New technology may double radio frequency data capacity

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toastycookies

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A team of Columbia Engineering researchers has invented a technology—full-duplex radio integrated circuits (ICs)—that can be implemented in nanoscale CMOS to enable simultaneous transmission and reception at the same frequency in a wireless radio. Up to now, this has been thought to be impossible: transmitters and receivers either work at different times or at the same time but at different frequencies. The Columbia team, led by Electrical Engineering Associate Professor Harish Krishnaswamy, is the first to demonstrate an IC that can accomplish this. The researchers presented their work at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) in San Francisco on February 25.

"This is a game-changer," says Krishnaswamy. "By leveraging our new technology, networks can effectively double the frequency spectrum resources available for devices like smartphones and tablets."

In the era of Big Data, the current frequency spectrum crisis is one of the biggest challenges researchers are grappling with and it is clear that today's wireless networks will not be able to support tomorrow's data deluge. Today's standards, such as 4G/LTE, already support 40 different frequency bands, and there is no space left at radio frequencies for future expansion. At the same time, the grand challenge of the next-generation 5G network is to increase the data capacity by 1,000 times.


full article @ New technology may double radio frequency data capacity
 

pinballwiz86

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Good. Now we can breathe a little easier about big telecomm trying to steal amateur radio bandwidth.
 

krokus

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This sounds a little difficult to believe. I will have to read the article, when I have a few minutes.

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KC8ESL

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Not good, it'll congest bandwidth for the next 10 years while we deal with legacy devices such as the phone I'm typing on now and the NEW devices that will take up less spectrum but in a different area. Just playing devils advocate here.
 
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