PCCPCH

Primary Common Control Physical Channel

Physical Layer
Introduced in R99
A downlink physical channel in UMTS (WCDMA) that continuously broadcasts essential system information and serves as a timing reference for the entire cell. It carries the Broadcast Channel (BCH) transport channel, providing cell identity, access parameters, and synchronization signals critical for UE initial search and camp-on procedures.

Description

The Primary Common Control Physical Channel (PCCPCH) is a fundamental physical channel in the UMTS WCDMA air interface. It is a downlink, always-on channel transmitted from every Node B (base station) across its entire cell coverage area. Unlike dedicated channels, it is not power-controlled and is transmitted at a constant power level to ensure reliable reception at the cell edge. Its primary role is to act as the physical layer carrier for the Broadcast Channel (BCH) transport channel, which contains the Master Information Block (MIB) and System Information Blocks (SIBs).

From a physical layer perspective, the PCCPCH has a fixed spreading factor of 256 and uses a specific channelization code (typically the first code in the code tree). It does not carry Transport Format Combination Indicator (TFCI) or Transmit Power Control (TPC) bits, as its format is constant. The channel is transmitted without closed-loop power control, making its reception quality a key indicator of downlink link quality for cell selection and reselection. The PCCPCH is divided into two distinct parts: the Primary Synchronization Channel (P-SCH) and Secondary Synchronization Channel (S-SCH) are time-multiplexed with it, but they are separate physical channels used for initial slot and frame synchronization and scrambling code group identification.

The PCCPCH's operation is central to UE procedures. When a UE powers on or enters a new area, it performs a cell search. It first uses the SCH channels for slot/frame sync and scrambling code group identification. Once synchronized, it demodulates the PCCPCH to read the BCH information. This information includes the cell's scrambling code (allowing definitive identification), the uplink interference level, the access stratum system information, and parameters for random access and other common channels. The PCCPCH Received Signal Code Power (RSCP) and Ec/No (energy per chip to noise ratio) are primary measurements for cell reselection and handover decisions. Essentially, the PCCPCH is the cell's beacon, providing the necessary information and reference for any UE to discover, synchronize with, and evaluate the suitability of the cell.

Purpose & Motivation

The PCCPCH was created as a cornerstone of the WCDMA air interface in UMTS Release 99 to fulfill several critical requirements absent in GSM. In GSM, broadcast information and synchronization were provided by different physical channels (FCCH, SCH, BCCH). WCDMA's spread spectrum technology required a unified, robust physical channel to carry broadcast system information and serve as a stable phase and timing reference for all UEs in the cell.

Its design solved the problem of initial cell acquisition and continuous cell monitoring in a wideband, code-division system. By having a fixed spreading factor and a known channelization code, it simplified the UE's cell search procedure. The constant power transmission allows UEs to make reliable measurements (RSCP, Ec/No) for radio resource management procedures like cell selection/reselection and handover, which are more complex in CDMA than in TDMA-based GSM.

Furthermore, the PCCPCH provides the fundamental timing for the entire cell's downlink transmission. All other downlink physical channels (DPCH, CPICH, etc.) are time-aligned relative to the PCCPCH. This synchronization is crucial for proper operation of the RAKE receiver in the UE and for managing soft handover. Without a stable, always-present primary common channel like PCCPCH, the complexity of UE implementation and network operation in a WCDMA system would be significantly higher, hindering reliable mobility and service continuity.

Key Features

  • Constant power, always-on downlink physical channel for cell-wide broadcast
  • Carries the Broadcast Channel (BCH) transport channel with system information
  • Uses a fixed spreading factor (256) and a primary channelization code
  • Provides the primary timing reference for all downlink transmissions in the cell
  • Serves as the measurement reference for cell selection, reselection, and handover (PCCPCH RSCP/Ec/No)
  • Transmitted without TFCI or TPC bits, as its format is static

Evolution Across Releases

R99 Initial

Introduced as a foundational physical channel in the initial UMTS WCDMA specification. Defined with a fixed structure to carry the BCH, using a spreading factor of 256. It established the cell's primary broadcast and timing reference, enabling UEs to perform initial cell search, acquire system information, and camp on the network.

Defining Specifications

SpecificationTitle
TS 21.905 3GPP TS 21.905
TS 25.101 3GPP TS 25.101
TS 25.133 3GPP TS 25.133
TS 25.141 3GPP TS 25.141
TS 25.224 3GPP TS 25.224
TS 25.402 3GPP TS 25.402
TS 25.430 3GPP TS 25.430
TS 25.433 3GPP TS 25.433
TS 25.874 3GPP TS 25.874
TS 34.124 3GPP TR 34.124
TS 36.124 3GPP TR 36.124
TS 37.105 3GPP TR 37.105
TS 37.145 3GPP TR 37.145