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IEEE 802.11.g 2.4.GHz (ISM) Europe standard:<br />

• 100.mW in<br />

2.40–2.4835.GHz<br />

In USA:<br />

• 4.W in 2.40–2.4835.GHz<br />

IEEE 802.11n (a.k.a WWiSE: World-Wide<br />

Spectrum Efficiency)<br />

IEEE<br />

802.15.4<br />

based<br />

technology<br />

ZigBee/ZigBee Pro<br />

WirelessHART<br />

ISA100.11a<br />

OCARI<br />

2.4 and 5.GHz Regulations on 2.4 and 5.GHz<br />

bands are applied for total<br />

MIMO beam<br />

• 16 channels in the 2450.MHz band<br />

• 30 channels in the 915.MHz band<br />

• 3 channels in the 868.MHz band<br />

• 0.5–10.mW<br />

• 1.mW typically<br />

Up to 54.Mbps<br />

Up to 600.Mbps<br />

Up to 250.kbit/s<br />

Hundreds of meters<br />

Hundreds of meters<br />

Tens of meters<br />

FM-UWB (Swiss standard) low rate UWB • 3.1–10.6.GHz • 0.05.mW 1–10.kbit/s and<br />

Up to 10.m<br />

100–1000.kbit/s<br />

ECMA-368/369 high rate UWB<br />

(European association for standardizing<br />

information and <strong>communication</strong><br />

<strong>systems</strong>)<br />

• 3.1–10.6.GHz • 1–15.mW (0–12.dBm) 53.3–480.Mbps Up to 10.m<br />

Wireless Communication Standards 54-5<br />

© <strong>2011</strong> by Taylor and Francis Group, LLC

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