A
UT Arlington electrical engineering professor is developing a system in a cell
phone that could automatically locate available space within a bandwidth,
reducing or eliminating those annoying “dead spots” in coverage.
Qilian
Liang, the electrical engineering professor, received a three-year, $470,000 National Science
Foundation grant that creates and implements a plan that researches
spectrum-sharing technologies.
“In the wireless network industry, bandwidth
is everything,” said Liang, who has been at UT Arlington since 2002. “The
system I’m developing shows where the room is in a bandwidth.”
Liang
said most wireless network and bandwidth researchers believed that space was
nearly all allocated.
However,
if a system more specifically directs a signal to travel to where there is
space, users can experience quicker response time as well as fewer or no dead
spots.
Liang
said one example might be Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, where dropped cell
phone calls or no cell phone service happens frequently.
Qilian
Liang
“The
system we’re developing would tell a cell phone signal where to go on the
bandwidth spectrum,” Liang said. “We’ve discovered that only a portion of the
spectrum is being used. If you tell the signal where to go, that person can get
service and the spectrum is then able to accommodate more users.”
Liang
compared his research to a highway that could contain more cars at a faster
speed.
He
said the cell phone network providers like AT&T or Verizon could program
their phones to try one part of the spectrum, then another, then another.
Jean-Pierre
Bardet, dean of the UT Arlington College of Engineering, said Liang’s work has the ability to save cell phone users time
and money.
“The
system also has the chance to save cell phone companies time and money, and
provide better service. Who hasn’t experienced dropped calls?” Bardet said.
“Cell phones and the wireless spectrum have become so much a part of who we
are. The research has a chance to change how cell phones operate.”
The
co-principal investigators of this project are Jie Wang from University of
Massachusetts and Hyeong-Ah Choi from George Washington University.
Liang’s
grant is part of an initiative that started when President Obama issued a
memorandum in 2010, titled, “Unleashing the Wireless Broadband Revolution.” The
president’s charge was to identify 500 megahurtz of spectrum to be made
available for wireless broadband use.
Congress
followed that memorandum with a directive to the Federal Communications
Commission to devise a plan “to ensure that all people of the United States
have access to broadband capability.” The resulting National Broadband Plan was
released in 2010 and, among many other recommendations, calls on the NSF to
fund wireless research and development that will advance the science of
spectrum access.
“We
want to continue work in this area,” Liang said. “We believe the opportunity
for funding in this area will continue because of the
popularity of wireless devices and the need for increasing bandwidth space and
utilization.”
(Article written by Herb Booth, UTA. The photo
that illustrates this article is also an example of cell tower art – making the
towers less obtrusive or at least more visually entertaining)
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