LTE needs a way to organize time and frequency so millions of users can share the same spectrum. The frame structure is that organizational system.
Think of it like a train schedule. Every train (data packet) needs a specific time slot and platform (frequency). Without this structure, chaos.
The Time Hierarchy
LTE divides time into a nested hierarchy. Each level zooms in further.
Radio Frame: The Big Picture
The radio frame is the largest time unit:
1 Radio Frame = 10 ms
This 10 ms window repeats forever. Everything in LTE is synchronized to this heartbeat.
Subframes: Dividing the Frame
Each radio frame contains 10 subframes:
| Unit | Duration | Count per Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Radio Frame | 10 ms | 1 |
| Subframe | 1 ms | 10 |
Each subframe is the basic scheduling unit. The network decides what to send in each 1 ms subframe.
Time-Slots: Further Division
Each subframe splits into 2 time-slots:
| Unit | Duration | Count per Subframe |
|---|---|---|
| Subframe | 1 ms | 1 |
| Time-slot | 0.5 ms | 2 |
So one radio frame has 20 time-slots total.
OFDM Symbols: The Atomic Unit
Each time-slot contains 7 OFDM symbols (with normal cyclic prefix):
| Unit | Duration | Count per Slot |
|---|---|---|
| Time-slot | 0.5 ms | 1 |
| OFDM Symbol | ~71.4 μs | 7 |
Why 7? It comes from the math:
- Subcarrier spacing = 15 kHz
- Symbol duration = 1/15000 = 66.7 μs
- Add cyclic prefix time, and 7 symbols fit in 0.5 ms
Cyclic Prefix: The Guard Time
Remember the cyclic prefix from OFDM? It’s the guard time that prevents inter-symbol interference from multipath.
LTE offers two options:
Normal Cyclic Prefix
- CP duration: ~5.2 μs (first symbol) / ~4.7 μs (others)
- Symbols per slot: 7
- Use case: Most deployments, small to medium cells
The short guard time means more symbols fit in each slot, giving you higher throughput.
Extended Cyclic Prefix
- CP duration: ~16.7 μs
- Symbols per slot: 6
- Use case: Large cells, mountainous terrain, high multipath environments
The longer guard time wastes more capacity but provides better protection against multipath delay spread.
Rule of thumb: Normal CP handles delay spreads up to ~5 μs. Extended CP handles up to ~17 μs.
The Frequency Dimension
Now the other axis. LTE uses OFDM with a fixed subcarrier spacing:
Subcarrier spacing = 15 kHz
The total bandwidth determines how many subcarriers you get:
| Bandwidth | Usable Subcarriers |
|---|---|
| 1.4 MHz | 72 |
| 5 MHz | 300 |
| 10 MHz | 600 |
| 20 MHz | 1200 |
Resource Block: The Allocation Unit
Here’s the crucial concept. LTE allocates resources in 2D chunks called Resource Blocks (RB).
What’s in a Resource Block?
A Resource Block combines time and frequency:
1 RB = 12 subcarriers × 7 OFDM symbols
Breaking that down:
- 12 subcarriers × 15 kHz = 180 kHz bandwidth
- 7 symbols = 1 time-slot = 0.5 ms duration
- 84 Resource Elements total (12 × 7)
Resource Element: The Smallest Unit
A Resource Element (RE) is the atomic unit:
1 RE = 1 subcarrier × 1 OFDM symbol
This is the smallest addressable unit in LTE. Each RE carries one modulation symbol (QPSK, 16-QAM, or 64-QAM).
How Many Resource Blocks?
The number of RBs depends on your bandwidth:
| Bandwidth | Resource Blocks |
|---|---|
| 1.4 MHz | 6 RBs |
| 5 MHz | 25 RBs |
| 10 MHz | 50 RBs |
| 20 MHz | 100 RBs |
The scheduler assigns RBs to users each subframe. More RBs = more capacity.
FDD vs TDD: Frame Types
LTE supports two duplexing modes that determine how uplink and downlink share the spectrum.
Type 1: FDD (Frequency Division Duplex)
FDD uses separate frequencies for uplink and downlink:
- Uplink and downlink transmit simultaneously
- Requires paired spectrum (two frequency bands)
- All 10 subframes available for each direction
- Most common in LTE deployments
Type 2: TDD (Time Division Duplex)
TDD uses the same frequency for both directions:
- Uplink and downlink take turns in time
- Uses unpaired spectrum (single frequency band)
- Some subframes for DL, some for UL, some special
- Flexible UL/DL ratio based on traffic patterns
Which is Better?
| Aspect | FDD | TDD |
|---|---|---|
| Spectrum | Paired (more expensive) | Unpaired |
| Latency | Lower (simultaneous) | Higher (waiting for turn) |
| Flexibility | Fixed UL/DL ratio | Adjustable ratio |
| Deployment | ~80% of LTE networks | ~20% of LTE networks |
FDD dominates because paired spectrum was historically more available and the constant bandwidth simplifies planning.
Summary: Key Parameters
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Radio frame | 10 ms |
| Subframe | 1 ms |
| Time-slot | 0.5 ms |
| Symbols/slot (Normal CP) | 7 |
| Symbols/slot (Extended CP) | 6 |
| Subcarrier spacing | 15 kHz |
| Resource Block | 12 subcarriers × 7 symbols |
| RB bandwidth | 180 kHz |
The frame structure is LTE’s universal clock. Every device, every tower, every packet follows this timing. It’s what makes coordinated multi-user access possible.