The mobile communication industry and standards organizations have therefore started work on 4G access technologies, such as LTE Advanced. At a workshop in April 2008 in China, 3GPP agreed the plans for work on Long Term Evolution (LTE). A first set of specifications were approved in June 2008. Besides the peak data rate 1
Gb/s as defined by the ITU-R, it also targets faster switching between power states and improved performance at the cell edge. Detailed proposals are being studied within the
working groups. The LTE+ format was first proposed by
NTT DoCoMo of
Japan and has been adopted as the international standard. It was formally submitted as a candidate
4G to
ITU-T in late 2009 as meeting the requirements of the
IMT-Advanced standard, and was standardized by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (
3GPP) in March 2011 as 3GPP Release 10. The work by
3GPP to define a
4G candidate radio interface technology started in Release 9 with the study phase for LTE-Advanced. Being described as a
3.9G (beyond 3G but pre-4G), the first release of LTE did not meet the requirements for
4G (also called
IMT Advanced as defined by the
International Telecommunication Union) such as peak data rates up to 1
Gb/s. The ITU has invited the submission of candidate Radio Interface Technologies (RITs) following their requirements in a circular letter, 3GPP Technical Report (TR) 36.913, "Requirements for Further Advancements for
E-UTRA (LTE-Advanced)." These are based on ITU's requirements for
4G and on operators’ own requirements for advanced LTE. Major technical considerations include the following: • Continual improvement to the LTE radio technology and architecture • Scenarios and performance requirements for working with legacy radio technologies • Backward compatibility of LTE-Advanced with LTE. An LTE terminal should be able to work in an LTE-Advanced network and vice versa. Any exceptions will be considered by
3GPP. • Consideration of recent
World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-07) decisions regarding frequency bands to ensure that LTE-Advanced accommodates the geographically available spectrum for channels above 20 MHz. Also, specifications must recognize those parts of the world in which wideband channels are not available. Likewise, '
WiMAX 2', 802.16m, has been approved by ITU as the
IMT Advanced family. WiMAX 2 is designed to be backward compatible with WiMAX 1 devices. Most vendors now support conversion of 'pre-4G', pre-advanced versions and some support software upgrades of base station equipment from 3G. == Proposals ==