SC-FDMA

The Power Problem

OFDMA works great for the downlink (tower to phone).

But there’s a problem for the uplink (phone to tower).


When you add many sine waves together, sometimes they all peak at the same moment.


Most of the time:

  • Waves partially cancel out
  • Signal stays moderate

Occasionally:

  • Waves align perfectly
  • Signal spikes way up

This is called high PAPR (Peak-to-Average Power Ratio).


Why Does This Matter?

Your phone’s amplifier must handle the highest peaks without distorting.

Average PowerPeak PowerWhat You Need
1 W10 W10 W amplifier

You’re paying for a 10W amplifier but only using 1W most of the time.


The problem:

  • Amplifier runs inefficiently
  • Wastes power as heat
  • Drains your battery faster

The tower has unlimited power. It doesn’t care.

But your phone runs on a small battery. Every watt matters.


SC-FDMA: The Fix

SC-FDMA = Single Carrier FDMA

Before transmitting, we spread each data symbol across all your assigned subcarriers.


Regular OFDMA:

  • Each symbol sits alone on one subcarrier
  • Waves are independent
  • Can spike when they align

SC-FDMA:

  • Each symbol is smeared across many subcarriers
  • Combined signal behaves like a single smooth wave
  • Much lower peaks

Lower peaks = less power waste = longer battery life.


Where Each Is Used

DirectionTechnologyWhy
Downlink (tower → phone)OFDMATower has power. Maximize efficiency.
Uplink (phone → tower)SC-FDMAPhone has battery. Minimize power waste.

Summary

SC-FDMA spreads data to avoid power spikes, saving battery on the uplink.

OFDMASC-FDMA
PeaksHighLow
PowerMore neededLess needed
Used forDownlinkUplink

This is why LTE uses different technologies for each direction.