Beamwidth testing for millimetre waves
A new antenna evaluation method could help boost 5G network capacity and cut network design costs.
Researchers at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed a method for evaluating and selecting optimal antenna designs for future 5G mobile phones, other wireless devices and base stations. The new method could boost 5G wireless network capacity and reduce costs.
Antenna beamwidth affects wireless system design and performance. NIST’s new measurement-based method allows system designers and engineers to evaluate the most appropriate antenna beamwidths for real environments.
“Our new method could reduce costs by enabling greater success with initial network design, eliminating much of the trial and error that is now required,” NIST engineer Kate Remley said.
“The method also would foster the use of new base stations that transmit to several users either simultaneously or in rapid succession without one antenna beam interfering with another.
“This, in turn, would increase network capacity and reduce costs with higher reliability,” she added.
This is the first detailed measurement-based study of how antenna beamwidth and orientation interact with the environment to affect millimetre-wave signal transmission.
In the technique, measurements covering a broad range of antenna beam angles are converted into an omnidirectional antenna pattern covering all angles equally. The omnidirectional pattern can then be segmented into narrower and narrower beamwidths. Users can evaluate and model how antenna beam characteristics are expected to perform in specific types of wireless channels.
An engineer could use the method to select an antenna that best suits a specific application. For example, the engineer may choose a beamwidth that is narrow enough to avoid reflections off certain surfaces or that allows multiple antennas to coexist in a given environment without interference.
To develop the new method, the NIST team collected experimental data in a hallway and lobby of a NIST research building, using a special robot loaded with a customised channel sounder and other equipment. A channel sounder collects data that capture the signal reflections, diffractions and scattering that occur between a transmitter and receiver. Many such measurements can be used to create a statistical representation of the radio channel, to support reliable system design and standardisation.
NIST study results confirm that narrow beams can significantly reduce signal interference and delays, and that an optimised beam orientation reduces energy loss during transmissions. For example, the time interval during which signal reflections arrive (RMS delay spread) dropped dramatically from 15 nanoseconds to about 1.4 ns as antenna beamwidth was reduced from omnidirectional to a narrow 3°.
Future research will include extending the method to different environments and analysis of other wireless channel characteristics. The present research has been published online in IEEE Communications Magazine.
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