Image : nanopatentsandinnovations
Oct. 15, 2013 —
Extension of cable-based telecommunication networks requires high investments
in both conurbations and rural areas. Broadband data transmission via radio
relay links might help to cross rivers, motorways or nature protection areas at
strategic node points, and to make network extension economically feasible. In
the current issue of the nature photonics magazine, researchers present a
method for wireless data transmission at a world-record rate of 100 gigabits
per second.
In their record experiment,
100 gigabits of data per second were transmitted at a frequency of 237.5 GHz
over a distance of 20 m in the laboratory. In previous field experiments under
the "Millilink" project funded by the BMBF, rates of 40 gigabits per
second and transmission distances of more than 1 km were reached. For their
latest world record, the scientists applied a photonic method to generate the
radio signals at the transmitter. After radio transmission, fully integrated
electronic circuits were used in the receiver.
"Our project focused on
integration of a broadband radio relay link into fiber-optical systems,"
Professor Ingmar Kallfass says. He coordinated the "Millilink"
project under a shared professorship funded by the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied
Solid State Physics (IAF) and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT).
Since early 2013, he has been conducting research at Stuttgart University.
"For rural areas in particular, this technology represents an inexpensive
and flexible alternative to optical fiber networks, whose extension can often
not be justified from an economic point of view." Kallfass also sees
applications for private homes: "At a data rate of 100 gigabits per
second, it would be possible to transmit the contents of a blue-ray disk or of
five DVDs between two devices by radio within two seconds only."
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In the experiments, latest
photonic and electronic technologies were combined: First, the radio signals
are generated by means of an optical method. Several bits are combined by so-called
data symbols and transmitted at the same time. Upon transmission, the radio
signals are received by active integrated electronic circuits.
The transmitter generates the
radio signals by means of an ultra-broadband so-called photon mixer made by the
Japanese company NTT-NEL. For this, two optical laser signals of different
frequencies are superimposed on a photodiode. An electrical signal results, the
frequency of which equals the frequency difference of both optical signals,
here, 237.5 GHz. The millimeter-wave electrical signal is then radiated via an
antenna.
"It is a major advantage
of the photonic method that data streams from fiber-optical systems can
directly be converted into high-frequency radio signals," Professor Jürg
Leuthold says. He proposed the photonic extension that was realized in this
project. The former head of the KIT Institute of Photonics and Quantum
Electronics (IPQ) is now affiliated with ETH Zurich. "This advantage makes
the integration of radio relay links of high bit rates into optical fiber
networks easier and more flexible." In contrast to a purely electronic
transmitter, no intermediate electronic circuit is needed. "Due to the
large bandwidth and the good linearity of the photon mixer, the method is
excellently suited for transmission of advanced modulation formats with
multiple amplitude and phase states. This will be a necessity in future
fiber-optical systems," Leuthold adds.
Reception of radio signals is based on electronic circuits.
In the experiment, a semiconductor chip was employed that was produced by the
Fraunhofer Institute of Applied Solid State Physics (IAF) within the framework
of the "Millilink" project. The semiconductor technology is based on
high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMT) enabling the fabrication of active,
broadband receivers for the frequency range between 200 and 280 GHz. The
integrated circuits have a chip size of a few square millimeters only. The
receiver chip can also cope with advanced modulation formats. As a result, the
radio link can be integrated into modern optical fiber networks in a
bit-transparent way.
Already in May this year the
team succeeded in transmitting a data rate of 40 gigabits per second over a
long distance in the laboratory using a purely electronic system. In addition,
data were transmitted successfully over a distance of one kilometer from one
high-riser to another in the Karlsruhe City center. "The long transmission
distances in "Millilink" were reached with conventional antennas that
may be replaced by fully integrated miniaturized antenna designs in future
compact systems for indoor use," says Professor Thomas Zwick, Head of the
KIT Institut für Hochfrequenztechnik und Elektronik (Institute of
High-Frequency Technology and Electronics). The present data rate can be still
increased. "By employing optical and electrical multiplexing techniques,
i.e., by simultaneously transmitting multiple data streams, and by using
multiple transmitting and receiving antennas, the data rate could be
multiplied," says Swen König from the KIT Institute of Photonics and
Quantum Electronics (IPQ), who conceived and conducted the recent world-record
experiment. "Hence, radio systems having a data rate of 1 terabit per
second appear to be feasible."
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