TITLE:
Effects of Antenna Tilting on Transmitting Power in Mobile Cellular Communication Systems
AUTHORS:
Gbenga E. Aderibigbe, Michael O. Kolawole, Victor S. A. Adeloye
KEYWORDS:
Optimum Tilting Angle, QoS, Near-Far Effect, Mobile Station, Carrier-to-Interference Ratio
JOURNAL NAME:
International Journal of Communications, Network and System Sciences,
Vol.4 No.7,
July
11,
2011
ABSTRACT: Radio resources must be wisely managed, in wireless communication systems, when implementing different multiple access techniques. This perspective is pivotal since the variations in propagation channel are very fast and the system is highly complex due to random and unpredictable movement of mobile users continuously. The complexity in the cellular system periodically contributes to different interference levels, high or low, resulting in the degradation of the system capacity. Transmitter power control is an efficient technique to mitigate the effect of interference under fading conditions, combat the Near-Far problem and conserve the battery life. Several remedial measures—like space diversity, frequency diversity, route diversity, increase in antenna height, antenna tilting, etc.—have been tried by many operators to overcome the debilitating effect of multipath fading in fixed line-of-sight microwave and mobile communication links. Among these remedial measures, diversity techniques have been extensively studied in terms of improvement factor, whereas the concept of antenna tilting is relatively less explored compared with other remedial measures. In this study, the effect of antenna tilting on fixed and mobile communication links is investigated to find out the optimum tilting angles in terms of design parameters, as well as on quality of service (QoS). The paper established that a deviation of more than 1.5o in antenna elevation angle would impact on QoS requirements and seriously affect the quality of signal to be received by the mobile systems.