Cellular Subscriber Lines (CSL): A Wireless-Wireline Physically Converged Architecture

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Abstract

Wireless-wireline convergence and cellular wireless deployment can economically accelerate through partial transmission of wireless 4G, 5G (generally 3GPP-standards-compliant), and/or Wi-Fi 6 baseband signals on the billions of copper phone, Ethernet, coaxial cable, and other wireline connections. This article poses such a Cellular Subscriber Lines (CSL) re-use architecture and investigates large bandwidth-efficiency gains, as well as the consequent cost-efficiency improvement that accrues for CSL's deployment infrastructure. In-home wireless signals' seamless distribution partially over copper links can achieve good data-rate-versus-distance profile. Results here also expand to Wi-Fi (possibly with MIMO use) on Ethernet multi-pair cables, finding very large gains over existing enterprise mesh (ad-hoc or otherwise) approaches.

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APA

Cioffi, J. M., Hwang, C. S., Kanellakopoulos, I., Oh, J., & Kerpez, K. J. (2020). Cellular Subscriber Lines (CSL): A Wireless-Wireline Physically Converged Architecture. IEEE Transactions on Communications, 68(12), 7289–7310. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCOMM.2020.3020572

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