Survey of Cellular Signal Booster
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Date
2018-11-08
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Mecs, Information Engineering and Electronic Business
Abstract
The development of wireless technology has
facilitated the wide deployment of mobile
communication systems. The beauty of wireless
communication is that all nooks and corners can be
reached at a cheaper and faster rate when compared with
wireline. Wireless is now dominating the
telecommunications market. Initially, the dawn of
wireless was seen as the dawn of communications to poor
countries and rural areas which were poorly covered by
wireline devices due to high cost. Currently, the story has
changed. Both the wired and unwired environments are
clamoring for wireless connectivity. Considering the hype
of R&D in broadband technologies and easy acceptance
in the market place, wireline communications may soon
die a natural death. However, wireless communications
faces a few challenges. One of them is that the radio
frequency (RF) carrier signals used in these
communication systems degrades as it travels through the
air interface due to attenuation and interference. As a
result, the range of coverage may not be as planned
leading to very weak reception or even dead zones where
no communication can be done. This problem has
resulted in the development of cellular signal boosters
that help in receiving the weak signal, amplifying and
then re-transmitting it to reach the uncovered areas.
Boosters are now giving hope to the frustrated wireless
users such as indoor users and those at the fringes of a
cell site. These boosters are diverse in make, range,
method of operation, deployment and cost. In this paper,
a survey of various signal booster designs, deployment
and performance is presented. It is hoped that this will
serve as a one-stop shop for researchers and developers in
the important field of wireless signal boosters and
extenders, who wish to know what is available and
existing challenges
Description
Keywords
Boosters, Repeaters, Cellular Signal Degradation, Weak Signal Reception, Cellular Generations