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What is Active Antenna System (AAS) and its 3D

Aspect, Why AAS for 5G ?


September 26, 2017admin5G, RF Basics

An active antenna is an antenna that contains active electronic components like antenna-integrated
radio designs place the RF module next to the passive antenna to reduce cable losses.

Active Antenna does not need to be merely passive elements. With intelligent integration, active
antenna technology transforms traditional antenna to contribute to base station efficiency. This
enables operators to significantly increase the capacity and coverage targets set for their network.

As a base station system evolved, the AAS integrated the active transceiver array and the passive
antenna array into one radome.

In normal mode, RRH is connected to Antenna through RF cable. So there are two different units
(one is RRH and second is antenna) as shown below:
On the other hand, AAS is altogether single unit where different antenna elements has their own RF
transceiver chains integrated as shown below:
AAS is integrated into the antenna so as to offer possibilities for finer grained digital control of the
beamforming weight of each individual subelement within the antenna.

Its 3D-MIMO technologies fully utilize radio resources in both the micro- and macro-spatial domains.

3D Aspect of AAS
Traditionally and still, evaluations in the wireless communication field use channel models with only
two dimensions, even though we live in a three-dimensional world. The vertical direction is basically
non-existent in these models, all UEs are assumed to be placed on ground-level.

UE specific elevation beamforming is one key technique that we are exploring in the context of 3D
channel models. It allows a beam to be directed in a way that suits each individual UE in the cell. For
example, a UE high up in a high-rise may desire a beam pointing upwards, while a UE on the ground
level may get a downwards pointing beam.
The related MU-MIMO technique can be used to co-schedule UEs that appear in different horizontal
and/or elevation angles. Coordinated beamforming may utilize the additional degrees of freedom
provided by the elevation domain to more efficiently avoid interference on victim UEs. There are
almost endless opportunities in combining the various basic multi-antenna components.

The performance potential of beamforming techniques tends to increase with an increasing number
of antennas, since the baseband gets access to more degrees of spatial freedom. This is facilitated
by techniques for active antenna systems (AAS) where the radio is integrated into the antenna so as
to offer possibilities for finer grained digital control of the beamforming weight of each individual
subelement within the antenna.

AAS for 5G
Massive MIMO is the back-bone for 5G network where 100 or more antenna elements are to be
used for various benefits. But it is difficult to introduce massive-elements antennas (100 or more
elements) that are required for massive MIMO into traditional base stations, attaching over 100 RF
cables between each antenna element and RF TRX unit seems unrealistic and adding more RF
losses. Using an AAS that combines the antennas, and RF TRX unit (transmitter and receiver
chains), into one unit would be an effective way to resolve these issues.

In addition to the conventional roof top mounting locations, small cells are expected to cover
shopping malls, Stadiums, food canteens, or different premises. To be effective, AAS/MIMO must be
able to flexibly adapt to each individual small cell user’s distribution environment, so optimum
antenna structure can be offered for any individual situation in terms of the number of vertical and
horizontal antenna elements and the number of independent transceivers, adding huge efficiency to
the network.

AAS BENEFITS
 There is a potential to significantly reduce the site footprint
 The distribution of radio functions within the antenna results in built-in redundancy and
improved thermal performance, which can result in higher system availability (lower failure
rates).
 Distributed transceivers can support a host of advanced electronic beam-tilt features that can
enable improvements in network capacity and coverage
 Integrating the active transceiver array and the passive antenna array into one radome
reduces cable losses

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