Wireless communications testing
Setting new performance standards with IEEE 802.11bn
Authors: Lisa Ward, Jörg Köpp
Wi-Fi, based on the IEEE 802.11 standards, has become essential to modern connectivity. From video conferencing and AR/VR experiences to IoT devices, content sharing, web browsing, and high-definition streaming, Wi-Fi now carries the majority of mobile internet traffic across homes, workplaces, and public venues.
IEEE 802.11bn, the foundation of Wi-Fi 8, moves beyond the throughput focus of earlier Wi-Fi generations to deliver a better overall user experience. It provides ultra-high reliability (UHR), stable performance, reduced latency, seamless connectivity, spectrum and power efficiency, and smart coexistence, while maintaining the core physical-layer parameters introduced in Wi-Fi 7.
This white paper highlights the new PHY and MAC features of IEEE 802.11bn, including distributed resource units (DRU), enhanced long-range (ELR) capabilities, unequal modulation (UEQM), multi-AP coordination, improved roaming, non-primary channel access (NPCA), and dynamic subband operation (DSO).
As homes, enterprises, and public spaces demand faster, more predictable, and energy-efficient connectivity, Wi-Fi 8 lays the groundwork for next-generation Wi-Fi experiences.
In this white paper you will learn about:
- Wi-Fi 8 for ultra-high reliability
- Tackling real-world Wi-Fi challenges
- PHY features
- MAC essentials
- Advanced MAC features
- IEEE 802.11bn physical layer testing
- Smart testing for ultra-high reliability
Learn how Wi-Fi 8 will transform connectivity and network efficiency in our whitepaper.
