HIGH SPEED WIRELESS DATA COVERAGE
Engineers to pioneer unprecedented high speed wireless data coverage
Summary:
A major new international research program is responding to
the overwhelming demand of internet traffic to develop ubiquitous wireless data
coverage with unprecedented speed at millimetre waves.
For the first time in the Internet's
history, the data used by tablets and smartphones now exceeds that of desktops.
Emerging technologies and entertainment such as telemedicine, Internet of
Things (IoT), 4K video streaming, cloud gaming, social networks, driverless
cars, augmented reality and many other unpredictable applications will need
zettabyte (1,000 billions of billions) of wireless data.
Smartphones will continue to work at
microwave frequencies for many years because of microwaves' ability to pass
through barriers. Though due to limitations to the amount of data that can be
transmitted by microwaves, the only way to provide data with very fast download
speeds is through covering urban areas with dense grids of micro, nano and pico
'cells', at microwave frequencies to serve a small number of users per cell.
However, manufacturers and operators
have not yet solved how to feed a huge amount of data to a new maze of cells.
Fibre is too expensive and difficult, if not impossible, to deploy in many
urban areas, due city council permits or disruption.
A desirable solution is a wireless
layer that can provide data at the level of tens of gigabit per second per
kilometre square. It also needs to be flexible and come at a low cost.
Only the millimetre wave
frequencies, 30-300 GHz, with their multi GHz bandwidths, could support tens of
gigabit per second of wireless data rate. Unfortunately, rain can weaken or
block data transmission and other technological limits have so far prevented
the full exploitation of this portion of the spectrum.
The €2.9million European Union's
Horizon 2020 ULTRAWAVE project, led by engineers at Lancaster University, aims,
for the first time, to build technologies able to exploit the whole millimetre
wave spectrum beyond 100 GHz.
The ULTRAWAVE concept is to create
an ultra-capacity layer, aiming to achieve the 100 gigabit of data per second
threshold, which is also flexible and easy to deploy. This layer will be able
to feed data to hundreds of small and pico cells, regardless of the density of
mobile devices in each cell. This would open scenarios for new network
paradigms and architectures towards fully implementing 5G.
The ULTRAWAVE ultra capacity layer
requires significant transmission power to cover wide areas overcoming the high
attenuation at millimetre waves. This will be achieved by the convergence of
three main technologies, vacuum electronics, solid-state electronics and
photonics, in a unique wireless system, enabled by transmission power at multi
Watt level. These power levels can only be generated through novel millimetre
wave traveling wave tubes.
Professor Claudio Paoloni, Head of
Engineering Department at Lancaster University and Coordinator of ULTRAWAVE,
said: "When speeds of wireless networks equal fibre, billions of new rapid
connections will help 5G become a reality. It is exciting to think that the EU
Horizon 2020
ULTRAWAVE project could be a major milestone towards solving one
of the main obstacles to future 5G networks, which is the ubiquitous wireless
distribution of fibre-level high data rates.
existing wireless communication
networks. Imagine crowded areas, such as London's Oxford Street, with tens of
thousands of smartphone users per kilometre that wish to create, and receive
content, with unlimited speed. To meet this demand, ULTRAWAVE will create
European state of the art technologies for the new generation of wireless
networks."
The ULTRAWAVE project sta"The
huge growth in mobile devices and wireless data usage is putting an incredible
strain on our rted on the 1st September 2017 and will be presented to the
public by the Kickoff Workshop at Lancaster University on the 14th September
2017.
Comments
Post a Comment