Sunday, April 5, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Indian-Origin Engineer Develops Technology To Double Wi-Fi Speed

The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2016 11:58 AM
    An Indian-origin engineer has developed a novel technology that doubles Wi-Fi speeds with a single antenna -- an achievement with potential to transform the telecommunications field in future.
     
    Columbia University's Harish Krishnaswamy, an electrical engineering graduate from the Indian Institute of Technology -Madras, has for the first time integrated a non-reciprocal circulator and a full-duplex radio on a nanoscale silicon chip to create the breakthrough system. 
     
    "This technology could revolutionise the field of telecommunications," said Krishnaswamy, director of the Columbia High-Speed and Mm-wave IC (CoSMIC) Lab.
     
    "Our circulator is the first to be put on a silicon chip, and we get literally orders of magnitude better performance than prior work," he noted.
     
    Last year, Columbia researchers invented a technology -- full-duplex radio integrated circuits (ICs) -- that can be implemented in nanoscale CMOS to enable simultaneous transmission and reception at the same frequency in a wireless radio. That system required two antennas.
     
    "Full-duplex communications, where the transmitter and the receiver operate at the same time and at the same frequency, has become a critical research area and now we've shown that WiFi capacity can be doubled on a nanoscale silicon chip with a single antenna. This has enormous implications for devices like smartphones and tablets," Krishnaswamy explained.
     
     
    "Being able to put the circulator on the same chip as the rest of the radio has the potential to significantly reduce the size of the system, enhance its performance, and introduce new functionalities critical to full duplex," added co-researcher Jin Zhou.
     
    Krishnaswamy's team had to "break" Lorentz Reciprocity - a fundamental physical characteristic of most electronic structures that requires electromagnetic waves travel in the same manner in forward and reverse directions - to develop the technology. 
     
    "It is rare for a single piece of research, or even a research group, to bridge fundamental theoretical contributions with implementations of practical relevance. It is extremely rewarding to supervise graduate students who were able to do that," said the Indian-origin engineer who has earlier won many accolades for his research efforts.
     
    The research was published in the journal Nature Communications and the paper was presented at the "2016 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference" in San Francisco, California, recently.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker

    Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker
    China's Xiaomi has become the fifth largest smartphone maker in the world. The Chinese company reached this milestone in just three years....

    Xiaomi now world's fifth largest smartphone maker

    US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images

    US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images
    A woman in the US has filed a $123 million case against social networking site Facebook for not deleting "revenge porn" images uploaded by her old friend....

    US woman sues Facebook over 'revenge porn' images

    Getting chatty with meow chat

    Getting chatty with meow chat
    A new chat app is on the prowl, stalking users on social networks like a cat...

    Getting chatty with meow chat

    Instagram launches messaging app

    Instagram launches messaging app
    Social network Instagram has launched its messaging app called Bolt which makes sending visuals easy. The easy to use app allows you to tap once to...

    Instagram launches messaging app

    Our Milky Way much smaller than previously thought

    Our Milky Way much smaller than previously thought
    The Milky Way, the galaxy that contains our solar system, is way smaller than astronomers previously thought, says a study...

    Our Milky Way much smaller than previously thought

    New device allows blind to read graphs

    New device allows blind to read graphs
    In what could open up new career paths and educational opportunities for the visually impaired, researchers have developed a digital system that allows...

    New device allows blind to read graphs