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SiBeam, NI, join 5G mmWave exploratory study

SiBeam, NI, join 5G mmWave exploratory study

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By eeNews Europe



The NYU Wireless research centre has announced it will build an advanced programmable platform to rapidly design, prototype, and validate technologies vital for the millimeter wave (mmWave) radio spectrum, which is potentially key to launching the next ultra-high-data-rate generation of wireless communication, or 5G. Funded by a [US] National Science Foundation (NSF) programme that supports exploratory work on potentially transformative research, the platform will be one of the first of its kind available to researchers from academia, government, and industry who are driving the early stages of mmWave technology.

Millimeter wave communication relies on highly directional transmissions; current mmWave prototyping systems use directional horn antennas mounted on mechanically rotatable gimbals. These mechanical systems are too large and slow for mobile applications. The new software-defined radio (SDR) platform will integrate an electrically steerable phased array with no physically moving parts and near-instantaneous steering. Equipment from NYU Wireless affiliate sponsor SiBEAM, a Lattice Semiconductor company, will provide the RF (radio frequency) front end for this testbed. (board, pictured).

Equipment from another affiliate sponsor, National Instruments (NI), will provide a high bandwidth and massive baseband processing system to create mmWave prototypes capable of high data rates and very low latency.

Both SiBEAM and NI will provide engineering support to New York University researchers. As part of the program, support will be provided for the system’s release to other university and industry groups to speed development of mmWave technology.

The mmWave frequencies above 10 GHz are a promising frontier in the quest to greatly expand the capacity in cellular and local area networks to accommodate the increased bandwidth needed in the future. The mmWave spectrum could provide 200 times the capacity of all of today’s cellular spectrum allocations, and 5G is projected to become more than 1,000 times faster than 4G.

“The development of an open-source, powerful SDR platform will greatly speed the development of mmWave systems and allow academic and industry groups to bring design ideas to reality,” said Sundeep Rangan, NYU Wireless director and associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering. “This project was only possible by leveraging the unique expertise of companies such as NI and SiBeam and with crucial support from NSF.” Rangan is the lead researcher for the project, which received approximately $100,000 for equipment as part of the NSF Early-concept Grant for Exploratory Research, more widely known as an EAGER Award.

NI’s LabVIEW system design software has been featured in several high-profile mmWave communications demonstrations. “We are excited to collaborate with leading research institutions and industry partners like NYU Wireless and SiBeam to define 5G,” said James Kimery, director of RF Research and SDR Marketing at NI. “Our software-defined platform based on LabVIEW and PXI is ideal for researching and prototyping cutting-edge technology to achieve faster data rates in the mmWave spectrum.”

SiBeam is active in mmWave RF, and will supply the high gain phase array to the project.

“SiBeam believes that only mmWave spectrum provides sufficient capacity to enable the applications envisaged for 5G services and that electrically steerable phased array antenna technology is fundamental to delivering those services effectively. We are excited to make SiBeam’s technology available to a wider audience through our collaboration with NYU Wireless and National Instruments in this NSF-supported project,” said Sohrab Emami, chief architect at SiBeam.

The first version of the system will operate in the 60 GHz band, which is one of several that the Federal Communications Commission, using input and research from NYU Wireless and others, recently decided to regulate to move mmWave technology toward commercialisation.

National Instruments; www.ni.com

SiBeam; www.sibeam.com

New York University Tandon School of Engineering/ NYU Wireless; https://engineering.nyu.edu

and https://nyuwireless.com

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