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RE: 40 GBit @ 240 GHz across 1 km LoS


From: MailPlus| David Hofstee <david () mailplus nl>
Date: Fri, 17 May 2013 13:51:18 +0200

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1139451&url=http%3A%2F%2Fieeexplore.ieee.org%2Fxpls%2Fabs_all.jsp%3Farnumber%3D1139451
 

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Phil Fagan [mailto:philfagan () gmail com] 
Verzonden: vrijdag 17 mei 2013 13:32
Aan: Eugen Leitl
CC: NANOG
Onderwerp: Re: 40 GBit @ 240 GHz across 1 km LoS

Congrats! How does 240Ghz react to atmospheric conditions other than "clear skys?"
On May 17, 2013 4:17 AM, "Eugen Leitl" <eugen () leitl org> wrote:


Fraunhofer:

http://www.iaf.fraunhofer.de/de/news-medien/pressemitteilungen/presse-
2013-05-16.html

Google Translate:

New world record in data transmission by radio

Press Release 16/05/2013

With a Langstreckendemonstrator between two skyscrapers in Karlsruhe, 
a distance of over a kilometer could already be bridged.  © KIT

The RF chip is only 4 x 1.5 mm2 large, since electronic components 
with the frequency or wavelength scale.

© Fraunhofer IAF

Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State 
Physics IAF and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology KIT, it is able 
to transmit 40 Gb / s at 240 GHz and over a distance of one kilometer 
by radio. With its recent demonstration they have achieved a new world 
record and establish for the first time seamlessly with the capacity 
of fiber to. Such future radio links could close gaps in the provision 
of broadband Internet by the wireless links complement the network of 
hard to reach areas or in rural areas.

Digital, mobile and networked - the changing media usage behavior and 
require progressively increasing faster data transfer rates. The 
expansion of the fiber network in Germany is lagging behind European 
standards, such as the statistics of the industry organization FTTH 
Council Europe show. To lay fiber optic lines is expensive and in the 
case of natural or urban obstacles such as rivers and transport hubs 
difficult. Broadband radio links can help to overcome such critical 
points and so promote the expansion of network infrastructures. In 
rural areas, they provide a cost effective and flexible alternative to 
"Fibre To The Home 'in the expansion of broadband network dar.

In the data transmission by radio researchers have set a new world 
record for the first time fully integrated electronic transmitter and 
receiver are designed for a frequency of 240 GHz, with which the data 
transfer rates up to
40 Gbit s is / possible. This corresponds to the transfer of a full 
DVD in less than a second or 2400 DSL16000 Internet connections. With 
a Langstreckendemonstrator a distance of over a kilometer could 
already be covered, which was built by the Karlsruhe Institute of 
Technology between two skyscrapers in the "Milli Link" project. "We 
have managed to develop a wireless link based on active electronic 
circuits similar to high data rates, such as fiber optic systems, and 
thus a seamless integration of the radio link allows" said Professor 
Ingmar Kallfass, the project initially at Fraunhofer IAF in looking a 
shared professorship - supported by IAF and KIT - coordinated. 
Kallfass since 2013 has been working at the University of Stuttgart, 
where he continued to lead the project.

High frequencies allow fast data transfer

The use of the high frequency range between 200 and 280 GHz not only 
enables the fast transfer of large amounts of data, but also a very 
compact technical structure. Since the dimensions of electronic 
circuits and antennas scalable with frequency or wavelength of the 
transmitter and receiver chip is 4 x
1.5
mm 2 in size. Developed at Fraunhofer IAF semiconductor technology 
based on transistors with high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) 
makes it possible to use the frequency range between 200 and 280 GHz 
with active transmitters and receivers in the form of compact, 
integrated circuits. In this frequency range, the atmosphere has low 
attenuation values, so that broadband radio links are possible. "This 
is our spark gap compared to optical data transmission systems easier 
to align and work in bad weather conditions such as fog or rain," 
explains Jochen antes from the KIT.

So far, radio systems were not yet able to provide the bandwidth of an 
optical fiber directly. That could change in the future, as the test 
shows construction of the project. Such a powerful system possess the 
advantage of the so-called bit transparency, ie, the signal could be 
fed directly to a fiber without energy-intensive recoding in a radio 
link, transmit and re-routed at the other end with a glass fiber. The 
record data from the test set are just the beginning. "With an 
improvement in spectral efficiency through the use of complex 
modulation formats or combination of channels, ie multiplexing, we can 
achieve even higher data rates, 'said Antes is safe.
This could be the expansion of broadband network a boost. Maybe 
Germany will in future no longer lies in Europe compared to the rear 
seats.

About the project

The project "Milli Link" is supported by the German Federal Ministry 
of Education and Research within the funding program "broadband access 
next generation networks" with a total of two million euros. Besides 
the two research institutes Fraunhofer IAF and KIT industry partner 
Siemens AG, Kathrein KG and Radiometer Physics GmbH are involved in 
the project. The aim of the project is the integration of wireless 
links or radio links in broadband optical communication networks in 
order to provide particular to rural areas with fast Internet access. 
Other possible applications include indoor wireless local area 
networks (WLAN), wireless personal area networks (WPAN), and 
intra-machine and board-to-board communication.

Milli link Langstreckendemonstrator (print quality) 
[1.6095294952392578 MB JPG] Milli link radio frequency chip (print 
quality) [1.7061738967895508 MB JPG]



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