IEEE 802.11ax

802.11 ax is a type of WLAN in the IEEE 802.11 set of types of WLANs. It is designed to improve overall spectral efficiency. It is still in a very early stage of development, but is predicted to have a top speed of around 10 Gbit/s[1] (as tested by Huawei), it works in 2.4 and/or 5 GHz, in addition to MIMO and MU-MIMO it introduces OFDMA technique to improve spectral efficiency and also higher order 1024 QAM modulation support for better throughputs. It is due to be publicly released in 2019.

Rate Set

Modulation and coding schemes for single spatial stream
MCS
index[lower-alpha 1]
Modulation
type
Coding
rate
Data rate (in Mbit/s)[lower-alpha 2]
20 MHz channels 40 MHz channels 80 MHz channels 160 MHz channels
1600 ns GI[lower-alpha 3] 800 ns GI 1600 ns GI 800 ns GI 1600 ns GI 800 ns GI 1600 ns GI 800 ns GI
0 BPSK 1/2 4 4 8 9 17 18 34 36
1 QPSK 1/2 16 17 33 34 68 72 136 144
2 QPSK 3/4 24 26 49 52 102 108 204 216
3 16-QAM 1/2 33 34 65 69 136 144 272 282
4 16-QAM 3/4 49 52 98 103 204 216 408 432
5 64-QAM 2/3 65 69 130 138 272 288 544 576
6 64-QAM 3/4 73 77 146 155 306 324 613 649
7 64-QAM 5/6 81 86 163 172 340 360 681 721
8 256-QAM 3/4 98 103 195 207 408 432 817 865
9 256-QAM 5/6 108 115 217 229 453 480 907 961
10 1024-QAM 3/4 122 129 244 258 510 540 1021 1081
11 1024-QAM 5/6 135 143 271 287 567 600 1134 1201

Notes

  1. MCS 9 is not applicable to all channel width/spatial stream combinations.
  2. A second stream doubles the theoretical data rate, a third one triples it, etc.
  3. GI stands for the guard interval.

References

  1. "What is 802.11ax WiFi, and will it really deliver 10Gbps? (updated) | ExtremeTech". ExtremeTech. Retrieved 2016-01-01.

Further reading

  1. "Are you ready for the next chapter of Wi-Fi? Meet 802.11ax"
  2. Bellalta, Boris (2015). "IEEE 802.11ax: High-Efficiency WLANs,". arXiv:1501.01496v4Freely accessible. 
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