Title :
MultiGigabit millimeter wave communication: System concepts and challenges
Author :
Madhow, Upamanyu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of California, Santa Barbara, CA
fDate :
Jan. 27 2008-Feb. 1 2008
Abstract :
The millimeter wave band from 60-95 GHz offers large swathes of unlicensed and semi-unlicensed spectrum, which may well form the basis for the next revolution in wireless communication, in which wireless catches up with wires.With the rapid scaling of silicon processes, low-cost implementations for radio frequency front-ends are on the horizon. A key challenge now is to parlay these breakthroughs into innovative system concepts. We review three such concepts here.Millimeter wave MIMO: The small carrier wavelength enables spatial multiplexing in line-of-sight environments, potentially resulting in point-to-point outdoor wireless links at optical speeds (40 Gbps) using bandwidths of the order of 5 GHz. Directional multihop networking: Indoor Gigabit wireless links based on 60 GHz unlicensed spectrum are subject to disruption due to line-of-sight blockage by obstacles such as furniture and humans. We show that a multihop architecture with a small number of relays assures full network connectivity. All-digital multiGigabit baseband: Since high-speed analog-to- digital conversion (ADC) is costly and power-hungry, in order to design all-digital baseband processing that can be implemented inexpensively by riding Moore´s law, we must be able to perform signal processing with sloppy ADC. We discuss Shannon-theoretic limits and signal processing challenges in this context.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; analogue-digital conversion; microwave links; radio spectrum management; Moore´s law; Shannon-theoretic limits; all-digital baseband processing; bandwidth 5 GHz; directional multihop networking; frequency 60 GHz to 95 GHz; millimeter wave MIMO; millimeter wave communication; multihop architecture; network connectivity; point-to-point outdoor wireless links; radio frequency front-ends; semi-unlicensed spectrum; signal processing; spatial multiplexing; wireless communication; Baseband; High speed optical techniques; MIMO; Millimeter wave communication; Optical signal processing; Radio frequency; Silicon; Spread spectrum communication; WDM networks; Wireless communication;
Conference_Titel :
Information Theory and Applications Workshop, 2008
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2670-6
DOI :
10.1109/ITA.2008.4601047