Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Non contiguous MHz mode for Europe, Japan and global

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Non contiguous MHz mode for Europe, Japan and global"— Presentation transcript:

1 Non contiguous 40+40 MHz mode for Europe, Japan and global
Month Year doc.: IEEE yy/xxxxr0 Non contiguous MHz mode for Europe, Japan and global Date: John Doe, Some Company

2 Content The following modes have already been accepted by 11ac
20MHz, 40MHz, 80MHz (mandatory) Contiguous and non contiguous 160MHz (optional) Optional 40+40MHz non contiguous transmission mode should be added to the spec framework especially for Europe, Japan and Global operating class tables it enables to exploit the part of the band left aside by the current contiguous 80MHz frequency planning it increases the probability to transmit at 80MHz (the target of 11ac) in presence of neighboring BSS or radars its complexity is identical to the 80+80MHz mode already accepted by TGac

3 80MHz Channel planning in 5GHz band
Weather radars 5170 MHz 5330 MHz 5490 MHz 5710 MHz 5735 MHz 5835 MHz 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 100 104 108 112 116 120 124 128 132 136 140 149 153 157 161 165 IEEE channel # 20 MHz 40 MHz 80 MHz only in US Only 4 channels for 80MHz in Europe/Japan/Global, only 2 at 30dBm If a weather radar is active, one channel (in red) is denied, reducing the number of available channels to 3 In many cases, contiguous only BSS will not be able to transmit at 80MHz without overlapping Non contiguous 40+40MHz mode is the solution in this part of the band each 40MHz segment is allocated in the band according to 40MHz channel planning Slide 3

4 Neighboring BSS issue Neighboring BSS is an issue in big cities of Europe/Japan/Global because the density of population is high (>3000 people per sqKm) Europe: Japan USA Source : Slide 4

5 Typical example of fragmented usage of 5GHz band in Europe/Japan
Weather radars 5170 MHz 5330 MHz 5490 MHz 5710 MHz 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 100 104 108 112 116 120 124 128 132 136 140 IEEE channel # 20 MHz Load < 20% 40 MHz Load > 80% 80 MHz In red colour, the 20MHz channels (48, 60, 100, 116 and 136) with a high load (neighboring a and n APs) If a new ac AP is looking for 80MHz bandwidth … Contiguous 80MHz transmission is disrupted due to high loaded channels (load > 80%) Contention with neighboring APs and channel access is deferred Non contiguous 40+40MHz transmission is assured thanks to low loaded channels (load < 10%) Four 40MHz non contiguous channels are available !!!

6 Extension of the existing non-contiguous mode
Non contiguous 40+40MHz mode could be paired with in the non contiguous MHz mode Chipsets with the non contiguous option could target 2 markets: Low density areas when using MHz High density areas when using MHz Non contiguous 40+40MHz mode provides a high throughput experience for end-user in dense areas instead of a fallback of 40MHz mode ("802.11n like" behavior) People living in cities of Europe, Japan, China, …

7 Conclusion 40+40MHz non contiguous transmission mode should be added to the spec framework as an optional feature for Europe/Japan/Global Areas with less channels and high density of population it enables to exploit the part of the band left aside by the current contiguous 80MHz frequency planning it increases the probability to transmit at 80MHz (the target of 11ac) in presence of neighbors or radars.. it does not imply any additional complexity for devices supporting the 80+80MHz mode already accepted by TGac

8 Pre-motion Do you support adding the following section and item into the specification framework document, 11-09/0992? Section 3.1.D Non contiguous 160 MHz PHY Transmission R3.1.D.1: The draft specification shall include support for non contiguous 40+40MHz PHY transmission, whose frequency spectrum consists of two segments, necessarily non-adjacent in frequency, each transmitted using one 40 MHz channel, for devices supporting non contiguous 160 MHz. Yes: No: Abstain:

9 References [1] Cariou, L. and Christin, P., Non contiguous additional bandwidth mode, IEEE /1159r1, Sept 2010 [2] Cariou, L. and Christin, P., 80MHz and 160MHz channel access modes, IEEE /0385r1, Mar. 2010 [3] Cariou, L. and Benko, J., Gains provided by multichannel transmissions, IEEE /0103r1, Jan. 2010


Download ppt "Non contiguous MHz mode for Europe, Japan and global"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google