Wireless Interoperability in Microwave Access (WiMax) is a trade name (owned by WiMax Forum, an industry consortium) used for products, services compliant to IEEE 802.16 set of standards, notably, the 802.16d and 802.16e standards. Additionally, the WiMax Forum has published a set of recommendations for core network aspects including mobility, authentication, authorization and accounting among others. These are the stage 2/3 Network specifications authored by the Network Working Group within WiMax Forum.
Figure below shows the overall network architecure in wimax.
The figure indicates the various elements and interfaces defined in the specifications. The 802.16d/e specification is limited to the Air Interface i.e. the R1 interface. IEEE specifies the Physical and Media Access layers for wimax and rest of the interface points/elements are described by the stage 2/3 specifications of the wimax Forum. These specifications also describe the interworking mechanisms/flows with other core networks such as 3G or IMS.
An excellent introduction to the rationale behind wimax indicates the reasons, mainly from Air Interface perspective for the adoption of wimax technology.
The wimax Media Access Control layer is a collection of procedures for transferring a higher layer SDU to its peer layer at the basestation. The following figure illustrates the layers and the Service Access Points (SAPs) within the MAC layer.
The higher layer PDU (ATM/IP) is sent to a convergence sublayer (CS) at the top of the MAC layer. The role of the convergence Sublayer is:
ASB GW is a WiMAX network element providing a Point of connectivity to the Core network. Its provides following macro level functionality:
| Group Name | Members |
| MAC | Ramakrishnan, Rakesh, Ajay Khanna |
| PHY | Rajenish |
| ASN-GW | Mallika, Shivom |
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