Abstract:
There are ever increasing demands, in wireless communications, for additional capacity to handle voice, data and wideband Internet applications. These demands are constra...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
There are ever increasing demands, in wireless communications, for additional capacity to handle voice, data and wideband Internet applications. These demands are constrained by the bandwidth that has been allocated to wireless communications. A novel unorthodox concept to substantially increase the spectral efficiency in highly scattering environments, named BLAST (Bell-labs LAyered Space-Time), has been introduced (see Foschini, G.J., Bell Labs Technical Journal, vol.1, no. 2, p.41-59, 1966; Foschini, G.J. and Gans, M.J., Wireless Personal Communications, vol.6, p.311-35, 1998). A measurement campaign was undertaken to assess the BLAST gains in spectral efficiency in the suburban outdoor environment for stationary subscribers. The measurements employed directive antennas for better control of interference from adjacent cells. Extensive calibration methods, assisted by simulations, were developed to assure accurate results for the BLAST capacities of the measured remote subscriber sites.
Published in: IEEE VTS 53rd Vehicular Technology Conference, Spring 2001. Proceedings (Cat. No.01CH37202)
Date of Conference: 06-09 May 2001
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 07 August 2002
Print ISBN:0-7803-6728-6
Print ISSN: 1090-3038