4G, short for fourth generation, is the fourth generation
of mobile telecommunications technology, succeeding 3G. A 4G system must
provide capabilities defined by ITU in IMT Advanced. Potential and
current applications include amended mobile web access, IP telephony, gaming
services, high-definition mobile TV, video
conferencing, 3D television, and cloud computing]
Two 4G candidate systems are commercially deployed: the Mobile WiMAX standard
(first used in South Korea in 2007), and the first-release Long Term Evolution (LTE) standard (in Oslo,
Norway and Stockholm, Sweden since 2009). It has however been debated if these
first-release versions should be considered to be 4G or not, as discussed in
the technical definition section
below]
In the United States, Sprint (previously Clear wire) has deployed
Mobile WiMAX networks since 2008, while Metro PCS became the first
operator to offer LTE service in 2010. USB wireless modems were among the first
devices able to access these networks, with WiMAX smartphones becoming
available during 2010, and LTE smartphones arriving in 2011. 3G and 4G
equipment made for other continents are not always compatible because of
different frequency bands. Mobile WiMAX is not available for the European
market as of April 2012.
Technical understanding
In March 2008, the International
Telecommunications Union-Radio communications sector (ITU-R)
specified a set of requirements for 4G standards, named the International Mobile
Telecommunications Advanced (IMT-Advanced) specification,
setting peak speed requirements for 4G service at 100 megabits per second (Mbit/s) for high mobility
communication (such as from trains and cars) and 1 gigabit per second (Gbit/s) for low mobility
communication (such as pedestrians and stationary users).
Since the first-release versions of Mobile WiMAX and LTE support much less than 1 Gbit/s peak bit rate, they are not
fully IMT-Advanced compliant, but are often branded 4G by service providers.
According to operators, a generation of network refers to the deployment of a
new non-backward-compatible technology. On December 6, 2010, ITU-R recognized
that these two technologies, as well as other beyond-3G technologies that do
not fulfill the IMT-Advanced requirements, could nevertheless be considered
"4G", provided they represent forerunners to IMT-Advanced compliant versions
and "a substantial level of improvement in performance and capabilities
with respect to the initial third generation systems now deployed".
Mobile WiMAX Release 2 (also known
as Wireless MAN-Advanced or IEEE 802.16m')
and LTE Advanced (LTE-A) are
IMT-Advanced compliant backwards compatible versions of the above two systems, standardized
during the spring 2011, and promising
speeds in the order of 1 Gbit/s. Services were expected in 2013.
As opposed to earlier generations, a 4G system does not support
traditional circuit-switched telephony
service, but all-Internet Protocol (IP) based
communication such as IP telephony. As seen below,
the spread
spectrum radio technology used in 3G systems, is abandoned in all 4G candidate
systems and replaced by OFDMA multi-carrier transmission
and other frequency-domain equalization (FDE) schemes, making it
possible to transfer very high bit rates despite extensive multi-path radio propagation (echoes). The peak bit rate is
further improved by smart antenna arrays
for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communications.
Background
The nomenclature of the generations generally refers to a change in the
fundamental nature of the service, non-backwards-compatible transmission
technology, higher peak bit rates, new frequency bands, wider channel frequency
bandwidth in Hertz, and higher capacity for many simultaneous data transfers
(higher system spectral efficiency inbit/second/Hertz/site).
New mobile generations have appeared about every ten years since the first
move from 1981 analogue (1G) to digital (2G) transmission in 1992. This was
followed, in 2001, by 3G multi-media support, spread spectrum transmission
and at least 200 kbit/s peak bit rate, in 2011/2012 to be followed by
"real" 4G, which refers to all-Internet Protocol (IP) packet-switched networks giving
mobile ultra-broadband (gigabit speed) access.
While the ITU has adopted recommendations for technologies that would be
used for future global communications, they do not actually perform the
standardization or development work themselves, instead relying on the work of
other standard bodies such as IEEE, The WiMAX Forum and 3GPP.
In the mid-1990s, the ITU-R standardization
organization released the IMT-2000 requirements
as a framework for what standards should be considered 3G systems,
requiring 200 kbit/s peak bit rate. In 2008, ITU-R specified the IMT-Advanced (International
Mobile Telecommunications Advanced) requirements for 4G systems.
The fastest 3G-based standard in the UMTS family is
the HSPA+ standard,
which is commercially available since 2009 and offers 28 Mbit/s downstream
(22 Mbit/s upstream) without MIMO, i.e. only with
one antenna, and in 2011 accelerated up to 42 Mbit/s peak bit rate
downstream using either DC-HSPA+ (simultaneous
use of two 5 MHz UMTS carriers)[3] or
2x2 MIMO. In theory speeds up to 672 Mbit/s are possible, but have
not been deployed yet. The fastest 3G-based standard in the CDMA2000 family is
the EV-DO Rev. B, which is
available since 2010 and offers 15.67 Mbit/s downstream
IMT-Advanced requirements
This article refers to 4G using IMT-Advanced (International Mobile
Telecommunications Advanced), as defined by ITU-R. An
IMT-Advanced cellular
system must fulfill the following requirements:[4]
·
Be based on an all-IP packet
switched network.
·
Have peak data rates of up to
approximately 100 Mbit/s for high mobility such as mobile access and up to
approximately 1 Gbit/s for low mobility such as nomadic/local wireless
access.[1]
·
Be able to dynamically share and use
the network resources to support more simultaneous users per cell.
·
Use scale-able channel bandwidths of
5–20 MHz, optionally up to 40 MHz. Rumney, Moray (September
2008). "IMT-Advanced: 4G Wireless Takes
Shape in an Olympic Year" (PDF). Agilent
Measurement Journal.
·
Have peak link spectral efficiency of
15-bit/s/Hz in the downlink, and 6.75-bit/s/Hz in the uplink (meaning that 1 Gbit/s
in the downlink should be possible over less than 67 MHz bandwidth).
·
System spectral efficiency is, in
indoor cases, 3-bit/s/Hz/cell for downlink and 2.25-bit/s/Hz/cell for uplink.
·
Smooth handovers across
heterogeneous networks.
·
The ability to offer high quality of
service for next generation multimedia support.
In September 2009,
the technology proposals were submitted to the International Telecommunication
Union (ITU) as 4G candidates. Basically all proposals are based on two
technologies.
Implementations of Mobile WiMAX and first-release LTE are largely
considered a stopgap solution that will offer a considerable boost until WiMAX
2 (based on the 802.16m spec) and LTE Advanced are deployed. The latter's
standard versions were ratified in spring 2011, but are still far from being
implemented.
The first set of 3GPP requirements on LTE Advanced was approved in June
2008. LTE Advanced was to be standardized in 2010 as part of Release 10 of the
3GPP specification. LTE Advanced will be based on the existing LTE
specification Release 10 and will not be defined as a new specification series.
A summary of the technologies that have been studied as the basis for LTE
Advanced is included in a technical report.
Some sources consider first-release LTE and Mobile WiMAX implementations as
pre-4G or near-4G, as they do not fully comply with the planned requirements of
1 Gbit/s for stationary reception and 100 Mbit/s for mobile]
Confusion has been caused by some mobile carriers who have launched
products advertised as 4G but which according to some sources are pre-4G
versions, commonly referred to as '3.9G’ which do not follow the ITU-R defined
principles for 4G standards, but today can be called 4G according to ITU-R. A
common argument for branding 3.9G systems as new-generation is that they use
different frequency bands from 3G technologies , that they are based
on a new radio-interface paradigm , and that the standards are not
backwards compatible with 3G, whilst some of the standards are forwards
compatible with IMT-2000 compliant versions of the same standards.
System standards
IMT-2000 compliant 4G standards
As of October 2010, ITU-R Working Party 5D approved two industry-developed
technologies (LTE Advanced and Wireless MAN-Advanced for inclusion in the
ITU's International Mobile Telecommunications Advanced program (IMT-Advanced
program), which is focused on global communication systems that will be
available several years from now.
LTE Advanced
LTE Advanced (Long Term
Evolution Advanced) is a candidate for IMT-Advanced standard, formally
submitted by the3GPP organization
to ITU-T in the fall 2009, and expected to be released in 2013. The target of
3GPP LTE Advanced is to reach and surpass the ITU requirements. LTE Advanced
is essentially an enhancement to LTE. It is not a new technology, but rather an
improvement on the existing LTE network. This upgrade path makes it more cost
effective for vendors to offer LTE and then upgrade to LTE Advanced which is
similar to the upgrade from WCDMA to HSPA. LTE and LTE Advanced will also make
use of additional spectrums and multiplexing to allow it to achieve higher data
speeds. Coordinated Multi-point Transmission will also allow more system
capacity to help handle the enhanced data speeds. Release 10 of LTE is expected
to achieve the IMT Advanced speeds. Release 8 currently supports up to
300 Mbit/s of download speeds which is still short of the IMT-Advanced
standards.
Data speeds of LTE Advanced
|
|
Peak download
|
1 Gbit/s
|
Peak upload
|
500 Mbit/s
|
IEEE 802.16m or Wireless MAN-Advanced
The IEEE 802.16m or Wireless MAN-Advanced evolution of 802.16e is under
development, with the objective to fulfill the IMT-Advanced criteria of
1 Gbit/s for stationary reception and 100 Mbit/s for mobile
reception.[11]
Forerunner
versions
The pre-4G 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE)
technology is often branded "4G-LTE", but the first LTE release does
not fully comply with the IMT-Advanced requirements. LTE has a
theoretical net bit rate capacity of
up to 100 Mbit/s in the downlink and 50 Mbit/s in the uplink if a
20 MHz channel is used — and more if multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), i.e.
antenna arrays, are used.
The physical radio interface was at an early stage
named High Speed OFDM Packet Access (HSOPA), now
named Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA).
The first LTE USB dongles do not support any
other radio interface.
The world's first publicly available LTE service was
opened in the two Scandinavian capitals, Stockholm (Ericsson and Nokia Siemens Networks systems)
and Oslo (a Huawei system) on
December 14, 2009, and branded 4G. The user terminals were manufactured by
Samsung. As of November 2012, the five publicly available LTE services in
the United States are provided by Metro PCS, Verizon Wireless, AT&T Mobility, U.S. Cellular, Sprint, and T-Mobile US.
T-Mobile Hungary launched a public beta test (called friendly
user test) on 7 October 2011, and has offered commercial 4G LTE services
since 1 January 2012 In South Korea, SK Telecom and LG U+ have enabled access
to LTE service since 1 July 2011 for data devices, slated to go nationwide by
2012. KT Telecom closed its 2G service by March 2012, and complete the
nationwide LTE service in the same frequency around 1.8 GHz by June 2012.
In the United Kingdom, LTE services were launched
by EE in October 2012, and
by O2 and Vodafone in August
2013.
Data speeds of LTE
|
|
Peak download
|
100 Mbit/s
|
Peak upload
|
50 Mbit/s
|
Mobile WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e)
The Mobile WiMAX (IEEE
802.16e-2005) mobile wireless broadband access (MWBA) standard (also known
as Wi Bro in South
Korea) is sometimes branded 4G, and offers peak data rates of 128 Mbit/s
downlink and 56 Mbit/s uplink over 20 MHz wide channels.
In June 2006, the world's first commercial mobile
WiMAX service was opened by KT in Seoul, South Korea.
Sprint has begun using Mobile WiMAX, as of 29 September 2008, branding it as
a "4G" network even though the current version does not fulfill the
IMT Advanced requirements on 4G systems.
In Russia, Belarus and Nicaragua Wi Max broadband
internet access is offered by a Russian company Scartel,
and is also branded 4G, Yota.
Data speeds of WiMAX
|
|
Peak download
|
128 Mbit/s
|
Peak upload
|
56 Mbit/s
|
TD-LTE for China market
Just as Long-Term Evolution (LTE) and
WiMAX are being vigorously promoted in the global telecommunications industry,
the former (LTE) is also the most powerful 4G mobile communications leading
technology and has quickly occupied the Chinese market. TD-LTE, one of the two
variants of the LTE air interface technologies, is not yet mature, but many
domestic and international wireless carriers are, one after the other turning
to TD-LTE.
IBM's data shows that 67% of the operators are
considering LTE because this is the main source of their future market. The
above news also confirms IBM's statement that while only 8% of the operators
are considering the use of WiMAX, WiMAX can provide the fastest network
transmission to its customers on the market and could challenge LTE.
TD-LTE is not the first 4G wireless mobile broadband
network data standard, but it is China's 4G standard that was amended and
published by China's largest telecom operator - China Mobile. After a series
of field trials, is expected to be released into the commercial phase in the
next two years. Ulf Ewaldsson, Ericsson's vice president said: "the
Chinese Ministry of Industry and China Mobile in the fourth quarter of this
year will hold a large-scale field test, by then, Ericsson will help the
hand." But viewing from the current development trend, whether this
standard advocated by China Mobile will be widely recognized by the
international market is still debatable.
Discontinued candidate systems
UMB (formerly EV-DO Rev. C)
UMB (Ultra Mobile Broadband) was the brand
name for a discontinued 4G project within the 3GPP2 standardization
group to improve the CDMA2000 mobile phone
standard for next generation applications and requirements. In November 2008,Qualcomm,
UMB's lead sponsor, announced it was ending development of the technology,
favouring LTE instead. The objective was to achieve data speeds over
275 Mbit/s downstream and over 75 Mbit/s upstream.
Flash-OFDM
iBurst and MBWA (IEEE 802.20) systems
The iBurst system (or
HC-SDMA, High Capacity Spatial Division Multiple Access) was at an early stage
considered to be a 4G predecessor. It was later further developed into
the Mobile Broadband Wireless Access (MBWA)
system, also known as IEEE 802.20.
Data rate comparison
The following
table shows a comparison of the 4G candidate systems as well as other competing
technologies.
Comparison of mobile Internet access methods
|
||||||
Common
Name |
Family
|
Primary Use
|
Radio Tech
|
Downstream
(Mbit/s) |
Upstream
(Mbit/s) |
Notes
|
3G Data
|
21
42 84 672 |
5.8
11.5 22 168 |
HSPA+ is
widely deployed. Revision 11
of the 3GPP states that HSPA+ is expected to have a throughput capacity of
672 Mbit/s.
|
|||
General 4G
|
LTE-Advancedupdate expected to offer peak rates up to 1 Gbit/s
fixed speeds and 100 Mb/s to mobile users.
|
|||||
WirelessMAN
|
37 (10 MHz TDD)
|
17 (10 MHz TDD)
|
||||
Wireless MAN
|
83 (20 MHz TDD)
141 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
46 (20 MHz TDD)
138 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
||||
Wireless MAN
|
2x2 MIMO
110 (20 MHz TDD) 183 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 219 (20 MHz TDD) 365 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
2x2 MIMO
70 (20 MHz TDD) 188 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 140 (20 MHz TDD) 376 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
Also, low mobility users can aggregate multiple
channels to get a download throughput of up to 1 Gbit/s[25]
|
|||
Flash-OFDM
|
Mobile Internet
mobility up to 200 mph (350 km/h) |
5.3
10.6 15.9 |
1.8
3.6 5.4 |
Mobile range 30 km (18 miles)
extended range 55 km (34 miles) |
||
HIPERMAN
|
Mobile Internet
|
56.9
|
||||
Mobile Internet
|
288.8 (using 4x4 configuration in 20 MHz
bandwidth) or 600 (using 4x4 configuration in 40 MHz bandwidth)
|
Antenna, RF front endenhancements and minor protocol timer tweaks have
helped deploy long range P2Pnetworks
compromising on radial coverage, throughput and/or spectra efficiency (310 km &382 km)
|
||||
Mobile Internet
|
95
|
36
|
Cell Radius:
3–12 km
Speed: 250 km/h Spectral Efficiency: 13 bits/s/Hz/cell Spectrum Reuse Factor: "1" |
|||
Mobile Internet
|
1.6
|
0.5
|
3GPP Release 7
|
|||
General 3G
|
0.384
14.4 |
0.384
5.76 |
HSDPA is
widely deployed. Typical
downlink rates today 2 Mbit/s, ~200 kbit/s uplink; HSPA+ downlink
up to 56 Mbit/s.
|
|||
UMTS/3GSM
|
Mobile
Internet
|
16
|
||||
EV-DO Rel. 0
EV-DO Rev.A EV-DO Rev.B |
CDMA2000
|
Mobile
Internet
|
2.45
3.1 4.9xN |
0.15
1.8 1.8xN |
Rev B note: N
is the number of 1.25 MHz carriers used. EV-DO is not designed for
voice, and requires a fallback to 1xRTT when a voice call is placed or received.
|
Notes: All speeds are theoretical maximums and will
vary by a number of factors, including the use of external antennas, distance
from the tower and the ground speed (e.g. communications on a train may be
poorer than when standing still). Usually the bandwidth is shared between
several terminals. The performance of each technology is determined by a number
of constraints, including the spectral efficiency of the technology, the cell
sizes used, and the amount of spectrum available. For more information,
see Comparison of wireless data standards.
For more comparison tables, see bit rate progress trends, comparison of mobile phone standards, spectral efficiency comparison table and OFDM system comparison table.
Principal technologies in all
candidate systems
Key features
The following key
features can be observed in all suggested 4G technologies:
·
Physical layer transmission
techniques are as follows:
·
MIMO: To attain ultra-high
spectral efficiency by means of spatial processing including multi-antenna and
multi-user MIMO
·
Frequency-domain-equalization, for
example multi-carrier modulation (OFDM) in the downlink
or single-carrier frequency-domain-equalization (SC-FDE) in
the uplink: To exploit the frequency selective channel property without complex
equalization
·
Frequency-domain statistical
multiplexing, for example (OFDMA) or
(single-carrier FDMA) (SC-FDMA, a.k.a. linearly precoded OFDMA, LP-OFDMA) in
the uplink: Variable bit rate by assigning different sub-channels to different
users based on the channel conditions
As opposed to
earlier generations, 4G systems do not support circuit switched telephony. IEEE
802.20, UMB and OFDM standards lack soft-handover support,
also known as cooperative relaying.
Multiplexing and access schemes
Recently, new access schemes like Orthogonal FDMA (OFDMA), Single Carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA), Interleaved FDMA, and Multi-carrier CDMA (MC-CDMA)
are gaining more importance for the next generation systems. These are based on
efficient FFT algorithms and frequency
domain equalization, resulting in a lower number of multiplications per second.
They also make it possible to control the bandwidth and form the spectrum in a
flexible way. However, they require advanced dynamic channel allocation and
adaptive traffic scheduling.
WiMax is using
OFDMA in the downlink and in the uplink. For the LTE (telecommunication), OFDMA is used
for the downlink; by contrast, Single-carrier FDMA is used for the uplink since
OFDMA contributes more to the PAPR related
issues and results in nonlinear operation of amplifiers. IFDMA provides less power
fluctuation and thus requires energy-inefficient linear amplifiers. Similarly,
MC-CDMA is in the proposal for the IEEE 802.20 standard.
These access schemes offer the same efficiencies as older technologies like
CDMA. Apart from this, scalability and higher data rates can be achieved.
The other important advantage of the above-mentioned
access techniques is that they require less complexity for equalization at the
receiver. This is an added advantage especially in the MIMO environments
since the spatial multiplexing transmission of MIMO systems
inherently require high complexity equalization at the receiver.
In addition to improvements in these multiplexing
systems, improved modulation techniques
are being used. Whereas earlier standards largely used Phase-shift keying, more efficient systems such as 64QAM are being
proposed for use with the 3GPP Long Term Evolution standards.
IPv6 support
Unlike 3G, which is based on two parallel
infrastructures consisting of circuit switched and packet switched network
nodes, 4G will be based on packet switching only. This will
require low-latency data
transmission.
By the time that 4G was deployed, the process of IPv4 address exhaustion was expected
to be in its final stages. Therefore, in the context of 4G, IPv6 is essential
to support a large number of wireless-enabled devices. By increasing the number
of IP addresses available,
IPv6 removes the need for network address translation (NAT), a
method of sharing a limited number of addresses among a larger group of
devices, although NAT will still be required to communicate with devices that
are on existing IPv4 networks.
As of June 2009, Verizon has posted specifications that require any
4G devices on its network to support IPv6.
Advanced antenna systems
The performance of radio communications depends on an
antenna system, termed smart or intelligent antenna. Recently, multiple antenna technologies are emerging
to achieve the goal of 4G systems such as high rate, high reliability, and long
range communications. In the early 1990s, to cater for the growing data rate
needs of data communication, many transmission schemes were proposed. One
technology, spatial multiplexing, gained importance for its
bandwidth conservation and power efficiency. Spatial multiplexing involves
deploying multiple antennas at the transmitter and at the receiver. Independent
streams can then be transmitted simultaneously from all the antennas. This
technology, called MIMO(as a branch
of intelligent antenna), multiplies the base data rate by
(the smaller of) the number of transmit antennas or the number of receive
antennas. Apart from this, the reliability in transmitting high speed data in
the fading channel can be improved by using more antennas at the transmitter or
at the receiver. This is called transmit or receive
diversity. Both transmit/receive diversity and transmit spatial
multiplexing are categorized into the space-time coding techniques, which does
not necessarily require the channel knowledge at the transmitter. The other
category is closed-loop multiple antenna technologies, which require channel
knowledge at the transmitter.
Open-wireless Architecture and Software-defined radio (SDR)
One of the key technologies for 4G and beyond is
called Open Wireless Architecture (OWA), supporting multiple wireless air
interfaces in an open architecture platform.
SDR is one form of open wireless
architecture (OWA). Since 4G is a collection of wireless standards, the final
form of a 4G device will constitute various standards. This can be efficiently
realized using SDR technology, which is categorized to the area of the radio
convergence.
History of 4G and pre-4G
technologies
The 4G system was originally envisioned by the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The DARPA selected the distributed
architecture and end-to-end Internet protocol (IP), and believed at an early
stage in peer-to-peer networking in which every mobile device would be both a
transceiver and a router for other devices in the network, eliminating the
spoke-and-hub weakness of 2G and 3G cellular systems. Since the 2.5G GPRS
system, cellular systems have provided dual infrastructures: packet switched
nodes for data services, and circuit switched nodes for voice calls. In 4G
systems, the circuit-switched infrastructure is abandoned and only a packet-switched network is provided,
while 2.5G and 3G systems require both packet-switched and
circuit-switched network nodes, i.e. two
infrastructures in parallel. This means that in 4G, traditional voice calls are
replaced by IP telephony.
·
In 2005, OFDMA transmission
technology is chosen as candidate for the HSOPA downlink,
later renamed 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) air interface E-UTRA.
·
In April 2006, KT started the world's first
commercial mobile WiMAX service in Seoul, South Korea.
·
In mid-2006, Sprint announced that it would invest about US$5 billion in a WiMAX technology
buildout over the next few years ($5.87 billion in real terms). Since that time Sprint
has faced many setbacks that have resulted in steep quarterly losses. On 7 May
2008, Sprint, Imagine, Google, Intel, Comcast, Bright House, and Time Warner announced a
pooling of an average of 120 MHz of spectrum; Sprint merged its Xohm WiMAX division
with Clear wire to form a
company which will take the name "Clear".
·
In February 2007, the Japanese company NTT DoCoMo tested a 4G
communication system prototype with 4×4 MIMOcalled VSF-OFCDM at 100 Mbit/s while moving,
and 1 Gbit/s
while stationary. NTT DoCoMo completed a trial in which they reached a maximum
packet transmission rate of approximately 5 Gbit/s in the downlink with
12×12 MIMO using a 100 MHz frequency bandwidth while moving at
10 km/h, and is planning on releasing the first commercial network in
2010.
·
In September 2007, NTT Docomo
demonstrated e-UTRA data rates of 200 Mbit/s with power consumption below
100 mW during the test.
·
In January 2008, a U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) spectrum auction for the
700 MHz former analog TV frequencies began. As a result, the biggest share
of the spectrum went to Verizon Wireless and the next biggest to
AT&T. Both of these companies have stated their intention of
supporting LTE.
·
In January 2008, EU
commissioner Viviane
Reding suggested re-allocation of 500–800 MHz spectrum for wireless
communication, including WiMAX.
·
On 15 February 2008, Skyworks
Solutions released a front-end module for e-UTRAN.
·
In November 2008, ITU-R established
the detailed performance requirements of IMT-Advanced, by issuing a Circular
Letter calling for candidate Radio Access Technologies (RATs) for IMT-Advanced.
·
In April 2008, just after receiving
the circular letter, the 3GPP organized a workshop on IMT-Advanced where it was
decided that LTE Advanced, an evolution of current LTE standard, will meet or
even exceed IMT-Advanced requirements following the ITU-R agenda.
·
In April 2008, LG and Nortel
demonstrated e-UTRA data rates of 50 Mbit/s while travelling at
110 km/h.
·
On 15 December 2008, San Miguel Corporation, the largest food
and beverage conglomerate in south east Asia, has signed a memorandum of
understanding with Qatar Telecom QSC (Qtel) to build
wireless broadband and mobile communications projects in the Philippines. The joint-venture
formed wi-tribe Philippines, which offers 4G in the country. Around the
same time Globe Telecom rolled out
the first WiMAX service in the Philippines.
·
On 3 March 2009, Lithuania's LRTC
announcing the first operational "4G" mobile WiMAX network in
Baltic states.
·
In December 2009, Sprint began
advertising "4G" service in selected cities in the United States,
despite average download speeds of only 3–6 Mbit/s with peak speeds of
10 Mbit/s (not available in all markets).
·
On 14 December 2009, the first
commercial LTE deployment was in the Scandinavian capitals Stockholm and Oslo by the
Swedish-Finnish network operator TeliaSonera and its Norwegian
brandname NetCom
(Norway). TeliaSonera branded the network "4G". The modem devices on
offer were manufactured by Samsung (dongle
GT-B3710), and the network infrastructure created by Huawei (in Oslo)
and Ericsson (in Stockholm).
TeliaSonera plans to roll out nationwide LTE across Sweden, Norway and Finland.
TeliaSonera used spectral bandwidth of 10 MHz, and single-in-single-out,
which should provide physical layer net bitrates of up to
50 Mbit/s downlink and 25 Mbit/s in the uplink. Introductory tests
showed a TCP throughput of
42.8 Mbit/s downlink and 5.3 Mbit/s uplink in Stockholm.
·
On November 4, 2010, the Samsung Galaxy Craft
offered by MetroPCS is the first commercially available LTE
smartphone.
·
On 6 December 2010, at the ITU World
Radiocommunication Seminar 2010, the ITU stated
that LTE, WiMax and similar
"evolved 3G technologies" could be considered "4G".
·
On 12 December 2010, VivaCell-MTS
launches in Armenia a 4G/LTE
commercial test network with a live demo conducted in Yerevan.
·
In September 2011, all three Saudi
telecom companies STC, Mobily and Zain announced
that they will offer 4G LTE for USB modem dongles, with further development for
phones by 2013.
·
On March 17, 2011, the HTC Thunderbolt offered by
Verizon in the U.S. was the second LTE smartphone to be sold commercially.
·
On 31 January 2012, Thailand's AIS and its subsidiaries DPC under
cooperation with CAT Telecom for
1800 MHz frequency band and TOT for
2300 MHz frequency band launched the first field trial LTE in Thailand
with authorization from NBTC.
·
In February 2012, Ericsson demonstrated mobile-TV over LTE, utilizing the new
eMBMS service (enhanced Multimedia
Broadcast Multicast Service).
·
On 10 October 2012, Vodacom
(Vodafone South Africa) became the first operator in South Africa to launch a
commercial LTE service.
·
In Kazakhstan, 4G LTE was
launched on December 26, 2012 in the entire territory in the frequency bands
1865–1885/1760–1780 MHz for the urban population and in
794-799/835-840 MHz for those sparsely populated
Deployment plans
Africa
Rwanda
As of 11 November
2014 Rwanda became the newest country to begin introducing 4G LTE services in
its capital Kigali after months
of testing.
Kenya
Safaricom, the company with
a 79% share of the market released its 4G network on December 4, 2014 in Nairobi and Mombasa ahead of
rivals Airtel Kenya, yu Mobile
and Orange Kenya.
Morocco
In 2009, Morocco launched Maroc Numeric 2013, an
accelerated plan to position the country among the leading emerging countries
in communications and technology.[65] Discussions
about the introduction of 4G surfaced since 2012 by the National Telecom
Regulatory Agency (ANRT) and the 3 major providers, but licenses and auctions
were delayed until late 2013.
As of November 2014, Maroc Telecom, Meditel and Inwi have already
realised tests over mobile 4G and succeed to reach debits up to 100Mbit/s.
The official launch of 4G is due in early 2015.
On 12 March 2015,
ANRT have reviewed all applications, and accorded 4G licenses to the main
operators.
Algeria
Algérie Télécom
announced the official launch of its new fixed-wireless LTE high-speed
Internet, Tuesday, April 29, 2014. Although the company brands its offer
as 4G, the network is available only through fixed home equipments, the mobile
4G is yet to be launched in late 2015.
Just few days after the announcements, controversies
circulated around the use of the term 4G to describe the offers.
Asia
China
Afghanistan
Telecom giant Etisalat Afghanistan, the first telecom
company to launch 3.75G services in Afghanistan on 19 February, 2013 announced
the commencement of test of its Long-term Evolution (LTE) 4G mobile network.
India
Bharti Airtel launched India's first 4G service,
using TD-LTE technology, in Kolkata on 10 April
2012. On June 2013 prior to the official launch in Kolkata, a group consisting
of China Mobile, Bharti Airtel
and Soft Bank
Mobile came together, called Global TD-LTE Initiative (GTI) in Barcelona, Spain and they
signed the commitment towards TD-LTE standards for the Asian region. It must be
noted that Bharti Airtel's 4G network does not support mainstream 4G phones
such as Samsung Galaxy Note 3, Samsung Galaxy S4 and others.
·
Bharti Airtel 4G services are
available in Kolkata, Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, Visakhapatnam, Madurai, Rourkela,Kochi and Chandigarh region (The
Tricity or Chandigarh region consists of a major city Chandigarh, Mohali and Panchkula). Since May 2015,
Airtel had also partnered with Samsung India to introduce 4G services in Chennai, on a trial
basis.
·
RIL is launching 4G services through its subsidiary, Jio Infocomm. RIL 4G
services are currently available only in Jamnagar, where it is
testing the new TD-LTE technology. Reliance's 4G rollout is planned to start
in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata and expand
to cover 700 cities, including 100 high-priority markets in 2015.
·
Bharti Airtel launched 4G on mobiles
in Bangalore, thus becoming
the first in India to offer such a service on 14th Feb, 2014
·
Bharti Airtel in July 2014, expanded
4G services to many cities in Punjab like Amritsar, Patiala, Hoshiarpur, Ajitgarh,Ludhiana, Jalandhar, Phagwara and Kapurthala. Until July 2014,
Customers in these cities access 4G services through dongles and wifi modems on
Apple iPhone 5S and
5C, XOLO LT 900
and LG G2 (model
D802T).
·
Vodafone India launched its
4G services in Kochi on December
8, 2015 on the 1800 MHz FDD-LTE band (band 3) and plans to expand coverage
to the Bangalore, Kolkata, Delhi and Mumbai circles by
March, 2016.
India uses
2.3 GHz frequency (band 40).
Tikona Digital Networks holds
broadband wireless access spectrum in the 2300 MHz band and is waiting for
the appropriate time and maturity of the 4G ecosystem before making a foray
into the space. Tikona holds 4G spectrum licences in five circles in
northwest India, covering Gujarat, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh (East and West) and
Himachal Pradesh.
Indonesia
During APEC meeting on
October 1–8, 2013 in Bali, Telkomsel will
conduct 4G LTE network trial. Telkomsel 4G LTE network will operate at
1800 MHz frequency. As part of the program it will sell "simPATI LTE
Trial Edition" prepaid SIM card.
Since November 2013, PT Internux, with brand Bolt 4G,
has commercialized LTE 4G service using TDD-LTE. Initially, Bolt 4G is only
available on 2300 MHz covering Jakarta and the surrounding cities.
Kazakhstan
By the end of 2012, the national telecommunication
operator JSC Kazakhtelecom launched 4G services in both Astana and Almaty. It
is expected that by the end of 2013 the service will be available across the
whole country.
Maldives
4G technology was introduced for the 1st time in
Maldives by Ooredoo (formerly known as Wataniya) in April 2013. Currently
serving over 33% of the population in Male, Hulhumale, Villingilli and Maafushi
Island. Ooredoo operates its 4G network in both 700 MHz and 1800 MHz
Middle East
·
Saudi Arabia: In mid-September
2011, Mobily,
announced their 4G LTE networks to be ready after months of testing and
evaluations.
·
Oman: In July
2012, Omantel launched
4G LTE commercially. In February 2013, Nawras launched
4G LTE commercially.
·
UAE: In December
2012, Etisalat announced
the commercial launch of 4G LTE services covering over 70% of country's urban
areas. As of May, 2013 only few areas have been covered.
·
Lebanon: In 2012, Alfa and touch, announced their
4G LTE networks to be ready after months of testing and evaluations. And 4G LTE
was officially launched in April 2013.
·
Qatar: 15 April
2013, Qtel, (now called
Ooredoo) launched its first 4G LTE commercially in Qatar. after that Ooredoo
also launched 4G+. on 3 June 2014 Vodafone Launched 4G in Doha
·
Iran: MTN Irancell launched
Iran's first 4G LTE network in November 2014 shortly
after regulatory's approval.
Pakistan
On 23 April 2014, the government auctioned of 3G and
4G licenses to cellular service providers raising $1.182 billion in
revenues. Zong became the
country's first and only company to win a 4G license. Mobilink and Zong bid for the
‘superior' 10 MHz band, while Telenor and Ufone preferred to
bid on the cheaper 5 MHz band. Although Mobilink,
having acquired the 10 MHz band, qualified for a 4G licence too, they
opted not to go all the way.
On May 2,
2014, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority allowed Warid Telecom to
go public with 4G LTE services. Warid has planned to launch the service.
Philippines
As part of its massive network upgrade, Globe has launched its
4th Generation Long-Term Evolution (4G LTE) network for mobile and broadband.
To date, Globe has completed over 2,700 4G LTE network sites, with the number
expected to rise to over 4000 by the end of 2012.
Smart Communications was the first to roll out the 4G
LTE in the country (Philippines). Over 900 sites served nationwide with partner
establishments. Cherry Mobile was the
first local brand to release LTE ready mobile phone in the Philippines with its
Cherry Mobile W900 LTE and Ultra others are Cosmos Force, their recent Flagship
Cosmos One Plus and the Newly Released Cosmos S2.
South Korea
On July 7,
2008, South Korea announced
plans to spend 60 billion won, or
US$58,000,000, on developing 4G and even 5G technologies, with the goal of
having the highest mobile phone market share by 2012, and the hope of becoming
an international standard.[91]
Sri Lanka
On June 2,
2013, Mobitel launched FD-LTE service in Sri
Lanka.
On January 19,
2014, Sri Lanka Telecom successfully demonstrated and
launched its 4G LTE service.[95]
Thailand
Thailand National
Broadcasting & Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) has earmarked
1.8 GHz and 2.3 GHz spectrum for 4G services. The 1.8 GHz will
be available for auction around the 4th quarter of 2014 when the license for
GSM service on the spectrum will expire. The 2.3 GHz spectrum is currently
held by TOT Corp, a state enterprise. Negotiation on refarming part of the band
is ongoing.
Truemove-H has launched
Thailand's first commercial 4G LTE service on 8 May 2013 using 2100 MHz
Band I.
Operator
|
Frequency ( MHz)
|
1800
|
|
2100, 1800
|
|
2100, 1800
|
Turkmenistan
On 18 September
2013, the national telecommunication operator TM Cell launched 4G
services in Turkmenistan.
Vietnam (2016)
Europe
Austria
In August,
2009 Huawei and T-Mobile introduced
Europe's largest trial LTE network. Both companies set up 60 cells inInnsbruck which have
been in service since July 2009.]
On October 18,
2010, the allocation procedure for 2600 MHz frequency band was
completed. The following figure shows the current allocation for this
frequency band:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
A1 Telekom Austria
|
T-Mobile Austria
|
Orange Austria*
|
Hutchison 3
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×70 MHz
1×50 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2x20 MHz
1x25 MHz |
2x20 MHz
- |
2x10 MHz
- |
2x20 MHz
1x25 MHz |
·
*License holder formerly Orange
Austria, now Hutchison Drei Austria GmbH
A1 Telekom Austria
started the first commercial (FDD-)LTE service in Austria on 19
October 2010. Iniatially A1 Telekom Austria covered Vienna with 49 eNodeB's
and St. Pölten with 3
eNodeB's.
On 28 July 2011,
T-Mobile Austria launched commercial LTE service in Vienna, Linz, Graz and
Innsbruck.
After A1 Telekom
Austria and T-Mobile Austria started their LTE service Austria's smallest
operator 3 introduced
LTE commercially on 18 November 2011.
In March, 2012, A1
Telekom Austria integrated Circuit-switched fallback (CSFB) and launched
the first LTE Smartphone (HTC Velocity 4G) for the Austrian
market.
At the end of
November, 2012, A1 Telekom Austria claims to reach 30% of the Austrian
population with its LTE network. At this time, according to a press release,
800 EnodeB's were used.
At the beginning
of July, 2013, A1 Telekom Austria announced that the company has switched on
their 1000th eNodeB.
At the beginning
of September, 2013, Bregenz, Dornbirn and Lustenau are
covered by A1 Telekom Austria LTE.
On 7 October 2013,
T-Mobile Austria started LTE service for Smartphones. The company also
announced plans for further LTE coverage. Until the end of 2013 parts of the
city Bregenz, Klagenfurt, Salzburg and St.
Pölten will be covered with LTE.
On October 21,
2013, the multiband spectrum auction was completed. The following figure shows
the current allocation for this frequency band
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
A1 Telekom Austria
|
T-Mobile Austria
|
Hutchison 3
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
-
|
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2×35 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×75 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x35 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
At the end of
November, 2013, Huchtison 3 and T-Mobile Austria intent to appeal auction
results.
On 4 December 2013,
according to A1 Telekom Austria Klosterneuburg is
covered with LTE.
International LTE
Roaming: 19. December, 2013, A1 Telekom Austria is the first Austrian operator which
introduced LTE Roaming. The company signed a roaming agreement with Swisscom
following by further countries (planned: Brazil, Canada, Croatia, Germany,
Italy, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Romania, Slovenia, South Africa, South
Korea, Spain, United Kingdom, United States) in 2014. If Customers of A1
Telekom Austria want use LTE abroad they need either a LTE package or one of
their new A1 Go! contract plans, launched in December 2013.
On 28 January
2014, A1 announced commercial service for LTE 800 MHz on more than 200
sites. Austrians largest mobile operator covers currently 45% of the population
with LTE. The company plans to cover more than 50% of the population until the
end of 2014.
On 11 March 2014,
T-Mobile announced top LTE transmission speed raises to 150 Mbit/s.
On 6 May 2014,
Austrian Media announced that Hutchison 3 is waiting for approval to refarm
1800 MHz frequency to go further with LTE deployment.
On 11 June 2014,
A1 added LTE Roaming in Slovenia (Si.mobil).
On 28 June
2011, Belgium's largest telecom
operator Belgacom announced
the roll out of the country's first 4G network.[120] On 3 July
2012 it confirmed the outroll in 5 major cities and announced the commercial
launch to take place before the end of 2012.
On May 21, 2014,
in official press-conference Max Telecom announced
the launch of the first 4G LTE network in Bulgaria in 6 cities - Sofia, Stara Zagora, Sliven, Bansko, Ruse and Pleven.
On November 26,
2015, Telenor Bulgaria announced 4G LTE mobile
technology services to its customers in 53 cities and 2 resorts, starting on
December 1, 2015 with coverage to 56.73% of the country's population. Further
expansion is expected in 2016, including Bulgaria's popular seaside resorts.
Croatia
On 23 March
2012, Hrvatski telekom launched the country's
first commercial 4G network, with coverage in four major cities and plans to
expand to other urban areas.
France
On 22 November
2012, Orange launched the first 4G business plan in Marseille, Lyon, Lille and Nantes. Then, on 29
November 2012, SFR launched 4G in Lyon, extending
to Montpellier. It was the first
4G commercial launch in France.
Germany
After the
multiband spectrum auction (12.04. - 20.05.2010[]) the frequency
allocation in Germany is as follows:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Telekom
|
Vodafone
|
Telefónica O2
|
E-Plus Gruppe
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
-
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×25 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x15 MHz
|
-
|
-
|
2x10 MHz
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×70 MHz
1×50 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2x20 MHz
1x5 MHz |
2x20 MHz
1x25 MHz |
2x20 MHz
1x10 MHz |
2x10 MHz
1x10 MHz |
5 April 2011,
Deutsche Telekom launched LTE service on 800 MHz.
1 July 2011, o2 offers LTE on 800 MHz which is available in several rural communities,
including Oberreichenbach in
theBlack Forest or Zscherben
in Saxony-Anhalt.
3 July 2012,
Deutsche Telekom announced LTE service for the following cities in Baden-Württemberg: Freiburg,
Friedrichshafen, Heidelberg, Heilbronn, Karlsruhe, Mannheim, Pforzheim. Berlin. Bremen. Hesse: Darmstadt,
Hanau, Ludwigshafen. Lower Saxony: Braunschweig,
Celle, Hildesheim, Oldenburg. North Rhine-Westphalia: Gütersloh,
Paderborn, Velbert. Rhineland-Palatinate: Kaiserslautern, Mainz. Saxony: Halle
(Saale). Schleswig-Holstein: Neumünster.Thuringia: Erfurt and Gera.
7 February 2013,
o2 claimed to do the world's first handovers of voice calls from LTE to UMTS
under realistic conditions.[134]
5 September 2013,
Deutsche Telekom announced LTE category 4 with download speed of 150
Mbit/s at the IFA. LTE category 4 or LTE+,
so called by Deutsche Telekom, is available in areas which are covered by the
1800 MHz and 2600 MHz frequency.
15 November 2013,
Telefónica and Vodafone have announced that they are testing LTE-Advanced in the
German cities ofMunich and Dresden.
20 February 2014,
Deutsche Telekom announced 580 Mbit/s data speed during LTE-A trials in Alzey.
5 March
2014, E-Plus started
commercial LTE service in Berlin, Nuremberg and Leipzig
by using the 1800 MHz frequency.
10 March 2014, at
the CeBIT in Hannover Deutsche
Telekom announced the launch of LTE-A with 300 Mbit/s for Q3 in 2014.
International LTE
Roaming: 22 May 2014, Vodafone added LTE Roaming within the Vodafone Group in the
following six European countries. Greece, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal,
Spain and UK. Vodafone also plans to launch LTE Roaming in other countries and
on other networks.
17 June 2014,
Deutsche Telekom announced LTE Roaming for six European countries. (Belgium
(Mobistar), France (Orange), Italy (TIM), Norway (Telenor), Poland (Orange) and
Spain (Orange)) Followed by the UK. The company also plans further agreements
with other operators.
19 August 2014,
Deutsche Telekom announced LTE Roaming for The Netherlands (KPN) and UK (EE).
Ireland
In May 2005, Digiweb,
an Irish wired and wireless broadband company, announced that they had
received a mobile communications license from the Irish telecoms
regulator ComReg.
This service will be issued the mobile code 088 in Ireland and
will be used for the provision of 4G mobile communications. Digiweb
launched a mobile broadband network using FLASH-OFDM technology at
872 MHz.
On November 15,
2012 the Commission for Communications
Regulation (ComReg) announced the results of its multi-band spectrum auction. This
auction awarded spectrum rights of use in the 800 MHz, 900 MHz and
1800 MHz bands in Ireland from 2013 to 2030. The winners of spectrum
were Three Ireland, Meteor, O2 Ireland and Vodafone. All of the
winning bidders in the auction have indicated that they intend to move rapidly
to deploy advanced services.
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Vodafone Ireland
|
Telefónica Ireland
|
Meteor
|
Hutchison 3
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
-
|
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2×35 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×75 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x25 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
On 14 October
2013, Vodafone started their 4G offer (mobile broadband only) in six cities
(Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Galway, Waterford and Kilkenny) and 23 towns (Carlow,
Tralee, Wexford, Middleton, Carrigaline, Mallow, Killarney, Enniscorthy,
Dungarvan, New Ross, Kenmare, Tullow, Kanturk, Bagnelstown, Thomastown,
Millstreet, Bunclody, Newmarket, Dunmanway, Lismore, Rosslare Harbour, Rosslare
Strand and Killorglin) across the country.
On 9 December
2013, Vodafone switched on 4G for Smartphones and turned 4G service in eight
additional towns (Ballincollig, Carrigtohill, Cloyne, Cobh, Enniscorthy,
Fermoy, Gorey, Kinsale) on.
On 27 January
2014, Three launched their 4G network in Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick,
Wexford and Waterford.
Italy
Since the first
half of December 2012, all of Italy's ISP have been offering or have plans to
offer 4G services in some cities:
International LTE
Roaming: From 5 May 2014 customers of TIM are able to use 4G while roaming in
Switzerland on Swisscom and from 14 May 2014 on Orange in Spain. TIM added new
roaming partners in Germany (Telekom) and Hong Kong (CSL) in June 2014.
Greenland
TELE Greenland started LTE
service (800 MHz - Band 20) at the beginning of December 2013.
Luxembourg
Orange and Tango launched LTE
in October 2012. Post Telecom (formerly
LuxGSM) launched LTE in October 2013. All operators are using the
1800 MHz frequency.
International LTE
Roaming: On 24 June 2014 Orange announced LTE Roaming for the following
countries from July 1, 2014: Canada, China, Germany, Greece, Italy, Romania,
South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the UK and the USA.
Republic of Macedonia
T-Mobile introduced 4G in Macedonia at the beginning of
December 2013.
Vip launched LTE
service at the beginning of July 2014.
Malta
4G technology was
introduced in Malta by Vodafone on 9 October 2013.
Netherlands
After the
multiband spectrum auction in Q4-2012 KPN announced
that the deployment of 4G services would start in February 2013 and that
nationwide coverage will be available in Q1 2014.
Vodafone has
launched the 4G network in August 2013, while T-Mobile announced roll-out
in Q4 of 2013. Tele2 will launch their network probably in the same time as
T-Mobile, because they are using site/antenna-sharing.
As of Q1 2014, KPN
is the first network provider that has deployed a nationwide 4G network in the
Netherlands. Vodafone has announced it would reach nationwide coverage in 2014.
As of Q1 2015, Vodafone is claiming national coverage. T-Mobile achieved
nationwide coverage by the end of 2015. Tele2, being a lower-budget provider,
will probably never reach a nationwide coverage. Tele2 will stay a MVNO (i.e.,
Tele2 will buy network capacity) on the T-Mobile network for 2G/3G Services.
Network operator
ZUM's (Ziggo / UPC Mobile) plans remain unknown; only a small 2.6 GHz LTE
network would be required to meet regulatory requirements.
After the
multiband spectrum auction the frequency allocation in the Netherlands is as
follows
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
KPN
|
Vodafone
|
T-Mobile
|
Tele2
|
ZUM
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2x30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
||
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2x35 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
||
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2x70 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x30 MHz
|
||
1900 MHz
|
XXXIII (33)
|
1x35 MHz
|
TDD
|
1x5 MHz
|
1x5.4 MHz
|
1x24.6 MHz
|
||
2100 MHz
|
I (1)
|
2x59,4 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x19.8 MHz
|
2x19.6 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
||
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2x65 MHz
2x65 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2×10 MHz
1×30 MHz |
2x10 MHz
- |
2x5 MHz
1x25 MHz |
2x20 MHz
1x5 MHz |
2x20 MHz
- |
International LTE
Roaming: On 16 February 2014 KPN announced LTE Roaming agreement with Orange in France andTelenor in Norway.
Following by operators in the US, the UK, Russia, Japan, Spain, Austria,
Switzerland, Poland and Saudi Arabia later this month. Brazil and China are
scheduled to be included in March, Germany, Hong Kong, Croatia and Slovenia
will be added in April, and Denmark, Canada and Finland will be included in
June.
Norway
After the
multiband spectrum auction in December 2013.
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Telco Data
|
Telenor
|
TeliaSonera
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2×? MHz
|
FDD
|
2x5 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×? MHz
|
FDD
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
Poland
On 31 August 2011,
Plus (Polkomtel) launched 4G commercially in Poland. The download speed was up
to 100 Mbit/s, while upload speed was up to 50 Mbit/s. On 25 October
2012, download speed was increased to 150 Mbit/s. It uses 1800 MHz
spectrum belonging to CenterNet and Mobyland.
In Poland, the
construction of LTE networks cooperate:
·
Plus (Polkomtel) - CenterNet,
Mobyland, Aero 2, Sferia
·
NetWorkS! - T-Mobile, Orange
·
P4 (PlayMobile)
The following
figure shows the current allocation for this frequency band:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Plus (Polkomtel)
|
T-Mobile
|
Orange
|
P4 (Play)
|
CenterNet
|
Mobyland
|
Aero 2
|
Sferia
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2x30MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
||||||||
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2 x 9,8 MHz
1 x 200 kHz |
2 x 9,8 MHz
1 x 200 kHz |
||||||
2100 MHz
|
5 MHz test
|
||||||||||
2600 MHz
|
XXXVIII (38)
|
TDD
|
1x50 MHz
|
Spectrum auction
LTE800 5x (2x5MHz) and LTE 2600 14x (2x5MHz). Participate in the auction:
Polkomtel, Orange, T-Mobile, P4, Emitel and NetNet.
Portugal
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
MEO
|
Vodafone
|
NOS
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×60 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
Romania
On 31 October
2012, Vodafone has launched
4G tests. Now 4G connectivity is available in several cities: Otopeni,Constanța, Galați, Craiova, Brașov, Bacău, Iași, Cluj-Napoca, Arad and Timișoara.
According to ANCOM the following
spectrum is used for 4G:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
2K Telecom
(granted to RCS-RDS)
|
Vodafone
|
Orange
|
Telekom/
Cosmote
(Telemobil)
|
Unallocated
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2x30 MHz
|
FDD
|
-
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x5MHz
|
1x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2x75 MHz
|
FDD
|
-
|
2x30 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x25 MHz
|
-
|
2600 MHZ
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2x70 MHz
3x15 MHz
|
FDD
TDD
|
-
1x30 MHz
|
-
1x15 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
-
|
2x10 MHz
-
|
2x40 MHz
-
|
International LTE
Roaming: Since mid-May 2014 Orange offers LTE Roaming service which is currently
available in the networks of Orange in Moldova, Poland and Spain and will also
be extended to other networks during 2014.
Russian Federation
Yota launched LTE
service in March 2012.
MegaFon launched LTE
service in April 2012.
MTS launched LTE service in
September 2012.
Vainakh Telecom launched LTE
service in January 2013. Network available in Chechnya.
Beeline launched LTE
service in May 2013.
Rostelecom launched LTE
service in June 2013.
Scandinavia
TeliaSonera started
deploying LTE (branded "4G") in Stockholm and Oslo November 2009 (as
seen above), and in several Swedish, Norwegian, and Finnish cities during 2010.
In June 2010, Swedish television companies used 4G to broadcast live television
from the Swedish Crown Princess's wedding.
Serbia
mts launched 4G service in April
2015, and initially covered the cities of Aranđelovac, Belgrade, Novi Pazar, Novi Sad,Pančevo, Šabac as
well as the Kopaonik mountain resort.]
Telenor Serbia launched 4G
service in March 2015 4G service is currently available in Belgrade, Niš, Novi Sad,Subotica, and the mountain
resorts of Kopaonik and Zlatibor.] Telenor
Serbia announced international 4G roaming. Since June 24, 2015 customers of
Telenor Serbia are able to use 4G network of the Montenegrin operator Telenor
Crna Gora.
VIP Mobile launched 4G
service in March 2015.
Slovakia
After the
multiband spectrum auction the frequency allocation in Slovakia is as
follows:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Orange
|
Slovak Telekom
|
Telefónica Slovakia
|
SWAN
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
-
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×20.4 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x4.8 MHz
|
-
|
2x0.6 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×70 MHz
1×50 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2x30 MHz
- |
2x40 MHz
1x50 MHz |
-
- |
-
- |
Slovenia
After the
multiband spectrum auction in April 2014.
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Si.Mobil
|
Telekom Slovenije
|
Tusmobil
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2×35 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×75 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x30 MHz
|
2x25 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2100 MHz
|
XXXIV (34)
|
1×? MHz
|
TDD
|
2x20 MHz
|
-
|
-
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×70 MHz
1×50 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2x35 MHz
1x25 MHz |
2x35 MHz
1x25 MHz |
-
- |
Spain
On May 9,
2013, Yoigo announced
its service, which will use the 1800 MHz band and offer speeds up to
100Mbit/s, and will first be launched in Madrid on July 19.
On May 13, Orange Espana announced it
will launch its 4G network on 8 July, simultaneously in six of the country's
largest cities: Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Malaga and Murcia. A further
nine cities — Bilbao, Zaragoza, Alicante, Cordoba, A Coruña, Valladolid and
Vigo on the mainland, Palma de Mallorca in the Balearic Islands and Las Palmas
in the Canary Islands — will be live by the end of 2013.[192]
Since 30 May 2013,
4G is available in Spain thanks to Vodafone 4G. According to the company,
services will use 1800 MHz and 2600 MHz spectrum and will offer
download speeds of up to 150Mbit/s and upload speeds of 50Mbit/s.
On week 9, 2014,
during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona Vodafone
tested LTE-A with speed of 540 Mbit/s.
On 11 March 2012,
Vodafone announced LTE service for Castilla La Mancha.
On 12 March 2014,
Vodafone announced LTE service for Logroño.
After the
multiband spectrum auction in July 2011.
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Movistar
|
Orange
|
Vodafone
|
Yoigo
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×60 MHz
|
FDD
|
-
|
2×5 MHz
|
-
|
-
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×74.8 MHz
|
FDD
|
2×20 MHz
|
2×20 MHz
|
2×20 MHz
|
2×10 MHz
2×4.8 MHz |
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
|
2×70 MHz
|
FDD
|
2×20 MHz
|
2×20 MHz
|
2×20 MHz
|
-
|
Switzerland
In September
2010, Swisscom tested LTE
in Grenchen by
using the 2.6 GHz frequency (E-UTRA Band 7). In December 2011 after the LTE field
experiment in Grenchen has become a success the company used the 1.8 GHz
frequency (E-UTRA Band 3) for further testing in Grindelwald, Gstaad, Leukerbad, Montana, Saas-Fee and St. Moritz/Celerina.
After the
multiband spectrum auction (06.02. - 22.02.2012) the frequency
allocation in Switzerland is as follows:
Frequency
|
E-UTRA Band
|
Bandwidth
|
Type of LTE
|
Swisscom
|
Sunrise
|
Orange
|
800 MHz
|
XX (20)
|
2×30 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
900 MHz
|
VIII (8)
|
2×35 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x15 MHz
|
2x5 MHz
|
1800 MHz
|
III (3)
|
2×75 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x30 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2x25 MHz
|
2100 MHz
|
I (1)
|
2×60 MHz
|
FDD
|
2x30 MHz
|
2x10 MHz
|
2x20 MHz
|
2600 MHz
|
VII (7)
XXXVIII (38) |
2×70 MHz
1×50 MHz |
FDD
TDD |
2x20 MHz
1x45 MHz |
2x25 MHz
- |
2x20 MHz
- |
Swisscom announced
on 29 November 2012, commercial service of its category 3 LTE network with maximum speed of
100 Mbit/s. The following frequency range is in service for LTE.
800 MHz, 1800 MHz and 2600 MHz. (E-UTRA Bands 20, 3 und 7) In May 2013 Swisscom upgraded its
LTE network from category 3 to category 4. As of the upgrade the maximum speed has become
150 Mbit/s.
Orange started LTE
on 28 May 2013. The second largest operator was the first who introduced
prepaid LTE in Switzerland. The following frequency range is in service for
LTE. 800 MHz, 1800 MHz and 2600 MHz. (E-UTRA Bands 20, 3 und 7) Orange LTE offers up to
100 Mbit/s. The company will upgrade the maximum speed up to
150 Mbit/s at the end of 2013.
International LTE
Roaming: Swisscom is the first European operator which offers international LTE
Roaming. Since the 21 of June 2013 customers of Swisscom are able to use LTE
network of the South Korean operators SK Telecom and KT. According to
Swisscom Canada (Rogers) and Hong Kong (SmarTone) are the next countries where customers of the former
state-owned company will be able to use LTE roaming.
Sunrise was the last operator in
Switzerland who introduced LTE. Commercial service is available as of 19 June
2013. The smallest operator in Switzerland offers speed
up to 100 Mbit/s. In 2013 Sunrise is using only the 1800 MHz
frequency for LTE service. (E-UTRA Band 3) The operator will use other frequency bands
(800 MHz and 2600 MHz - E-UTRA Bands 7 and 20) in the future as well. Prepaid
customers of Sunrise are able to use LTE with maximum network speed - evenMVNO customer.
Since the
beginning of July 2013 Swisscom prepaid customers are able to enter the LTE
network. Maximum speed depends on the subscribed plan.
On 19 November
2013, Orange and UPC Cablecom announced a
new partnership. Over the next two years, UPC Cablecom will connect more than
1,000 4G masts with top bandwidths of between 1 and 10 Gbit/s.
At the end of
November 2013, Swisscom added new LTE Roaming partners in Asia (Japan: Softbank,
Philippines: Globe Telecom, Singapore: M1), Europe
(France: Bouygues Telecom) and the Middle East (Saudi
Arabia: Mobily).
On 19 December
2013, Swisscom added new LTE Roaming partners in Asia (Hong Kong: China Mobile HK and PCCW) and Europe
(Austria: A1). At this time Swisscom covers nine countries and twelve foreign LTE
networks.
On 22 January
2014, Swisscom added new LTE Roaming partner in Russia (MegaFon).
On 29 January
2014, Sunrise announced 300 Mbit/s LTE trials by using LTE-A carrier aggregation. Commercial
service is planned for Q3 2014.
On 17 Februar
2014, Swisscom added new roaming partners (Canada: Telus,
France: SFR, Hong Kong: Huchison 3,
Norway: Telenor, USA: AT&T) to their LTE
roaming list. The company also mentioned an upcoming Russia operator (MTS) for 3. March 2014.
On 10 June 2014,
Swisscom added for the upcoming World Cup in Brazil new roaming partners among other
countries (Belgium: Belgacom; Brazil: Claro Oi, Vivo; France: Orange; Italy: TIM; Spain: Orange). Further more
Swisscom also announced more LTE Roaming in Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Netherland,
Portugal and Romania.
United Kingdom
In 2009, O2 (a subsidiary of Telefónica Europe) used Slough for testing
the 4G network, with Huawei installing
LTE technology in six masts across the town to allow testing of HD video
conferencing and mobile PlayStation games. On 29 February 2012, UK
Broadband launched the first commercial 4G LTE service in the UK in the London
Borough ofSouthwark In October
2012, MVNO, Abica Limited, announced they were
to trial 4G LTE services for high speed M2Mapplications.
On 21 August 2012,
the United
Kingdom's regulator Ofcom allowed EE, the owner of the Orange and
T-Mobile networks, to use its existing spectrum in the 1,800 MHz band to
launch fourth-generation (4G) mobile services. As part of Ofcom's approval of
the company's roll-out of 4G it was announced on 22 August that 3 had acquired
part of EE's 1,800 MHz spectrum for part of their own 4G network. The
4G service from EE was announced on 11 September 2012 and launched on 30
October initially in 11 cities. The network aims to cover 70% of the UK by
2013 and 98% by 2014.
On 12 November
2012 Ofcom published final regulations and a timetable. for the 4G
mobile spectrum auction. It also launched a new 4G consumer
page, providing information on the upcoming auction and the consumer
benefits that new services will deliver. Ofcom auctioned off the UK-wide 4G
spectrum previously used by the country's analogue television signals in the
800 MHz band as well as in the 2,600 MHz band. On 20 February
2013, the winners of the 4G spectrum auction were announced by Ofcom. The
four major networks, EE, O2, Vodafone and 3, were awarded spectrum along with
Niche Spectrum Ventures Ltd (a subsidiary of BT Group plc).
On 9 July 2013,
Ofcom announced that mobile network operators would be allowed to repurpose
their existing 2G and 3G spectrum, specifically in the 900, 1,800 and
2,100 MHz bands, for 4G services.
Both O2 and
Vodafone launched their 4G networks on 29 August 2013. The 3 network launched
their 4G service in December 2013, initially it was only available to a
selected few thousand customers in London preceding a nationwide rollout in
2014.
LTE MVNE: On 1 April 2014,
Plintron World's largest Multi-Country MVNE Enables Lycamobile to
be in the 4G League in UK. Plintron has completed its LTE core interoperability
with O2 UK, to enable 4G data services.
International LTE
Roaming: AT&T signed LTE roaming agreement with EE on 17 December 2013. EE
announced further LTE roaming agreements with Orange in France and Spain on March
2014. Customers of EE will access the LTE networks of both operators
immediately. The company also announced in a press release that it will extend
its 4G coverage across major roaming destination including the USA, Italy,
Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands by the Summer.
At the beginning
of May 2014, Vodafone added 4G roaming for their Red 4G customers
in Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain.
On 12 June 2014,
Vodafone announced LTE rollout for Belfast over the summer.
The Americas
Canada
Telus and Bell Canada, the major
Canadian cdma One and EV-DO carriers,
have announced that they will be cooperating towards building a fourth
generation (4G) LTE wireless broadband network in Canada. As a transitional
measure, they are implementing 3G UMTS network that
went live in November 2009. Bell Canada claims that its HSPA+ (3G)
network, that it calls 4G, covers 97% of the population as of December 2013.
Brazil
On 27 April
2012, Brazil's telecoms
regulator Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações (Anatel)
announced that the 6 host cities for the 2013 Confederations Cup to be held
there will be the first to have their networks upgraded to 4G.
Mexico
4G technology was
introduced by Telcel on
November 7, 2012. Movistar launched its
4G network on September 22, 2014 and Nextel did on
October 13, 2014.
United States
Verizon Wireless, AT&T, T-Mobile and Sprint Corporation all use 4G LTE. Only Sprint still utilizes WiMAX, but plans to end
its use of WiMax by
2015.
On September 20,
2007, Verizon Wireless announced plans for a joint
effort with the Vodafone Group to
transition its networks to the 4G standard LTE. On December 9, 2008, Verizon
Wireless announced their intentions to build and roll out an LTE network by the
end of 2009. Since then, Verizon Wireless has said that they will start their
roll out by the end of 2010.
Sprint offers a 3G/4G connection plan, currently available in select
cities in the United States. It delivers rates up to 10 Mbit/s. Sprint has
also launched an LTE network in early 2012.
Verizon Wireless has
announced that it plans to augment its CDMA2000-based EV-DO 3G network in
the United States with LTE, and is supposed to complete a rollout of 175 cities
by the end of 2011, two thirds of the US population by mid-2012, and cover the existing 3G
network by the end of 2013. AT&T, along with
Verizon Wireless, has chosen to migrate toward LTE from 2G/GSM and 3G/HSPA by
2011.
Sprint had deployed WiMAX technology which it has labeled 4G as of October
2008. It was the first US carrier to offer a WiMAX phone.
The U.S. FCC is
exploring the possibility of
deployment and operation of a nationwide 4G public safety network which would
allow first responders to seamlessly communicate
between agencies and across geographies, regardless of devices. In June 2010
the FCC released a comprehensive white paper which indicates that the
10 MHz of dedicated spectrum currently allocated from the 1700 MHz spectrum for public safety
will provide adequate capacity and performance necessary for normal
communications as well as serious emergency situations.
International LTE
Roaming: AT&T signed LTE roaming agreement with EE on December 17, 2013.
Oceania
Fiji
Vodafone Fiji started
category 3 LTE service (1800 MHz - Band 3) at the beginning of December
2013.
New Zealand
In New Zealand, the first 4G
network was introduced in parts of Auckland by Vodafone NZ on 28 February 2013 using the 1800 MHz
frequency (Band 3). Vodafone has since expanded coverage to a total of 59
centers.
Moana, a small village by Lake Brunner on the West Coast with only 250 people,
got 4G coverage in May 2013. This was a test of rural broadband services in the
700 MHz range. Vodafone went on to launch 4G in this frequency in Papakura
on July 22, 2014.
The
Vodafone, Spark and 2degrees 4G networks operate
on 1800 MHz (Band 3). Vodafone and Spark have also deployed 4G on
700 MHz (APT Band 28) while 2degrees carries out a trial for this
frequency in Auckland. As of 15 January 2014, Spark has 4G coverage in
Wellington, Christchurch, Auckland, Whitianga and Whangamata.[
2degrees launched
their 4G (band 3) service on June 30, 2014 in parts of Auckland, then
extended coverage to Wellington on September 8, 2014, then Hamilton,
Christchurch, Tauranga before Christmas, and Te Awamutu, Fielding, Levin and
Dunedin in 2015.
Australia
Telstra announced on
15 February 2011, that it intends to upgrade its current Next G network to 4G
with Long Term Evolution (LTE) technology in the central business districts of
all Australian capital cities and selected regional centers by the end of 2011.
Telstra launched
the country's first 4G network (FD-LTE) in September 2011 claiming
"2–100 Mbps" speeds and announced an "aggressive"
expansion of that network in 2012.
Telstra will use a
mixture of 10 MHz and 15 MHz bandwidth in the 1800 MHz band.
Optus have
established a 4G (FD-LTE) network using 10 MHz (out of 15 MHz
available) bandwidth in the 1800 MHz band and added the 2.3 GHz band
for 4G TD-LTE after acquiring Vivid Wireless in 2012.
Vodafone Australia have indicated their roll out
of 4G FD-LTE will use 20 MHz bandwidth and initially support Cat 3 devices
at launch, then quickly move to support Cat 4 devices.
Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) will auction 700 MHz "digital dividend" and
2600 MHz spectrum for the provision of 4G FD-LTE services in April 2013.
Telstra and Optus are expected to participate in both, while Vodafone has
stated it will only participate in the 2600 MHz auction.
On 19 December
2013 Optus claims to set up the world's first TD-LTE Advanced carrier
aggregation network. The company achieved a throughput of 520 Mbit/s, by
combining four 20 MHz channels of the 2300 MHz spectrum band into
80 MHz.
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