Powerful
digital signal processors and CMOS RF chips are the key
enablers
The
Rebirth of Radio
By
Michael J. Riezenman,Senior
Engineering Editor
In
the beginning, automobiles were known as horseless carriages,
reflecting the feeling that horses were the natural way
to propel vehicles. Similarly, radio was known as wireless.
In the transportation arena, engines and motors have long
since supplanted the horse, and the term horseless carriage
has gone the way of the horse-drawn vehicle. But wiring
of one kind or another is still regarded as the "natural"
way to connect nodes in a communications network. To most
of us, wireless is an inferior, niche technology appropriate
only for mobile applications. Even television, which was
originally popularized as a wireless service, is now broadcast
largely over cable.
Today,
that mindset is under attack. Irwin Mark Jacobs, the chairman
and chief executive officer of Qualcomm Inc., San Diego,
Calif., admittedly not a disinterested party, predicted
recently that by 2005, most people will be using wireless
phones for both voice communications and Internet access.
He
may be optimistic, but he is right about the direction in
which things are moving. IEEE 802.11, the wireless local-area
network standard, is one of the hottest product areas at
the moment; Bluetooth threatens to become even hotter; Nokia
recently unveiled its self-configuring rooftop RF system
for Internet access; fixed-wireless links are gaining increasing
attention as candidate solutions to the Internet's last-mile
problem; and cell phones need hardly be mentioned.
Why
the sudden interest in radio? It can't compare with wired
optical networks in capacity. It leaves users more vulnerable
to eavesdropping than wired networks do. There is the problem
of all those unguided waves interfering with one another.
And cell phones with all their dropped calls and coverage
gaps don't seem to be exactly a ringing endorsement of the
technology.
The reason
isn't hard to find: advances in microelectronics have made
it possible to build complex wireless systems at low enough
cost to make them economically viable. These advances, and
others on the way, are not only allowing us to realize the
well-known advantages of wireless communication [see "Why
Wireless?"], they may also turn out to be the best way
to access the Internet in many situations.
Besides,
some of the cited drawbacks of wireless may not be as serious
as they sound or they may be susceptible to treatment by
further advances in semiconductor technology. Optical fiber
indeed has much greater capacity than radio. But so what?
Not every application needs immense transmission speed.
Fiber makes sense at the core of a telecommunications network.
Wireless is being touted for the periphery--or for small,
self-contained networks--where blazing speed is less important
than such factors as mobility, cost, and provisioning speed.
Today's
cell phones certainly leave a lot to be desired. But is
that because of any fundamental problem with the technology
or is it because cellular service providers are signing
up customers faster than they are building networks to serve
them? If the latter, as appears to be the case, then time
may well fix the problem.
As for
eavesdropping and interference, advanced digital signal processors
(DSPs) are already dealing with those problems and promise
to do even more. DSPs, after all, are at the heart of every
digital cell phone, compressing and encoding voice streams,
and making them almost immune to eavesdropping in the process.
They are only beginning to be used in smart antennas, which
will mitigate the interference problem and boost system capacity
[see The Myth, the Law,
and the Spectrum].
Chips to the rescue
Take
IEEE 802.11a, the high-speed wireless local-area network
standard. This 54-Mb/s improvement to 802.11b (11 Mb/s)
uses an exotic orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
scheme and works in the new Unlicensed National Information
Infrastructure (UNII) band, where 300 MHz of bandwidth is
available in two pieces: 200 MHz from 5.1 GHz to 5.3 GHz,
and 100 MHz at about 5.7 GHz. With its 54-Mb/s data rate,
802.11a is comfortably above the 22 Mb/s needed for a home
network capable of simultaneously connecting two computers
to the Internet or handling multiple audio and video streams
such as might be generated by CDs, camcorders, and so on.
So why hasn't this attractive technology been adopted until
now?
Adoption
of 802.11a has been delayed by the high cost of implementing
it--specifically, by the need to fabricate the radio-frequency
(RF) portion of the circuitry in a compound semiconductor
material like GaAs or SiGe. That is not only expensive,
it also is incompatible with CMOS--the material of choice
for the modem portion--with which the RF circuitry will
one day be integrated. But no more.
At
Networld+Interop in Atlanta last September, two unrelated
companies announced all-CMOS solutions to the 802.11a problem.
Radiata, an Australian company with roots in Sydney's Macquarie
University, and recently acquired by Cisco, unveiled a pair
of chips that between them almost constitute the physical
layer of an 802.11a transceiver. The R-M11a modem chip,
which includes 20-MHz analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog
converters, is built with a 0.25-µm CMOS process. Its
companion R-RF5 chip, fabricated with a 0.18-µm process,
is a complete 5-GHz radio, including all necessary amplifiers,
mixers, and filters. All that's needed to complete the transceiver
is a media access controller (MAC) and possibly a power
amplifier, if the R-RF5's 0-dBm transmitter output is insufficient.
The chip set will sell for US $35 in large quantities.
Atheros
Communications, Sunnyvale, Calif., introduced an even more
highly integrated chip set at N+I. Its two chips include
both the MAC and a power amplifier. The company, which also
has a tight academic connection (with Stanford University),
priced its chip set at "below $35." For both companies,
the quoted price for the chips translates into an end-user
price for the complete transceiver of about $150.
By
contrast with 802.11a, Bluetooth--the self-configuring short-range
network pioneered by Sweden's Ericsson--aims a lot lower
down the performance scale--around a megabit per second--but
also has a much more stringent budget. Companies contemplating
the addition of Bluetooth to their products tend to regard
$5 as the acceptable cost of adding that capability. What
that $5 buys is connectivity--the capability to participate
in an ad hoc network anytime two or more Bluetooth-enabled
devices get within about 30 meters of each other.
By
2005, most people will be using wireless phones for both
voice communication and Internet access
Most
Bluetooth visions involve portable equipment with limited
display capability, so its fairly low data rate is consistent
with its probable missions--e-mailing, wireless keyboards,
wireless headsets, smart home appliances, and the like.
Wireless headsets for cellular phones may be the killer
app here; their very low power is likely to ease the anxieties
of cell phone users worried about brain damage from excessive
exposure to RF power.
Like
several other RF technologies--including IEEE 802.11b--Bluetooth
operates in the 2.4-GHz ISM band using frequency-hopping
spread-spectrum. If it gains anywhere near the popularity
anticipated for it, problems may arise with other services
operating in that band, including wireless LANs based on
802.11b. Therefore, in a sort of perverse way, Bluetooth--or
rather its avoidance--may turn out to be a factor contributing
to the success of 802.11a.
Yet
another self-configuring network operating in the ISM band--at
least for now--is the kind based on Nokia's RoofTop Wireless
Router. All that's required to connect to a network based
on this technology is to mount one of the wireless routers
on a convenient rooftop; supply it with power; connect it
to a computer's Ethernet port; and, of course, make financial
arrangements with an Internet service provider with RoofTop
equipment. It's not even necessary that the customer's unit
have a direct line-of-sight link to the service provider.
Just as long as it can see one other node in the network,
all will be well. The unit will "talk" to similar units
in the neighborhood and together they will configure themselves
into an ad hoc mesh network. RoofTop routers self-configure
and self-heal as new customers connect to the local system.
New subscribers add redundancy to the network, and thereby
strengthen the infrastructure, according to Nokia general
manager Ari Leppä.
In
describing the system, Leppä was at pains to explain
that although the wireless routers run in the unlicensed
2.4-GHz band, there is no reason they cannot be moved to
one or more other parts of the spectrum. The radio portion
of the gear is separate from the router portion and can
be independently re-engineered.
Nokia's
system is illustrative of a new use of radio--wireless Internet
access unrelated to mobility. The RoofTop Wireless Router
makes possible data rates of up to 12 Mb/s (six 2-Mb/s channels),
which compares favorably with cable TV and DSL access methods.
Of course, since each user shares a cell with several others,
the data rate achievable at any given time will vary with
the number of users actively communicating in the cell.
More
deterministic fixed-wireless systems are based on Local
Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS) technology, which
uses directional antennas but has the corresponding drawback
of requiring expert installation. These systems work in
the 30-GHz region of the spectrum and provide data rates
on the order of 10 Mb/s. As always, the name of the engineering
game is tradeoff. Easy installation or high speed--you pays
your money and you takes your choice.
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