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Penn State Engineers Present Expanded View of
Broadband by Power
Lines
By Ronald Roach
As leading technology companies unveiled dazzling new
computing and electronic products at the Consumer
Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas earlier this month,
engineers from Penn State University captured the
research spotlight for presenting an innovative solution
for broadband delivery over power lines.
Coinciding
with the CES in Las Vegas to highlight technology
research, the IEEE Consumer Communications &
Networking Conference showcased the research paper of
engineering professor Dr. Mohsen Kavehrad and
engineering doctoral student Pouyan Amirshahi, who
outlined how power lines can transmit data to homes at
rates far faster than high-speed Internet connections
from cable and telephone companies.
"If you
condition those power lines properly, they're an
omnipresent national treasure waiting to be tapped for
broadband Internet service delivery, especially in rural
areas where cable or digital subscriber line (DSL) are
unavailable," Kavehrad says.
Residential
broadband, or the delivery of high-speed Internet
service, via cable television or telephone lines has
been the dominant means by which millions of Americans
have increasingly accessed the Internet. In recent
years, federal government officials have promoted
broadband service as an economic and education priority
and have undertaken steps to stimulate its use among
Americans.
"This country needs a national goal
for broadband technology, for the spread of broadband
technology. We ought to have a universal, affordable
access for broadband technology by the year 2007, and
then we ought to make sure as soon as possible
thereafter (that) consumers have got plenty of choices
when it comes to purchasing the broadband carrier," said
U.S. President George W. Bush last spring.
Touted by industry and government officials,
broadband service over power lines has been promoted as
a possible competitor to cable and telephone services.
Cable and telephone services currently handle nearly all
of the 30 million U.S. residential broadband
connections. Yet despite dozens of experiments, few
electric utilities have attempted to sell the service to
customers, citing cost and technical problems as
obstacles.
Typically, power-line broadband
systems offer data speeds of roughly one megabit to
three megabits per second, which is similar to cable and
DSL services. In their paper, "Transmission Channel
Model and Capacity of Overhead Multi-Conductor
Medium-Voltage Power-Lines for Broadband
Communications," Amirshahi and Kavehrad have contended
that their system could deliver data at close to one
gigabit per second over medium-voltage electrical lines
in ideal conditions, with speeds of hundreds of megabits
per second available to home users. A gigabit data
connection conveys information one thousand times larger
than a megabit connection.
"Our
research shows that power lines have much greater
broadband capacity than previously envisioned," Kavehrad
says, but cautions that increases in interference with
other communications require additional technical
solutions.
Officials say the researchers are the
first to evaluate data rate handling capacity for
overhead medium voltage unshielded U.S. electric power
lines. The Penn state system would use repeaters placed
every one kilometer, (0.62 miles) and requires modified
power lines to reduce interference with the data
signals, according to the researchers. Their estimates
are based on computer models, and that the data speeds
available in a real-world version would depend on how
many repeaters a power company used.
The
researchers say they will continue their studies into
power-line broadband transmission. Kavehrad believes
that the engineering issues to make broadband by power
lines 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, he adds.
The Penn State
study was funded with a grant from AT&T Corp.
© Copyright 2005 by
DiverseEducation.com
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