EDAB

Extended Dual slot Access Burst

Radio Access Network →
Introduced in Rel-14

EDAB is an enhanced GSM random access burst format that uses two consecutive time slots to increase signal power and duration, improving access success probability in challenging radio conditions.

Category
Radio Access Network
Introduced
Rel-14
Where
Radio Access Network
Specifications
7 specs
EDAB Description Purpose Detected Changes Specifications

Description

The Extended Dual slot Access Burst (EDAB) is a physical layer burst structure defined in GSM specifications for the Random Access Channel (RACH). It is an enhancement over the standard Access Burst (AB), which occupies a single time slot. The EDAB, as the name implies, extends the transmission over two consecutive time slots within a TDMA frame. This is achieved by the Mobile Station (MS) transmitting a specially formatted burst that spans these two slots. The burst structure includes an extended training sequence and guard periods tailored for the dual-slot duration, as detailed in specs like 45.001 and 45.003.

Operationally, when a GSM cell is configured to support EDAB (indicated via broadcast system information), an MS attempting network access—for example, to perform a location update or initiate a call—may use this burst format if it estimates poor radio conditions. The MS calculates its required transmission power and timing advance. If the path loss is very high, exceeding a threshold where a standard AB might not be reliably decoded by the Base Transceiver Station (BTS), the MS can opt to send an EDAB. The use of two slots provides approximately twice the energy for the same peak power, or allows for a more robust modulation pattern, thereby increasing the signal-to-noise ratio at the receiver.

Architecturally, the EDAB impacts both the MS and the BTS. The MS's physical layer must be capable of generating this longer burst format, including the appropriate modulation and power ramping across two slots. The BTS receiver must be equipped to detect and synchronize to these extended bursts on the RACH. The decoding algorithms in the BTS are designed to correlate the longer training sequence, which provides improved resistance to multipath fading and interference. The successful detection of an EDAB grants the MS access to the network, after which it proceeds with standard signaling procedures. EDAB's primary role is to extend the effective coverage radius of a GSM cell, particularly for control plane signaling, ensuring that users at the cell edge or in difficult propagation environments can still attach to the network and request services.

Purpose & Motivation

The Extended Dual slot Access Burst was developed to solve the critical problem of random access failure in large-cell GSM deployments and in environments with severe signal attenuation. Prior to EDAB, the standard Access Burst had a limited link budget. In very large cells (e.g., rural areas) or in deep indoor locations (e.g., basements), the signal from an MS might arrive at the BTS too weak to be detected reliably over the noise and interference on the RACH. This resulted in failed access attempts, repeated retries, increased interference, and ultimately, service denial for users in poor coverage areas.

Introduced in Release 14 as part of GSM evolution for IoT and coverage extension, EDAB was motivated by the need to support Machine-Type Communication (MTC) devices, which are often deployed in challenging radio conditions and require extremely reliable network attachment. The traditional approach to improve coverage was to increase BTS transmit power or deploy more sites, which is costly. EDAB provided a cost-effective solution by enhancing the uplink access signal from the device side, effectively increasing the uplink budget for the initial access procedure without requiring hardware changes at every BTS (only those needing the feature).

It addresses the fundamental asymmetry in cellular link budgets where the downlink (BTS to MS) is typically stronger than the uplink (MS to BTS). By dedicating more time (two slots) to the access attempt, the MS can integrate more energy into the signal, making it more likely to surpass the BTS's detection threshold. This was particularly important for ensuring the success of infrequent but critical signaling events like periodic location updates from IoT sensors. EDAB thus extends the practical coverage of a GSM cell for control signaling, improving accessibility and reliability, which is a key requirement for massive IoT deployments and robust commercial voice services.

Detected Changes Across Releases

from 3GPP Change Requests

Specific changes extracted from the „Change history“ tables of 3GPP specifications (3 CRs across 2 releases). Complements the general historical overview above with the evidence-based evolution of this function.

Studied in Rel-14, normative work from Rel-15.

Rel-15 1 change

In Release 15, the Extended Dual slot Access Burst (EDAB) format was newly introduced for the EC-RACH logical channel. This specific burst format is mandated for use in Coverage Class 5 (CC5) operation to achieve the required uplink coverage extension for EC-GSM-IoT. The network broadcasts which EC-RACH burst format, either Extended Synchronization Access Burst or Extended Dual slot Access Burst, is to be used for CC5 via System Information.

  • Extended-EARFCN related corrections TS 44.018CR1080
Rel-16 2 changes

In Release 16, the specification for the Extended Dual slot Access Burst (EDAB) was refined by removing the brackets from the description of its "tail bits 4" field. This change, along with a similar clarification for the extended training sequence in the EC-GSM-IoT sync burst, provided clearer, unambiguous text for the burst format used by the EC-RACH logical channel to achieve the highest level of extended coverage, specifically for Coverage Class 5 operation.

  • Removal of brackets for extended training sequence of EC-GSM-IoT sync burst TS 45.002CR0222
  • Removal of brackets for “tail bits 4” of EDAB TS 45.002CR0223

Explore further

Broader topics and technologies where EDAB plays a role.

Defining Specifications

3GPP specifications that define or reference EDAB, with the latest known release. Sourced from the 3GPP document catalog — see methodology.

SpecificationTitleRelease
TS 43.064 vj00 GPRS Radio Interface Lower-Layer Functions Rel-19
TS 44.018 vj00 GSM Radio Resource Management Procedures Rel-19
TS 45.001 vj00 GSM Physical Layer Introduction Rel-19
TS 45.002 vj00 GSM/EDGE Radio Physical Layer Specification Rel-19
TS 45.003 vj00 Channel Coding and Multiplexing for GSM/EDGE Rel-19
TS 45.005 vj00 GSM RF Requirements for MS and BSS Rel-19
TS 51.021 vj00 RF test methods and conformance requirements for GSM BSS Rel-19