(Center for Digital Education)
New Model for High-Speed Broadband Transmissions

Penn State researchers develop new model for
high-speed broadband transmissions over U.S. overhead
electric power lines

By Newsdesk - January 2005
Penn State engineers have developed a new model for
high-speed broadband transmissions over U.S. overhead
electric power lines and estimate that, at full data
rate handling capacity, the lines can provide bit
rates that far exceed DSL or cable over similar spans.


Mohsen Kavehrad, the W. L. Weiss professor of
electrical engineering and director of the Center for
Information and Communications Technology Research,
led the investigation. He says, "Although broadband
power line (BPL) service trials are now underway on a
limited basis in some locations in the U.S., these
trials run at DSL- comparable rates of 2 or 3 megabits
per second.

"We've run a computer simulation with our new power
line model and found that, under ideal conditions, the
maximum achievable bit rate was close to a gigabit per
second per kilometer on an overhead medium voltage
unshielded U.S. electric power line that has been
properly conditioned through impedance matching. The
gigabit can be shared by a half dozen homes in a
neighborhood to provide rates in the hundreds of
megabits per second range, much higher than DSL and
even cable."

Kavehrad adds, "If you condition those power lines
properly, they're an omni-present national treasure
waiting to be tapped for broadband Internet service
delivery, especially in rural areas where cable or DSL
are unavailable."

The researchers say they are the first to evaluate
data rate handling capacity for overhead medium
voltage unshielded U. S. electric power lines and
outlined their findings at the IEEE Consumer
Communications & Networking Conference in Las Vegas,
Nev., Jan. 5. Their paper is titled, "Transmission
Channel Model and Capacity of Overhead Multi-conductor
Medium-Voltage Power-lines for Broadband
Communications." The authors are Pouyan Amirshahi, a
doctoral candidate in electrical engineering, and
Kavehrad.

In their paper, the authors note that the junctions
and branches in the U.S. overhead electrical grid
cause broadband signals to reflect and produce
multipath-like effects on these lines. This causes
degradation in power-line broadband transmission
performance and decreases transmission capacity. 

Kavehrad explains, "The signal can bounce back and
forth in the lines if there is no proper impedance
matching. The bouncing takes energy away from the
signal and the loss is reflected in the ultimate
capacity.

"In service, performance will depend on how close the
power company chooses to place the repeaters," he
adds.

The researchers are continuing their studies. Kavehrad
predicts that the engineering issues to make BPL a
technical alternative to DSL and cable will be solved.
Whether it will be an economical alternative remains
to be seen since there are interference issues that
have to be overcome.

The study was supported by a grant from AT&T
Corporation.



Newsdesk 

 



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