Joint trial shows that running LTE in unlicensed spectrum is an effective offload option for wireless operators, but will it supplant operators' existing WiFi strategies?

Sarah Thomas, Director, Women in Comms

August 22, 2014

2 Min Read
NTT DoCoMo, Huawei Prove LTE-U Works

Giant Japenese operator NTT DoCoMo has completed a trial with Huawei that provides support for running LTE in unlicensed spectrum as a way to offload wireless data in congested areas.

The pair have been researching LTE-Unlicensed (LTE-U), what they call "Licensed-Assisted Access (LAA)," since February and vow to continue experimenting with how licensed and unlicensed spectrum can work together. For now, they've demonstrated on multiple-cell pre-commercial networks that LTE works in 5GHz unlicensed spectrum, achieving better coverage and capacity than WiFi alone. (See DoCoMo & Huawei Confirm LTE Network Over Unlicensed Spectrum.)

Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. says LTE-U also provides the benefits of guaranteed security, coverage, mobility and unified quality of services versus WiFi, which operators often have less control over.

NTT DoCoMo Inc. (NYSE: DCM) and its vendor partner compared the technologies in their labs by giving identical bandwidth to both LTE and WiFi and found that LTE-U had several times throughput improvements over WiFi for both cell-medium and cell-edge users in most scenarios. Cell capacity gain was around 1.6 times that of a single cell with better coverage for LTE-U over WiFi.

The pair concludes that LTE-U will enable better coverage, lower deployment costs, and a better customer experience. NTT is working to help standardize the new technology and believes it will be viable for LTE and future LTE-Advanced networks.

Read up on advances in LTE on our dedicated 4G/LTE site here at Light Reading.

Why this matters
LTE-U, a technology first championed by Qualcomm Inc. (Nasdaq: QCOM) and Ericsson AB (Nasdaq: ERIC), is attracting operator interest for many of the reasons Huawei and NTT outlined, but it's controversial given how many operators have already made big bets on WiFi. There is also concern it will cause interference or even take over the WiFi bands completely, although Huawei says interference management mechanisms will be introduced to rectify that issue in dense deployments. (See Why Some Operators Think LTE-U Is Rude.)

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— Sarah Reedy, Senior Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Sarah Thomas

Director, Women in Comms

Sarah Thomas's love affair with communications began in 2003 when she bought her first cellphone, a pink RAZR, which she duly "bedazzled" with the help of superglue and her dad.

She joined the editorial staff at Light Reading in 2010 and has been covering mobile technologies ever since. Sarah got her start covering telecom in 2007 at Telephony, later Connected Planet, may it rest in peace. Her non-telecom work experience includes a brief foray into public relations at Fleishman-Hillard (her cussin' upset the clients) and a hodge-podge of internships, including spells at Ingram's (Kansas City's business magazine), American Spa magazine (where she was Chief Hot-Tub Correspondent), and the tweens' quiz bible, QuizFest, in NYC.

As Editorial Operations Director, a role she took on in January 2015, Sarah is responsible for the day-to-day management of the non-news content elements on Light Reading.

Sarah received her Bachelor's in Journalism from the University of Missouri-Columbia. She lives in Chicago with her 3DTV, her iPad and a drawer full of smartphone cords.

Away from the world of telecom journalism, Sarah likes to dabble in monster truck racing, becoming part of Team Bigfoot in 2009.

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