Design Article
An overview of the LTE physical layer--Part II
Frank Rayal, Telesystem Innovations
6/20/2010 5:01 PM EDT
The location of the SSS immediately precedes the PSS--in the before to last symbol of the first and 11th slot of each radio frame. The UE would be able to determine the CP length by checking the absolute position of the SSS. The UE would also be able to determine the position of the 10 ms frame boundary as the SSS signal alternates in a specific manner between two transmissions (the SSS uses a sequence known as M-sequences).
In the frequency domain, the PSS and SSS occupy the central six resource blocks, irrespective of the system channel bandwidth, which allows the UE to synchronize to the network without a priori knowledge of the allocated bandwidth. The synchronization sequences use 62 sub-carriers in total, with 31 sub-carriers mapped on each side of the DC sub-carrier, which is not used. This leaves 5 sub-carriers at each extremity of the 6 central RBs unused.


Next: Physical Channels
About the Author
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Frank Rayal is the Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder at Telesystem Innovations. Based in Canada, Mr. Rayal assists clients with technology and vendor evaluation, business plan and financial modeling, RFI/RFP process, RF network planning and dimensioning, and project management for field trials and network deployment, and product requirement development. Prior to founding TSI, he was Director of Product Management at Redline Communications, where he developed base stations targeted at different market segments and applications and launched end-to-end broadband wireless access networks in emerging markets. Mr. Rayal holds a BS in Electrical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, and a MASc and MBA from the University of Toronto. He can be reached at: frank@tsiwireless.com.
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Odyssey_2010
11/19/2012 10:16 PM EST
It is specified in "LTE; Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access(E-UTRA);Physical channels and modulation(3GPP TS 36.211 version 10.4.0 Release 10)" that, there are 504 unique physical-layer cell identities. They are grouped into 168 unique groups, each group containing 3 cell identities.
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