Description
Outer Loop Power Control (OLPC) is a critical component of the uplink and downlink power control mechanisms in 3GPP radio access technologies like UMTS (WCDMA), LTE, and NR. It works in conjunction with the faster Inner Loop Power Control (ILPC). While ILPC (or fast power control) operates at a rate of 1500 Hz in UMTS or every subframe in LTE/NR to quickly counteract fading by adjusting power to meet a target SIR, OLPC operates on a much slower timescale, typically on the order of hundreds of milliseconds to seconds.
The primary function of OLPC is to determine the appropriate target SIR (or equivalent metric like SINR target in LTE/NR) for the ILPC. It does this by monitoring the quality of the received data, such as the Block Error Rate (BLER) or Packet Error Rate. The OLPC algorithm, typically residing in the Radio Network Controller (RNC) for UMTS or the base station (eNB/gNB) for LTE/NR, compares the measured BLER against a target BLER set by the radio resource management (RRM) entity based on the required QoS for the service (e.g., 1% for voice, 10% for best-effort data). If the measured BLER is higher than the target, OLPC increases the SIR target, instructing the ILPC to strive for a stronger signal. Conversely, if the BLER is lower than needed, it decreases the SIR target to conserve power and reduce network interference.
This adaptive process ensures that the minimum necessary power is used to achieve the required connection quality, which is vital for network capacity and battery life. In carrier aggregation and dual connectivity scenarios defined in later releases, OLPC becomes more complex, managing power control across multiple component carriers or connection points. The algorithms and parameters for OLPC are specified in detail in the 25.7xx series for UMTS/HSPA and the 38.8xx series for NR, covering various deployment scenarios and physical channels.
Purpose & Motivation
OLPC was developed to address the limitations of relying solely on fast, SIR-based inner loop power control. While ILPC is excellent at compensating for fast fading, it has no inherent knowledge of whether the resulting link quality (BLER) is sufficient or excessive for the service being delivered. A fixed SIR target would be inefficient: set too low, it leads to poor quality and dropped calls; set too high, it wastes transmit power, increases interference to other users, and reduces overall network capacity and battery life.
The purpose of OLPC is to dynamically and autonomously find the optimal SIR target that just meets the required BLER for a given service and radio channel condition. This solves the problem of maintaining consistent service quality (e.g., voice clarity, data throughput) for a mobile user moving through varying environments (from open space to dense urban canyons) without manual network tuning. Its creation was motivated by the need for robust, adaptive radio resource management in CDMA-based systems like UMTS, where interference is the primary capacity limiter, and the principle directly carries over to OFDMA-based LTE and NR for uplink control.
Historically, it enabled WCDMA systems to realize their capacity potential and support mixed services with different QoS requirements on the same carrier. It is a foundational algorithm for achieving one of the key promises of cellular networks: reliable service quality anywhere, while maximizing the number of simultaneous users the network can support.
Classification
Detected Changes Across Releases
from 3GPP Change RequestsSpecific changes extracted from the „Change history“ tables of 3GPP specifications (6 CRs across 4 releases). Complements the general historical overview above with the evidence-based evolution of this function.
Studied in Rel-12, normative work from Rel-16.
In Release 16, enhancements to Outer Loop Power Control (OLPC) were introduced to improve performance for high data rates and bursty traffic scenarios. Specifically, these included rate adaptation for improved power and rate control at high rates, along with more efficient grant handling and improvements for handling scheduled and non-scheduled data during dynamic traffic on the Enhanced Uplink. These changes aimed to optimize uplink coverage and control channel overhead for HSPA operation.
- Approved by plenary – Rel-16 spec under change control TS 38.886
In Release 17, improvements to Outer Loop Power Control (OLPC) were focused on enhancing rate adaptation for improved power and rate control at high data rates, along with improvements to handle dynamic traffic on Enhanced Uplink (EUL) more efficiently. These enhancements included more efficient grant handling and improved handling of scheduled and non-scheduled data and control transmissions during bursty traffic scenarios. Additionally, Release 17 introduced mechanisms to improve EUL coverage for both single Radio Access Bearer (RAB) and various multi-RAB combinations.
In Release 18, improvements to OLPC-related mechanisms focused on enhanced uplink access control during network overload. Specific enhancements included extending the range of wait times in RRC messages and introducing "Access Group" based control policies to prioritize or delay DTCH transmissions from UEs in CELL_FACH or CELL_PCH states. These changes allowed for more granular network control, separating traffic by priority, core network domain, or radio bearer to manage uplink congestion more efficiently.
In Release 19, improvements to Outer Loop Power Control (OLPC) were introduced to support rate adaptation for improved power and rate control at high data rates. The enhancements also focused on improving EUL coverage for both single RAB and multi-RAB combinations. Furthermore, mechanisms were added to reduce uplink control channel overhead for HSPA operation.
- TR 38.787 under change control TS 38.787
Explore further
Broader topics and technologies where OLPC plays a role.
Defining Specifications
3GPP specifications that define or reference OLPC, with the latest known release. Sourced from the 3GPP document catalog — see methodology.
| Specification | Title | Release |
|---|---|---|
| TS 25.700 vc00 | Further Enhanced Uplink (EUL) Study | Rel-12 |
| TS 25.705 vd00 | UMTS Small Data Transmission Enhancements Study | Rel-13 |
| TR 38.785 vh00 | UE radio transmission for enhanced NR sidelink | Rel-17 |
| TR 38.786 vi20 | Technical Report for NR Sidelink Evolution | Rel-18 |
| TS 38.787 vj00 | UE Radio Transmission for Sidelink CA in ITS Band | Rel-19 |
| TR 38.859 vi10 | Technical Report | Rel-18 |
| TR 38.868 vh00 | Optimizations of pi/2 BPSK uplink power in NR | Rel-17 |
| TR 38.886 vg30 | NR V2X UE Radio Transmission & Reception | Rel-16 |