Description
The Access Network (AN) constitutes the critical infrastructure that facilitates wireless connectivity between User Equipment (UE) and the core network in 3GPP systems. It is responsible for managing the radio interface, which includes all functions related to radio transmission and reception. Architecturally, the AN sits between the UE and the core network's control and user plane gateways. Its primary role is to establish, maintain, and release radio bearers, which are logical channels that carry user data and signaling information over the air interface. The AN manages radio resources dynamically, allocates bandwidth, handles power control, and executes handover procedures to ensure seamless mobility as users move between cells.
In 3GPP specifications, the AN is implemented differently across generations but maintains its core purpose. In UMTS (3G), the AN is known as the UTRAN (UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access Network), comprising Node B base stations and Radio Network Controllers (RNCs). For LTE (4G), it is the E-UTRAN (Evolved UTRAN), which simplified the architecture by eliminating the RNC and consolidating its functions into the eNodeB (evolved Node B). In 5G NR, the AN is the NG-RAN (Next Generation Radio Access Network), consisting of gNBs (next-generation Node Bs) and, optionally, ng-eNBs for non-standalone operation with LTE. Each generation's AN implements specific air interface technologies (e.g., WCDMA, OFDMA) and protocols to meet evolving performance requirements.
The AN operates through several key functional components. The Radio Resource Control (RRC) layer manages connection establishment, mobility, and broadcast of system information. The Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) layer handles header compression, ciphering, and integrity protection. The Radio Link Control (RLC) layer manages segmentation, retransmission, and in-sequence delivery. The Medium Access Control (MAC) layer schedules data, manages hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ), and multiplexes logical channels. Finally, the Physical (PHY) layer performs coding, modulation, and the actual transmission over the radio spectrum. Together, these layers ensure reliable, efficient, and secure data transfer over the inherently challenging wireless medium.
The AN's performance directly impacts key network metrics like data throughput, latency, coverage, and capacity. It interfaces with the core network via standardized interfaces: the Iu interface in UMTS, the S1 interface in LTE, and the NG interface in 5G. These interfaces separate control plane signaling (e.g., to the MME or AMF) from user plane data (e.g., to the SGW or UPF). The AN also plays a vital role in network management and optimization, providing measurements and performance data to the Operations Support System (OSS) for monitoring, fault management, and radio network planning. Its design is continuously optimized to support new services, from voice and mobile broadband to massive IoT and ultra-reliable low-latency communications.
Purpose & Motivation
The Access Network exists to bridge the gap between mobile devices and the core network's service infrastructure. Its fundamental purpose is to provide ubiquitous wireless coverage and capacity, enabling mobile communication. It solves the problem of connecting a potentially massive number of geographically distributed, mobile users to a centralized network using a shared, limited, and interference-prone resource: the radio spectrum. Without the AN, mobile devices would have no means to establish a communication link, making cellular networks impossible.
Historically, the evolution of the AN has been driven by the need to support new services with increasing performance demands. Early cellular networks (1G, 2G) focused on circuit-switched voice, requiring ANs that could manage frequency channels and basic handovers. The introduction of packet-switched data with 3G necessitated more complex AN architectures (UTRAN) to handle variable data rates and quality of service (QoS). The shift to all-IP, high-speed data in 4G led to a flattened AN architecture (E-UTRAN) to reduce latency and improve efficiency. Each generation addressed limitations of the previous one: 3G improved data rates over 2G, 4G reduced complexity and latency compared to 3G, and 5G is designed for extreme flexibility to support diverse use cases beyond mobile broadband.
The creation and continuous enhancement of the AN are motivated by the core business of mobile network operators: to deliver reliable, high-quality connectivity services. It addresses technical challenges like signal propagation loss, multipath fading, co-channel interference, and user mobility. By efficiently managing the radio interface, the AN maximizes spectral efficiency (bits per second per Hertz), extends battery life through intelligent power control, and ensures service continuity during movement. It is the most visible and costly part of the network to deploy and maintain, making its design and optimization paramount to the commercial success of any mobile operator.
Key Features
- Radio Resource Management (RRM) for dynamic allocation of spectrum and power
- Mobility Management supporting handovers (intra- and inter-RAT) for seamless connectivity
- Multi-layer protocol stack (RRC, PDCP, RLC, MAC, PHY) for reliable data transmission
- Interfaces to the core network (e.g., S1, NG) separating control and user plane functions
- Support for multiple radio access technologies (e.g., 5G NR, LTE, WCDMA) across generations
- Provision of measurements and data for network operation, administration, and maintenance (OAM)
Evolution Across Releases
Introduced the Access Network (AN) as a formal architectural component within the UMTS framework, specifically as the UTRAN. This initial architecture defined the Node B (base station) and the Radio Network Controller (RNC) as key elements, connected via the Iub interface. It established the fundamental split between the Access Network and the Core Network (CN), with the Iu interface facilitating communication for both circuit-switched and packet-switched domains.
Defining Specifications
| Specification | Title |
|---|---|
| TS 21.905 | 3GPP TS 21.905 |
| TS 22.495 | 3GPP TS 22.495 |
| TS 22.980 | 3GPP TS 22.980 |
| TS 23.110 | 3GPP TS 23.110 |
| TS 23.795 | 3GPP TS 23.795 |
| TS 24.502 | 3GPP TS 24.502 |
| TS 26.091 | 3GPP TS 26.091 |
| TS 26.093 | 3GPP TS 26.093 |
| TS 26.191 | 3GPP TS 26.191 |
| TS 26.193 | 3GPP TS 26.193 |
| TS 26.919 | 3GPP TS 26.919 |
| TS 28.808 | 3GPP TS 28.808 |
| TS 28.841 | 3GPP TS 28.841 |
| TS 29.276 | 3GPP TS 29.276 |
| TS 29.890 | 3GPP TS 29.890 |
| TS 32.102 | 3GPP TR 32.102 |
| TS 32.103 | 3GPP TR 32.103 |
| TS 32.833 | 3GPP TR 32.833 |
| TS 32.899 | 3GPP TR 32.899 |
| TS 33.107 | 3GPP TR 33.107 |
| TS 33.108 | 3GPP TR 33.108 |
| TS 33.401 | 3GPP TR 33.401 |
| TS 33.812 | 3GPP TR 33.812 |
| TS 33.822 | 3GPP TR 33.822 |
| TS 33.853 | 3GPP TR 33.853 |