1. FDD vs TDD Comparison:Why TDD LTE Improves Battery Life & Lowers Costs Dr. Darcy Poulin October 15, 2009
2. Overview One easy way to mitigate complexities of “40 bands” is to eliminate the duplexer The easiest way to do this is to switch to TDD TDD will result in lower power consumption, lower cost, and smaller size
3. Introduction FDD/TDD overview and comparison In the absence of losses, FDD and TDD are identical in terms of data throughput and energy consumption Practical considerations FDD duplexer (+ switch?). TDD switch Side by side comparison taking losses into account shows FDD transmitter consumes 55% more energy than TDD Other factors also favoring TDD
12. TDD versus FDD: Power and Range FDD systems transmit data over half the bandwidth, for twice as long as TDD systems 2x5 MHz FDD system transmits data over 5 MHz bandwidth for the entire frame 10 MHz TDD system transmits data over a 10 MHz bandwidth for about half of the frame If both systems transmit at 200mW, power is more concentrated for FDD (40mW/MHz for FDD, 20mW/MHz for TDD), so the range of an FDD system will be larger than TDD To achieve identical range, the power at the antenna of a TDD system needs to be 2x (3 dB) higher than the power at the antenna of an FDD system ….BUT An FDD system transmits 2x longer than a TDD system, so the net energy (power*time) transmitted from the antenna is identical for both cases Again, neglecting component losses, FDD and TDD are identical in terms of energy consumption
13. TDD versus FDD: Duplexing Duplexing refers to transmitting and receiving voice/data simultaneously A TDD system receives data for about the first half of the frame, and then transmits data for about the last half of the frame Uses the same frequency for both Rx and Tx, and uses time to duplex Uses a T/R switch that can be integrated into the RF front end An FDD system transmits and receives continuously and simultaneously Transmits and receives data on different frequencies Requires a large and lossy duplex filter (required to protect the sensitive receiver from Tx noise). Very difficult to integrate the duplexer into an RF front end.
14. Duplexer Technology Duplexer insertion loss depends on duplex spacing Typical duplexer insertion loss is ~2.5 dB Typical duplexer size is 2.5x3mm
15. TDD versus FDD comparison for LTE Putting it all together: A TDD LTE PA needs to be ~1 dB (25%) bigger than an FDD LTE PA to achieve the same range. However, due to duplexer losses, PA power consumption of the TDD system is about 55% better than for the FDD system
16. Other considerations: Asymmetric data Mobile traffic is highly asymmetric Asymmetric data is difficult to handle with FDD, since the FDD bands have all been allocated with equal UL/DL splits. This leads to inefficient use of bandwidth for FDD With TDD, asymmetry is trivial; simply change the DL/UL ratio
17. Other considerations: MIMO MIMO requires precise knowledge of the channel. The channel characteristics vary significantly with frequency FDD MIMO is much more difficult to implement, since it is more difficult to do accurate channel estimation TDD MIMO uses the same frequencies for UL and DL, and channel estimates made in the UL can be applied directly to the DL
18. Other considerations: Radio design FDD systems require that the transmitter and receiver are both on at the same time, on different frequencies Simultaneous operation on different frequencies requires a more complex synthesizer and more complex radio; it may even force users to separate receiver and transmitter Ics for isolation reasons TDD systems have a single synthesizer, and Tx/Rx radios can be on the same die as there is no issue with isolation Baseband chipsets are larger and more complex for FDD; they require independent Tx and Rx chains to handle simultaneous Tx and Rx TDD systems can reuse most of the baseband processor, as it is shared between Tx and Rx (although it does have to run at twice the speed)
22. You need the switch for either TDD or FDD, so it is almost free for TDD.
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24. Conclusions In this analysis, we have compared TDD and FDD devices While a TDD system must transmit at higher power to achieve the same range as an FDD system, a TDD system will always consume less power than an FDD system. Typically, TDD systems will have >50% better battery life than FDD systems For mobile devices, TDD is preferred. Battery lifetime is longer, and the FDD duplexer is larger than the TDD switch There are also other considerations that favor TDD as well Asymmetry of UL and DL traffic is easier with a TDD system MIMO is better suited for TDD TDD radios are easier to build, and overall sizes are smaller I urge everyone to push regulators to consider TDD for next generation wireless technologies!
25. Wish list LTE runs exclusively on TDD basis, and duplexers are relegated to the same fate as isolators (this is a wish list after all). But seriously… Awareness of TDD advantages would be a great start… List of band priorities so that I know which order to design PAs in. Should we do 700MHz first? 2.1 GHz first? 2.5 GHz first?