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Compare TDMA, CDMA, FDMA and SDMA
1 Answer
written 8.4 years ago by |
Approach | SDMA | TDMA | FDMA | CDMA |
---|---|---|---|---|
Idea | Segment spaced into cells or sectors. | Segments sending time into disjoint time slots demand driven or fixed patterns. | Segment the frequency band into disjoint subbands | Spread the spectrum using orthogonal codes. |
Terminals | Only one terminal can be active in one cell or one sector. | All terminals are active for short periods of time on same frequency. | Every terminal has its own frequency uninterrupted | All terminals can be active at the same place at the same moment uninterrupted. |
Signal separation | Cell structure, directed antennas | Synchronization in time domain | Filtering in the frequency domain. | Code plus special receivers. |
Transmission scheme | Continuous | Discontinuous | Continuous | Continuous |
Cell capacity | Depends on cell area | Limited | Limited | No absolute limit on channel capacity but it is an interference limited system |
Advantages | Very simple, increases capacity per | Established fully digital, flexible | Simple, established, robust | Flexible, less frequency planning needed, soft handover |
Disadvantages | Inflexible, antennas typically fixed | Guard space needed (multipath propagation), synchronization difficult | Inflexible, frequencies are scarce resource | Complex receivers, needs more complicated power control for senders |
Comment | Only in combination with TDMA, FDMA or CDMA useful | Standards in fixed networks, together with FDMA or SDMA used in many mobile networks | Typically combined with TDMA and SDMA | Still faces some problems, higher complexity, lowered expectations, will be integrated with TDMA or FDMA |