Material Characterization and Radio Channel Modeling at D-Band Frequencies

As the throughput requirements for wireless communication links keep rising, characterization of sub-THz radio channels is necessary. This paper presents the results of a radio channel measurement campaign in which we characterize the full D-band, ranging from 110 to 170 GHz, for distances up to 5 m...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brecht De Beelde, David Plets, Claude Desset, Emmeric Tanghe, Andre Bourdoux, Wout Joseph
Format: article
Language:EN
Published: IEEE 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/b5dd14fa50d8417194176e94e0c782e4
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:As the throughput requirements for wireless communication links keep rising, characterization of sub-THz radio channels is necessary. This paper presents the results of a radio channel measurement campaign in which we characterize the full D-band, ranging from 110 to 170 GHz, for distances up to 5 m. We measured penetration and reflection loss for a broad set of materials that are commonly used in indoor environments, including wood, glass, acrylic, and concrete, and measured corner diffraction losses. Measurements over the full 60 GHz bandwidth reveal frequency selectivity as well as a periodic variation of both penetration and reflection loss, which is attributed to the thin film effect. Based on measurements in a conference room and outdoors, we create a spatio-temporal channel model for the conference room and an outdoor path loss model. The channel models show that the radio channel is extremely sparse to multipath components, containing only a Line-of-Sight path with signal attenuation close to path loss in free space, and first-order reflections with a measured attenuation that corresponds to the sum of the path and reflection loss.