What is WiMAX?
WiMAX = Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
Think of it as WiFi’s long-range cousin:
- WiFi: ~100m range, best effort, unlicensed spectrum
- WiMAX: several km range, QoS support, licensed spectrum
WiMAX was designed for metropolitan area networks: city-wide coverage from a single base station.
IEEE 802.16e
The 802.16e standard added mobility support to WiMAX.
Key features:
- Mobile users (not just fixed)
- Handover between base stations
- Power saving modes
This made WiMAX a competitor to cellular (3G/4G), though LTE eventually won.
OFDMA-Based PHY
WiMAX uses OFDMA for its physical layer, the same technology later adopted by LTE.
How it works:
- Spectrum divided into many subcarriers
- Subcarriers grouped into subchannels
- Different subchannels assigned to different users
WiMAX was one of the first mobile broadband systems to use OFDMA.
Scalable Parameters
WiMAX PHY is scalable, adapting to available bandwidth:
| Channel Bandwidth | FFT Size | Subcarrier Spacing |
|---|---|---|
| 1.25 MHz | 128 | 10.94 kHz |
| 5 MHz | 512 | 10.94 kHz |
| 10 MHz | 1024 | 10.94 kHz |
| 20 MHz | 2048 | 10.94 kHz |
Subcarrier spacing stays constant. More bandwidth = more subcarriers, not wider subcarriers.
Frame Structure
WiMAX transmission is organized into frames (typically 5ms).
Each frame contains:
- Downlink (DL) subframe: base station → users
- Uplink (UL) subframe: users → base station
The frame is a 2D grid:
- Horizontal axis: Time (OFDM symbols)
- Vertical axis: Frequency (subchannels)
Frame Components
Preamble:
- First symbol of the frame
- Used for synchronization and channel estimation
FCH (Frame Control Header):
- Contains DL-MAP location info
- Tells users where to find their data
DL-MAP / UL-MAP:
- Maps that tell each user which time-frequency slots are theirs
- DL-MAP: describes downlink allocations
- UL-MAP: describes uplink allocations
Bursts:
- Actual user data
- Each burst = one user’s allocation
- Can use different modulation (QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM)
Subchannelization Modes
WiMAX offers different ways to group subcarriers into subchannels:
PUSC (Partial Usage of Subchannels):
- Subcarriers distributed across the band
- Provides frequency diversity
- Good for mobile users
FUSC (Full Usage of Subchannels):
- All subcarriers used
- Maximum diversity
- Downlink only
AMC (Adaptive Modulation and Coding):
- Adjacent subcarriers grouped together
- Allows channel-aware scheduling
- Good for stationary users with strong signals
PUSC is most common. It handles mobility well by spreading each user’s data across the spectrum.
Adaptive Modulation
WiMAX adapts modulation based on channel conditions:
| Modulation | Bits/Symbol | When Used |
|---|---|---|
| QPSK | 2 | Poor signal (far from base station) |
| 16-QAM | 4 | Medium signal |
| 64-QAM | 6 | Strong signal (close to base station) |
Better signal = higher modulation = more throughput. The system constantly adapts.
Duplexing
WiMAX supports both:
TDD (Time Division Duplex):
- DL and UL share the same frequency
- Take turns in time
- More flexible for asymmetric traffic
- Most common in WiMAX
FDD (Frequency Division Duplex):
- DL and UL use different frequencies
- Simultaneous transmission
- Requires paired spectrum
MIMO Support
WiMAX 802.16e supports MIMO:
- 2x2 and 4x4 configurations
- Spatial multiplexing for throughput
- Space-time coding for reliability
MIMO in WiMAX works the same way as in WiFi and LTE: multiple antennas, multiple streams.
Summary
| Feature | WiMAX 802.16e |
|---|---|
| Multiple Access | OFDMA |
| Bandwidth | 1.25 - 20 MHz (scalable) |
| Frame Duration | ~5 ms |
| Duplexing | TDD or FDD |
| Modulation | QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM (adaptive) |
| MIMO | Up to 4x4 |
| Subchannelization | PUSC, FUSC, AMC |