CA2200241C - Method and apparatus for switching code division multiple access modulated beams - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for switching code division multiple access modulated beams Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2200241C
CA2200241C CA002200241A CA2200241A CA2200241C CA 2200241 C CA2200241 C CA 2200241C CA 002200241 A CA002200241 A CA 002200241A CA 2200241 A CA2200241 A CA 2200241A CA 2200241 C CA2200241 C CA 2200241C
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Canada
Prior art keywords
beams
downlink
uplink
cdma modulated
traffic channels
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Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002200241A
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French (fr)
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CA2200241A1 (en
Inventor
Diakoumis Parissis Gerakoulis
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AT&T Corp
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AT&T Corp
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Publication date
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Publication of CA2200241C publication Critical patent/CA2200241C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/69Spread spectrum techniques
    • H04B1/707Spread spectrum techniques using direct sequence modulation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/14Relay systems
    • H04B7/15Active relay systems
    • H04B7/204Multiple access
    • H04B7/216Code division or spread-spectrum multiple access [CDMA, SSMA]

Abstract

In a code division switch each of a plurality or uplink CDMA modulated RF beams, each including a plurality of uplink traffic channels, are down converted to IF and overspread with a new orthogonal code having a spreading rate N times that of the spreading code of the uplink CDMA modulated RF beam. All of the overspread beams are combined into a single combined IF stream. The individual traffic channels are extracted from the combined IF stream by de-overspreading the stream with orthogonal codes and despreading with beam and traffic channel specific orthogonal codes. All traffic channels are respread with downlink beam codes anddownlink orthogonal traffic channel codes and joined onto selected ones of downlink CDMA modulated IF beams having common destinations with the included traffic channels. Downlink CDMA modulated IF beams are up converted to RF frequency and transmitted to selected destinations.

Description

22002ql Method And Apparatus For Switching Code Division Multiple Access Modulated Beams Field of the Invention This invention relates to switching apparatus and methods to be used in wired and/or wireless digital telecon~ unication systems for message switching. It is particularly concerned with the switching of spread spectrum/CDMA modulated beams carrying traffic channels from a specific source to a specific destination.
Background of the Invention Digital switching of CDMA digital telecommunication signals has previously been limited to circuit and packet switching. Packet type switching is batch transmission sign~ling and generally requires the use of a buffer memory somewhere in the tran~mi~sion process. The switching (i.e., CDMA message multiplexing) of end-to-end CDMA complete message signals, without the buffering15 requirement, has been considered to have complexity sufficient to render it impractical and uneconomical. In some instances a CDMA beam may be redirected, but the individual traffic channels included within each uplink beam are left undisturbed in a corresponding downlink CDMA beam. Uplink CDMA beams are redirected and become a downlink beam, but include the same traffic channels. So20 traffic channels must have common destinations with the common redirected CDMA
beam in which they are included.
In some instances the handling of CDMA packet beams requires the conversion of the CDMA traffic channels to baseband frequencies for switching and redirection processes to occur.
25 Sun~nary of the Invention Therefore in accord with the invention a method and apparatus for switching traffic channels between uplink and downlink spread spectrum/CDMA
modulated beams is disclosed as claimed in the claims. It particularly concerns CDMA information traffic channel (i.e.,mPss~ge) switching in which a total 30 aggregate information signal is switched at IF frequency without memory buffering required in the process.
In one general illustrative embodiment traffic channels in uplink CDMA
beams, received by a switching medium/center, (e.g., a satellite switch) are identified by uplink spreading codes. These uplink CDMA beams are overspread and summed - 35 into a single stream from which a plurality of CDMA modulated downlink beams are created with each going to a specific destination. The traffic channels going to that specific are deoverspread and respread to form a CDMA downlink beam. The destination of each traffic channel, identified by unique user code, is joined into that CDMA modulated downlink beam having the same destination. User recovery is S performed at an IF frequency. Application of the invention principles to various forms of spread spectrum is considered to be within the invention scope. In one embodiment multi-CDMA beams are switched in a satellite switching system.
In a particular illustrative embodiment each of a plurality or uplink CDMA modulated RF beams, each including a plurality of uplink traffic channels 10 identified by orthogonal code are down converted to IF CDMA beams identified by PN codes and overspread with a new orthogonal code having a spreading rate N
times that of the spreading code of the uplink CDMA modulated RF beam. In the illustrative embodiment "N" represents the number of uplink CDMA beams. All of the overspread uplink beams are combined into a single combined IF stream. The 15 individual traffic channels are extracted from the combined IF stream by de-overspreading the stream with orthogonal codes and despreading with beam and traffic channel specific orthogonal codes. All traffic channels are respread with downlink beam codes and downlink orthogonal traffic channel codes and joined onto selected ones of downlink CDMA modulated IF beams having common destinations 20 with the included traffic channels. Downlink CDMA modulated IF beams are up converted to RF frequency and transmitted to selected destinations.
The individual traffic channels are maintained distinct through the operation of overspreading, combined with user identifying orthogonal codes. These operations and apparatus, for switching traffic channels, may be combined in various 25 combinations different from those disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. All these variations will use the above principles of the invention.
In one embodiment control information is stored in a traffic matrix in memory storage contained in a switch control unit. Routing of traffic channels from 30 uplink CDMA beams onto downlink CDMA beams is determined by the stored traffic matrix and the overhead signals activating the matrix.
An advantage of the invention is that switching (i.e., multiplexing of traffic channels among downlink beams) is performed independent of time as a controlling variable. No buffering (i.e., memory storage) of the traffic channels is 35 required in the switching process.

..

Brief Description of the Drawing FIG. 1 is a block schematic of a code switching system architecture;
FIG. 2 is a block schematic of a code division switch;
FIG. 3 is a block schematic of a traffic channel recovery circuit which is 5 a sub-component of the code division switch;
FIG. 4 is a schematic of the traffic matrix included in the control unit;
FIG. S is a block schematic of downlink code division multiplexing;
FIG. 6 is a block schematic of a code division switch with intermodule routing;
FIG. 7 is block schematic of a downlink code division multiplexer; and FIG. 8 is a system schematic showing one application of the code division switch.
Detailed Description A code switching architecture, such as shown in FIG. 1, includes a 15 control unit 101 having memory storage for a traffic matrix relating uplink sources to intended downlink destinations. Uplink access channels 103, which may comprise aplurality of uplink data and access CDMA beams 1 through N, are directed to an Access Channel Reception unit 105 for processing and for whose output is directed to the control unit 101. The output of the control unit 101 is applied to a Satellite 20 Broadcast Transmitter Unit 107 where it supplies the downlink broadcast data and access channels over the CDMA beams 109. A second output of the control unit is applied, via lead 111, to a code division switch 125.
Code division switch 125 accepts a plurality of bearer CDMA
modulated RF beams 131, downconverts the beams to IF and applies identifying and25 overspreading codes to the individual traffic channels contained within each beam.
The beams are all summed into one combined stream and the individual traffic channels are recovered and identified as to their destination in response to the control signal, applied via lead 111. The destination traffic channels are are inserted into downlink CDMA beams 133 for tr~n~mi~ion to specific downlink destinations.
While a satellite application, using an air interface is shown as an illustrative embodiment, the invention is not limited to satellite communicationsystems. The invention is equally applicable to terrestrial communication systems and to systems using wired and optical connections.
A code division switch, such as shown in FIG. 2 separates uplink traffic 35 channels from uplink CDMA beams and inserts them in to downlink CDMA beams having the desired destination. Incoming uplink CDMA modulated RF beams 201-1 to 201-N, each of which include traffic channels, are each applied to downconversion frequency converters 202- 1 to 202-N, respectively, to convert the beams into CDMA
modulated IF beams. Each CDMA modulated beam is over-spread by the application of the Walsh function chips W I to W N, as inputs 203-1 to 203-N, S applied to the mixing circuits 204-1 to 204-N, respectively. The Walsh functions uniquely identify the traffic channels within the beams. Overspreading by a multiple of N does not contribute any interference to the various distinct traffic channels. All of the over-spread CDMA beams are summed into one inclusive signal stream by the~ulllllling circuitry 205. Summing of these IF beam signals combined with the 10 overspreading avoids any inter-traffic-channel interference that that would be inserted into the individual traffic channels and hence assure their subsequent intact recovery. In one illustrative embodiment of the invention this recovery is further enhanced by the use of orthogonal user spread coding.
This summed signal stream is applied to a distribution bus 206 which in 15 turn applies the stream to a plurality of traffic channel recovery circuits 207-1 to 207-L. The output of each traffic channel recovery circuit is applied to a second g circuit 208- 1 to 208-N from which a downlink CDMA modulated if beam is derived with each downlink beam having a particular destination. The control unit described above applies control signals to each traffic channel recovery circuit 207- 1 20 to 207-N to recover the traffic channels destined for a particular destination from the beam formed from the output of that traffic channel recovery circuit.
The beams are formed in the ~u~ ling circuits 208-1 to 208-N and each beam is upconverted to RF by the upconversion frequency converters 209-1 to 209-N resulting in the downlink CDMA modulated RF beams 210-1 to 210-N.
In the illustrative traffic channel recovery circuit of FIG. 3 individual traffic channels are recovered from the summed beam and segregated into downlinkbeams having a destination in common with the destination of the traffic channel.
Recovery of the traffic channels is accomplished by the despreading of the applied summed signal stream with beam and user codes and filtering the desired IF
30 frequency.
The individual traffic channels are recovered from the summed beam in the traffic channel recovery circuits which supply a downlink with traffic channels having a common destination/ A particular embodiment of the Traffic channel recovery circuit, shown in FIG. 3, receives the summe~ signal at input 301 and 35 applies it to a mixer 302 which deoverspreads the summed signal stream with a first - user code suplied by a N-Walsh function generator 311 fed through a base band filter 312. The various traffic channels are recovered by the integrator 303 and are applied to the mixer 304 for despreading with codes supplied by a beam PN code generatedby the PN code generator 314 and filtered by the base band filter 313. The signal is further despread by a code supplied by the L-Walsh function generator 316 and 5 filtered by baseband filter 315, which code is applied to mixer 305 for despreading.
This despread signal is integrated by integrator 307 and applied to mixer 308. It is spread by a PN code supplied by PN code generator 318 and filtered by baseband filter 317 This signal is further spread in mixer 309 by a L-Walsh code supplied by a Walsh function generator 320 and filtered by the baseband filter 319. The beam 10 output cont~ining the baseband IF downlink beam is supplied on output lead 310.
An illustrative matrix (for three beams) which may be used in the control unit for directing uplink traffic channels to downlink beams is shown in the FIG. 4 and may be contained n the control unit as part of a stored program. As shown the columns are identified with the downlink CDMA beams and the rows are 15 identified with the uplink CDMA beams. Each uplink and downlink CDMA
contains a plurality of user traffic channels Un + Um + --- +Up and Ua + Ub + ---Uc, respectively. The matrix entries indicate the codes to be used for the uplink and downlink traffic channels. This assures that the downlink traffic channels are included in the desired downlink beam.
A scheme for multiplexing downlink beams is schematically shown in the FIG. 5. A code division switch (module A of a plurality of modules) 501 receives the CDMA beams 502- 1 through 502-N. The output beams of module A
and the other modules (not shown) are applied to a plurality of summers 503- 1 through 503-N. The output of the summers 503- 1 through 503-N are controlled by the control unit input 504-1 through 504-N which selects the traffic channels to be applied to the up conversion circuits 505-1 through 505-N, which includes the traffic channels in the appropliate downlink RF beams.
A specific system for intermodule routing is shown in the FIG. 6 in which the bus is suppled by the input Cil~;uill y shown in the FIG. 2. The output 30 scheme includes an identical plurality of traffic channel recovery units "one" through "L" all connected to different ~ ling circuits 601-1 through 601-N for formingdownlink beams each directed to a different downlink module for further transmlssion.
The arrangement for forming a beam with the traffic channels all having 35 a destination in common with a particular beam "j" is shown in the FIG. 7 The traffic - channels selected by traffic channel recovery circuits 701-1 through 701-N are applied to a ~ulllnler 702 in common with the pilot, sync and paging channels 703.
The summer output is applied to an upconversion frequency converter 705 to generate the desired downlink CDMA modulated RF beam.
A typical illustrative application of the code division switch is 5 illustrated in the FIG.8, in which multiple source points 801-1 to 801-N are connected by a CDMA switching satellite 802 to any one of the multiple destination points 803-1 to 803-N. This multi-point to multi-point switched connection has not been priorly achieved in the tr~n~mi~.cion of message CDMA signals/beams. the air interfaces further allow unlimited bandwidth in the uplink and downlink signals.

Claims (8)

The invention claimed is:
1. A method for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF channel, each traffic channel being uniquely identified by an orthogonal code and a beam code;
downconverting the uplink CDMA modulated RF beams into uplink CDMA modulated IF beams;
overspreading each CDMA modulated IF beam with a new orthogonal code having a rate N times higher than a spreading rate of the uplink CDMA
modulated RF beams;
summing all of the uplink CDMA modulated IF beams into a single combined IF stream;
extracting the individual traffic channels, according to their destinations, from the single combined IF stream; by:
de-overspreading the single combined IF stream with an orthogonal code, despreading with the beam code, and despreading with the orthogonal code to recover the individual traffic channels, and filtering at the IF frequency;
respreading with a downlink beam code and with a downlink orthogonal traffic channel code;
combining all CDMA IF traffic channels into a plurality of downlink CDMA modulated IF beams with a commonality of destination between the CDMA
modulated beams and the traffic channels they include;
upconverting each one of the plurality of downlink beams into a downlink CDMA modulated RF beam carrying selected traffic channels to their intended destination in common with a destination of the downlink CDMA
modulated RF beam.
2. A method for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF channel, as claimed in claim 1:
further including the step of:
generating codes for the purpose of extracting the individual traffic channels according to destination in response to a destination control signal.
3. A method for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF channel, as claimed in claim 1:

the step of over spreading includes:
using Walsh codes with N chips times spreading PN codes to overspread the CDMA modulated IF beam.
4. A method for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF channel, as claimed in claim 1:
further including the step of;
storing destination control signals in a matrix array used for generating the destination control signals in response to matrix entries Tij of sums of uplink i and downlink j CDMA modulated beams.
5. A CDMA switch for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF channel, where each traffic channel is uniquely identified by an orthogonal code and a beam code;
first frequency conversion means for receiving uplink CDMA modulated RF beams and downconverting the uplink CDMA modulated RF beams into uplink CDMA modulated IF beams;
overspreading means connected to an output of the first frequency conversion means and overspread each CDMA modulated IF beam and receive as spreading input a new orthogonal code having a rate N times higher than a spreading rate of the uplink CDMA modulated RF beams;
summing means connected to receive all overspread CDMA modulated IF beams and sum all of the overspread uplink CDMA modulated IF beams into a single combined IF stream;
traffic channel recovery means for receiving the single combined IF
stream and extracting the individual traffic channels, according to their destinations, from the single combined IF stream; including:
de-overspreading means connected to receive the single combined IF
stream and de-overspread the single combined IF stream with an orthogonal code, despreading means connected for despreading an output of the de-overspreading means with a beam code, and further despread it with an orthogonal code to recover the individual traffic channels, and a filter to filter it at the IF
frequency;

respreading means connected for respreading an output of the filter with a downlink beam code and with a downlink orthogonal traffic channel code;
signal combining means connected for combining all CDMA IF traffic channels into a plurality of downlink CDMA modulated IF beams with a commonality of destination between the CDMA modulated beams and the traffic channels they include;
second frequency conversion means connected for upconverting each one of the plurality of downlink beams into a downlink CDMA modulated RF beam carrying selected traffic channels to their intended destination in common with a destination of the downlink CDMA modulated RF beam.
6. A code division switch for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF
channel, as claimed in claim 5:
further including:
a code generator connected to the traffic channel recovery means and generating codes for the purpose of extracting the individual traffic channels according to destination in response to a destination control signal.
7. A code division switch for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF
channel, as claimed in claim 5:
further including:
a Walsh function generator for generating and connected for applying an N chip Walsh function to overspread the uplink CDMA modulated IF beam
8. A code division switch for switching traffic channels between a plurality of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated RF beams of a common RF
channel, as claimed in claim 5:
further including:
a memory for storing destination control signals in a matrix array used for generating the destination control signals in response to column and row sums of uplink and downlink CDMA modulated beams.
CA002200241A 1996-04-23 1997-03-18 Method and apparatus for switching code division multiple access modulated beams Expired - Fee Related CA2200241C (en)

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US63516296A 1996-04-23 1996-04-23
US635,162 1996-04-23

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EP (1) EP0803992A3 (en)
JP (1) JP2947771B2 (en)
KR (1) KR100257172B1 (en)
CN (1) CN1175137A (en)
AU (1) AU1893997A (en)
BR (1) BR9701884A (en)
CA (1) CA2200241C (en)
SG (1) SG74584A1 (en)

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Publication number Publication date
BR9701884A (en) 1998-09-29
JP2947771B2 (en) 1999-09-13
JPH1093526A (en) 1998-04-10
KR970072738A (en) 1997-11-07
CA2200241A1 (en) 1997-10-23
US5995497A (en) 1999-11-30
AU1893997A (en) 1997-10-30
KR100257172B1 (en) 2000-05-15
EP0803992A3 (en) 2000-10-18
SG74584A1 (en) 2000-08-22
CN1175137A (en) 1998-03-04
MX9702897A (en) 1997-10-31
EP0803992A2 (en) 1997-10-29

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