Finnish vendor unveils 360 High Gain technology that it says overcomes the propagation challenges of mmWave to enable FWA.

Anne Morris, Contributing Editor, Light Reading

October 12, 2021

3 Min Read
Nokia boasts of mmWave breakthrough for 5G FWA

5G technology has promised to support high-speed mobile operations in the millimeter wave (mmWave) spectrum bands, thus allowing operators to raise their peak network speeds from around 100Mbit/s to above 1Gbit/s.

As previously noted by Mike Dano, Light Reading's editorial director for 5G and wireless, the problem is that transmissions in mmWave spectrum can't travel more than a few thousand feet, and often cannot penetrate glass or trees. Transmissions in traditional, low-band cellular spectrum bands, such as 800MHz or 1900MHz, can often travel miles and reach deep inside buildings.

Figure 1: Not going through that: Nokia says it has solved some of the problems presented by mmWave's inability to go through walls, like this one. (Source: Paweł Czerwiński on Unsplash) Not going through that: Nokia says it has solved some of the problems presented by mmWave's inability to go through walls, like this one.
(Source: Paweł Czerwiński on Unsplash)

Dano also noted that most industry observers nevertheless believe operations in mmWave spectrum will eventually find a place within a bigger 5G network. For example, mmWave 5G might never cover entire neighborhoods, but it might be widely available in destinations like restaurants or offices.

Indeed, enterprise networks, private 5G networks and fixed wireless access (FWA) appear to be regarded as among the primary use cases for mmWave. But propagation issues remain: since mmWave requires line-of-sight to operate, signals can easily be disrupted by obstacles both inside or outside the home or office. That kind of coverage will likely require new technologies that dramatically cut down the cost of mmWave deployments.

Going full circle

Step forward Nokia, which has just announced what it describes as a novel approach to make 5G mmWave fixed wireless access viable.

The Finnish vendor unveiled a technology called 360 High Gain, which it claims overcomes the inherent propagation challenge of mmWave by both amplifying available signals and "dynamically finding" the strongest connection.

Nokia further explained that the technology captures a 360 mmWave fingerprint of the indoor environment, picks up direct and reflected signals from any direction, and adapts to the changing environment, through advanced analytics.As things stand, Nokia said it has validated the 360 High Gain 5G mmWave FWA technology in its research labs, and technology trials are ongoing in various urban environments.

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Volume deployments will start in 2023 and are expected to focus initially on operators with subscribers in dense urban environments where high speeds and high capacity is essential for market penetration, the vendor said.

Gabriel Brown, principal analyst at Heavy Reading (a sister publication of Light Reading), noted that fixed wireless service experience and economics are largely determined by the performance and cost of customer equipment."Advanced CPE antenna technologies, such as this 360° field of view algorithm, can increase the link budget and extend mmWave coverage to larger numbers of indoor, self-install customers," Brown said.

Sandy Motley, president, fixed networks at Nokia said making indoor, self-installable mmWave FWA viable in an urban indoor environment is crucial for FWA growth."The addition of mmWave to the 5G FWA market will deliver the five to ten times more capacity that is needed to support the ever more demanding subscribers and services," Motley said.

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— Anne Morris, contributing editor, special to Light Reading

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Europe

About the Author(s)

Anne Morris

Contributing Editor, Light Reading

Anne Morris is a freelance journalist, editor and translator. She has been working in the telecommunications sector since 1996, when she joined the London-based team of Communications Week International as copy editor. Over the years she held the editor position at Total Telecom Online and Total Tele-com Magazine, eventually leaving to go freelance in 2010. Now living in France, she writes for a number of titles and also provides research work for analyst companies.

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