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5G at 60 GHz sets data rate record at 2 Gbps at 300 m, 4 Gbps at 100 m

5G at 60 GHz sets data rate record at 2 Gbps at 300 m, 4 Gbps at 100 m

Technology News |
By Jean-Pierre Joosting



Data rates were 4 Gbps at 100 m and 500 Mbps at 800 m over most scan angles. Initial tests by a leading wireless provider suggest the system can deliver content to eight homes at a time at up to 300 m.

Key highlights of the system include the UC San Diego transmit/receive phased-array chips which feature a noise figure < 6 dB; 42 dBm equivalent isotropic radiated power (EIRP), and scans ±50 degrees with sidelobes < -14 dB (32-element antenna).

The entire phased array consumed 3 to 4 W of DC power in either its transmit (Tx) or receive (Rx) modes. This is due to the high-performance system-on-a-chip (SoC) designs UC San Diego created using the third-generation silicon germanium BiCMOS standard buried collector (SiGe BiCMOS SBC18H3) process from TowerJazz, the global specialty foundry leader.

Keysight hardware and software enabled rapid prototyping of the system, as well as link equalization and state-of-the-art performance measurements at 2 GHz modulation bandwidth. Central hardware elements were the M8195A arbitrary waveform generator, E8267D PSG vector signal generator and DSOS804A high-definition oscilloscope.

A team at the University of California San Diego is using this test setup to characterize the performance of its 32-element phased array at gigabit data rates over distances of 100 to 800 meters. Keysight hardware and software enabled rapid prototyping of the array as well as state-of-the-art performance measurements at 2 GHz modulation bandwidth for 5G communications. Photo courtesy of UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.

UC San Diego used Keysight’s Signal Studio software to define and generate the 60 GHz 802.11ad waveform, which was the basis for development. The 81199A wideband waveform center software helped the team link Tx and Rx, apply digital pre-distortion and improve error vector magnitude (EVM) performance. The team also used the 89600 VSA software to perform demodulation and analysis of advanced signals.

“This is the second time UC San Diego has worked with Keysight to demonstrate high-performing phased-array 5G communication links, now achieving gigabit-per-second speeds at previously unimagined ranges and with extremely low power consumption,” said Gabriel M. Rebeiz, member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, distinguished professor and wireless communications industry chair at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. “Keysight equipment and software, along with the SBC18H3 technology from TowerJazz, have been instrumental to our success.”

The H3 process is part of the TowerJazz Terabit Platform, which includes state-of-the-art 240 GHz SiGe bipolar transistors and CMOS analog devices. With unequalled low noise, the platform is a technology of choice for use at 60 GHz and in high-frequency applications such as radar, optical wireless communication and emerging wireless standards.

Key contributors to the UC San Diego effort were Bhaskar Rupakula and Ahmed Nafe, graduate students in electrical engineering; and Samet Zihir and Tsu-Wei Lin, electrical engineering post-doctoral fellows.

www.keysight.com
www.ece.ucsd.edu and www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu.

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