Gigabit Wireless Communication Look To Keep Pace With Data Demand

Friday, April 11, 2014

Compressive Sensing

 Telecommunications
Gigabit wireless communications could radically enhance the wireless capabilities of future mobile phones and tablets.  Two new research papers demonstrate what some of the implications of this may be. 




T

he demand for data access by mobile users is growing exponentially every year and is predicted to continue into the foreseeable future.  This is pushing service providers to deploy denser networks. Also, since the frequency bands used by 3G and 4G services are close to their capacity limits, there is considerable interest in the use of millimetre wave frequencies for 5G cellular networks.

Gigabit wireless data capacities are 100x better than those achieved with current Wi-Fi technologies.


Now, two research papers, led by Andrew Nix, Professor of Wireless Communication Systems and Dr Simon Armour, Senior Lecturer in Software Radio, from the Bristol University’s Communication Systems and Networks research group in the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, could have significant implications for the future of mobile devices.

The millimetre-wave band (58-63GHz) is seen as a perfect candidate for short-range gigabit wireless communications.  These networks are envisaged to satisfy the demands of future data-rate hungry applications but few studies have analysed the potential of frequency reuse at 60GHz.

The first paper, "Polarimetric filtering for an enhanced multi-user 60GHz WPAN system," on gigabit wireless communications could radically enhance the wireless capabilities of future mobile phones and tablets.  The research looked at enhanced technologies and algorithms to increase the data capacity and densification of short range wireless networks.

The work showed that polarimetric filtering can enable a higher density of active data links. Each millimeter wave link is capable of supporting user rates of up to 7Gbps, with Bristol’s research showing that four simultaneous links could be active in a single room. These data capacities are 100x better than those achieved with current Wi-Fi technologies.

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Djamal Berraki, a PhD student working on the gigabit wireless communications project, has produced a short video to demonstrate the capabilities of the simulator. The video below shows output from the University of Bristol's IEEE 802.11ad (WiGig) simulator. The clip shows the performance of the researchers' adaptive codebook beamforming algorithms in the presence of five moving people.

The second paper, "Application of compressive sensing in sparse spatial channel recovery for beamforming in mmWave outdoor systems," considered beamforming as a solution to provide multi-gigabit connections between the 4G and 5G cellular base stations and the core network. The work also supported direct connections to the users.  Here beamforming is used to focus the communication waveforms onto specific mobile phones and tablets.

At present it is common for the data rates in a cellular network to be limited by the link to the core network (known as backhaul). The research proposed an efficient adaptive beamforming algorithm to extend the range and data rate while also reducing interference. The paper used compressive sensing to significantly reduce the amount of control data needed to adapt the network to temporal and spatial changes in the channel.

Nix said: “Both research papers represent an important contribution in the quest to address the ever increasing user demand for higher data rates and capacities. We are fast running out of radio spectrum in the lower frequency bands where cellular and Wi-Fi current operation. As a result we need to exploit high frequencies in future products.”





SOURCE  University of Bristol

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