학술논문

Orbital Angular Momentum Multiplexing Using Radio Wave and its Extension to Multishape Radio
Document Type
Periodical
Source
Journal of Lightwave Technology J. Lightwave Technol. Lightwave Technology, Journal of. 41(7):1985-1996 Apr, 2023
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Photonics and Electrooptics
Multiplexing
Wireless communication
Frequency division multiplexing
Electromagnetic scattering
Optical fiber communication
Antennas
6G mobile communication
6G
multishape radio
OAM
OAM-MIMO
orbital angular momentum
sub-THz
Language
ISSN
0733-8724
1558-2213
Abstract
Orbital angular momentum (OAM) is a physical property of electromagnetic waves characterized by a helical phase front in the propagation direction. Much research has been conducted using not only light waves but also radio waves for OAM multiplexing. This paper explores the potential of OAM multiplexing using radio waves toward the 6G era. In particular, we study OAM multiplexing as an enabler for high-capacity wireless transmission that allows terabit-class wireless transmission. Different from optical fibers where each OAM carrying beam is reflected within the fibers, the energy of OAM-carrying beams is not necessarily focused within the reception antenna area when OAM multiplexing has been performed due to its divergence. To address this, we propose OAM-MIMO (multi-input and multi-output) multiplexing that uses multiple sets of lower OAM modes with additional digital signal processing. We experimentally validated the effectiveness of the proposed OAM-MIMO multiplexing using 28 GHz and 40 GHz frequency bands by achieving over 100 Gbit/s transmission at a distance of over 100 m. Also, we successfully demonstrate the feasibility of OAM multiplexing using the sub-THz frequency band by achieving over 100 Gbit/s. Finally, we extend our work to multishape radio that exploits the various physical properties of electromagnetic waves. Together with the utilization of OAM, multishape radio will lead to new opportunities toward the 6G era.