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A wide variety of different wireless data technologies exist, some in direct competition with one another, others designed for specific applications. Wireless technologies can be evaluated by a variety of different metrics of which some are described in this entry.
Standards can be grouped as follows in increasing range order:
Personal area network (PAN) systems are intended for short range communication between devices typically controlled by a single person. Some examples include wireless headsets for mobile phones or wireless heart rate sensors communicating with a wrist watch. Some of these technologies include standards such as ANT UWB, Bluetooth, Zigbee, and Wireless USB.
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN / WSAN) are, generically, networks of low-power, low-cost devices that interconnect wirelessly to collect, exchange, and sometimes act-on data collected from their physical environments - "sensor networks". Nodes typically connect in a star or mesh topology. While most individual nodes in a WSAN are expected to have limited range (Bluetooth, Zigbee, 6LoWPAN, etc.), particular nodes may be capable of more expansive communications (Wi-Fi, Cellular networks, etc.) and any individual WSAN can span a wide geographical range. An example of a WSAN would be a collection of sensors arranged throughout an agricultural facility to monitor soil moisture levels, report the data back to a computer in the main office for analysis and trend modeling, and maybe turn on automatic watering spigots if the level is too low.
For wider area communications, wireless local area network (WLAN) is used. WLANs are often known by their commercial product name Wi-Fi. These systems are used to provide wireless access to other systems on the local network such as other computers, shared printers, and other such devices or even the internet. Typically a WLAN offers much better speeds and delays within the local network than an average consumer's Internet access. Older systems that provide WLAN functionality include DECT and HIPERLAN. These however are no longer in widespread use. One typical characteristic of WLANs is that they are mostly very local, without the capability of seamless movement from one network to another.
Cellular networks or WAN are designed for citywide/national/global coverage areas and seamless mobility from one access point (often defined as a base station) to another allowing seamless coverage for very wide areas. Cellular network technologies are often split into 2nd generation 2G, 3G and 4G networks. Originally 2G networks were voice centric or even voice only digital cellular systems (as opposed to the analog 1G networks). Typical 2G standards include GSM and IS-95 with extensions via GPRS, EDGE and 1xRTT, providing Internet access to users of originally voice centric 2G networks. Both EDGE and 1xRTT are 3G standards, as defined by the ITU, but are usually marketed as 2.9G due to their comparatively low speeds and high delays when compared to true 3G technologies.
True 3G systems such as EV-DO, W-CDMA (including HSPA and HSPA+) provide combined circuit switched and packet switched data and voice services from the outset, usually at far better data rates than 2G networks with their extensions. All of these services can be used to provide combined mobile voice access and Internet access at remote locations.
4G networks provide even higher bitrates and many architectural improvements, which are not necessarily visible to the consumer. The current 4G systems that are deployed widely are WIMAX and LTE. The two are pure packet based networks without traditional voice circuit capabilities. These networks provide voice services via VoIP or VoLTE.
Some systems are designed for point-to-point line-of-sight communications, once two such nodes get too far apart they can no longer communicate. Other systems are designed to form a wireless mesh network using one of a variety of routing protocols. In a mesh network, when nodes get too far apart to communicate directly, they can still communicate indirectly through intermediate nodes.
The following standards are included in this comparison.
Common name |
Family | Primary use | Radio tech | Downstream (Mbit/s) |
Upstream (Mbit/s) |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HSPA+ | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/TDMA/FDD MIMO |
21 42 84 672 |
5.8 11.5 22 168 |
HSPA+ is widely deployed. Revision 11 of the 3GPP states that HSPA+ is expected to have a throughput capacity of 672 Mbit/s. |
LTE | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | OFDMA/TDMA/MIMO/SC-FDMA/for LTE-FDD/for LTE-TDD | 100 Cat3 150 Cat4 300 Cat5 25065 Cat17 1658 Cat19 (in 20 MHz FDD) [1] |
50 Cat3/4 75 Cat5 2119 Cat17 13563 Cat19 (in 20 MHz FDD)[1] |
LTE-Advanced Pro offers rates in excess of 3 Gbit/s to mobile users. |
WiMax rel 1 | 802.16 | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 37 (10 MHz TDD) | 17 (10 MHz TDD) | With 2x2 MIMO.[2] |
WiMax rel 1.5 | 802.16-2009 | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 83 (20 MHz TDD) 141 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
46 (20 MHz TDD) 138 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
With 2x2 MIMO.Enhanced with 20 MHz channels in 802.16-2009[2] |
WiMAX rel 2.0 | 802.16m | WirelessMAN | MIMO-SOFDMA | 2x2 MIMO 110 (20 MHz TDD) 183 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 219 (20 MHz TDD) 365 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
2x2 MIMO 70 (20 MHz TDD) 188 (2x20 MHz FDD) 4x4 MIMO 140 (20 MHz TDD) 376 (2x20 MHz FDD) |
Also, low mobility users can aggregate multiple channels to get a download throughput of up to 1 Gbit/s[2] |
Flash-OFDM | Flash-OFDM | Mobile Internet mobility up to 200 mph (350 km/h) |
Flash-OFDM | 5.3 10.6 15.9 |
1.8 3.6 5.4 |
Mobile range 30 km (18 miles) Extended range 55 km (34 miles) |
HIPERMAN | HIPERMAN | Mobile Internet | OFDM | 56.9 | ||
Wi-Fi | 802.11 (11ax) |
Wireless LAN | OFDM/OFDMA/CSMA/MIMO/MU-MIMO/Half duplex | 9600 Wi-Fi 6 |
Antenna, RF front end enhancements and minor protocol timer tweaks have helped deploy long range P2P networks compromising on radial coverage, throughput and/or spectra efficiency (310 km & 382 km) | |
iBurst | 802.20 | Mobile Internet | HC-SDMA/TDD/MIMO | 95 | 36 | Cell Radius: 3–12 km Speed: 250 km/h Spectral Efficiency: 13 bits/s/Hz/cell Spectrum Reuse Factor: "1" |
EDGE Evolution | GSM | Mobile Internet | TDMA/FDD | 1.6 | 0.5 | 3GPP Release 7 |
UMTS W-CDMA HSPA (HSDPA+HSUPA) |
3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/FDD CDMA/FDD/MIMO |
0.384 14.4 |
0.384 5.76 |
HSDPA is widely deployed. Typical downlink rates today 2 Mbit/s, ~200 kbit/s uplink; HSPA+ downlink up to 56 Mbit/s. |
UMTS-TDD | 3GPP | Mobile Internet | CDMA/TDD | 16 | Reported speeds according to IPWireless using 16QAM modulation similar to HSDPA+HSUPA | |
EV-DO Rel. 0 EV-DO Rev.A EV-DO Rev.B |
3GPP2 | Mobile Internet | CDMA/FDD | 2.45 3.1 4.9xN |
0.15 1.8 1.8xN |
Rev B note: N is the number of 1.25 MHz carriers used. EV-DO is not designed for voice, and requires a fallback to 1xRTT when a voice call is placed or received. |
Notes: All speeds are theoretical maximums and will vary by a number of factors, including the use of external antennas, distance from the tower and the ground speed (e.g. communications on a train may be poorer than when standing still). Usually the bandwidth is shared between several terminals. The performance of each technology is determined by a number of constraints, including the spectral efficiency of the technology, the cell sizes used, and the amount of spectrum available.
For more comparison tables, see bit rate progress trends, comparison of mobile phone standards, spectral efficiency comparison table and OFDM system comparison table.
When discussing throughput, there is often a distinction between the peak data rate of the physical layer, the theoretical maximum data throughput and typical throughput.
The peak bit rate of the standard is the net bit rate provided by the physical layer in the fastest transmission mode (using the fastest modulation scheme and error code), excluding forward error correction coding and other physical layer overhead.
The theoretical maximum throughput for end user is clearly lower than the peak data rate due to higher layer overheads. Even this is never possible to achieve unless the test is done under perfect laboratory conditions.
The typical throughput is what users have experienced most of the time when well within the usable range to the base station. The typical throughput is hard to measure, and depends on many protocol issues such as transmission schemes (slower schemes are used at longer distance from the access point due to better redundancy), packet retransmissions and packet size. The typical throughput is often even lower because of other traffic sharing the same network or cell, interference or even the fixed line capacity from the base station onwards being limited.
Note that these figures cannot be used to predict the performance of any given standard in any given environment, but rather as benchmarks against which actual experience might be compared.
Standard | Peak Downlink | Peak Uplink | Approximate Maximum Range in Meters | Typical Downlink throughput |
---|---|---|---|---|
CDMA2000 1xRTT | 0.3072 | 0.1536 | 29000 | 0.125 |
CDMA2000 EV-DO Rev. 0 | 2.4580 | 0.1536 | 29000 | 1[citation needed] |
CDMA2000 EV-DO Rev. A | 3.1 | 1.8 | 29000 | 2[citation needed] |
CDMA2000 EV-DO Rev. B | 4.9 | 1.8 | 29000 | |
GSM GPRS Class 10 | 0.0856 | 0.0428 | 26000 | 0.014[citation needed] |
GSM EDGE type 2 | 0.4736 | 0.4736 | 26000 | 0.034[citation needed] |
GSM Evolved EDGE | 1.8944 | 0.9472 | 26000 | |
UMTS W-CDMA R99 | 0.3840 | 0.3840 | 29000 | 0.195[citation needed] |
UMTS W-CDMA HSDPA | 14.4 | 0.3840 | 200000[3] | 2[citation needed] |
UMTS W-CDMA HSUPA | 14.4 | 5.76 | 200000[3] | |
UMTS W-CDMA HSPA+ | 168 | 22 | 200000[3] | |
UMTS-TDD | 16[4] | 16 | ||
LTE | 326.4 | 86.4 | ||
iBurst: iBurst | 24 | 8 | 12000 | >2 |
Flash-OFDM: Flash-OFDM | 5.3 | 1.8 | 29000 | avg 2.5[citation needed] |
WiMAX: 802.16e | 70 | 70 | 6400 | >10[citation needed] |
WiFi: 802.11a | 54 | 54 | 30 | 20 |
WiFi: 802.11b | 11 | 11 | 30 | 5[citation needed] |
WiFi: 802.11g | 54 | 54 | 30 | 20[citation needed] |
WiFi: 802.11n | 600 | 600 | 50 | |
WiFi: 802.11ac | 1,300 | 1,300 | 50 | |
WiFi: 802.11ad | 7,000 | 7,000 | 3.3 | |
WiFi: 802.11ax | 10,000 | 10,000 |
Standard | Frequencies | Spectrum Type |
---|---|---|
UMTS FDD | 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 2.0, 1.9/2.1, 2.1, and 1.7/2.1 GHz | Licensed |
UMTS-TDD | 450, 850 MHz, 1.9, 2, 2.5, and 3.5 GHz[5] 2 GHz |
Licensed (Cellular, 3G TDD, BRS/IMT-ext, FWA) Unlicensed (see note) |
CDMA2000 (inc. EV-DO, 1xRTT) | 450, 850, 900 MHz 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, and 2.1 GHz | Licensed (Cellular/PCS/3G/AWS) |
EDGE/GPRS | 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1.8 GHz, and 1.9 GHz | Licensed (Cellular/PCS/PCN) |
iBurst | 1.8, 1.9, and 2.1 GHz | Licensed |
Flash-OFDM | 450 and 870 MHz | Licensed |
Bluetooth/BLE | 2.4 GHz | Unlicensed ISM |
Low Rate WPAN (802.15.4) | 868 MHz, 915 MHz, 2.4 GHz | Unlicensed ISM |
802.11 | 2.4, 3.6, 4.9, 5.0, 5.2, 5.6, 5.8, 5.9 and 60 GHz[6] | Unlicensed ISM |
WiMax (802.16e) | 2.3, 2.5, 3.5, 3.7, and 5.8 GHz | Licensed |
Wireless USB, UWB | 3.1 to 10.6 GHz | Unlicensed Ultrawideband |
VEmesh* | 868 MHz, 915 MHz, and 953 MHz | Unlicensed ISM |
EnOcean* | 868.3 MHz | Unlicensed ISM |