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IPFS News Link • Technology: Computer Hardware

New technology could fundamentally change future wireless communications

• http://phys.org/news

Radio systems, such as mobile phones and wireless internet connections, have become an integral part of modern life. However, today's devices use twice as much of the radio spectrum as is necessary. New technology is being developed that could fundamentally change radio design and could increase data rates and network capacity, reduce power consumption, create cheaper devices and enable global roaming.

A pioneering team of researchers from the University of Bristol's Communication Systems and Networks research group, have developed a new technique that can estimate and cancel out the interference from one's own transmission, allowing a radio to transmit and receive on the same channel at the same time. This therefore requires only one channel for two-way communication, using half as much spectrum compared to the current technology.

Leo Laughlin, a PhD student from the University's EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) in Communications, together with MSc student Chunqing Zhang, supervisors Professor Mark Beach and Dr Kevin Morris, and industrial mentor, Dr John Haine at u-blox, have designed and built a novel full-duplex transceiver architecture, which combines electrical balance isolation and active radio frequency cancellation. Their prototype can suppress interference by a factor of over 100 million and uses low-cost, small form factor technologies, making it well suited to use in such as smartphones and tablets.

This important change in radio design could offer a range of benefits. In Wi-Fi systems this would double the capacity of a Wi-Fi access point, allowing more users and higher data rates. For cellular systems, full-duplex operation would also deliver increased capacity and data rates, or alternatively the network operators could provide the same total network capacity with fewer base station sites, giving obvious benefits in the cost and environmental impact of running the network.

Leo Laughlin, who is in the first cohort of students in the CDT in Communications, said: "Until now there has been a fundamental unsolved problem with radio communication. Since the is a limited resource, and with network operators paying billions of pounds to access the spectrum, solving this problem would bring us one step closer to the faster, cheaper and greener devices of our connected future."