In a Nutshell

Why can't we just push 100Gbps over a standard copper phone line? The answer lies in the fundamental laws of information theory. The Shannon-Hartley theorem defines the maximum rate at which information can be transmitted over a communications channel of a specified bandwidth in the presence of noise.

The Capacity Formula

Claude Shannon proved that the capacity CC of a channel is limited by two primary physical factors: the Bandwidth (frequency range) and the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR).

C=Blog2(1+SN)C = B \log_2(1 + \frac{S}{N})

Where:

  • C: Channel Capacity (bits per second).
  • B: Bandwidth (Hz).
  • S/N: Signal-to-Noise Power Ratio (linear, not dB).

Converting dB to Linear

In the field, we measure SNR in decibels (dB). To use the Shannon formula, we must convert the log-scale dB back to the linear power ratio:

Linear Ratio=10(SNRdB/10)\text{Linear Ratio} = 10^{(\text{SNR}_{dB} / 10)}

Example: An SNR of 30dB corresponds to a linear ratio of 1000. Under these conditions, a 20MHz Wi-Fi channel has a theoretical limit of roughly 20×log2(1001)200 Mbps20 \times \log_2(1001) \approx 200 \text{ Mbps}.

Increasing Capacity: MIMO and MCS

How do we bypass these limits in modern hardware?

  • MIMO: Multiple-Input Multiple-Output uses spatial multiplexing to create multiple "virtual channels," effectively multiplying the capacity by the number of spatial streams.
  • High-Order Modulation (QAM): Encoding more bits per symbol allows us to pack more information into the same bandwidth, but requires a significantly cleaner SNR (lower noise floor).

The Future: Terahertz and Beyond

As we reach the peak of SNR efficiency in the Gigahertz range, the only path forward for 6G and beyond is moving into higher frequency bands (Terahertz), where vast amounts of Bandwidth (B) are still available, even if the SNR remains challenging at those ranges.

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Technical Standards & References

REF [1]
Claude Shannon (1948)
A Mathematical Theory of Communication
Published: Bell System Technical Journal
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REF [2]
Bernard Sklar (2001)
Digital Communications: Fundamentals and Applications
Published: Prentice Hall
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Mathematical models derived from standard engineering protocols. Not for human safety critical systems without redundant validation.

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