (IBCCDS)

ZHONE VDSL2 TECHNOLOGY. Access Technology for the Future. November 2009 CONTENTS

Automatic Carrier-in-Carrier Power Control: Increased Link Margin and Availability in Carrier-in-Carrier Links

COMPATIBILITY AND SHARING ANALYSIS BETWEEN DVB T AND RADIO MICROPHONES IN BANDS IV AND V

Residential Broadband: Technologies for High-Speed Access To Homes

Loop Diagnostics in DSL

Managing Interference in a Vectored VDSL2 environment Communications Alliance WC58

ADSL2 AND ADSL2plus THE NEW ADSL STANDARDS

L I A I S O N. Liaison on possible new work item

What are the Requirements for an Accurate DSL Line Simulator? Paradyne International, France

How Enhanced DSL Technologies Optimize the Last Copper Mile By John Williams

Adaptive Spectrum and Signal Alignment, Incorporated THE RE-PROFILER DSM CLOSES THE CASE ON DIAGNOSING DSL/VDSL TROUBLES

Residential Broadband: Technologies for High-Speed Access To Homes

EFM Copper (EFMC) Tutorial. June 2004

xdsl Tutorial By Brandon Provolt Engineering Intern Marketing and Product Development Group Schott Corporation Version 0.53 (beta) August 2000

Bluetooth voice and data performance in DS WLAN environment

Western Washington Amateur Relay Association

FURTHER READING: As a preview for further reading, the following reference has been provided from the pages of the book below:

Analysis Techniques for Loop Qualification and Spectrum Management

TELECOMMUNICATIONS STANDARDS ADVISORY COMMITTEE TSAC WORKING GROUP ON NEW STANDARDS AND POLICY (NSP)

DSL Variations. NEXTEP Broadband White Paper. Broadband Networks Group. Definitions and differences of Digital Subscriber Line variations.

Chapter 9 Using Telephone and Cable Networks for Data Transmission

V-DSL technology in the NBN

Characterization of a new copper cable for next generation DSL systems

CS263: Wireless Communications and Sensor Networks

DVB-T BER MEASUREMENTS IN THE PRESENCE OF ADJACENT CHANNEL AND CO-CHANNEL ANALOGUE TELEVISION INTERFERENCE

Future Proof Telecommunications Networks with VDSL2

Data Transmission. Data Communications Model. CSE 3461 / 5461: Computer Networking & Internet Technologies. Presentation B

Brief on xdsl interference

Voice Grade Copper. Characteristics, problems and spectral management. EFM July, 2001 Hugh Barrass (Cisco Systems) With Thanks to:

XDSL and DSLAM Access Technologies

Transmission properties of pair cables

LTE Evolution for Cellular IoT Ericsson & NSN

HDSL Basics. HDSL Basics. Introduction. HDSL Overview

Breathing New Life into Copper: The Long Awaited Arrival of VDSL2

ETSI EN V1.2.1 ( )

SERIES L: CONSTRUCTION, INSTALLATION AND PROTECTION OF CABLES AND OTHER ELEMENTS OF OUTSIDE PLANT

The art of deploying DSL, Broadband via noisy telephony wiring

VDSL (VERY HIGH DATA BIT RATE DIGITAL SUBSCRIBER LINE)

Channel Bandwidth, MHz. Symbol Rate, Msym/sec

Appendix A: Basic network architecture

Radio-frequency channel arrangements for fixed wireless systems operating in the MHz band

Performance and Limitations of VDSL2-based Next Generation Access Networks

ADSL TUTORIAL. Figure 1: Typical DSL system.

An Analysis of Speed Drop in ADSL Lines in Sri Lanka

Multiplexing on Wireline Telephone Systems

The Impact of PLC-to-DSL Interference on VDSL2, Vectored VDSL2, and G.fast

Radio-frequency channel arrangements for fixed wireless system operating in the GHz band

AN Application Note: FCC Regulations for ISM Band Devices: MHz. FCC Regulations for ISM Band Devices: MHz

Copper Testing for ADSL/2/2+ Qualification and troubleshooting of the local loop

An Engineer s Guide to Full Compliance for CAT 6A Connecting Hardware

: Instructor

7302 ISAM (Intelligent Services Access Manager)

VDSL2 POTS Splitters and Microfilters

10BaseS: Ethernet transport over standard twisted pair wire

A Simple Model of Relative Power vs. Reach

Dynamic Spectrum Management for Next-Generation DSL Systems

Line Simulator (LiSi) for Asymmetric and Very High-Speed Digital Subscriber Line

Transcription:

04/19/99 1 T1E1.4/99-121 T1E1.4/99-200 Project: T1E1.4: VDSL and ITU Title: VDSL Performance Requirement Verification for ITU (99-200) Contact: W. Yu, G.Ginis, J. Cioffi Information Systems Laboratory Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305 Phone: 650-23-2525 ; Fax: 650-23-843 K. Jacobsen Texas Instruments 2043 Samaritan Dr. San Jose, CA 95124 Phone: 408-89-2039 ; Fax:408-89-2900 Date: April 20, 1999 Dist'n: T1E1.4 Abstract: This contribution seeks US consensus position to be formally decided at US Study Group B in June 1999 that verifies VDSL system requirements performance compliance according to [1] for the transmission technique in [2]. Results for the test situations in Section 6.5 are presented using the standardized methods in the ANSI spectrum management project [3]. NOTICE This contribution has been prepared to assist Standards Committee T1 - Telecommunications. This document is offered to the Committee as a basis for discussion and is not a binding on any of the companies listed as authors. The requirements are subject to change after further study. The authors specifically reserve the right to add to, amend, or withdraw the statements contained herein.

04/19/99 2 T1E1.4/99-121 VDSL Performance Requirement Verification for ITU W. Yu, G.Ginis, J. Cioffi Information Systems Laboratory Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305 Phone: 650-23-2525 Fax: 650-23-843 K. Jacobsen Texas Instruments 2043 Samaritan Dr. San Jose, CA 95124 Phone: 408-89-2039 Fax:408-89-2900 Abstract This contribution seeks US consensus position to be formally decided at US Study Group B in June 1999 that verifies VDSL system requirements performance compliance according to [1] for the transmission technique in [2]. Results for the test situations in Section 6.5 are presented using the standardized methods in the ANSI spectrum management project [3]. 1. Introduction Section 6.5 of the T1E1.4 VDSL System Requirements Document ([1]) details several tests for verification of compliance of a VDSL transmission method. This contribution evaluates the transmission method proposed in [2] for each of those test conditions according to standardized evaluation procedures specified in the spectrum management standard (draft in [3]). The results indicate compliance at the levels indicated and further that these levels are consistent with performance objectives generally outlined in Section 6 of [1]. This contribution seeks consensus support through US Study Group B in June 1999 for a US position validating the results within. 1 Section 2 further describes the transmission method used, specifically detailing a consistent frequencydivision duplexing format for each of the cases of symmetric and asymmetric transmission. Section 2 further outlines some rationale for the selection that goes beyond current US VDSL system requirements to encompass protection of Home Phone Network of American (HPNA) signals as detailed in [4]. Section 3 lists results in tabular form. 2. VDSL Transmission System Description The VDSL transmission system is detailed in [2], but uses DMT transmission technology with the following parameters: Tone width 4.3125 khz Maximum bandwidth 1.664 MHz Transmit power 11.5 dbm (following ADSL-compatible PSD mask in [1]) parameters A-ON, N-OFF and N-ON (see tables), V-ON For duplexing, the maximum bandwidth is partitioned into 16 subbands corresponding to the frequencies 1 The time of the T1E1.4 full meeting in June is such that Study Group B occurs first, so US position papers will go directly to Study Group B, but this contribution seeks to inform US participants of such intent and to solicit comment prior to the SG B meeting.

04/19/99 3 T1E1.4/99-121 ( 1.104 MHz) < f < ( k + 1) ( 1.104 MHz) k = 0,..., 15 k. Each of these 16 frequency bands is allocated to either upstream or to downstream transmission according to the digital frequency duplexing method with cyclic prefix and suffix described in [2], which does not require guard bands for reversal of transmission direction on adjacent frequencies. However, the use of 16 bands allows a reduction in the analysis-complexity of attempting to find best duplexing option. To protect both ADSL and HPNA, upstream transmission was forbidden in the band with k=0 and the bands for k=5,6,,8 (presuming transmitter windowing for sharp decay of out-of-band energy). Thus there are 11 = 165 3 possible band assignments that need to be investigated. The band selection method for symmetric service was the following: Band assignments were ranked with respect to total achieved data rate for the following 6 scenarios: Length (ft.) noise x cable 1) 300m VDSL1, 20 VDSL FEXT, Noise A, cable 26 2) 300m VDSL1, 20 VDSL FEXT, Noise B, cable 26 3) 1000m VDSL1, 20 VDSL FEXT, Noise A, cable 26 4) 1000m VDSL1, 20 VDSL FEXT, Noise B, cable 26 5) 300m VDSL1 with BT, 20 VDSL FEXT, White noise, cable 26 6) 1000m VDSL1 with BT, 20 VDSL FEXT, White noise, cable 26 For each scenario, a ranking of the 165 assignments is produced (lower rates to higher rates). Each assignment receives a total score, which is equal to the sum of its rank positions for each of the 6 scenarios. The assignment with the maximum score is then chosen. This particular assignment may not be optimum (but optimum is hard to define in this context of multiple channel types and multiple data rates), but produced assignments for the asymmetric and symmetric 2 transmission that appear to meet requirements. k=0 corresponds to the same band as ADSL and is downstream in both cases. k=5,6,,8,9 overlap HPNA band and so were allocated downstream in both cases also (although k=9 was not forced, the optimization produced it as downstream anyway in both cases, further protecting the HPNA band). The two frequency allocations then were ("ZIP-CODE 16"): k Asymmetric Symmetric 0 down down 1 down down 2 down up 3 down up 4 up up 5 down down 6 down down down down 8 down down 9 down down 10 down up 11 down up 12 down up 13 down up 14 down up 15 down down 2 For the symmetric band allocation, we only tested allocations with equal number of upstream and downstream bands. This symmetric searching leads to the number 11 choose 3, or 165. (Of 16 bands, 5 are decided, or choose 3 more out of 11 remaining.) The asymmetric assignment only requires search of the 11 bands to see which is best for upstream transmission.

04/19/99 4 T1E1.4/99-121 While these particular allocations are not optimum for all situations, they prevent VDSL self-next. Also long-range asymmetric VDSL is affected by symmetric VDSL NEXT only in the bands for k=2 and k=3. However, upstream symmetric is then affected by VDSL NEXT in the same two bands, which may be a more substantial reduction in symmetric range reduction. Thus, medium and long-range asymmetric performance (which are closest to the minimum requirements) is less degraded by mixture than is symmetric performance (which exceeds requirements substantially in most cases). Such mixture is not required by T1E1.4, but may be required by the ITU, but performance requirements are not yet specified so no testing is possible. (Additional information is available from authors on request.) 3. Performance Results Performance is to be specified in achievable range for 26 and twisted pair for 4 testing situations in Section 6.5 of [1]: TEST 1: Tests (VDSL FEXT and AWGN only) TEST 2: Radio Tests (add Radio notching of PSD in [1] to TEST 1) TEST 3: Xtalk limited Tests - (add Noise Models A and B to TEST 1) TEST 4: Optional Bridged-tap Tests (add 50' bridged tap to TEST 1) For each test, a table summarizes the achievable range rounded to the nearest 150 feet as mandated in [1]. 10. Results are presented for 3.8 and.3 db 3 of coding gain with a 6 db margin at probability of error Rough objectives as outlined in [1] are High-speed short range - 1000 ft. of (1500 ft of ) Medium-speed, medium range - 3000 ft. Low-speed, long range - 4500 ft. Tests are considered past if within 10% of the objective (either way) and those that are 10% or more off objective are shaded, underlined, and in bold face for easy location. 3.1 TEST 1 TEST 1 results for (with 20 VDSL FEXT) Short sym 25.9 35.8 1950 26.4 36.0 1800 Med sym 13.2 1.6 4500 13.4 16.6 3600 Short asym 6.4 60.3 1000 6.4 60.0 1000 Med asym 4.0 26.5 4200 3.8 25.5 3450 Long asym 1.9 21.3 5400 1.6 21.6 4050 3 Results for.3 db coding gain could reflect margin reduction, soft-decoding of Reed Solomon FEC codes, concatenated coding with trellis or turbo codes, or a modest improvement caused by various crosstalk reduction/mitigation schemes (multiuser detection). This figure is intended to provide some information on the potential performance should more complex decoding methods be used with the proposal in [2], or should 6 db margin be reduced as in HDSL-2 project.

04/19/99 5 T1E1.4/99-121 TEST 1 results for (with 20 VDSL FEXT) Coding gain is.3 db, margin is 6 db, at 10 error rate Short sym 25.9 38.2 3000 23.9 38.1 2400 Med sym 13.6 1.3 5400 13.5 1.0 3600 Short asym 6.4 58.8 2250 6.5 55.9 4050 Med asym 3.3 26.9 5250 3.1 2.5 3950 Long asym 1.9 24.8 500 1.8 25.4 4200 3.2 TEST 2 TEST 2 results for RF Noise (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Short sym 25.8 36.2 1650 26. 36.9 1500 Med sym 13.0 22. 350 13.1 18.1 3300 Short asym 6.4 56.8 1000 6.4 56.5 1000 Med asym 4.2 26.5 3950 4.4 26.1 3150 Long asym 1.8 19.4 5400 1.6 19. 4200 TEST 2 results for RF Noise (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Coding gain is.3 db, margin is 6 db, at 10 error rate Short sym 26.1 3.5 200 28.4 39.6 2100 Med sym 13.4 1.5 4950 13.0 16.4 3950 Short asym 6.5 5.1 2100 6.6 56.3 1950 Med asym 4.2 26.1 4950 3.8 25.9 350 Long asym 1.9 22.5 500 1.8 23.0 4200 3.3 TEST 3 TEST 3 results for Noise Model A (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Short sym 25.9 28.0 1950 26.4 28.3 1800 Med sym 13.9 12.8 4200 14. 12.3 3300 Short asym 6.4 52.2 1000 6.4 51.9 1000 Med asym 4.6 26.8 3300 4.9 2.0 200 Long asym 1.9 14.6 5400 1.6 15.2 4200

04/19/99 6 T1E1.4/99-121 TEST 3 results for Noise Model A (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Coding gain is.3 db, margin is 6 db, at 10 error rate Short sym 25.9 29.9 3000 2.3 31.6 2400 Med sym 16.8 14.1 4500 16.9 12. 3600 Short asym 6.5 52.2 2100 6. 54.6 1800 Med asym 5.4 28.8 3900 5.3 25.9 3300 Long asym 1.9 16.6 6000 1.8 18.2 4200 TEST 3 results for Noise Model B (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Short sym 26.9 26.3 1800 2. 26. 1650 Med sym 14.1 13.6 350 14.6 12.8 3000 Short asym 6. 53.8 820 6. 53.8 820 Med asym 4. 26.4 3000 5.0 26.1 2400 Long asym 3.5 13. 4500 3.1 12.9 3600 TEST 3 results for Noise Model B (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Coding gain is.3 db, margin is 6 db, at 10 error rate Short sym 25.8 26. 3000 2.1 28.2 2250 Med sym 16.3 13.4 4200 1.5 14.9 3150 Short asym 6. 53.0 1800 6.9 54.1 1650 Med asym 5.5 26.9 350 5.8 26.5 3000 Long asym 3.1 13.5 5250 2.48 12. 4050 The only test at full coding gain to be 10% in below required range (in fact, it is exactly 10% in error) is the Noise-B test. Note the upstream data rate is well above the required 1.6 Mbps - this means that if the duplexing scheme were further subdivided into a larger number of bands than 16 as here, this requirement could be met. However, it is sufficiently close at the 10% limit to suggest such further partitioning is unnecessary.

04/19/99 T1E1.4/99-121 3.4 TEST 4 TEST 4 results for Bridged Tap (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Short sym 25. 35. 1950 26.1 34.8 1800 Med sym 13.0 18.3 4500 13.5 19.0 3300 Short asym 6.4 60.3 1000 6.4 60.0 1000 Med asym 3.9 25.8 4200 3.9 25.6 3300 Long asym 1. 19.3 5400 1. 19. 3950 TEST 4 results for Bridged Tap (and 20 VDSL FEXT) Coding gain is.3 db, margin is 6 db, at 10 error rate Short sym 26.2 38. 200 26.1 3. 2250 Med sym 12.5 1.8 5250 13.0 18. 350 Short asym 6.4 5.9 2250 6.5 53. 2100 Med asym 3.6 26.2 5100 3.4 26.1 350 Long asym 1. 22.1 500 1.55 22.2 4200 4. Conclusion The VDSL transmission system from [2] was found to meet the performance system requirements. This set of transmission calculations according to the standardized transmission calculation method in [3] is important in that it establishes the US VDSL performance requirements as feasible, thus supporting their inclusion in ITU requirements. The verification of meeting such requirements with a US consensus position to the ITU through US Study Group B meeting in June should strengthen US position with respect to a rapidly moving ITU VDSL standardization process. 5. References [1] ANSI T1E1.4 Contribution 99-043R8, "VDSL System Requirements Document," December 1998 (Editor, J. Cioffi). [2] " Physical Medium Specific Specification for G.vdsl," Alcatel et al., ITU SG15/Q4 Temporary Document MA-050R2, March 29, 1999, (Editor, T. Pollet), Melbourne, Australia. [3] ANSI T1E1.4 Contribution 99-002R2, "T1E1.4: Spectrum Compatibility for Twisted-Pair Loop Transmission Systems," Draft Spectrum Management Standard (Editors, R. McDonald and B. Rezvani), April 20, 1999, Arlington, VA. [4] "Home PNA 1.0 Spectral Compatibility," 3COM et al, ANSI Contribution T1E1.4/99-190, (Editor D. Shaver), April 20, 1999, Arlington, VA.