IEEE P802.15.2/D09 PDF | Request Standard
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IEEE P802.15.2/D09

Part 15.2: Coexistence of Wireless Personal Area Networks With Other Wireless Devices Operating in Unlicensed Frequency Bands (Replaced by IEEE 802.15.2-2003)

Standard by IEEE, 2003

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  • Language: English
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IEEE P802.15.2/D09 is a draft IEEE document focused on coexistence for wireless personal area networks operating alongside other wireless devices in unlicensed frequency bands. It addresses how systems can share spectrum more effectively in crowded communication environments, helping reduce interference and improve practical operation. As a standards reference in communication, networking, and broadcast technologies, IEEE P802.15.2/D09 is relevant to engineers and buyers who need a clear technical basis for WPAN coexistence planning.

IEEE P802.15.2/D09 overview

This draft standard sits within the IEEE 802.15 family and specifically examines coexistence behavior for wireless personal area networks. IEEE P802.15.2/D09 provides technical context for how devices may operate when other unlicensed-band wireless equipment is present, which is important in shared-spectrum deployments. Although marked inactive and later replaced by IEEE 802.15.2-2003, the document remains useful for understanding the requirements and design thinking behind WPAN coexistence in communication systems.

Typical use cases

IEEE P802.15.2/D09 is typically relevant where short-range wireless devices must function near other unlicensed-band radios, such as consumer electronics, office connectivity equipment, and embedded communication modules. It may be consulted during system design, coexistence evaluation, or product comparison for wireless personal area network implementations. The standard can also support technical review of RF behavior, interference management, and compatibility planning in mixed-device environments where multiple wireless technologies share limited spectrum.

Why this standard matters

For organizations working with WPAN products, IEEE P802.15.2/D09 helps establish a common reference point for coexistence expectations and technical consistency. That can reduce design risk, support more predictable performance, and improve procurement decisions when evaluating wireless equipment intended for unlicensed bands. It is also useful for compliance-oriented review and testing, especially when engineers need to compare implementation choices against a defined coexistence framework rather than relying on ad hoc assumptions.

  • WPAN coexistence in unlicensed bands
  • Interference and spectrum sharing guidance
  • IEEE 802.15 family technical reference
  • Inactive draft, replaced by later revision
SKU: c3b1b09ea5cf

  • Publication Date: 2003
  • Standard Status: Inactive
  • Publisher: IEEE
  • Subject: Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
  • Official IEEE: Doi link

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