
Europe
: At the "Mobile Internet 2010" forum held by the German
Ministry of Education and Research on September 14 and 15, Siemens
presented the latest results from its mobile communication research
for the first time to the general public. On a test system, videos
and music as well as a Microsoft NetMeeting conference were transmitted
in wireless mode at data rates of up to 360 megabits per second (Mbps).
This
speed is around one hundred times faster than the fastest DSL connection
available today. To also achieve these peak data rates for larger
coverage areas, Siemens is the first company in the world to test
a combination of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)
and the so-called multi-hop technology, a new infrastructure concept.
The system was already tested successfully in a field trial in the
center of Munich.
"As is the
case in information technology, the transmission speed in radio technology
will also increase exponentially. We expect mobile systems with transmission
speeds of more than 100 megabits per second to be the standard in
about ten years", said Christoph Caselitz, President of Networks
within Siemens mobile. "A look back at the history of mobile
communication shows what long time cycles are required for developing
and standardizing new systems, for identifying new frequency spectrums,
and for regulatory processes like licensing. The first talks about
UMTS started in the late 1980s. It took almost 15 years for the system
to become operational. It's therefore understandable that the first
research efforts for developing mobile communication beyond 3G already
began in the late 1990s."
To transmit data
rates in the hundred-megabit range, the frequency bands which transport
the data as signals through the air need to become increasingly wider,
with carrier frequencies entering into the gigahertz range. Starting
at about three gigahertz, the waves are severely obstructed by buildings
and natural obstacles. The multi-hop concept can increase the signal
coverage area considerably. Wireless but fixed multi-hop stations
- a combination of base station, repeater and router - forward the
signal from cell to cell, also around obstacles, down to the terminal
device when the direct link between base station and mobile terminal
is interrupted.
To make the high-frequency
signals more resistant to interference, Siemens deploys orthogonal
frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). Multiplexing procedures specify
how a transmission medium can be used several fold, for example by
multiple users at the same time. Orthogonal frequency multiplexing
is a special form of frequency multiplexing with which signals are
split over different, closely adjacent carrier frequencies. These
bundles of so-called sub carriers are supplemented by a timed protection
interval so that the generated signal sequence is largely protected
against interference from echoes and multipathing. OFDM represents
a very elegant solution to the problems usually associated with broadband
wireless transmission.