How much better is MIMO capable of significantly increasing wireless data throughput?
How much better is MIMO capable of significantly increasing wireless data throughput?
I think the speedup is approximately linear, that is, two antennas give about twice the speed
as one antenna, etc. But besides increased speed, you also get increased range,
increased reliability (reduced fading), and increased mobility, and can use multi-path
algorithms to better handle interference.
Hello Barry,
Welcome to the Community, we hope you are enjoying it. Thank you for your reply coder27. I will move this discussion over to our Wireless Area of teh Community
Thank you,
Jamie
I agree with coder27. There is number of antennas and number of streams. You can have multiple antennas on the TX and/or RX side, and thereby increase the link budget. One way to look at this is if you have two antennas xmitting 10mW, you're xmitting 20mW. If you have two antennas, you have twice the amt of RX energy you're capturing. You actually get even more improvement than 2x (i.e. 3dB) because MIMO takes advantage of the multipath reflections. If it's not a rich multipath environment with a delay spread less than the symbol period, you'll just get the 2x improvement from doubling the antennas, which is pretty cool.
If you have good signal strength and a nice multipath channel, you can do dual streams which doubles throughput. Theoretically you do more than two streams. I have seen dual stream work on an 802.11(n) card in my own testing.
I've experimented with 802.11(n) 2-stream and seen it work. Here are the caveats:
Despite all this, you really can do the seeming impossible: You can double the amt of data you send over a 20MHz channel simply by adding another antenna and doing dual stream. You're transmitting two separate streams on the same frequency at the same time, which seems like magic. You can read more about 802.11(n) and 802.11(ac) MIMO here.