[Technology Report]
Wi-Fi Chips Stand Out In A Sea Of Wireless Products
Louis E. Frenzel
ED Online ID #20104
December 1, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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Most of the ICs we cover in Electronic
Design are new products that really
have something to offer. With hundreds
of new chips announced annually, it’s a
challenge to identify those that push the
speed, power, and size boundaries or have
unique features. We look for innovation.
You wouldn’t think, then, that the Wi-Fi
radio chips I selected as the Best Communications/
Wireless products would
be, well, the winners. Yet these new chips
do offer something better.
NEW PORTABLE APPS
Wi-Fi has turned into a stellar wireless
technology and standard (IEEE
802.11). It’s widely used in enterprise
local-area networks (LANs), hot spots,
and home networks. But up until now, it
has found homes primarily in fixed and
mobile device applications like laptops
and even some cell phones—applications
with significant power available.
Breaking new ground, G2 Microsystems
introduced a low-power systemon-
a-chip (SoC) and related module
that allows Wi-Fi to be used in a wider
range of applications that work from
smaller batteries, like remote controls
and asset tracking tags.
The G2C547 is a fully 802.11b/gcompatible
radio media access controller
(MAC) and physical layer (PHY) on a
chip that also comes with its own 32-bit
CPU (a version of SPARC), memory,
and some very interesting I/O (Fig. 1).
Memory consists of 128-kbyte RAM
and 512-kbyte ROM. A 2-kbyte battery-
backup ROM is also provided.
The I/O is for external flash, UART,
GPIO, SDIO, and SPI (both master
and slave). An interesting addition—
not typically part of a Wi-Fi chip—is
a collection of sensor interface circuits,
including analog-to-digital converters
(ADCs) for temperature, motion, security
seals, and other functions.
For this type of low-power IC, the onchip
regulators and power-management
circuits are a given. Thus, many applications won’t need an additional processor.
Yet the chip will work with an external
8- or 16-bit controller as required.
Full crypto hardware covers AES-128,
RC4, MD5, SHA-1, and CRC-32. The
complete 802.11i security features are
implemented for WEP and all versions
of WPA. In addition, the eCos operating
system (OS) running on the processor
includes the complete TCP/IP stack and
drivers, making Internet connectivity
easy to implement. A real-time clock
makes for wakeup and time-stamp functions
as well as a super-fast boot.
The G2C547 also comes with features
that make it useful in a wide range
of asset tracking and other tagging
applications. The device includes a complete
125-kHz transceiver that’s typically
used in various RFID applications.
Furthermore, the G2C547 supports the
EPC Gen 2 900-MHz RFID standard.
It contains circuitry to implement realtime
location systems (RTLS).
Its ISO 24730-2 time distance of
arrival (TDOA) location technology lets
you use the chip in tracking and location
schemes for major assets, like keeping
track of equipment in a hospital. These
applications can use the existing Wi-Fi
access points to implement an enormous
range of location services. Equipped
with in-place infrastructure plus this
chip, you can assemble a flexible tracking
system at a very reasonable cost and time
of implementation.
The device, which comes in a 10- by
10-mm, 72-pin quad flat no-lead (QFN)
package, works from -40°C to 85°C.
Typical power-consumption figures are
10 µW in sleep/standby mode, 79 µW
in listen mode, and 117 µW in active
orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
(OFDM) receive mode.
If you aren’t a wireless whiz, you can
also get the G2M5477 module. It uses
the G2C547 chip plus a +20-dBm power
amp and antenna, crystal, and other discretes
to create a final working product.
The module is already FCC and CE certified
and tested for Wi-Fi Alliance apps
like Wireless MultiMedia. Just drop it
right into your product and go.
The G2C547 is sampling now. Initial
pricing is $9 in 100,000-unit quantities.
A development evaluation board, software,
and other accessories are also available.
The G2M5477 module costs $22
in 10,000-unit lots. High-volume production
is planned for February 2009.
GUARANTEED BANDWIDTH
At least a half-dozen companies make
transceivers for the 802.11n Wi-Fi standard.
All comply with the Draft 2.0 standard
and the Wi-Fi Alliance’s interoperability
guidelines so they can deliver at least
100 Mbits/s within the typical unobstructed
100-m range. They also interoperate
but lack any significant distinction from
one another. Yet Quantenna Communications’
QHS Wi-Fi chips change that tune
with significant features and improvement
over the more common chips.
When dealing with limited multipleinput
multiple-output (MIMO) of the
2-by-2 or 2-by-3 variety, link distances and
throughput rates are typically unpredictable.
Thanks to an unending number of
environmental conditions, you can only
guess your connection range and speed.
Limited range means that coverage in
a home or with an enterprise access point
will have dead zones, ultimately translating
into connection unreliability. In critical
applications like video, that can greatly
limit the usefulness of wireless. In fact, few
vendors will support video over Wi-Fi.
Continue to page 2
Product size or printed-circuit-board
(PCB) footprint can also be an issue in
packaging. To achieve longer range, higher
speeds, and reliability, typically more chips
must be used, which increases product size.
Finally, power consumption is always at
the forefront of most new designs.
The QHS series removes many of these
limitations. The family offers raw data
speeds up to 1 Gbit/s with a throughput
up to 600 Mbits/s. Range and reliability
get a boost from a 4-by-4 MIMO scheme
as well as transmit beamforming. These
features alone account for a 10- to 11-dB
advantage over the closest competitors.
Range and reliability are also extended by
the availability of a vector mesh networking
capability with spectrum management.
Mesh node routing easily expands coverage
depending on the number of nodes used.
Whole-home coverage becomes almost
automatic with the Quantenna solution.
The QHS series is highly integrated,
which means fewer chips and discrete
components are needed, saving lots of
PCB space. Bill-of-materials (BOM) costs
are also lower than competitive solutions.
The top-of-the-line series member, the
QHS1000, is a fully integrated chip set that
delivers 1 Gbit/s (Fig. 2). It comes in either
a dual 4-by-4 or quad 2-by-2 MIMO configuration
and operates on both the 2.4-
and 5-GHz unlicensed spectrum.
In the chip set, the QHS600 delivers
up to 600 Mbits/s in either dual 4-by-4 or
quad 2-by-2 form and operates only in the
5-GHz band. It targets video applications.
The QHS450 offers up to 450 Mbits/s and
comes in a single 4-by-4 or dual 2-by-2
configuration. Designed for data-intensive
uses, it operates in the 2.4-GHz band.
Quantenna offers its own OS to help
designers implement a fully featured access
point. Vendor-specific applications are easy
to port to the OS. The QHS chip sets are
sampling now. Contact the company for
pricing.
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