1、 AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARD FOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS ATIS-0600015.09.2015 Energy Efficiency for Telecommunication Equipment: Methodology for Measurement and Reporting of Base Station Metrics As a leading technology and solutions development organization, the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry So
2、lutions (ATIS) brings together the top global ICT companies to advance the industrys most pressing business priorities. ATIS nearly 200 member companies are currently working to address the All-IP transition, network functions virtualization, big data analytics, cloud services, device solutions, eme
3、rgency services, M2M, cyber security, network evolution, quality of service, billing support, operations, and much more. These priorities follow a fast-track development lifecycle from design and innovation through standards, specifications, requirements, business use cases, software toolkits, open
4、source solutions, and interoperability testing. ATIS is accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The organization is the North American Organizational Partner for the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), a founding Partner of the oneM2M global initiative, a member of and
5、 major U.S. contributor to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), as well as a member of the Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL). For more information, visit www.atis.org. AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARD Approval of an American National Standard requires review by ANSI that the
6、requirements for due process, consensus, and other criteria for approval have been met by the standards developer. Consensus is established when, in the judgment of the ANSI Board of Standards Review, substantial agreement has been reached by directly and materially affected interests. Substantial a
7、greement means much more than a simple majority, but not necessarily unanimity. Consensus requires that all views and objections be considered, and that a concerted effort be made towards their resolution. The use of American National Standards is completely voluntary; their existence does not in an
8、y respect preclude anyone, whether he has approved the standards or not, from manufacturing, marketing, purchasing, or using products, processes, or procedures not conforming to the standards. The American National Standards Institute does not develop standards and will in no circumstances give an i
9、nterpretation of any American National Standard. Moreover, no person shall have the right or authority to issue an interpretation of an American National Standard in the name of the American National Standards Institute. Requests for interpretations should be addressed to the secretariat or sponsor
10、whose name appears on the title page of this standard. CAUTION NOTICE: This American National Standard may be revised or withdrawn at any time. The procedures of the American National Standards Institute require that action be taken periodically to reaffirm, revise, or withdraw this standard. Purcha
11、sers of American National Standards may receive current information on all standards by calling or writing the American National Standards Institute. Notice of Disclaimer TDD will be specified in a future release of this standard). UMTS (including WCDMA and HSPA). GSM (including EDGE and GPRS). 1.2
12、Purpose The purpose of this standard is to define a consistent method of measuring and reporting base station input power and energy efficiency metrics. 1.3 Application This standard is intended to compare the input power and the energy efficiency of functionally similar base stations. Comparisons s
13、hould occur between base stations of the same rated output power class as per 3GPP TS 36.104 3 (e.g., Macro-to-Macro, Micro-to-Micro). Compared base stations should also serve the same number of sectors and have identical rated RF output powers and antenna configurations. For example, a three-sector
14、 base station configured for 2x2 MIMO and 40 Watt RF output power should be compared to another three-sector 2x2 MIMO 40 Watt base station. This standard is not intended to compare the input power and/or the energy efficiency of base stations serving different radio access technologies (e.g., a UMTS
15、 base station should not be compared with an LTE base station). ATIS-0600015.09.2015 2 The defined measurement methods and reported results: Enable fair evaluation of functionally similar base stations from different vendors. Enable base station evaluation under simulated network conditions. Allow v
16、endors to characterize energy improvements as their base station products evolve. Capture the impact of base station energy-saving features. Drive base stations toward sustainable energy-efficient solutions. This document provides a common baseline to compare base station products, and the results s
17、hould not be used for site engineering (e.g., cable sizing, power estimation). End users may request testing to configurations other than those defined within this standard. Customized measurements cannot be reported as an ATIS Base Station Input Power or Energy Efficiency Metric. 2 Normative Refere
18、nces The following standards contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute provisions of this standard. At the time of publication, the editions indicated were valid. All standards are subject to revision, and parties to agreements based on this standard are encouraged to inve
19、stigate the possibility of applying the most recent editions of the standards indicated below. 1 ATIS-0600015.2013, Energy Efficiency for Telecommunication Equipment: Methodology for Measurement and Reporting General Requirements12 ATIS-0600315.2013, Voltage Levels for DC-Powered Equipment Used in t
20、he Telecommunications Environment23 3GPP TS 36.104 v12.5.0 Release 12, LTE; Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Base Station (BS) radio transmission and reception34 3GPP TS 25.141 v12.5.0 Release 12, Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS); Base Station (BS) Conformance Te
21、sting (FDD)35 3GPP TS 36.141 v12.5.0 Release 12, LTE; Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Base Station (BS) Conformance Testing36 3GPP TS 51.021 v12.2.0 Release 12, Digital Cellular Telecommunications System (Phase 2+); Base Station System (BSS) equipment specification; Radio aspect
22、s31This document is available from the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS) at . 2This document is available from the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS) at . 3This standard is available from the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) at . ATIS-0600015.0
23、9.2015 3 3 Definitions, Acronyms, and, 2. Distributed base station wherein the digital equipment is in a cabinet or frame with or without RF outputs at one location and the Radio Units (RU) with their RF outputs are at another location. The two basic configurations are shown in Figure 4.1. RNC Radio
24、 Network Controller RS Reference Signal (LTE) RU Radio Unit S-CCPCH Secondary-Common Control Physical Channel (UMTS) SCH Synchronization Channel (UMTS) S-SCH Secondary Synchronization Channel (LTE) TEE Telecom Energy Efficiency (ATIS Subcommittee) TEER Telecommunications Energy Efficiency Ratio TRX
25、Transceiver (GSM) TS Technical Specification (3GPP) UMTS Universal Mobile Telecommunication System WCDMA Wideband Code Division Multiple Access 3GPP 3rd Generation Partnership Project ATIS-0600015.09.2015 6 Figure 4.1 Base Station Configurations For all measurements covered by this standard, a stand
26、ard base station production unit shall be used. All components of the base station (hardware, software, and firmware) shall be the same as they would be for commercial base station configurations. 5 Base Station Input Power Characterization 5.1 Metric Definition The Base Station Input Power Metric i
27、s a weighted average of five base station input power measurements. Each measurement is made with the base station transmitting at a specific RF load and is evenly weighted based on the standard daily usage model shown in Table 5.1. ATIS-0600015.09.2015 7 Table 5.1 Standard Daily Usage Model Nominal
28、 RF Load (% of Rated RF Output Power) Base Station Input Power Measurement Notation Standard Daily Usage Model Notation Standard Daily Usage Model (Hours per Day at Each RF Load) 90% nullnullnullnullnullnull4.8 70% nullnullnullnullnullnull4.8 50% nullnullnullnullnullnull4.8 30% nullnullnullnullnulln
29、ull4.8 10% nullnullnullnullnullnull4.8 The Base Station Input Power Metric is given by the following: nullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnullnull null nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull
30、nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull (Eq. 5.1-1) Table 5.2 defines the Base Station Input Power Metric parameters. Table 5.2 Base Statio
31、n Input Power Metric Parameters P90, P70, P50, P30, P10Each value represents the total average base station input power (in Watts) measured at all equipment locations at a specific RF load (i.e., nullnullnullis the total measured average base station input power when transmitting at 10% RF load). T9
32、0, T70, T50, T30, T10Each value represents the total time spent at each RF load (in hours per day) as per the daily usage model (i.e., nullnullnullis used to weight the nullnullnullaverage base station input power measurement). ATIS-0600015.09.2015 8 Equation 5.1-1 applies to both integrated and dis
33、tributed base stations. For an integrated base station, the base station input power is the average input power drawn by the base station equipment at the single main location (i.e., location 1). Thus in equation 5.1-1, the average input power drawn at the 10% RF load (i.e., nullnullnullnull is repr
34、esented by the following equation: nullnullnullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull null(Eq. 5.1-2) For a distributed base station, the base station input power is the sum of the average input power drawn by the base station equipment at a main location as well as at all remote location
35、s (i.e., location 1, location 2, , location N). Thus in equation 5.1-1, the average input power drawn at the 10% RF load is represented by the following equation: nullnullnullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnull nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull nullnull nullnullnull
36、null nullnullnullnullnullnullnullnull null(Eq. 5.1-3) It should be noted that it may be of interest to explore the effect that different base station load scenarios have on the weighted-average base station input power. This can be done by creating custom daily usage models and applying them to the
37、five base station input power measurements provided in the test report. Refer to Annex A for further information. 5.2 Test Procedure 5.2.1 Equipment Setup Inactive time slots at idle power. 2. The BCCH TRX is always active and thus the 8 time slots are always at static power. 3. Because this RF load
38、 cannot be realized, the minimum 50% RF load configuration shall be used. Table 5.6 GSM Load Model: Base Station with 4 TRX per Sector Number of Active Time Slots Per GSM Sector1TRX Type 10% Nominal RF Load430% Nominal RF Load 50% Nominal RF Load 70% Nominal RF Load 90% Nominal RF Load BCCH TRX28 8
39、8 8 8 Non-BCCH TRX30 2 8 15 21 Generated RF Load 25% 31% 50% 72% 91% Notes: 1. The table shows the number of active time slots out of 32 total time slots for the sector. Active time slots are transmitted at static power; inactive time slots at idle power. 2. The BCCH TRX is always active and thus th
40、e 8 time slots are always at static power. 3. These time slots shall be distributed equally over the non-BCCH TRX. 4. Because this RF load cannot be realized, the minimum 25% RF load configuration shall be used. ATIS-0600015.09.2015 14 Table 5.7 GSM Load Model: Base Station with 8 TRX per Sector Num
41、ber of Active Time Slots Per GSM Sector1TRX Type 10% Nominal RF Load430% Nominal RF Load 50% Nominal RF Load 70% Nominal RF Load 90% Nominal RF Load BCCH TRX28 8 8 8 8 Non-BCCH TRX30 11 24 36 50 Generated RF Load 13% 30% 50% 69% 91% Notes: 1. Table shows number of active time slots out of 64 total t
42、ime slots for the sector. Active time slots are transmitted at static power; inactive time slots at idle power. 2. The BCCH TRX is always active and thus the 8 time slots are always at static power. 3. These time slots shall be distributed equally over the non-BCCH TRX. 4. Because this RF load canno
43、t be realized, the minimum 13% load configuration shall be used. 5.2.2 Measurement Procedure The measurement procedure for collecting the data needed to calculate the Base Station Input Power Metric is presented here. The environmental conditions under which the base station is tested are defined in
44、 ATIS-0600015 1. However the service provider has the option to request additional base station testing at temperatures other than those specified. For all radio access technologies, testing shall be performed at the center frequency of the applicable downlink bands. The center frequency shall be id
45、entified in the test report. All measured values shall be recorded in the accompanying test report to the accuracy stated in ATIS-0600015 1. A total of 300 continuous samples (taken over 1 second intervals) shall be recorded over the 5 minute measurement period. The recorded base station input power
46、 is the total average input power of the entire base station, and it is based on the measured samples. For an integrated base station, the total input power is the summation of the average power measured at all input voltage ports of the single main location (i.e., location 1). For a distributed bas
47、e station, the total input power is the summation of the average power measured at all input voltage ports of the main location (i.e., location 1) plus the average power measured at all input voltage ports of all remote locations (i.e., location 2, , location N). The recorded base station RF output
48、power is the total average RF output power of the entire base station, and it is based on the measured samples. The total RF output power is the summation of the measured average RF output power at all transmitter antenna connectors at all locations of the base station. The RF output power at each a
49、ntenna connector must be individually measured and recorded. It is not permissible to measure the RF outputs of only one radio unit and assume that all other RF outputs of all other radio units are the same. Once started, the following measurement procedure shall be completed as written without interruption. The procedure shall be conducted simultaneously on all sectors and at all equipment locations. ATIS-0600015.09.2015 15 Step 1: Prepare Test Environment Connect and configure the base station as per the relevant radio access