6G Will Be 100 Times Faster Than 5G—and Now There’s a Chip for It

By Vanessa Bates Ramirez -Aug 21, 2020
https://singularityhub.com/2020/08/21/6g-will-be-100-times-faster-than-5g-and-now-theres-a-chip-for-it/


Though 5G—a next-generation speed upgrade to wireless networks—is scarcely up 
and running (and still nonexistent in many places) researchers are already 
working on what comes next. It lacks an official name, but they’re calling it 
6G for the sake of simplicity (and hey, it’s tradition). 6G promises to be up 
to 100 times faster than 5G—fast enough to download 142 hours of Netflix in a 
second—but researchers are still trying to figure out exactly how to make such 
ultra-speedy connections happen.

A new chip, described in a paper in Nature Photonics by a team from Osaka 
University and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, may give us a 
glimpse of our 6G future. The team was able to transmit data at a rate of 11 
gigabits per second, topping 5G’s theoretical maximum speed of 10 gigabits per 
second and fast enough to stream 4K high-def video in real time. They believe 
the technology has room to grow, and with more development, might hit those 
blistering 6G speeds.


[Team Photo]  NTU final year PhD student Abhishek Kumar, Assoc Prof Ranjan 
Singh and postdoc Dr Yihao Yang. Dr Singh is holding the photonic topological 
insulator chip made from silicon, which can transmit terahertz waves at 
ultrahigh speeds. Credit: NTU Singapore

But first, some details about 5G and its predecessors so we can differentiate 
them from 6G.

Electromagnetic waves are characterized by a wavelength and a frequency; the 
wavelength is the distance a cycle of the wave covers (peak to peak or trough 
to trough, for example), and the frequency is the number of waves that pass a 
given point in one second. Cellphones use miniature radios to pick up 
electromagnetic signals and convert those signals into the sights and sounds on 
your phone.

4G wireless networks run on millimeter waves on the low- and mid-band spectrum, 
defined as a frequency of a little less (low-band) and a little more (mid-band) 
than one gigahertz (or one billion cycles per second). 5G kicked that up 
several notches by adding even higher frequency millimeter waves of up to 300 
gigahertz, or 300 billion cycles per second. Data transmitted at those higher 
frequencies tends to be information-dense—like video—because they’re much 
faster.

The 6G chip kicks 5G up several more notches. It can transmit waves at more 
than three times the frequency of 5G: one terahertz, or a trillion cycles per 
second. The team says this yields a data rate of 11 gigabits per second. While 
that’s faster than the fastest 5G will get, it’s only the beginning for 6G. One 
wireless communications expert even estimates 6G networks could handle rates up 
to 8,000 gigabits per second; they’ll also have much lower latency and higher 
bandwidth than 5G.

Terahertz waves fall between infrared waves and microwaves on the 
electromagnetic spectrum. Generating and transmitting them is difficult and 
expensive, requiring special lasers, and even then the frequency range is 
limited. The team used a new material to transmit terahertz waves, called 
photonic topological insulators (PTIs). PTIs can conduct light waves on their 
surface and edges rather than having them run through the material, and allow 
light to be redirected around corners without disturbing its flow.

The chip is made completely of silicon and has rows of triangular holes. The 
team’s research showed the chip was able to transmit terahertz waves error-free.

Nanyang Technological University associate professor Ranjan Singh, who led the 
project, said, “Terahertz technology […] can potentially boost intra-chip and 
inter-chip communication to support artificial intelligence and cloud-based 
technologies, such as interconnected self-driving cars, which will need to 
transmit data quickly to other nearby cars and infrastructure to navigate 
better and also to avoid accidents.”

Besides being used for AI and self-driving cars (and, of course, downloading 
hundreds of hours of video in seconds), 6G would also make a big difference for 
data centers, IoT devices, and long-range communications, among other 
applications.

Given that 5G networks are still in the process of being set up, though, 6G 
won’t be coming on the scene anytime soon; a recent whitepaper on 6G from 
Japanese company NTTDoCoMo estimates we’ll see it in 2030, pointing out that 
wireless connection tech generations have thus far been spaced about 10 years 
apart; we got 3G in the early 2000s, 4G in 2010, and 5G in 2020.

In the meantime, as 6G continues to develop, we’re still looking forward to the 
widespread adoption of 5G.

--

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to