FR3 – the spectrum for 6G
In today’s mobile communication ecosystem, there are two active frequency ranges. FR1 (410 MHz to 7.125 GHz) and FR2 (24.25 GHz to 71 GHz). FR1 is heavily utilized for 5G and offers wide coverage and strong penetration. However, it faces overcrowding and bandwidths limitations. FR2, on the other hand, provides ultra-wide bandwidth and low latency but suffers from poor propagation and high deployment costs.
FR3 (7.125 GHz to 24.25 GHz) promises to be the best of both worlds: better propagation characteristics than FR2 while delivering more bandwidth than the sub-7 GHz frequencies of FR1. It is expected to enable more robust and scalable networks capable of meeting the burgeoning demands of advanced applications in dense urban environments. The exact frequency bands for deployment are subject to global and regional standardization and regulations. However, the focus for initial deployment is in the range from 7.125 GHz to 8.4 GHz.
Extended reality (XR) is one of the major applications anticipated for 6G, and it demands exceptionally high data rates – around 20 Gbps in dense urban environments – to enable immersive experiences. Achieving such high data rates requires wide bandwidths to support the high display rates necessary for expansive fields of vision and high resolution. Likewise, the sudden increase in AI applications based on large language models (LLM) in cellular communications will contribute to increased capacity needs. FR3 is crucial for such data-heavy applications.
FR3 is also relevant for non-terrestrial networks (NTN). NTN enables ubiquitous coverage and resilient connectivity through satellite connections, and it is already a strong market with 5G-Advanced. This is expected to continue into 6G. ITU spectrum allocations for legacy mobile and fixed satellite services include Ku and Ka bands, and 3GPP enables the usage of these bands for NTN.