SCCH

Synchronization Control Channel

Physical Layer →
Introduced in R99

SCCH is a logical channel in UMTS and NR that carries synchronization and system control information for initial cell search, timing alignment, and broadcasting essential parameters to enable network access.

Category
Physical Layer
Introduced
R99
Where
Radio Access Network › NG-RAN (5G)
Specifications
7 specs
SCCH Description Purpose Detected Changes Specifications

Description

The Synchronization Control Channel (SCCH) is a downlink logical channel defined within the 3GPP Radio Link Control (RLC) and Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol architectures. It operates at the interface between Layer 2 (Data Link Layer) and Layer 1 (Physical Layer), where it is mapped onto specific physical channels for transmission. In UMTS, it is typically associated with transport channels like the Synchronization Channel (SCH) and Broadcast Channel (BCH). In 5G NR, its functions are integrated into synchronization signal blocks (SSBs) and the Physical Broadcast Channel (PBCH). The channel's primary role is to transport critical system information that is not user-specific but essential for the entire cell.

From an architectural perspective, the SCCH is generated by the RRC layer in the network and processed by the RLC and MAC layers before being passed to the physical layer for transmission. It carries messages related to cell synchronization, such as timing information for frame and slot alignment, and system control information like master information blocks (MIBs) and system information blocks (SIBs) in a broadcast manner. This broadcast mechanism ensures that all User Equipment (UE) within the cell coverage can receive the information simultaneously without dedicated signaling overhead.

The operation of the SCCH is fundamental to the initial access procedure. When a UE powers on or enters a new area, it performs a cell search by scanning for synchronization signals. The information carried on the SCCH enables the UE to achieve time and frequency synchronization with the cell, decode the cell's identity, and acquire the essential system parameters needed to proceed with random access and establish an RRC connection. Without the SCCH, UEs would be unable to synchronize with the network or understand how to access it, making it a cornerstone of cellular network operation.

Purpose & Motivation

The SCCH was introduced to solve the fundamental problem of how User Equipment (UE) discovers, synchronizes with, and acquires essential configuration data from a cellular network in an efficient and standardized manner. Prior to 3GPP standardization, early cellular systems used proprietary methods for synchronization and system information broadcast, which hindered interoperability and seamless mobility. The SCCH provides a unified, logical channel structure to encapsulate this critical control information.

Its creation was motivated by the need for a reliable and low-latency mechanism to broadcast cell-specific parameters to all potential UEs. This broadcast approach is far more efficient than establishing individual signaling connections with each UE for common information. The SCCH ensures that every UE, regardless of its state (idle or connected), has access to the same core network configuration, timing references, and access barring information, which is vital for network stability, load control, and efficient radio resource management.

By decoupling the synchronization and system information function into a dedicated logical channel, 3GPP allowed for greater flexibility in how this information is mapped to physical resources across different radio access technologies (UTRA, E-UTRA, NR). This design supports evolution from 3G to 5G, where the underlying physical signals (e.g., Primary and Secondary Synchronization Signals, PBCH) may change, but the logical need for a Synchronization Control Channel remains constant.

Detected Changes Across Releases

from 3GPP Change Requests

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

Rel-16 1 change

In Release 16, the SCCH function was enhanced through modifications to the Backhaul RLC Channel as specified in the 38.322 series, focusing on the control channel's role in managing system control information within the radio access network's logical resources.

  • CR to 38.322 on Backhaul RLC Channel TS 38.322CR0037
Rel-17 1 change

In Release 17, there were no specific, documented enhancements to the Synchronization Control Channel (SCCH) function itself. The provided Change Request titles and grounding context contain no mention of SCCH, its procedures, or any related technical modifications. The only relevant CR title discusses a correction for a PDCP Control PDU for UDC, which pertains to a different protocol layer and function entirely. Therefore, based solely on the given materials, Release 17 introduced no new SCCH features compared to the previous release.

  • Correction on PDCP Control PDU for UDC feedback TS 38.323CR0105

Explore further

Broader topics and technologies where SCCH plays a role.

Defining Specifications

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

SpecificationTitleRelease
TR 21.905 vj00 3GPP Technical Terms and Definitions Rel-19
TS 25.301 vj00 UE-UTRAN Radio Interface Protocol Architecture Rel-19
TS 25.302 vj00 UTRA Physical Layer Services Rel-19
TS 25.321 vj00 MAC Protocol Specification for UTRAN Rel-19
TS 25.322 vj00 RLC Protocol Specification Rel-19
TS 38.322 vj00 NR Radio Link Control (RLC) Protocol Rel-19
TS 38.323 vj00 Packet Data Convergence Protocol (PDCP) Rel-19