RACH and BEAM Management 5G NR

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5G/NR RACH -

PRACH
The first question poping up in your mind when you first hear about the word
RACH or RACH Process would be 'Why RACH ?', 'What is the functionality/purpose
of RACH process ?', "Why we need this kind of complicated (looks over-
complicated) ?'.
For sure, it is not for confusing you :), RACH has very important functionality
especially in LTE (and in WCDMA as well). The main purpose of RACH can be
described as follows.
i) Achieve UP link synchronization between UE and eNB
ii) Obtain the resource for Message 3 (e.g, RRC Connection Request)
In most of the communication (especially digital comunication regardless of
whether it is wired or wireless), the most important precondition is to establish the
timing synchronization between the reciever and transmitter. So whatever
communication technology you would study, you would see some kind of
synchronization mechanism that is specially designed for the specific
communication.

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In NR (in LTE and WCDMA as well), the synchronization in downlink (Transmitter = gNB, Reciever =
UE), this synchronization is achieved by the special synchronization channel (special physical signal
pattern). This downlink sync signal gets broadcasted to everybody and it is get transmitted all the
time with a certain interval.
However in Uplink(Transmitter = UE, Reciever = gNB), it is not efficient (actually waste of energy
and causing a lot of interference to other UEs) if UE is using this kind of broadcasting/always-on
synchronization mechanism. You may easily understand this kind of problem. In case of uplink, this
synchronization process should meet following criteria
i) The synchronization process should happen only when there is immediate necessity
ii) The synchronization should be dedicated to only a specific UE
All the complicated/confusing stories in this page is mostly about the process specially designed
mechanism to meet these criteria.

Another purpose of RACH process is to obtain the resource for Msg3 (Message 3). RRC Connection
Request is one example of Msg3 and there are several different types of Msg3 depending on
situation. You would figure out this part in reading through this page and this is not very complicated
to understand.

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G-NR PRACH:
1.PRACH is a channel to carry preamble from UE for UL synchronization.
2.In 5G there are 13 types of preamble format supported.
3.Format 0, Format 1, Format 2,Format 3 ,Format A1,Format A2,Format
A3,Format B1,Format B2,Format B3,Format B4,Format C0,Format C1.
4.Two types of preamble sequences are there in 5G, 839 and
139 depending on PRACH preamble format.
5.There are 64 preambles defined in each time -frequency PRACH
occasion.
6.Following tables are used for different preamble sequence and PRACH
format. sequence 839 are used for format 0,1,2 and 3 and 139 is used for
others.

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When we need RACH ?

There are many situation that triggers RACH process. The list of cases are summarized in
38.300-9.2.6 as follows. The first half of the list(i~iv) is same as in LTE. The second half of
the list would be NR specific. We don't have RRC_INACTIVE state (item v), On-Demand SIB
transmition(item vii) in LTE, we have a primitive types of BeamFormaing /
BeamManagement in LTE but not as sophisticated as in NR(item viii). We do have CA(SCell
addition) in LTE but we don't trigger RACH in any of CA activity in LTE(item vi).

i) Initial access from RRC_IDLE;


ii) RRC Connection Re-establishment procedure;
iii) Handover;
iv) DL or UL data arrival during RRC_CONNECTED when UL synchronisation status is "non-
synchronised";
v) Transition from RRC_INACTIVE;
vi) To establish time alignment at SCell addition;
vii) Request for Other SI
viii) Beam failure recovery.

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Two types of RACH : Contention Based and NonContention Based

Typical 'Contention Based' RACH Procedure is as follows :

i) UE --> NW : RACH Preamble (RA-RNTI, indication for L2/L3 message size)


ii) UE <-- NW : Random Access Response (Timing Advance, T_C-RNTI, UL grant for L2/L3
message)
iii) UE --> NW : L2/L3 message
iv) Message for early contention resolution

Now let's assume that a contention happened at step i). For example, two UEs sent PRACH
.4 In this case, both of the UE will recieve the same T_C-RNTI and resource allocation
at step ii). And as a result, both UE would send L2/L3 message through the same resource
allocation(meaning with the same time/frequency location) to NW at step iii).
What would happen when both UE transmit the exact same information on the exact
same time/frequency location ? One possibility is that these two signal act as
interference to each other and NW decode neither of them.

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In this case, none of the UE would have any response (HARQ ACK) from NW
and they all think that RACH process has failed and go back to step i). The
other possibility would be that NW could successfully decode the message from
only one UE and failed to decode it from the other UE. In this case, the UE with
the successful L2/L3 decoding on NW side will get the HARQ ACK from
Network. This HARQ ACK process for step iii) message is called "contention
resolution" process.

Typical 'Contention Free' RACH Procedure is as


follows :

i) UE <--NW : RACH Preamble


(PRACH) Assignment
ii) UE --> NW : RACH Preamble (RA-RNTI,
indication for L2/L3 message size)
iii) UE <--NW : Random Access Response
(Timing Advance, C-RNTI, UL grant for L2/L3
message)

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PRACH: Overview
 After a cell search, the UE establishes a connection with the cell through a random access
procedure and obtains uplink synchronization.
 PRACH: Used to transmit preamble sequences.
The gNodeB measures the preamble to obtain the transmission delay between the gNodeB and the UE, and informs the
UE of the uplink timing information through the timing advance command.

 PRACH resources:
– Time domain: Time domain position (system frame, subframe, slot, and symbol), duration, and period.
– Frequency domain: Start RB and the number of occupied RBs.
– Code domain: Preamble sequence (root sequence u and cyclic shift parameter v). Each cell has 64 preamble
sequences, which are generated based on the values of u and v.

 The UE is informed of the PRACH resources in the RMSI (SIB1).


5G NR PRACH function, 5G NR PRACH contents, mapping and physical layer processing of
5G NR PRACH (Physical Random Access Channel).

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PRACH Preamble: Basic Format
 The preamble sequence is classified into the long sequence and short sequence according to the preamble sequence lengths.
• The long sequence uses the sequence design in LTE. There are four formats for the long sequence. The maximum cell radius and typical scenarios in
different formats are as follows:
Time Domain
Format Sequence Length Subcarrier Spacing Occupied Bandwidth Maximum Cell Radius Typical Scenarios
Duration
Low speed and high speed,
0 839 1.25 kHz 1.0 ms 1.08 MHz 14.5 km
normal radius
1 839 1.25 kHz 3.0 ms 1.08 MHz 100.1 km Ultra-wide coverage
2 839 1.25 kHz 3.5 ms 1.08 MHz 21.9 km Weak coverage
3 839 5 kHz 1.0 ms 4.32 MHz 14.5 km Ultra-high-speed

• The short sequence is a new format in NR. In 3GPP Release 15, the subcarrier spacing can be {15,30} kHz on the sub-6 GHz band, and can be {16,120}
kHz on the above 6 GHz band.
Time Domain
Format Sequence Length Subcarrier Spacing Occupied Bandwidth Maximum Cell Radius Typical Scenarios
Duration
A1 139 15·2μ (μ=0/1/2/3) 0.14/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 0.937/2μ km small cell
A2 139 15·2μ 0.29/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 2.109/2μ km Normal cell
A3 139 15·2μ 0.43/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 3.515/2μ km Normal cell
B1 139 15·2μ 0.14/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 0.585/2μ km small cell
B2 139 15·2μ 0.29/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 1.054/2μ km Normal cell
B3 139 15·2μ 0.43/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 1.757/2μ km Normal cell
B4 139 15·2μ 0.86/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 3.867/2μ km Normal cell
C0 139 15·2μ 0.14/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 5.351/2μ km Normal Cell
C2 139 15·2μ 0.43/2μ ms 2.16·2μ MHz 9.297/2μ km Normal Cell
PRACH Preamble: Sequence Generation
 ui ( i 1)
j
 ZC sequence generation: xu  i   e LRA
, i  0,1,..., LRA  1
– u: Indicates the root sequence index. The index of the first root sequence of each cell is configured by the gNodeB for the UE. If the first
root sequence is insufficient to generate 64 preambles, the next root sequence is automatically used until 64 preambles are generated.
– LRA indicates the length of the root sequence. The long sequence length is 839, and the short sequence length is 139.

 Cyclic shift: xu ,v (n)  xu ((n  Cv ) mod LRA )


– The cyclic shift Cv is as follows:
vN CS v  0,1,...,  N ZC N CS   1, N CS  0 for unrestricted sets

Cv  0 N CS  0 for unrestricted sets

 f  v, N CS  v  0,1,..., for restricted sets

– Ncs: restrictedSetConfig indicates the basic length of the cyclic shift.


– The length of v is the number of preambles that can be generated by one root sequence.
– unrestricted sets is used in low-speed scenarios. restricted sets is used in high-speed scenarios.

LRA 1 2mn
j
 Extension to the frequency domain: yu ,v (n)  
m 0
xu ,v (m)  e LRA
PRACH Preamble: Time Domain Structure
A1, SCS 15kHz
 The preamble consists of two
parts: A2, SCS 15kHz

– Cyclic prefix (CP) A3, SCS 15 kHz

– Preamble sequence B1, SCS 15 kHz

 Differences in the time domain B2, SCS 15 kHz


of different preamble formats B3, SCS 15 kHz
are as follows:
B4, SCS 15 kHz
– CP length
C0, SCS 15 kHz
– Sequence length
C2, SCS 15 kHz
– GP length
0, SCS 1.25 kHz CP Sequence GP
– Number of sequence repetitions
3, SCS 5 kHz CP Sequence GP

PUSCH, SCS 15 kHz PUSCH

PUSCH, SCS 30 kHz


PRACH: Time Domain Position
 When a UE initiates the random access, the UE sends a preamble on the PRACH.
 The time domain position of the PRACH is determined by the frame number, subframe number, slot number, and
occasion number, as shown in the following figures. Radio frame where the
PRACH
PRACH is located
period

… … … …

Subframe where the


PRACH is located

0 1 2 3 5 6 7 8

PRACH occasion

PRACH
slot
PRACH: Frequency Domain Position
 Frequency position (left) and number of occupied PRBs in frequency domain (right)
Sequence Length PRACH SCS PUSCH SCS PRACH PRBs (From the Perspective of PUSCH)
839 1.25 15 6
839 1.25 30 3
839 1.25 60 2
839 5 15 24
839 5 30 12
839 5 60 6
System 139 15 15 12
bandwidth
Initial BWP 139 15 30 6
139 15 60 3
139 30 15 24
PRACH 139 30 30 12
139 30 60 6
139 60 60 12
139 60 120 6
139 120 60 24
139 120 120 12
Beam Management in 5G NR

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Introduction:

The 5G NR (New Radio) is the latest in the series of 3GPP standards which supports very
high data rate with lower latency compare to its predecessor LTE (4G) technology. 5G NR
supports FR1 and FR2 frequency bands. FR1 is sub-6 GHz, from 450 to 6000 MHz where as
FR2 is mmwave band (from 24.25 GHz to 52.6 GHz).
As the mmwave band uses very high frequency, it leads to propagation loss and other losses.
To compensate for the losses, directional communication is essential at such frequencies.
Antenna arrays with large number of antenna elements make it possible due to smaller
wavelengths. This concept provide beamforming gain to the RF link budget which helps in
compensation of propagation loss. Moreover, large antenna array helps to achieve higher
data rate due to spatial multiplexing technique.
These directional links require accurate alignment of transmitted and received beams. In
order to achieve alignment of beam pair and to have required end to end performance with
desired delay, beam management operations are introduced in the 5G NR. Beam
management operations are essential during Initial Access (i.e. IDLE mode) when UE is not
in connection with gNB and during tracking (i.e. CONNECTED mode) when UE is
exchanging data with the gNB (i.e. network).

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One of the main new features in NR is the support for analog beam-forming, which is foreseen to
be prevailingatmillimeter-wavefrequencies.Forthispurposeanewframeworkcalledbeammanagement
has been developed in order to support analog beam-forming at both the BS and the UE side.
Beam
managementhasbeendefinedin3GPPasasetofLayer1/2procedurestoacquireandmaintainasetof
BSand/orUEbeams26 thatcanbeusedfordownlinkanduplinktransmission/reception[1].Itincludes a
number of features, such as:

1. • Sweeping. Covering an angular sector by sweeping analog beams over the sector.
2. • Measurement. Measuring the quality of different beams.
3. • Reporting. Reporting beam information such as which beams are best and their measured
qualities.
4. • Determination. Selecting one or a few beams out of a number of candidate beams.
5. • Indication. Indicating which beam or beams has been or have been selected for data
transmission.
6. • Switching. Switching to another beam if another beam gets higher quality than the current
beam.
7. • Recovery. Finding a new beam if the current beam cannot maintain a communication link
due to, e.g., blockage.
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Beamforming
Digital vs Analog
● Beamforming - scheduling in time/frequency/spatial (beam- or directional) domain,
○ has to be considered when the scheduling prioritizations and link adaptation decisions are taken

Digital BF
● BF weights attached in frequency domain
(frequency subframe scheduling possible):
○ Different allocation in same symbol can be
beam formed in different directions
Time ○ In one subframe, Control, UL and DL may have
their separate BF

Analog BF
● BF weights attached in time domain:
○ All allocation in same symbol is beam formed in
same direction
○ In one subframe, Control, UL and DL may have
their separate BF
Time ○ the bitrates on the fronthaul interfaces are
reduced compared to digital BF
Beam Management
The beam management is nothing but a procedure
with set of phases like,

(a) Beam sweeping


(b) Beam measurements
(c) Beam determination
(d) Beam reporting
(e) Beam failure recovery

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(a) Beam sweeping:

Beam Sweeping is a technique to transmit the beams in all predefined directions in a burst in a
regular interval. For example, the first step in mobile terminal attach procedure is Initial Access,
which is to synchronize with system and receive the minimum system information broadcast. So
a “SS Block” carries the PSS, the SSS and the PBCH, and it will be repeated in predefined
directions (beams) in time domain in 5ms window, this is called a SS burst, and this SS burst will
be repeated in 20ms periodicity typically. Below diagram illustrates the concept.

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It’s understandable that above illustration of 20 beams based cell
sector coverage diagram (in the previous section) will not have
fixed beams (always on) with reference signals and
synchronization signals, it’s just for visualization. So it’s clear
now a 32 beams Nokia gNB will transmit 32 SS blocks in
different predefined directions (beams) in regular interval, the set
of directions covered by the SS blocks may or may not cover the
entire set of predefined directions available. The maximum
number of predefined directions (beams / SS blocks) in the SS
burst set is frequency dependent, like up to 3 GHz its “4”, from 3
GHz to 6 GHz its “8”, and from 6 GHz to 52.6 GHz its “64”
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(b) Beam measurements / (c) Beam determination:

In IDLE mode the measurement is based on SS (Synchronization Signal), and in


the connected mode it’s based on CSI-RS in DL and SRS in UL. The CSI-RS
measurement window configuration like periodicity and time/frequency offsets
are relative to the associated SS burst. The best beam needs to be searched
periodically, by using the SS and CSI-RS measurement results. Like SS blocks,
CSI-RS will also be covered using beam sweeping technique, considering the
overhead in covering all the predefined directions, CSI-RS will be transmitted
only in the subsets of those predefined directions (beams), based on the
locations of the active mobile terminals.
The SRS in UL is similar to LTE spec, the mobile terminal will transmit the SRS
based on gNB directions and gNB will measure SRS to determine the best UL
beam.
The DL beam is determined by the mobile terminal, the criterion is the beam
should be received with maximum signal strength above a predefined threshold.

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(d) Beam reporting:
In IDLE mode, after the mobile terminal selected a SS block (beam), for that SS block there is
a predefined one or more RACH opportunities with certain time and frequency offset and
direction (special to this SS block only), so that the mobile terminal knows in which transmit
(UL) beam to transmit the RACH preamble. This is a way for mobile terminal to notify the gNB
which one is the best beam. The gNB (transmit/ receive point, TRP) will be indicated to the
mobile terminal in the system information, there is a one to one mapping between beam
sweeping (SS block) blocks. The UE will send PRACH preamble in the UL SS Block
corresponding to the DL SS Block in which the best Signal strength is detected.
Below diagram illustrates the Rx beam to Tx beam mapping during initial access in 5G NR.

In connected mode, the mobile terminal will provide feedback using control channel, in case of link failure and no directions can be recovered
using CSI-RS, the mobile terminal will try to recover the link using the SS bursts.
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Beam failure recovery:

When the mobile terminal is suffering from poor channel condition, it will get it as a beam failure
indication from lower layers. The mobile terminal will request for a recovery by indicating a new SS
block or CSI-RS, this will be done by starting a RACH procedure. The gNB will transmit a DL
assignment or UL grant on the PDCCH to end the beam failure recovery.

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BeamManagementProcedure

Although not explicitly stated in the specifications, downlink beam management has been divided
into three procedures [1]:
• P-1. The purpose of P-1 is to find initial BS Tx beam(s) and possibly also UE Rx beam(s) by
performing a beam sweep over a relatively wide angular sector.
• P-2. This is used for beam refinement of the BS Tx beam(s) by performing a beam sweep in a
more narrow angular sector than in P1.
• P-3. This is used for performing an Rx beam sweep at the UE. In P-3, the BS Tx beam is fixed
during the UE Rx beam sweep.

There are similarities between the procedures and not all procedures are needed. Furthermore, P-2
can be a special case of P-1. An example of how the P-1, P-2, and P-3 procedures can be
performed is schematically illustrated in Fig. 7.14. In P-1, the BS performs a beam sweep over an
angular sector that covers the entire cell by transmitting a unique reference signal in each beam. To
limit the number of beams in such a wide beam sweep the beams could be relatively wide to give
an initial, coarse estimate of the best beam direction. The reference signal could be, e.g., the SSBs
during initial access
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or a periodic CSI-RS transmission that has been configured for beam management. The UE
measures the power of the received reference signals from all BS Tx beams using a wide Rx
beam and reports to the BS which beam has the highest received power. In P-2, the BS performs
beam refinement by an aperiodic CSI-RS transmission using narrower beams in an angular
sector around the best beam reported by the UE in P-1. The UE measures the power of the
received CSI-RSs from these BS TX beams, still using a wide Rx beam, and it reports to the BS
which of the narrow beams has the highest received power. In P-3, the BS transmits CSI-RS
repeatedly in the best narrow beam reported by the UE in P-2 so that the UE can perform an Rx
beam sweep to find its best Rx beam by measuring the power of the received CSI-RS in each Rx
beam. In the data transmission, the BS uses the best BS Tx beam found during P-2 and the UE
uses the best UE Rx beam found during P-3.
Notethatthisisjustoneexampleofhowtoperformbeammanagementandotherwaysarepossible. For
example, P-1 could be a joint BS Tx/UE Rx beam sweep in which the UE sweeps its Rx beams
for each BS Tx beam. The BS then has to repeat the reference signal transmissions in each BS
Tx beam so that the UE can evaluate different Rx beams for every BS Tx beam. Therefore, this
approach is more costly in terms of reference signaling overhead and beam acquisition time. To
provide robustness against blocking, a UE can be configured to monitor PDCCH on multiple
beam pair links. For example, while data transmission is being performed on an active beam pair
link, the UE can monitor PDCCH on another beam pair as a backup link for swift fallback if there
should be a sudden blockage of the active link.
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Beam management procedures. Schematic illustration of the beam management procedures P-1,
P-2, and P-3.

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Thanks

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