NIST
Nist1

DoD Volunteers 100-MHz Bandwidth for Spectrum Sharing

Sept. 27, 2020
The DoD is willing to share 100 MHz of midband frequency bandwidth with civilian users to enable wideband 5G wireless cellular communications applications.

Wireless electronic applications are continuing to increase in many different markets, such as for commercial and military applications, with limited available frequency bandwidths for those applications. To help the growth of new wireless applications, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is seeking to share bandwidth that had once been used solely for military applications with emerging commercial and industrial applications. The shared bandwidth is a 100-MHz section of frequency spectrum from 3450 to 3550 MHz. That part of frequency bandwidth has traditionally been used for defense-related applications, such as for electronic-warfare (EW), radar, and other electronic defense-related applications. But with proper interoperability and integration, that 100-MHz bandwidth can also be used for commercial and industrial applications.

Commercial and industrial applications can be added to the newly available 100 MHz without disrupting the operation of existing defense applications within that bandwidth, such as shipboard and ground-based radar systems. For commercial applications, the additional 100-MHz bandwidth can be considered as part of the contiguous frequency bandwidth from 3450 to 3980 MHz, such as for higher-capacity Fifth Generation (5G) wireless cellular communications networks. Any devices for commercial applications within the shared 100-MHz bandwidth must operate without interfering with established defense-related equipment operating at those frequencies.

For efficient operation together, the DoD’s Chief Information Officer, the Honorable Dana Deasy, invited industry partners to present innovative solutions and technologies for dynamic sharing of the spectrum allocation with 5G wireless communications system deployments, tested with anechoic chambers such as one at the National Institute of Science and Technology (see the figure). He explained: “DOD’s partnership with industry is imperative in this extremely technical and competitive field.  What we learn in this effort has potential to benefit the entire nation and keep the U.S. as the global leader of 5G technology for many years to come.” Responses about methods for spectrum sharing from industry are due to the DoD by October 19, 2020. 

Sponsored Recommendations

UHF to mmWave Cavity Filter Solutions

April 12, 2024
Cavity filters achieve much higher Q, steeper rejection skirts, and higher power handling than other filter technologies, such as ceramic resonator filters, and are utilized where...

Wideband MMIC Variable Gain Amplifier

April 12, 2024
The PVGA-273+ low noise, variable gain MMIC amplifier features an NF of 2.6 dB, 13.9 dB gain, +15 dBm P1dB, and +29 dBm OIP3. This VGA affords a gain control range of 30 dB with...

Fast-Switching GaAs Switches Are a High-Performance, Low-Cost Alternative to SOI

April 12, 2024
While many MMIC switch designs have gravitated toward Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) technology due to its ability to achieve fast switching, high power handling and wide bandwidths...

Request a free Micro 3D Printed sample part

April 11, 2024
The best way to understand the part quality we can achieve is by seeing it first-hand. Request a free 3D printed high-precision sample part.