W-CDMA (Wideband Code Division
Multiple Access) is a type of 3G cellular network.
W-CDMA is the technology behind the 3G UMTS standard
and is allied with the 2G GSM standard with the
International Telecommunication Union - ITU. More
technically, W-CDMA is a wideband spread-spectrum
3G mobile telecommunication air interface that utilizes
code division multiple access (or CDMA the general
multiplexing scheme, not to be confused with CDMA
the US standard). History W-CDMA was developed by
NTT DoCoMo as the air interface for their 3G network
FOMA. Later NTT DoCoMo submitted the specification
to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
as a candidate for the international 3G standard
known as IMT-2000. The ITU eventually accepted W-CDMA
as part of the IMT-2000 family of 3G standards.
Later, W-CDMA was selected as the air interface
for UMTS, the 3G data part of GSM. Attempts were
made to unify W-CDMA (3GPP) and CDMA-1X (3GPP2)
standards in order to provide a single worldwide
standard, however, divergent requirements resulted
in the two incompatible standards being retained.
Features Only key features are cited below. Supports
two basic modes of duplex: FDD (frequency division
duplex) and TDD (time division duplex) modes Employs
coherent detection on uplink and downlink based
on the use of pilot symbols Inter-cell asynchronous
operation Variable mission: on a 10 ms frame basis
Multicode transmission Adaptive power control based
on SIR Multiuser detection and smart antennas can
be used to increase capacity and coverage Multiple
types of handoffs between different cells including
soft handoff, softer handoff and hard handoff Misconceptions
W-CDMA is based on the Direct Spread CDMA technique.
Code Division Multiple Access has been developed
by a number of companies, and in the US this is
dominated by Qualcomm. However, the ITU standard
is not a Qualcomm implementation, but one where
Qualcomm has been invited to participate.
Other standards, such as TD-SDMA/TD-CDMA has
been developed by Siemens and the Chinese independent
of both the ITU and Qualcomm and bears no relationship
with the US technology other than the name others
have assigned to it. In the mobile phone world,
the term CDMA can refer to either the Code Division
Multiple Access spread spectrum multiplexing technique,
or the CDMA family of standards developed by Qualcomm,
including cdmaOne (IS-95) and CDMA2000 (IS-2000
and IS-856). The CDMA multiplexing technique existed
long before Qualcomm used it for its IS-95 protocol.
However, this protocol is now widely referred
to as "CDMA" for its principal characteristic
of using the CDMA multiplexing scheme to share
multiple connections divided by different codes
(PN sequences) over the same spectrum channel,
as opposed to other spectrum division schemes
Qualcomm was able to introduce the first mobile
protocol relying upon the CDMA multiplexing technique,
associating the multiplexing technique with the
name of the protocol. W-CDMA is used in 3G as
a political compromise made by the more advanced
non-US companies to allow the US to participate
in the rollout of 3G services. Since it now is
part of the International Telecommunication Union's
standards it is part of a larger suite of standards.
W-CDMA is a complete set of specifications, a
detailed protocol that defines how a mobile phone
communicates with the tower, how signals are modulated,
how datagrams are structured, and system interfaces
are specified allowing free competition on technology
elements. In summary: -The term CDMA in the mobile
world typically refers to the CDMA family of standards
developed by Qualcomm.
They are protocols, sets of defined specifications
of mobile communications -CDMA (the multiplexing
technique) is used as the principle of the W-CDMA
air interface protocol, as well as Qualcomm's
CDMA protocols -W-CDMA strictly refers to a mobile
phone protocol with detailed specifications, as
defined in IMT-2000 -The W-CDMA protocol was developed
independently of the CDMA protocol developed by
Qualcomm. ?The CDMA family of standards (including
cdmaOne and CDMA2000) are not compatible with
the W-CDMA family of standards that are based
on ITU standards. Implementations The world's
first commercial W-CDMA service, FOMA, was launched
by NTT DoCoMo in Japan in 2001. FOMA is not compatible
with UMTS. But the effort for migrating the FOMA
specifications to UMTS are indicated by Japan.
J-Phone Japan (now Vodafone) soon followed by
launching their own W-CDMA based service, originally
branded "Vodafone Global Standard" and claiming
UMTS compatibility. The name of the service was
changed to "Vodafone 3G" in December 2004. Beginning
in 2003, Hutchison Whampoa gradually launched
their upstart UMTS networks. Most countries have
since the ITU approved of the 3G mobile service
either "auctioned" the radio frequencies to the
company willing to pay the most, or conducted
a "beauty contest" - asking the various companies
to present what they intend to commit to if awarded
the licenses. This strategy has been critices
to aiming to cash-drain the operators where some
of the bigger ones have been close to bankruptcy
to honour their bids or proposals. Most of them
have a time constraint for the rollout of the
service - where a certain "coverage" must be achieved
within a given date or the license will be revoked.
Vodafone launched several UMTS networks in Europe
in February 2004, New Zealand in August 2005 and
Australia in October 2005. AT&T Wireless (now
a part of Cingular Wireless) has deployed UMTS
in several cities. Though advancements in its
network deployment have been delayed due to the
merger with Cingular, Cingular began offering
HSDPA service in December 2005. Rogers in Canada
is currently trialing HSDPA on W-CDMA at 1900MHz
and plan the launch the service commercial in
Q3, 2006. TeliaSonera opened W-CDMA service in
Finland October 13th 2004 with speeds up to 384
kbit/s. Availability only in main cities. Pricing
is approx. 2Άζ/MB. [citation needed] SK Telecom
and KTF, two largest mobile phone service providers
in South Korea, have each started offering W-CDMA
service in December 2003. Due to poor coverage
and lack of choice in handhelds, the W-CDMA service
has barely made a dent in the Korean market which
was dominated by CDMA2000. In Norway, Telenor
introduced W-CDMA in major cities by the end of
2004, while their competitor, NetCom, followed
suit a few months later. Both operators have 98
% national coverage on EDGE, but Telenor has parallel
WLAN roaming networks on GSM, where the UMTS service
is competing with this. For this reason Telenor
is dropping support of their WLAN service in Austria
(2006). Maxis Communications and Celcom, two mobile
phone service providers in Malaysia, started offering
W-CDMA services in 2005. In Sweden, Telia introduced
W-CDMA March 2004. Technology W-CDMA may use unpaired
or paired spectrum, though the current implementations
of W-CDMA (i.e. FOMA and UMTS) all use a pair
of 5MHz spectrum, one for uplink and one for downlink.
See Spread spectrum for more information. FOMA
uses 16 slots per radio frame, where as UMTS uses
15 slots per radio frame.
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