Researchers from Hiroshima University and National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Japan have announced the development of a terahertz (THz) transmitter capable of transmitting digital data at a rate exceeding 100 gigabits per second over a single channel using the 300-gigahertz band.
The THz band is a new and vast frequency resource expected to be used for future ultrahigh-speed wireless communications.
The research group has developed a transmitter that achieves a communication speed of 105 gigabits per second using the frequency range from 290 GHz to 315 GHz.
Last year, the group demonstrated that the speed of a wireless link in the 300-GHz band could be greatly enhanced by using quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM).
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At this data rate, the whole content on a DVD (digital versatile disk) can be transferred in a fraction of a second.
"This year, we developed a transmitter with 10 times higher transmission power than the previous version's. This made the per-channel data rate above 100 Gbit per second at 300 GHz possible," said Minoru Fujishima from Hiroshima University.
"Fibre optics realised ultrahigh-speed wired links, and wireless links have been left far behind," he said.
"Terahertz could offer ultrahigh-speed links to satellites as well, which can only be wireless. That could, in turn, significantly boost in-flight network connection speeds, for example," Fujishima added.
"Other possible applications include fast download from contents servers to mobile devices and ultrafast wireless links between base stations," he added.
"Another, completely new possibility offered by terahertz wireless is high-data-rate minimum-latency communications," said Fujishima.
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