A
remote radio head is an operator radio control panel that connects to a remote
radio transceiver via electrical or wireless interface. When used to describe
aircraft radio cockpit radio systems, this control panel is often called the
radio head.
Current
and future generations of wireless cellular systems feature heavy use of Remote
Radio Heads (RRHs) in the base stations. Instead of hosting a bulky base
station controller close to the top of antenna towers, new wireless networks
connect the base station controller and remote radio heads through lossless
optical fibers. The interface protocol that enables such a distributed
architecture is called Common Publish Radio Interface (CPRI). With this new
architecture, RRHs offload intermediate frequency (IF) and radio frequency (RF)
processing from the base station. Furthermore, the base station and RF antennas
can be physically separated by a considerable distance, providing much needed
system deployment flexibility.
Typical
advanced processing algorithms on RRHs include digital up-conversion and
digital down-conversion (DUC and DDC), crest factor reduction (CFR), and
digital pre-distortion (DPD). DUC interpolates base band data to a much higher
sample rate via a cascade of interpolation filters. It further mixes the
complex data channels with IF carrier signals so that RF modulation can be
simplified. CFR reduces the peak-to-average power ratio of the data so it does
not enter the non-linear region of the RF power amplifier. DPD estimates the
distortion caused by the non-linear effect of the power amplifier and
pre-compensates the data.
More
importantly, many wireless standards demand re-configurability in both the base
station and the RRH. For example, the 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) and WiMax
systems both feature scalable bandwidth. The RRH should be able to adjust – at
run time – the bandwidth selection, the number of channels, the incoming data
rate, among many other things.
RRH
system model
Typically,
a base station connects to a RRH via optical cables. On the downlink direction,
base band data is transported to the RRH via CPRI links. The data is then
up-converted to IF sample rates, preprocessed by CFR or DPD to mitigate
non-linear effects of broadband power amplifiers, and eventually sent for radio
transmission.
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