NI debuts transceiver system SDR for 28 GHz research targeting 3GPP and Verizon 5G standards

May 23, 2017
The mmWave Transceiver System SDR and application-specific software from NI offer a comprehensive starting point for 5G measurement and research addressing both the 3GPP and Verizon 5G specifications.

At its NIWeek event in Austin, TX, National Instruments (NI), a provider of platform-based systems that enable engineers and scientists to solve engineering challenges, today announced a series of 28 GHz radio heads for its mmWave Transceiver System.

According to the company, this combination creates the first commercially available full transceiver of its kind that can transmit and/or receive wide-bandwidth signals of up to 2 GHz of bandwidth in real time, covering spectrum from 27.5 GHz to 29.5 GHz. The mmWave Transceiver System software defined radio (SDR) and application-specific software offer a complete and comprehensive starting point for 5G measurement and research addressing both the 3GPP and Verizon 5G specifications.

NI notes that the mmWave Transceiver System can operate as either an access point or user device in any over-the-air testing scenario. Users can also develop mmWave communication prototyping systems or perform channel measurements – necessary exercises for wireless researchers to understand the characteristics of a new spectrum – using the same system. The software works with the previously released radio heads for 71–76 GHz, so users can easily adapt their mmWave Transceiver System to 28 GHz by changing the RF radio heads.

Additionally, the mmWave Transceiver System baseband software delivers a complete communications physical layer compatible with the proposed 3GPP and Verizon 5G specifications as source code for LabVIEW system design software. This helps expedite system development by delivering a ready-to-run system that users can modify to adapt to their specific areas of research or testing.

“The new 28 GHz mmWave Transceiver System has been a key technology for many participants in our RF/Communications lead user program,” said James Kimery, director of RF research and SDR marketing at NI. “As the world allocates spectrum for 5G, 28 GHz has emerged as a leading candidate for several countries including the United States, South Korea, and Japan.”

The new radio heads include the models mmRH-3642, mmRH-3652 and mmRH-3602.