a wireless tipping point, open spectrum implications

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As presented at eComm Europe, October 2009.Are we using radio spectrum efficiently? No. Is this likely to change? Not soon. "Smart" radios have the potential to support much more efficient and productive use of spectrum, but spectrum regulation is a political issue with well established stakeholders. What's more, our limited experiments with commons-based spectrum management have had widely differing results: WiFi, enormous success; UltraWideBand, disappointment.WiFi's success happened in "junk" spectral bands where established players weren't interested. That will be difficult to repeat, but Brough will describe some very simple physical principals of radio propagation which, when combined with the next five years of Moore's law progress in semiconductors, suggest a path forward that's very different from TV white spaces. Indeed, the most important result of regulatory decisions on UltraWideBand and TV white spaces is they validate the concept of secondary access.

TRANSCRIPT

A Wireless Tipping Point, Open Spectrum Implications

Brough Turner

http://www.broughturner.com

2

1920s consumer radio receivers

� Very early tech, i.e. primitive

� Crystal, Regenerative, Tuned RF …

� Poor selectivity, low sensitivity, low stability

Crystal

Tuned RF

Philips 2501

3

Radio Spectrum Occupancy

As measured by Shared Spectrum Company and the

University of Kansas Center for Research for the

NSF National Radio Network Research Testbed (NRNRT)

Urban areas, 30 MHz to 3 GHz. Above 3 GHz mostly vacant.

4

New York City

Unusually heavy communications during Republican National Convention

August 30 to September 3, 2004 brought spectrum occupancy up to 13%.

5

Most spectrum idle most of the time

Dublin Ireland Spectrum Occupancy MeasurementsCollected On April 16-18, 2007Shared Spectrum Company, www.sharedspectrum.com

806 – 928 MHz

6

Most spectrum idle most of the time

Dublin Ireland Spectrum Occupancy MeasurementsCollected On April 16-18, 2007Shared Spectrum Company, www.sharedspectrum.com

806 – 928 MHz

7

Most spectrum idle most of the time

Dublin Ireland Spectrum Occupancy MeasurementsCollected On April 16-18, 2007Shared Spectrum Company, www.sharedspectrum.com

806 – 928 MHz

8

Open Spectrum

� Noise, Interference, Chaos … !

How could it work?

9

Open Spectrum

� Noise, Interference, Chaos … !

How could it work?

� Focus on Receiver Performance

10

Visible light analogy

Our vision system (eyes + visual cortex) = extremely efficient 400-790 THz receiver

� The product of years of evolution!

11

Spatial discrimination

� For Humans:~ 1/60th of a degree

12

Enormous knowledge base

� Detailed catalog of the characteristics of most potential visible light sources

13

Leveraging source motion

to increase received information …

14

1920: Regulation made sense

15

1920: Regulation made sense

� 2009: We’ve come a long way

16

1920: Regulation made sense

� 2009: We’ve come a long way

� Shared use of unlicensed spectrum

� Enormous value creation

17

1920: Regulation made sense

� 2009: We’ve come a long way

� Shared use of unlicensed spectrum

� Enormous value creation

Thermex Thermatron RF Dryers

18

Open spectrum prospects

Regulation � Vested interests

TV White Spaces

� Crippled for now…

19

Open spectrum prospects

Regulation � Vested interests

TV White Spaces

� Crippled for now…

What about higher frequencies?

20

Spectrum Myth

TV Spectrum is “beach front” spectrum

21

Spectrum Myth

TV Spectrum is “beach front” spectrum

� Based on legacy technology, not physics!

� Travels farther – No!

� Goes thru walls – Not that different…

22

Refraction and reflections

More at shorter wavelengths

� Multiple versions � “Multipath”

23

MIMO: Multiple Input Multiple Output

� Multiple paths improve link reliability and increase spectral efficiency (bps per Hz), range and directionality

24

Rich Indoor MIMO Multipath

Source: Fanny Mlinarsky, Octoscope

25

Municipal Multipath Environment

Source: Fanny Mlinarsky, Octoscope

26

TVWS – Beach-front Property?

� MIMO antenna separation >= ½ wavelength

� 2.1 meters at 70 MHz

� 21 cm at 700 MHz

� But

� 2.5 cm for 5.8 GHz Wi-Fi

Wavion NetworksD-Link DAP-2553

27

Multiple radios per chip

Like CPU cores …

� 2x2 MIMO – 2008

� 4x4 MIMO – 2010-11

then

� 8 radios, 16 radios?, …what to use the silicon for?

Beam-forming !

Intel

Fujitsu

AMD

28

Beamforming

2014: >200 Mbps Wi-Fi to >1 Kmat mass market prices ?

4x4 MIMOwith 12-16 antenna elements

29

Beamforming

2014: >200 Mbps Wi-Fi to >1 Kmat mass market prices ?

4x4 MIMOwith 12-16 antenna elements

30

Gaining spectrum for open use

Seeking only “Secondary access”

� No interference with existing users

� Geographic database; Listen-before-talk

� License-exempt stations under positive control of a “lightly” licensed station

31

Wi-Fi 802.11y - 2008

Rich protocol set for “secondary access”

32

Open spectrum

Wireless tipping point ahead

� Focus on spectrum blocks above 3 GHz

� More access at 5 GHz (4.9-6 GHz)

� Anything between 6-10 GHz

� “Secondary use”

� Light licensing – 802.11y protocols

Thank You

Brough Turner

broughturner@gmail.com

rbt@ashtonbrooke.com

34

Credits

� Beyond those noted on individual pages…� Images…� Office building facade: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Beek100

� Laptop icon: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ichibod/

� Microwave oven: http://www.flickr.com/photos/code_martial/

802.11n performance in the field� http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/beamforming-wifi-ruckus,2390.html

� http://www.muniwireless.com/2009/02/23/80211n-dramatically-improves-outdoor-wifi/

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