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BPL: The Better
Broadband? January 17, 2005
For several years,
power companies and their supporters have promoted broadband over
power line (BPL) as a viable alternative to DSL and cable Internet
access technologies. But new research indicates that BPL may not
only be another broadband choice, it may be a better
choice.
Penn State
University engineers have developed a new computer model for
measuring high-speed broadband transmissions over U.S. overhead
electric power lines. They estimate that, at full data rate handling
capacity, BPL lines can provide bit rates that far exceed DSL or
cable over similar spans.
"Although broadband
power line 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," observes Mohsen Kavehrad, the Penn
State professor of electrical engineering who led the investigation.
"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," he says. "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," says Kavehrad, who is also director
of Penn State's Center for Information and Communications Technology
Research.
Kavehrad views
power lines as a ready-made, super high-speed Internet access
infrastructure. "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 DSL are unavailable."
Still, BPL must
overcome several technical hurdles before it can become a mainstream
Internet access technology. Kavehrad notes, for example, that
junctions and branches in the U.S. overhead electrical grid cause
broadband signals to reflect, producing multipath-like effects on
power lines. This effect causes degradation in power-line broadband
transmission performance and decreases transmission capacity. "The
signal can bounce back and forth in the lines if there is no proper
impedance matching," Kavehrad explains. "The bouncing takes energy
away from the signal and the loss is reflected in the ultimate
capacity." In service, performance will depend on how closely the
power company chooses to place its repeaters, says
Kavehrad.
The Penn State
researchers are continuing their studies, and Kavehrad predicts that
BPL's engineering challenges will eventually be solved. But whether
BPL will ever become an economical alternative to cable or DSL
remains to be seen, since there are still political issues that have
to be resolved. Over the past few years, BPL has encountered fierce
resistance from some radio spectrum users, particularly amateur
radio operators, who claim that spurious signals radiated by the
technology interferes with their
operations.
Copyright © 2004 PricewaterhouseCoopers. PricewaterhouseCoopers
refers to the network of member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers
International Limited, each of which is a separate and independent
legal entity. All rights reserved. The preceding article was written
by John Edwards, a freelance technology writer based in Gilbert,
Arizona. He can be reached by phone at +1-480-854-0011. |
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