Today’s mobile users want faster data speeds and more reliable
service. The next generation of wireless networks—5G—promises to deliver
that, and much more. With 5G, users should be able to download a
high-definition film in under a second (a task that could take10 minutes on 4G LTE). And wireless engineers say these networks will boost the development of other new technologies, too, such as autonomous vehicles, virtual reality, and the Internet of Things.
If all goes well, telecommunications companies hope to debut the first commercial 5G networksin the early 2020s. Right now, though, 5G
is still in the planning stages, and companies and industry groups are
working together to figure out exactly what it will be. But they all
agree on one matter: As the number of mobile users and their demand for
data rises, 5G must handle far more traffic at much higher speeds than
the base stations that make up today’s cellular networks.
At the moment, it’s not yet clear which technologies will do
the most for 5G in the long run, but a few early favorites have emerged.
The front-runners include millimeter waves, small cells, massive MIMO,
full duplex, and beamforming. To understand how 5G will differ from
today’s 4G networks, it’s helpful to walk through these five
technologies and consider what each will mean for wireless users.
Millimeter Waves
Today’s wireless networks have run into a problem: More people
and devices are consuming more data than ever before, but it remains
crammed on the same bands of the radio-frequency spectrum that mobile
providers have always used. That means less bandwidth for everyone,
causing slower service and more dropped connections.
One way to get around that problem is to simply transmit
signals on a whole new swath of the spectrum, one that’s never been used
for mobile service before. That’s why providers are experimenting with
broadcasting on millimeter waves, which use higher frequencies than the radio waves that have long been used for mobile phones.
Millimeter waves are broadcast at frequencies between30 and 300 gigahertz,
compared to the bands below 6 GHz that were used for mobile devices in
the past. They are called millimeter waves because they vary in length
from1 to 10 mm, compared to the radio waves that serve today’s smartphones, which measuretens of centimeters in length.
Until now, only operators of satellites and radar systems used
millimeter waves for real-world applications. Now, some cellular
providers have begun to use them to send data between stationary points,
such as two base stations. But using millimeter waves to connect mobile
users with a nearby base station is an entirely new approach.
There is one major drawback to millimeter waves, though—they
can’t easily travel through buildings or obstacles and they can be
absorbed by foliage and rain. That’s why 5G networks will likely augment
traditional cellular towers with another new technology, called small
cells.
Small Cells
Small cells are
portable miniature base stations that require minimal power to operate
and can be placed every 250 meters or so throughout cities. To prevent
signals from being dropped, carriers could install thousands of these
stations in a city to form a dense network that acts like a relay team,
receiving signals from other base stations and sending data to users at
any location.
While traditional cell networks have also come to rely on an
increasing number of base stations, achieving 5G performance will
require an even greater infrastructure. Luckily, antennas on small cells
can be much smaller than traditional antennas if they are transmitting
tiny millimeter waves. This size difference makes it even easier to
stick cells on light poles and atop buildings.
This radically different network structure should provide more
targeted and efficient use of spectrum. Having more stations means the
frequencies that one station uses to connect with devices in one area
can be reused by another station in a different area to serve another
customer. There is a problem, though—the sheer number of small cells
required to build a 5G network may make it hard to set up in rural
areas.
In addition to broadcasting over millimeter waves, 5G base
stations will also have many more antennas than the base stations of
today’s cellular networks—to take advantage of another new technology:
massive MIMO.
Massive MIMO
Today’s 4G base stations have a dozen ports for antennas that
handle all cellular traffic: eight for transmitters and four for
receivers. But 5G base stations can support about a hundred ports, which
means many more antennas can fit on a single array. That capability
means a base station could send and receive signals from many more users
at once, increasing the capacity of mobile networks by a factor of22 or greater.
This technology is called massive MIMO.
It all starts with MIMO, which stands for multiple-input
multiple-output. MIMO describes wireless systems that use two or more
transmitters and receivers to send and receive more data at once.
Massive MIMO takes this concept to a new level by featuring dozens of
antennas on a single array.
MIMO is already found on some 4G base stations. But so far,
massive MIMO has only been tested in labs and a few field trials. In
early tests, it has set new records for spectrum efficiency, which is a measure of how many bits of data can be transmitted to a certain number of users per second.
Massive MIMO looks very promising for the future of 5G.
However, installing so many more antennas to handle cellular traffic
also causes more interference if those signals cross. That’s why 5G
stations must incorporate beamforming.
Beamforming
Beamforming is a traffic-signaling system for cellular base
stations that identifies the most efficient data-delivery route to a
particular user, and it reduces interference for nearby users in the
process. Depending on the situation and the technology, there are
several ways for 5G networks to implement it.
Beamforming can help massive MIMO arrays make more efficient
use of the spectrum around them. The primary challenge for massive MIMO
is to reduce interference while transmitting more information from many
more antennas at once. At massive MIMO base stations, signal-processing
algorithms plot the best transmission route through the air to each
user. Then they can send individual data packets in many different
directions, bouncing them off buildings and other objects in a precisely
coordinated pattern. By choreographing the packets’ movements and
arrival time, beamforming allows many users and antennas on a massive
MIMO array to exchange much more information at once.
For millimeter waves, beamforming is primarily used to address a
different set of problems: Cellular signals are easily blocked by
objects and tend to weaken over long distances. In this case,
beamforming can help by focusing a signal in a concentrated beam that
points only in the direction of a user, rather than broadcasting in many
directions at once. This approach can strengthen the signal’s chances
of arriving intact and reduce interference for everyone else.
Besides boosting data rates by broadcasting over millimeter
waves and beefing up spectrum efficiency with massive MIMO, wireless
engineers are also trying to achieve the high throughput and low latency
required for 5G through a technology called full duplex, which modifies
the way antennas deliver and receive data.
Full Duplex
Today's base stations and cellphones rely on transceivers that
must take turns if transmitting and receiving information over the same
frequency, or operate on different frequencies if a user wishes to
transmit and receive information at the same time.
With 5G, a transceiver will be able to transmit and receive
data at the same time, on the same frequency. This technology is known
as full duplex,
and it could double the capacity of wireless networks at their most
fundamental physical layer: Picture two people talking at the same time
but still able to understand one another—which means their conversation
could take half as long and their next discussion could start sooner.
Some militaries already use full duplex technology that relies on bulky equipment. To achieve full duplex in personal devices,
researchers must design a circuit that can route incoming and outgoing
signals so they don’t collide while an antenna is transmitting and
receiving data at the same time.
This is especially hard because of the tendency of radio waves
to travel both forward and backward on the same frequency—a principle
known as reciprocity. But recently,
experts have assembled silicon transistors that act like high-speed
switches to halt the backward roll of these waves, enabling them to
transmit and receive signals on the same frequency at once.
One drawback to full duplex is that it also creates more signal
interference, through a pesky echo. When a transmitter emits a signal,
that signal is much closer to the device’s antenna and therefore more
powerful than any signal it receives. Expecting an antenna to both speak
and listen at the same time is possible only with special
echo-canceling technology.
With these and other 5G technologies, engineers hope to build
the wireless network that future smartphone users, VR gamers, and
autonomous cars will rely on every day. Already, researchers and
companies have set high expectations for 5G by promising ultralow
latency and record-breaking data speeds for consumers. If they can solve
the remaining challenges, and figure out how to make all these systems
work together, ultrafast 5G service could reach consumers in the next
five years.
Writing Credits:
Amy Nordrum–Article Author & Voice Over
Produced By:
Celia Gorman–Executive Producer
Kristen Clark–Producer
Art Direction and Illustrations:
Brandon Palacio–Art Director
Mike Spector–Illustrator
Ove Edfors–Expert & Illustrator
Special Thanks: IEEE Spectrum would like to thank the following experts for their contributions to this video: Harish
Krishnaswamy, Columbia University; Gabriel M. Rebeiz, UCSD; Ove Edfors,
Lund University; Yonghui Li, University of Sydney; Paul Harris,
University of Bristol; Andrew Nix, University of Bristol; Mark Beach,
University of Bristol.