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April 12, 2007

How TDMA Works

TDMA relies upon the fact that the audio signal has been digitized; that is, divided into a number of milliseconds-long packets. It allocates a single frequency channel for a short time and then moves to another channel. The digital samples from a single transmitter occupy different time slots in several bands at the same time as shown in Figure










The access technique used in TDMA has three users sharing a 30–kHz carrier frequency. TDMA is also the access technique used in the European digital standard, GSM, and the Japanese digital standard, personal digital cellular (PDC). The reason for choosing TDMA for all these standards was that it enables some vital features for system operation in an advanced cellular or PCS environment. Today, TDMA is an available, well-proven technique in commercial operation in many systems.

To illustrate the process, consider the following situation. Figure 3 shows four different, simultaneous conversations occurring.


A single channel can carry all four conversations if each conversation is divided into relatively short fragments, is assigned a time slot, and is transmitted in synchronized timed bursts as in Figure 4. After the conversation in time-slot four is transmitted, the process is repeated
Effectively, the IS–54 and IS–136 implementations of TDMA immediately tripled the capacity of cellular frequencies by dividing a 30–kHz channel into three time slots, enabling three different users to occupy it at the same time. Currently, systems are in place that allow six times capacity. In the future, with the utilization of hierarchical cells, intelligent antennas, and adaptive channel allocation, the capacity should approach 40 times analog capacity
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