MCH

Multast Channel

Physical Layer
Introduced in Rel-8
A downlink transport channel in LTE and NR designed for point-to-multipoint transmission, primarily used for Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service (MBMS). It carries data destined for multiple UEs within a specific area, enabling efficient broadcast/multicast service delivery.

Description

The Multicast Channel (MCH) is a downlink transport channel defined in 3GPP specifications for LTE (E-UTRA) and carried forward into NR for similar purposes. Its primary function is to deliver Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service (MBMS) content to multiple users simultaneously within a designated MBMS service area. As a transport channel, the MCH sits above the physical layer and below the MAC layer in the protocol stack. It is characterized by its point-to-multipoint nature, meaning a single transmission from the network is received by all subscribed UEs in the coverage area, contrasting with unicast channels dedicated to a single UE. This makes it spectrally efficient for popular content like live TV, sports events, or software updates.

In the LTE architecture for MBMS (eMBMS), the MCH is mapped to specific physical layer resources. In the time domain, it uses the Multicast-Broadcast Single Frequency Network (MBSFN) subframes. In these subframes, multiple cells synchronize to transmit identical waveforms, allowing UEs to combine signals from multiple transmitters as a single, stronger signal, effectively creating a large single-frequency network area. This MBSFN operation is crucial for achieving good coverage and signal quality for broadcast services. The MCH carries one or more Multicast Traffic Channels (MTCHs), which are logical channels each dedicated to a specific MBMS service. It also carries the Multicast Control Channel (MCCH), which provides control information necessary for UEs to receive the MTCHs, such as scheduling information and service announcements.

The MAC layer handles the multiplexing of multiple MTCHs and the MCCH onto the MCH. Scheduling of the MCH is semi-static, meaning the allocation of resources (MBSFN subframes) is configured by higher layers (RRC) and remains relatively stable. Within the allocated resources, the MAC uses a specific scheduling structure defined by the MCH Scheduling Information (MSI) transmitted within the MCCH, informing UEs about which subframes carry data for which MTCH. In the physical layer, the data on the MCH undergoes channel coding (Turbo coding in LTE), modulation, and is mapped to the physical resource blocks in the MBSFN subframes. In 5G NR, the concept of multicast/broadcast is supported, and while the term MCH is used in some foundational specs, the NR multicast framework (often referred to as NR Multicast and Broadcast Services) defines new physical channels like the Physical Downlink Shared Channel (PDSCH) with group-common scheduling for multicast, evolving from the LTE-MCH approach.

Purpose & Motivation

The MCH was created to enable efficient mass content delivery over cellular networks, addressing the inefficiency of using multiple unicast streams to deliver the same content (e.g., a live news feed) to many users in the same area. Before dedicated broadcast/multicast channels, networks would have to establish individual bearers for each user, consuming excessive radio and core network resources. The MCH, as part of the MBMS feature set, solves this by allowing a single transmission to serve an unlimited number of users within its coverage area, dramatically improving spectral efficiency for broadcast-type services.

Historically, MBMS was introduced in 3G UMTS, but LTE's eMBMS, with the MCH and MBSFN technology, represented a significant evolution. It provided higher data rates, better coverage through SFN gain, and more flexible service area definitions. The motivation was driven by operator interest in offering mobile TV and content streaming services as a revenue stream, as well as for public safety applications where group communications are vital. The MCH's design with MBSFN subframes allows it to coexist with unicast traffic on the same carrier, providing network deployment flexibility.

In the 5G era, the need for efficient group communication persists for applications like public safety, vehicle-to-everything (V2X) group messaging, live event streaming, and IoT software updates. While NR initially focused on enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), the framework for NR multicast and broadcast, building upon the MCH concept, is being developed to support these new use cases with the improved performance characteristics of 5G, such as lower latency and support for wider bandwidths. The evolution from LTE's MCH to NR's multicast mechanisms addresses the need for more dynamic scheduling and integration with 5G core network service-based architecture.

Key Features

  • Point-to-multipoint downlink transport channel for efficient broadcast/multicast data delivery.
  • Primarily used for Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service (MBMS) in LTE and NR.
  • Utilizes MBSFN (Multicast-Broadcast Single Frequency Network) operation for improved coverage and signal combining.
  • Carries logical channels: Multicast Traffic Channels (MTCH) for user data and Multicast Control Channel (MCCH) for control information.
  • Features semi-static resource allocation configured via RRC signaling.
  • Enables spectral efficiency by serving multiple UEs with a single radio transmission.

Evolution Across Releases

Rel-8 Initial

Introduced the Multicast Channel (MCH) as part of LTE's initial Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service (MBMS) framework. Defined it as a transport channel for MBMS data, utilizing MBSFN subframes. Established the mapping of MTCH and MCCH logical channels onto the MCH.

Enhanced MBMS with the introduction of MBMS on dedicated carriers (MBSFN-only carriers) and improved service continuity and counting procedures, impacting MCH configuration and management.

Further evolved eMBMS for LTE, including enhancements for mission-critical communication (MC-PTT) and TV service improvements, leading to more robust MCH operation and service announcements.

Layed the groundwork for NR multicast and broadcast services. While new NR physical channels are defined, the foundational concept of MCH is referenced, and work began on integrating multicast into the 5G system architecture.

Specified NR Multicast and Broadcast Services (MBS) in detail, defining new procedures and channels. The LTE MCH concept influenced the design, but in NR, multicast data is primarily scheduled on PDSCH with group-common PDCCH, marking an evolution from the dedicated MCH transport channel model.

Defining Specifications

SpecificationTitle
TS 21.905 3GPP TS 21.905
TS 23.468 3GPP TS 23.468
TS 23.795 3GPP TS 23.795
TS 26.881 3GPP TS 26.881
TS 36.212 3GPP TR 36.212
TS 36.300 3GPP TR 36.300
TS 36.302 3GPP TR 36.302
TS 38.889 3GPP TR 38.889