1、 ETSI EN 302 326-2 V1.2.2 (2007-06)Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Fixed Radio Systems;Multipoint Equipment and Antennas;Part 2: Harmonized EN covering the essential requirementsof article 3.2 of the R Essential, or potentially Essential, IPRs notified to ETSI in respect of
2、ETSI standards“, which is available from the ETSI Secretariat. Latest updates are available on the ETSI Web server (http:/webapp.etsi.org/IPR/home.asp). Pursuant to the ETSI IPR Policy, no investigation, including IPR searches, has been carried out by ETSI. No guarantee can be given as to the existe
3、nce of other IPRs not referenced in ETSI SR 000 314 (or the updates on the ETSI Web server) which are, or may be, or may become, essential to the present document. Foreword This Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) has been produced by ETSI Technical Committee Transmission and Mu
4、ltiplexing (TM). The present document has been produced by ETSI in response to a mandate from the European Commission issued under Council Directive 98/34/EC (as amended) laying down a procedure for the provision of information in the field of technical standards and regulations. The present documen
5、t is intended to become a Harmonized Standard, the reference of which will be published in the Official Journal of the European Communities referencing the Directive 1999/5/EC 2 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 9 March 1999 on radio equipment and telecommunications terminal equipment
6、 and the mutual recognition of their conformity (“the R Multipoint Equipment and Antennas, as identified below: Part 1: “Overview and Requirements for Digital Multipoint Radio Systems“; Part 2: “Harmonized EN covering the essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R Part 3: “Harmonized EN covering
7、 the essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R those options include: channel separation alternatives (as provided by the relevant CEPT Recommendation); spectral efficiency class alternatives (different modulation formats provided in radio equipment standards); antenna sectorization alternative
8、s and directivity classes for CS; antenna directivity class alternatives for TS and/or RS, as well as omnidirectional alternative for TS intended for Nomadic Wireless Access (NWA); antenna basic polarization (linear or circular). The applicability of this whole multi-part deliverable to MP equipment
9、 is governed by the definition of a number of system profiles that define the set of consistent requirements as described in EN 302 326-1 11 to which equipment shall conform. ETSI ETSI EN 302 326-2 V1.2.2 (2007-06) 10The present document is considered applicable to fixed radio systems products with
10、integral antennas, for which all the technical requirements included in the present document and in EN 302 326-3 12 apply, and to separate equipment products, to which only the relevant technical requirements apply, and which might therefore be subject to separate declarations of conformity with res
11、pect to the essential requirements of the R Primary Equipment Type (EqC-PET); Secondary Equipment Type (EqC-SET), (where needed to distinguish variants of EqC-PET); Equivalent Modulation Order (EqC-EMO); Channel separation (EqC-ChS) - or range of separations; Station type (EqC-STN). ETSI ETSI EN 302
12、 326-2 V1.2.2 (2007-06) 11Table 1 shows the complete list of equipment profiles within the scope of this multi-part deliverable in terms of the allowed values (or ranges of values) of the various fields of EqC. The manufacturer shall indicate, in the Technical Construction File or elsewhere, the pro
13、file that the specific equipment shall comply with, by defining the values of those fields of EqC shown in table 1 that are applicable to the equipment. The equipment shall then comply with all requirements in EN 302 326-1 11 and the present document relevant to that EqC. In the case of asymmetric M
14、P implementations (see clause 1.6 of EN 302 326-1 11), the supplier shall identify separately the profiles of the equipment in the two alternate directions in terms of the various EqC fields, and the present document shall apply independently to each direction. Table 1: Equipment Profiles within the
15、 scope of this multi-part deliverable defined by their Equipment Classification (see notes 1 and 2) EqC-FR Frequency Range (Basic ranges) (note 7) EqC-PET Primary Equipment Type (note 3) EqC-EMO Equivalent Modulation Order (note 4) EqC-SET Secondary Equipment Type (note 5) EqC-ChS Channel Separation
16、 (MHz) (Basic Ranges) (note 6) T 2 QP, DQ, or GM No restriction O 2, 4, 6 DM or MA No restriction F (note 8) 2, 3, 4 Null No restriction D Not applicable OR or PR 3,5 to 20 1 GHz H Not applicable Null 1 to 14 T 1,2 Null 1,75 to 4 O 2, 4, 6 DM or MA 1,75 to 14 F (note 8) 2,3,4 Null 1 to 14 D Not appl
17、icable OR or PR 3,5 to 14 1 GHz to 3 GHz H Not applicable Null 1 to 14 Null 0,025 to 30HC 1,75 to 30 2 LC 0,025 to 2 4 Null 0,025 to 30 T 6 Null 1,75 to 30 2, 4 DM or MA 0,025 to 30 O 6 DM or MA 1,75 to 30 F (note 8) 2, 3, 4 Null 1 to 30 D Not applicable OR or PR 1 to 30 3 GHz to 11 GHz H Not applic
18、able Null 1 to 30 2 Null or HC 3,5 to 112 T 4,6 Null 3,5 to 112 M 2, 4, 6 Null 3,5 to 112 F (note 8) 2, 3, 4, 6 Null 3,5 to 112 24,25 GHz to 29,5 GHz D Not applicable OR or PR 3,5 to 112 T 2, 4, 6 Null 3,5 to 56 M 2, 4, 6 Null 3,5 to 56 31,0 GHz to 33,4 GHz F (note 8) 2, 3, 4 Null 3,5 to 56 NOTE 1:
19、A description of the fields of EqC appears in annex A of EN 302 326-1 11, and the relationship between EqC fields and the previous equipment types described in the superseded ENs appears in annex B of EN 302 326-1 11. NOTE 2: In the earlier standards a number of system types were defined (e.g. A, B,
20、 C, etc.). Annex B of EN 302 326-1 11 indicates the relationship between the earlier system types and the present EqC. NOTE 3: Although EqC-PET historically has a relationship with a specific multiple access method, any access method, or combination of access methods, may be used provided that the e
21、ntire set of requirements relevant to article 3.2 of the R Conformance testing; Part 2-1: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Definitions and general requirements“. 4 ETSI EN 301 126-2-2 (V1.1.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 2-2: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Test procedures for FDMA
22、 systems“. 5 ETSI EN 301 126-2-3 (V1.2.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 2-3: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Test procedures for TDMA systems“. 6 ETSI EN 301 126-2-4 (V1.1.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 2-4: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Test procedures for FH
23、-CDMA systems“. 7 ETSI EN 301 126-2-5 (V1.1.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 2-5: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Test procedures for DS-CDMA systems“. 8 ETSI EN 301 126-2-6 (V1.1.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 2-6: Point-to-Multipoint equipment; Test procedure
24、s for Multi Carrier Time Division Multiple Access (MC-TDMA) systems“. 9 ETSI EN 301 126-3-2 (V1.2.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Conformance testing; Part 3-2: Point-to-Multipoint antennas - Definitions, general requirements and test procedures“. 10 ETSI EN 301 390 (V1.2.1): “Fixed Radio Systems; Point-t
25、o-point and Multipoint Systems; Spurious emissions and receiver immunity limits at equipment/antenna port of Digital Fixed Radio Systems“. 11 ETSI EN 302 326-1: “Fixed Radio Systems; Multipoint Equipment and Antennas; Part 1: Overview and Requirements for Digital Multipoint Radio Systems“. 12 ETSI E
26、N 302 326-3: “Fixed Radio Systems; Multipoint Equipment and Antennas; Part 3: Harmonized EN covering the essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R in this way for most of the time the interference is reduced and the transmitter operates in a higher linearity mode NOTE 1: When this function is u
27、sed, the transmit power is dynamically changed with respect the propagation conditions. In principle, when ATPC is implemented, three different level of power may be identified: square4 maximum available power (delivered only in conditions of deep fading); square4 maximum nominal power (useable on a
28、 permanent basis when ATPC is disabled); it should be noted that this power is “nominal for the equipment“ and is not to be confused with the “nominal level set link by link“ by the frequency co-ordinating body. This is achieved through passive RF attenuators or use of the RTPC type 1 function; squa
29、re4 minimum power (delivered in unfaded conditions). NOTE 2: Maximum nominal and maximum available power levels may be coincident or, in case of multi-state modulation formats, the maximum available power may be used to overdrive the transmitter (losing linearity but gaining fade margin when the fad
30、e conditions have already impaired the expected RBER). Performance predictions are usually made with the maximum “available power“. Central Station (CS): base station which communicates with Terminal Stations and in some cases Repeater Stations Channel Separation (ChS): separation between the centre
31、 frequencies of neighbouring RF channels according ITU-R Recommendation F.746 (see bibliography) and used for adjacent channel interference requirements NOTE 1: In some access methodologies the whole channel given to the system is subdivided in sub-channels for use by subsets of terminal stations; h
32、owever also in this case the channel separation is still intended in the same way as the above definition (minimum continuous segment of bandwidth made available to the system). NOTE 2: In this whole multi-part deliverable Channel Separation (ChS) is a free variable the value(s) of which the supplie
33、r declares. Limiting values of some other parameters which are requirements of the present document are expressed as functions of ChS. CEPT Recommendations and national administrations may replace restrictions on which ChS values are permitted. DS-CDMA Full Capacity Load (FCL): maximum number of 64
34、kbit/s signals or equivalent which can be transmitted and received by a single CS within a specified RF-bandwidth, fulfilling given performance and availability objectives in respect to fading conditions DS-CDMA maximum system loading: maximum possible payload data rate on a single RF channel for th
35、e class of operation declared by the manufacturer Downlink: direction of traffic flow from Central Station towards a Terminal Station Equipment Classification (EqC): multi-field classification which indicates the principal characteristics of a particular equipment within the scope of EN 302 326 and
36、indicates which alternative consistent sets of requirements of EN 302 326 apply to that equipment FDMA signal: signal comprising all permitted carriers in a channel at full system load ETSI ETSI EN 302 326-2 V1.2.2 (2007-06) 17FH-CDMA Frequency Hopping (FH): spread spectrum technique whereby individ
37、ual radio links are continually switched from one sub-channel to another NOTE: Such links are not constrained to a single RF channel. FH-CDMA hopping sequence: sequence of sub-channels which a particular link follows FH-CDMA slow frequency hopping: FH technique where the hopping period is larger tha
38、n the symbol period Sub-channel Assigned Band RF Channel Figure 2: Relationship between “sub-channel“, “RF channel“ and “assigned channels“ Full Capacity Load (FCL): (only defined for DS-CDMA systems) See DS-CDMA Full Capacity Load (FCL). Frequency Hopping (FH): See FH-CDMA Frequency Hopping (FH). g
39、ain (of an antenna): ratio of the radiation intensity, in a given direction, to the radiation intensity that would be obtained if the power accepted by the antenna was radiated isotropically gross bit rate: transmission bit rate over the air. In case of a transmitter working in burst mode, the gross
40、 bit rate is the instantaneous maximum transmission bit rate during the burst NOTE: The gross bit rate has a unique relationship to the symbol rate through the implemented modulation format. In the case of OFDMA this relationship is unique when all OFDMA sub-carriers are in use. Gross bit rate for T
41、DMA/OFDMA systems is the aggregate bit rate of all OFDMA sub-carriers transmitting simultaneously; (e.g. for a TDMA/OFDMA system, in any single TDMA burst any single OFDMA TS may be dynamically assigned a subset of the OFDMA-sub-channels. Multiple TS are allowed to transmit at the same time on disjo
42、int sets of OFDM-sub-carriers, so the MGBR is defined when all available OFDM-sub-carriers are in use at the same time). hopping sequence: See FH-CDMA hopping sequence. integral antenna: antenna which is declared as part of the radio equipment by the supplier NOTE: Even when equipment with integral
43、antenna is concerned, it may still be possible to separate the antenna from the equipment using a special tool. In such cases the assessment of the radio equipment and of the antenna against requirements of this whole multi-part deliverable could be done separately by the actual supplier(s). Maximum
44、 System Loading (MSL): (only defined for DS-CDMA systems) See “DS-CDMA maximum system loading“. ETSI ETSI EN 302 326-2 V1.2.2 (2007-06) 18mixed-mode system: system having the capability for stations (CS or TS or RS) to operate on different modulation orders and/or switch dynamically between differen
45、t modulation orders NOTE: This capability may be used to improve deployment and capacity capabilities or to adaptively adjust for varying channel impairments, or to improve spectral efficiency by dynamically allocating transmission capacity. The switching between modulation orders may occur as frequ
46、ently as appropriate to the system, (e.g. on a per-burst or per-timeslot or per-carrier basis). multi-carrier system: system where more than one modulated sub-carrier is radiated from the same transmitter NOTE 1: A system that uses several transmitters into a non-active antenna is not considered as
47、a multi-carrier system. Systems using FDM/OFDM modulation formats are also not considered multi-carrier unless more that one separate FDM/OFDM signal set is transmitted from the same transmitter. NOTE 2: FDMA systems are intrinsically multicarrier, because any single sub-carrier may be easily discri
48、minated at RF level (unlike OFDM modulations) and activated according to the traffic requirements. However, for the purpose of the present document, a FDMA system are also considered as a whole (fully loaded) single signal set (comprised of multiple carriers), unless more that one FDMA signal set is
49、 transmitted from the same transmitter. Nomadic Wireless Access (NWA): “Wireless access“ application in which the location of the “end-user termination“ may be in different places but it must be stationary while in use NOTE: See ITU-R Recommendation F.1399 in bibliography. nominal output power: maximum output power of the Central Station (CS), Terminal Station (TS) or Repeater Station (RS) referred to point C of figure 3 under the full load condition declared by the manufacturer NOTE: This power may, however, be exceeded by the action of