Description
The Co-Location Test Antenna (CLTA) is a critical component in the 3GPP conformance testing framework for base stations, specifically defined in the 3GPP TS 37.141 (E-UTRA, UTRA and GSM/EDGE Multi-Standard Radio (MSR) Base Station (BS) conformance testing) and TS 38.141 (NR Base Station (BS) conformance testing) specifications. It is not an antenna used in operational networks but rather a standardized test fixture designed to simulate the worst-case coupling conditions between multiple radio transmitters and receivers when they are installed in close physical proximity within the same base station enclosure or on the same antenna mast. The CLTA's primary function is to create a controlled, repeatable electromagnetic environment that allows test laboratories to verify whether a base station's multiple radio units can operate simultaneously without causing unacceptable levels of interference to each other, which would degrade receiver sensitivity and overall system performance.
The CLTA works by being positioned at a specified, standardized distance and orientation relative to the base station's operational antennas during testing. Its electromagnetic characteristics—including gain pattern, polarization, and impedance—are precisely defined in the 3GPP specifications to ensure consistency across different test houses and equipment manufacturers. During co-location testing, the base station under test operates multiple transceivers simultaneously on different frequency bands or different radio access technologies (such as LTE and NR in a Multi-Standard Radio). The CLTA captures the transmitted signals and feeds them back into the base station's receivers via calibrated coupling paths, simulating the scenario where energy from one transmitter leaks into an adjacent receiver. Test equipment then measures key parameters such as Adjacent Channel Leakage Ratio (ACLR), receiver blocking, and receiver intermodulation to ensure they remain within the strict limits defined by 3GPP.
Architecturally, the CLTA is part of a larger test setup that includes a system simulator, signal generators, spectrum analyzers, and RF switches. The test procedures defined in 3GPP specifications detail exactly how the CLTA must be integrated into this setup. For example, tests might involve transmitting a high-power signal on one carrier while attempting to receive a low-power signal on an adjacent carrier, with the CLTA ensuring the coupling between these paths is representative of real-world co-location scenarios. The CLTA itself may be a physical antenna or, in some conducted test setups, be represented by calibrated cables and attenuators that emulate the antenna's coupling characteristics. Its role is to provide a reference point that eliminates variability in testing, allowing for fair and comparable assessments of base station equipment from different vendors.
Key components of the CLTA concept include the standardized antenna specifications, the defined test geometries (distances and angles relative to the Equipment Under Test), and the comprehensive test cases that cover various co-location scenarios. These scenarios include intra-band co-location (multiple carriers within the same frequency band), inter-band co-location (carriers in different frequency bands), and multi-RAT co-location (e.g., LTE and 5G NR carriers). The CLTA enables verification that a base station's filtering, shielding, and digital interference cancellation techniques are sufficient to maintain performance. This is especially important for modern base stations that support carrier aggregation, massive MIMO, and multi-band operation, where multiple transceivers are densely packed into a single unit. Without such standardized testing, network operators could deploy equipment that suffers from internal interference, leading to dropped calls, reduced data rates, and overall network instability.
Purpose & Motivation
The CLTA was created to address the growing challenge of base station densification and multi-band/multi-RAT deployments in mobile networks. As operators added more frequency bands and radio access technologies to their networks, they increasingly needed to install multiple radio units in the same physical location—either within a single base station cabinet or on the same antenna mast. This co-location creates the risk of electromagnetic interference between the transmitters and receivers of these different units. Even with careful design, energy from a high-power transmitter can leak into an adjacent receiver, desensitizing it and making it unable to detect weak signals from distant user equipment. This problem is particularly acute in base stations supporting carrier aggregation and Multi-Standard Radio (MSR) operation, where multiple transceivers operate simultaneously in close proximity.
Historically, before standardized co-location testing, equipment vendors and operators used ad-hoc methods to assess interference in co-located scenarios. These methods were often inconsistent, making it difficult to compare equipment from different vendors or to guarantee performance in real deployments. The lack of standardization could lead to situations where base stations passed laboratory tests but failed in the field due to unexpected interference patterns. This resulted in costly site re-engineering, performance degradation, and service outages. The 3GPP introduced the CLTA concept to provide a unified, rigorous testing methodology that ensures base stations can operate reliably in real-world co-location conditions.
The CLTA solves these problems by defining a worst-case coupling scenario that all base stations must be tested against. This ensures that any base station conforming to 3GPP specifications will have sufficient isolation between its internal components to prevent performance degradation. For network operators, this means greater confidence when deploying multi-band base stations, knowing that the equipment has been validated under standardized, repeatable conditions. For equipment vendors, it provides clear design targets for filtering, shielding, and linearity. Ultimately, the CLTA contributes to network reliability, spectral efficiency, and user experience by ensuring that the growing complexity of base station hardware does not come at the cost of increased interference and reduced performance.
Detected Changes Across Releases
from 3GPP Change RequestsSpecific changes extracted from the „Change history“ tables of 3GPP specifications (11 CRs across 4 releases). Complements the general historical overview above with the evidence-based evolution of this function.
In Release 15, the Co-Location Test Antenna (CLTA) function was formally introduced as a practical, passive antenna used for conformance testing of AAS Base Station co-location requirements, translating the theoretical co-location reference antenna into a testable setup. The release specified detailed CLTA characteristics and alignment tolerances for in-band and out-of-band testing, particularly for planar antenna array implementations. Furthermore, it established procedures for OTA spurious emissions and blocking tests to protect co-located base stations, relying on the declared worst-case side of the AAS BS for CLTA placement.
In Release 17, the CLTA (Co-Location Test Antenna) function was updated with a revised definition and its applicability was clarified for testing in a General Chamber setup. The release further specified that the CLTA is a practical passive antenna used for conformance testing of co-location requirements like OTA spurious emissions and blocking, translating power levels from the theoretical co-location reference antenna. It also detailed alignment tolerances and that CLTAs are suitable for testing AAS BSs implemented with a planar antenna array.
In Release 18, the CLTA function was updated with a correction to transmitter co-location requirements specifically for bands 87 and 88, as detailed in the change to TS 37.145-2. The release further clarifies that the co-location test antenna (CLTA) is a practical passive antenna used for conformance testing, translating requirements defined for a co-location reference antenna. Its alignment and placement, including declaring the worst-case side of the AAS BS for testing, are governed by specific tolerances and criteria within the specifications.
- (LTE410_Europe_PPDR-Perf) CR to TS 37.145-2 on correction of transmitter co-location requirements for bands 87 and 88 TS 37.145CR0385
In Release 19, the CLTA function was updated with agreements captured in a dedicated Technical Report and saw a simplification of the co-location and co-existence requirement tables for both LTE and NR base station conformance testing. This simplification specifically streamlined the tables detailing these requirements within the core test specifications. Furthermore, the release included a correction regarding the applicability of requirements for different receiver antenna connectors for specific NR uplink performance tests.
- CR to TR 37.941: Rel-19 CLTA-related agreements TS 37.941CR0062
- (TEI19) CR to TS 37.145-2: simplification of co-location and co-existence requirement tables [BDaT_simp_improvement] TS 37.145CR0409
- (TEI19) CR to TS 38-141-2: simplification of co-location and co-existence requirement tables [BDaT_simp_improvement] TS 38.141CR0681
- (NR_cov_enh-Perf)CR for 38.141-2, Correction on applicability of requirements for different receiver antenna connectors for performance requirements for PUSCH with DM-RS bundling for BS type 1-O TS 38.141CR0686
Explore further
Broader topics and technologies where CLTA plays a role.
Defining Specifications
3GPP specifications that define or reference CLTA, with the latest known release. Sourced from the 3GPP document catalog — see methodology.
| Specification | Title | Release |
|---|---|---|
| TS 37.145 vj10 | AAS Base Station Conducted Conformance Testing | Rel-19 |
| TR 37.941 vj20 | RF Conformance Testing Background for Radiated BS Requirements | Rel-19 |
| TS 38.141 vj20 | NR Base Station RF Conformance Testing Part 1 | Rel-19 |