Simultaneous Transmit & Receive (STAR) for Next Gen Comms 5/6G
38th ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM AND MINI-SHOW
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2024
Hanover Manor, 16 Eagle Rock Ave., East Hanover, NJ 07936. 973-992-7425
The ever-increasing demand for wireless services in modern society is leading to billion-dollar spectrum auctions from the FCC and other national, spectrum-controlling organizations around the world. The value of spectrum, and the expanding scope of commercial communications, are leading to increased demand for spectral efficiency. With much effort, traditional approaches to increasing spectral efficiency (such as advances in modulation, coding, MIMO, etc.) have largely been exhausted, leaving system designers looking elsewhere for further improvements. In-band full-duplex (IBFD) has the potential to double the capacity of a channel without an increase in bandwidth or signal-to-noise ratio. IBFD, also commonly referred to as “same frequency simultaneous transmit and receive” (SF-STAR) is a technology that allows for a device to transmit and receive signals on the same frequency at the same time. The major technical challenge to be solved is to reduce the self-interference (SI) signal below the noise floor of the receiver. Consensus has largely emerged that such real-world systems will require a combination of self-interference cancellation (SIC) techniques, coming from propagation (antenna), analog, and digital domains.
This talk will present the challenges and successes of analog, digital, and aperture-based techniques for STAR and will discuss possible ways forward that leverage new array-based architectures and processing techniques.
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General Event Chair Kirit Dixit 201-669-7599 kdixit@microcomsales.com
Technical Program Chair George Kannell 973-284-3682 george.kannell@L3Harris.com
Technical Program Co-Chair Ajay Poddar akpodddar@ieee.org
Speakers
Dr. Alan Brannon
Simultaneous Transmit & Receive (STAR) for Next Gen Comms 5/6G
Biography:
Dr. Alan Brannon received the B.S.E.E. degree from Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA, in 2002, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA, in 2004 and 2007, respectively. He currently leads the RF research group at CU Boulder’s Center for National Security Initiatives. He has 22 publications in the fields of electrical engineering and physics and is an inventor on 15 patents. He has served as team lead or technical lead on numerous research and design projects related to
5G/next-G wireless communications, RF interference cancellation techniques, new filter technologies, wideband antennas, phased arrays, power amplifiers, atomic clocks, oscillators, and RF front ends. Dr. Brannon has 14 years’ experience in industry R&D, including as a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff at LGS Innovations, the former Bell Labs applied research labs. Dr. Brannon was a recipient of the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, the Tau Beta Pi Graduate Research Fellowship, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology Fellowship.
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Address:United States
Agenda
WHEN:
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
WHERE:
Hanover Manor, 16 Eagle Rock Ave., East Hanover, NJ 07936.
Ph: +1 (973)-992-7425
TECHNICAL SYMPOSIUM from 8:50 AM – 4:30 PM
MINI SHOW featuring the latest products 9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Registration is on-site. Section Home page: http://sites.ieee.org/northjersey/
ALL ARE WELCOME (IEEE Membership not required). REGISTRATION IS ON-SITE
THERE IS NO CHARGE TO ATTEND THE SYMPOSIUM OR SHOW.
COMPLIMENTARY BREAKFAST / LUNCH INCLUDED FOR ALL.