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Picasso: flexible RF and spectrum slicing
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review - Special october issue SIGCOMM '12
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Wireless spectrum is increasingly fragmented due to the growing proliferation of unlicensed wireless devices and piecemeal licensed spectrum allocations. Current radios are ill-equipped to exploit such fragmented spectrum since they expect large contiguous chunks of spectrum to operate on. In this paper we argue that future radios should provide full duplex signal shaping to the higher layers to systematically exploit fragmented spectrum. Such an architectural design would allow the radio to decouple the use of different spcetrum fragments. We present the design and implementation of Picasso, a system that provides such a general signal shaping abstraction. Picasso has two novel components: a self-interference cancellation technique and a programmable filter engine that enables it to simultaneously send and receive over different spectrum fragments. We provide an initial design and empirically evaluate the feasibility of both components.