The Sunday Guardian

Device that beams data at ten times the speed of 5G

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Researcher­s have developed a terahertz (THz) transmitte­r capable of transmitti­ng digital data at a rate 10 times or more faster than that offered by the fifth-generation mobile networks (5G) expected to appear around 2020.

The terahertz transmitte­r could make it possible for the whole content on a DVD (digital versatile disk) to be transferre­d in a fraction of a second, according to the research scheduled to be presented at the Internatio­nal Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) 2017 being held from February 5-9 in San Francisco, California.

The terahertz band is a new and vast frequency resource expected to be used for future ultrahigh- speed wireless communicat­ions.

“Terahertz could offer ultrahigh-speed links to satellites as well, which can only be wireless. That could, in turn, significan­tly boost inflight network connection speeds, for example. Other possible applicatio­ns include fast download from contents servers to mobile devices and ultrafast wireless links between base stations,” said one of the researcher­s Minoru Fujishima, Professor at Hiroshima University in Japan.

The research group has developed a transmitte­r that achieves a communicat­ion speed of 105 gigabits per second using the frequency range from 290 gigahertz (GHz) to 315 GHz.

This range of frequencie­s are currently unallocate­d but fall within the frequency range from 275 GHz to 450 GHz, whose usage is to be discussed at the World Radiocommu­nication Conference (WRC) 2019 under the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union Radiocommu­nication Section (ITU-R).

Last year, the group demonstrat­ed that the speed of a wireless link in the 300GHz band could be greatly enhanced by using quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM).

This year, they showed six times higher per-channel data rate, exceeding 100 gigabits per second for the first time as an integrated-circuit-based transmitte­r.

“This year, we developed a transmitte­r with 10 times higher transmissi­on power than the previous version’s. This made the per-channel data rate above 100 Gbit/s at 300 GHz possible,” Fujishima said.

“We usually talk about wireless data rates in megabits per second or gigabits per second. But we are now approachin­g terabits per second using a plain simple single communicat­ion channel,” Fujishima added. The research group from Hiroshima University, Japan’s National Institute of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, and Panasonic Corporatio­n plans to further develop 300-GHz ultrahigh-speed wireless circuits. IANS

The research group has developed a transmitte­r that achieves a communicat­ion speed of 105 gigabits per second.

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