Intel builds all-in-one wireless radio package

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Intel builds all-in-one wireless radio package

Design could lead to cheaper, more power-efficient devices


Researchers at Intel Corp. have figured out how to integrate into a compact package all the elements needed to connect to wireless LANs, the company is expected to announce today at the VLSI Circuits Symposium in Japan.
Many companies have already built Wi-Fi chips that support the 802.11a/b/g standards, but those products require several other chips built onto the motherboard in order to connect to wireless networks.

Intel has now integrated components such as power amplifiers onto a single piece of silicon. It has also built connections from the amplifiers to external radio antennas on a single transceiver package, connections that used to be made with multiple pieces of silicon located outside the package, said Howard High, an Intel spokesman. A transceiver is a chip that can both transmit and receive signals.

The device currently supports 802.11a/b/g, but it should have enough bandwidth to also support the forthcoming 802.11n standard, High said. Intel believes the integrated design will help customers build cheaper and more power-efficient devices, he said.

In order to build this package, Intel researchers had to solve several problems presented by an integrated design. For example, they had to figure out how to keep the power amplifier from interfering with the radio signal, High said.

By eliminating as many discrete chips as possible, Intel was able to reduce the power consumption of the package and lower the cost of building wireless networking technology into a notebook, mobile phone, or PDA, Intel researchers said in a paper outlining their accomplishment.

The current design is only a prototype, and additional testing and validation is needed before Intel will start producing the chip in large volumes, High said. Given that wireless communication chips also require government approval before they can be sold, Intel is probably at least two years away from selling these chips, he said.

Intel's ultimate goal is to build a communications chip that can connect to any type of network, be it a Wi-Fi LAN, a WAN based on the WiMax technology it is heavily promoting, or personal-area networks like Bluetooth or ultrawideband, High said.

By 2007, the company expects to build an integrated chip with separate radios for the various networks and hopes to eventually build chips with "cognitive" or software-defined radios that can connect to multiple types of networks on their own.

Intel will showcase the prototype at the 2005 VLSI Circuits Symposium, an annual conference highlighting advances in semiconductor research. Intel, IBM, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Freescale Semiconductor Inc., Nvidia Corp. and many other chip companies have presented research at the conference, which ends tomorrow.
 
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