In looking to LTE specifications, with the subcarrier spacing $\Delta f = 15 \textrm{kHz}$,
- for bandwidth $10 \textrm{MHz}$, fft size $N_{fft} = 1024$ that needs a sampling rate $F_s \geq 1024 \times 15\textrm{kHz} = 15.36 \textrm{MHz}$. The useful subcarriers are the 600 centered ones (excluding the DC). There are $1024-600=424$ null subcarriers.
- for bandwidth $20 \textrm{MHz}$, fft size $N_{fft} = 2048$ that needs a sampling rate $F_s \geq 2048 \times 15\textrm{kHz} = 30.72 \textrm{MHz}$. The useful subcarriers are the 1200 centered ones (excluding the DC). There are $2048-1200=848$ null subcarriers.
I want to know what is the objective of band-edge null subcarriers in LTE, or in OFDM ? I have found the photo above in Internet, it seems that these null subcarriers are guard band.
Question 1 : are these null subcarriers really sent over propagation channel ? I mean the occupied bandwidth of LTE in "$10 \textrm{MHz}$" case is really $10 \textrm{MHz}$ or $15 \textrm{MHz}$ ?
Related question, BW of OFDM question, but the answer is still unclear about what is the occupied bandwidth in the shared wireless medium.
Question 2 : if the occupied bandwidth is only $10 \textrm{MHz}$, can other systems use this bandwidth (from subcarrier 300 to 511 and from -300 to -511) ? Is there degradation of its own performance ? Does it cause inteference to LTE data subcarriers ?
Question 3 : if the occupied bandwidth is $15 \textrm{MHz}$, the factor $424/1024 = 41.4 \%$ seems a lot. How is it dimensionned ? Are they "guard band" to allow the side lobe of sinc pulse shaping (from FFT) to vanish ?
For the question 3, I have found this question in stackexchange a related question with the answer
Specifications will often call for some null carriers around the edge of the band (to allow for rolloff in the antialiasing filters in the front end)
Hm, $41.4\%$ seems too much for rolling off, doesn't it ?
Update : my questions are about the band-edge null subcarriers, but one may find interesting information about the DC null carrier in the answer. Note that the DC subcarrier is skipped at OFDM baseband signal generation, i.e. not be used to transmit data. But in wireless environment, there may exist DC carrier to help mobile devices to find the carrier frequency, at least it is true for Downlink LTE (see LTE UE radio TX and RX spec, figure 5.4.2-1).