White Space & Broadcasting Networks
Mark Waddell is a lead research engineer here in Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ R&D working on our research into "white space"- the potentially useful bits and pieces of spare radio frequency spectrum that the move from analogue to digital broadcasting might make available. The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ's position on white space is probably best articulated in our. This post outlines where we are to date with our research in this area, what we plan to do and some of the interesting issues as Mark see's them:
In 2009 my IBC conference paper "Compatibility Challenges for Whitespace Devices and Broadcast Networks" discussed the opportunities and issues with emerging devices that offered the possibility of delivering broadband applications in potentially under utilised TV spectrum known as the white space. The switchover from analogue to digital broadcasting offered the potential of using this spectrum as the digital TV signals are significantly more resilient to interference than their analogue predecessors. The main concern related to the proposed access schemes required to use the fragmented spectrum and the proposals to consider spectrum sensing alone, aka cognitive radio, to detect and avoid the incumbent TV and microphone signals. Issues relating to adjacent channel interference were also expressed requiring location-dependent power limits for the white space devices to prevent interference to TV reception.
Two years on, the issues with spectrum sensing are being addressed by to control access in preference to sensing. The new devices will use a location service (e.g. GPS) and an internet-hosted database to identify the available channels and the permitted power limits. Details of how to compute the database from the broadcast coverage have been the subject of studies by CEPT in which reported its preliminary findings earlier this year. on the proposed techniques in December 2010, but no firm decisions have been made.
Candidate technologies are now emerging from (802.11 and 802.16), and a new start up company in the .The Nuel technology has been selected for the trial in Cambridge as they are based locally and are partners in the trial.
For the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ, the TV White Space might offer the possibility of improved home and business campus networking, rural broadband connectivity and enhanced access to broadband services like iPlayer and bbc.co.uk. The challenge is to balance this against the risk of interference and consequent disruption to Freeview and Freeview-HD services. The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ has invested heavily in these services, which have proved very popular and cost effective for consumers. show that 45% of households use the terrestrial platform as the main TV set and 80-90% of homes use terrestrial for 2nd, 3rd or 4th sets. Many homes with cable or satellite subscription services for the main TV also use DTT for video recording with simple PVR devices
Demand for wireless broadband is increasing and TV White Space technology could play a part in servicing this. Many questions remain and the technology is still very immature.Μύ Will the location services prove reliable enough and are the coverage predictions sufficiently accurate to allow the White Space Device transmitter power levels to be positioned sufficiently below the digital cliff of picture failure to maintain reliable Freeview reception? What happens if the devices or databases are hacked and do the benefits of the technology out weigh the possible disruption to the free to air DTT service enjoyed by over 80% of the population?Μύ Is there a business model for operating the databases and can frequency agile radios with the required spectral purity be produced to tune over 320MHz of bandwidth? Do Ofcom's regulatory proposals, which permit interference to 1% of TV services, allow sufficient device power to build a useful service? Is it ok for 270 thousand households to lose their DTT Freeview reception to enable the TV White Space or should power limits be set at a lower level to limit the damage? Is it appropriate to protect only fixed reception, as Ofcom propose, or should portable and set top aerials, commonly used for second and third TVs also be protected from interference?
A number of field trials are now underway with test licenses issued in and in Cambridge. These will explore some of the questions and the technology may prove to be a valuable piece in the wireless broadband jigsaw. There is considerable hype and some advocates claim a TVWS broadband network radiating 100mW- 4W will outperform proposed 4G LTE networks radiating 3kW. The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ is participating in these trials to understand what the technology can offer in broadband connectivity and what this will be the cost in terms of interference to DTT.
Comment number 1.
At 27th Jun 2011, Kit Green wrote:Am I right in thinking that white space is under severe pressure during the Olympics?
In the longer term do you see the risk of interference and consequent disruption to be more political than technical? I am sure the politicians will spot some more spectrum to sell.
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Comment number 2.
At 29th Jun 2011, Andrew Back wrote:There's something I don't quite understand:
"There is considerable hype and some advocates claim a TVWS broadband network radiating 100mW- 4W will outperform proposed 4G LTE networks radiating 3kW."
I've not kept up to speed with with 4G, but an LTE Mobile Station (MS) cannot radiate anything like 3kW, and I can't see the benefit of operating massively asymmetric ERPs (wouldn't this be a one-sided conversation?)
Also, I'd have thought the ERP of an LTE MS to be much less than 4W, as that seems like a lot of TX power to be supplied from a relatively small battery. Although I could very easily be wrong...
I have some concerns over commercially provided geolocation databases, and can't help but think of the racket that is browser PKI/SSL infrastructure. Even were such services to be touted as "free", they rarely are in practice. One possibility that does excite me, though, is a community operated database. I'll be very interested to see the criteria/barrier for Ofcom listing!
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