Exploring the future of UWB

Exploring the future of UWB

Download our white paper for comprehensive insights into IEEE 802.15.4ab

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Discover the next generation of UWB

The increasing integration of ultra-wideband (UWB) into consumer electronics, automotive systems and industrial applications is driving the evolution of UWB standards. To support new use cases such as precision ranging, secure access and advanced sensing, IEEE has initiated enhancements to the UWB physical and MAC layers under the IEEE 802.15.4ab standard. These improvements aim to increase performance while maintaining compatibility with previous iterations.

This white paper explores the technical advancements introduced in IEEE 802.15.4ab, such as enhanced modulation schemes, dynamic data rate adaptation, multi-millisecond ranging techniques and new capabilities for radar-based sensing. These features will enable future applications like vital sign detection, immersive multimedia sharing and ultra-low-power wake-up radios.

You will learn about:

  • The architecture and features of next-generation UWB technologies
  • Enhanced modulation and coding schemes for improved performance
  • Multi-millisecond UWB ranging methods and narrowband-assisted modes
  • Standardized radar/sensing packet structures and frequency stitching
  • Power-saving wake-up radios and low-energy UWB (LE-UWB)
  • New physical layer testing requirements and validation tools

HPRF modulation

The HRP-EMDEV is based on the high pulse repertion frequency (HPRF) modulation schemes introduced in IEEE802.15.4z that apply two pulse sequence bursts per coded bit. Each of these bursts is followed by a guard interval of the same length.

UWB driven MMS UWB ranging (one-to-one)

The image shows that the responder can immediately respond to the received fragments to provide a time optimized ranging phase, also called interleaved ranging.

Example for wake-up radio (for 20 SYNCs)

IEEE802.15.4ab will also introduce a power saving mechanism that lets receivers remain in very low power mode until a wake-up message is detected on a dedicated UWB channel.

Next generation UWB use cases and test requirements

Advanced ranging

Multi-millisecond (MMS) UWB ranging enhances precision and power efficiency by dividing ranging packets into RSF and RIF fragments transmitted in millisecond slots. This allows higher effective transmission power and reduced interference. Both UWB-driven and narrowband-assisted (NBA) configurations are supported, enabling hybrid use of UWB and O-QPSK channels. Multiple one-to-one and one-to-many ranging modes are defined, with options for interleaved or non-interleaved sequences depending on latency and power requirements.

UWB sensing/radar

UWB sensing capabilities are enabled through new SENS packet formats, specialized pulse shapes with minimal sidelobes and standardized CIR data interfaces. Applications include motion detection, vital sign monitoring and environmental mapping. Accuracy is improved using frequency stitching - either intra-packet or inter-packet - with overlapping channel allocations. Pulse design uses ternary codes and predefined timing markers to enhance resolution and object separation.

Wake-up radio

Wake-up radios use dedicated UWB bursts spaced in millisecond intervals to wake devices from low-power states. Wake-up messages consist of synchronized pulses encoded with a start bit and a target device ID, using position modulation for binary representation. The system balances latency and power consumption by varying the number of SYNC repetitions, supporting wake-up periods between 10.25 ms and 102.5 ms.

Low-energy UWB (LE-UWB)

LE-UWB enables efficient, low-complexity communication through mandatory on-off keying (OOK) and optional burst position modulation (BPM). Both modulations use chip-level pulse patterns with rates up to 245.76 MHz, supporting data rates between 5 Mbps and 20 Mbps. Symbols are short and require no RF carrier generation, making LE-UWB suitable for power-constrained and low-latency IoT applications.

New physical layer test requirements

Enhanced UWB features require new test conditions, including constraints on pulse shape accuracy using time-domain masks and cross-correlation requirements. Additional testing for O-QPSK-based narrowband PHYs, dynamic data rate adaptation and sensing pulse compliance is introduced. These tests align with IEEE standards as well as regulatory and certification requirements from bodies such as FiRa, CCC and CSA.

O-QPSK transmit power spectral density (PSD) mask

O-QPSK transmission in NBA MMS ranging must conform to specific spectral power density limits. The transmit PSD is measured with a 100 kHz resolution bandwidth, requiring a -20 dB relative drop beyond ±3.5 MHz from the carrier frequency. Symbol and carrier frequency alignment must meet tight ±20 ppm tolerances, ensuring coherent operation with UWB PHYs.

UWB test solutions

Test instruments such as the CMP200 and R&S®ATS800R support UWB development across all stages - from early research and chipset design to conformance, production and certification. Capabilities include parametric testing, AoA verification, sensing pulse validation and over-the-air (OTA) performance characterization.

White paper: Exploring the future of UWB

White paper: Exploring the future of UWB

This white paper explores the technical advancements introduced in IEEE 802.15.4ab, such as enhanced modulation schemes, dynamic data rate adaptation, multi-millisecond ranging techniques and new capabilities for radar-based sensing. These features will enable future applications like vital sign detection, immersive multimedia sharing and ultra-low-power wake-up radios.

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