IEEE P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 PDF | Request Standard
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IEEE P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009

Part 16: Air Interface for Fixed Broadband Wireless Access Systems - Improved Coexistence Mechanisms for License-Exempt Operation Amendment

Standard by IEEE, 2009

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  • Language: English
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  • Language: English
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About This Item

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P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 is a technical standard draft focused on improved coexistence mechanisms for license-exempt operation within the Part 16 air interface for fixed broadband wireless access systems. It addresses how wireless equipment can share unlicensed spectrum more effectively while reducing interference risks and supporting reliable operation. For communication and networking applications, this document is relevant to system design, interoperability planning, and performance control in environments where spectrum sharing is a practical concern.

About P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009

This specification sits within the IEEE 802.16 family and addresses a narrow but important problem: how fixed broadband wireless access systems may operate in license-exempt bands with better coexistence behavior. P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 helps define mechanisms intended to improve coordination between devices and reduce harmful interference in shared spectrum. As a draft technical document, it is useful for engineers evaluating protocol behavior, access methods, and operational requirements tied to wireless broadband deployments.

Where is P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 used?

P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 is most relevant in fixed wireless access equipment and network designs that must function in unlicensed or lightly managed radio environments. It may be used when planning base station behavior, subscriber station operation, or other broadband wireless components that need coexistence support in shared bands. The standard is also useful for vendors, integrators, and test teams working on communication systems where interference management and orderly spectrum sharing affect service quality.

Importance in practice

In practice, P802.16h/D10, Jul 2009 helps improve consistency and reduce deployment risk for systems operating without exclusive spectrum rights. Clear coexistence rules can support more predictable performance, easier testing, and better compliance alignment across equipment implementations. For procurement and engineering teams, this kind of standard provides a reference point for comparing designs and checking whether devices handle shared-spectrum conditions in a controlled way. That can matter for reliability, interoperability, and overall network planning.

  • Fixed broadband wireless access
  • License-exempt spectrum operation
  • Coexistence and interference management
  • IEEE 802.16 air interface context
  • Draft-level technical requirements
SKU: 97cc549be784

  • Publication Date: 2009
  • Standard Status: Inactive
  • Publisher: IEEE
  • Subject: Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
  • Official IEEE: Doi link

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