Tech Talk: Microwave-Capacity Evolution

06.02.2013 Категории Industry, Technology

Jonas Hansryd from Ericsson Research discusses how microwave backhaul can handle the demands for increased capacity.

Microwave links are the freeways of the modern mobile-broadband network. Over the past 10 years spectral efficiency has increased from about 1 bps/Hz to 35 bps/Hz demonstrating up to 1 Gbps in a single 28 MHz channel. This has made it possible for operators to roll out next-generation radio-access networks using available-frequency bands, without the need to invest in fiber infrastructure.

So how will microwave backhaul handle the demands for increased capacity?

The first GSM networks in the mid-1990s only needed to handle a few Mbps of traffic. Today’s LTE networks typically need 100-150 Mbps from a single site. With the current demand for capacity, we can expect a need for bitrates measured in gigabits-per-second within five to 10 years. Wireless backhaul will be able to cope with this.

Under Ericsson’s leadership microwave technology has undergone a tremendous evolution over the last ten years. It is reliable, provides high capacity and ensures a quick and cost effective rollout.

Ericsson has led this technology evolution and will continue to do so.

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