5G Infrastructure: RF Cable Requirements
1. Introduction
1.1 5G Frequency Bands
| Band | Frequency | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Low | <1 GHz | Coverage |
| Mid | 1-6 GHz | Capacity |
| High (mmWave) | 24-100 GHz | High capacity |
1.2 5G Architecture
| Link | Function | Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Backhaul | Core to RAN | High capacity |
| Fronthaul | RRU to BBU | Low latency |
| RF feed | Antenna connection | Low loss |
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MEDIA TODO2. 5G RF Requirements
2.1 Frequency Considerations
| Band | Frequency | Skin Depth | Cable Loss Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-6 | 3.5 GHz | 1.1 μm | High |
| mmWave | 28 GHz | 0.4 μm | Very high |
2.2 Performance Requirements
| Parameter | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Attenuation | Minimize |
| Return loss | >20 dB |
| PIM | <-150 dBc |
| Phase stability | Important |
2.3 Environmental Requirements
| Factor | Condition |
|---|---|
| Temperature | -40 to +70°C |
| UV exposure | Outdoor |
| Moisture | Weatherproof |
| Wind load | Tower installation |
3. Cable Types for 5G
3.1 Coaxial Cables
| Type | Frequency | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 1/2" | Sub-6 | Standard feed |
| 7/8" | Sub-6 | Low-loss |
| 1-5/8" | Sub-6 | Very low-loss |
3.2 Fiber-Coax Hybrid
| Configuration | Use |
|---|---|
| Fiber + power | RRH power |
| Fiber + coax | Combination |
3.3 mmWave Considerations
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| Waveguide preferred | Lowest loss |
| Very low-loss coax | Alternative |
| Length minimization | Critical |
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MEDIA TODO4. Material Selection
4.1 Center Conductor
| Material | Frequency | Performance | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cu | All | Best | High |
| CCA | <6 GHz | Good | Lower |
| SCC | <6 GHz | Better | Premium |
| Cu (smooth) | mmWave | Required | High |
4.2 Shield Materials
| Material | Application |
|---|---|
| Corrugated Cu | Standard |
| Al | Lower cost |
| Cu + foil | Premium |
4.3 Performance vs Cost
| Configuration | Attenuation | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Cu center, Cu shield | Baseline | High |
| CCA center, Al shield | +5-10% | Lower |
| Cu center, Al shield | Baseline | Moderate |
5. Design Considerations
5.1 Attenuation Budget
| Component | Loss Allocation |
|---|---|
| Cable | Primary |
| Connectors | Secondary |
| Jumpers | Include |
5.2 Connector Selection
| Connector | Frequency | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 7/16 DIN | <3 GHz | High power |
| 4.3-10 | <6 GHz | PIM-critical |
| Type N | <11 GHz | General |
| 2.2-5 | <6 GHz | Compact |
5.3 Installation
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Minimum bend radius | Prevent damage |
| Cable support | Proper hangers |
| Weatherproofing | Connectors |
| Grounding | Lightning protection |
5.4 PIM Considerations
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| Material quality | Critical |
| Connector quality | Critical |
| Installation | Proper torque |
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MEDIA TODO6. Conclusion
6.1 Summary
| Frequency | Center Conductor | Shield |
|---|---|---|
| <3 GHz | CCA acceptable | Al or Cu |
| 3-6 GHz | Cu or CCA | Cu preferred |
| >6 GHz | Cu smooth | Cu |
6.2 Cost-Performance Trade-off
- CCA provides cost savings for sub-6 GHz
- Cu preferred for mmWave
- Consider total system performance
7. References
- 3GPP TS 38.104. (2022). 5G Radio Specifications.
- IEC 61196. (2022). Coaxial Cables.
Frequently Asked Questions
What center conductor is recommended for 5G sub-6 GHz?
For sub-6 GHz 5G frequencies, CCA-80% provides acceptable performance with cost savings. For critical applications or longer cable runs, solid copper may be preferred.
Can CCA be used for mmWave 5G applications?
CCA is not recommended for mmWave frequencies (24-100 GHz). The higher attenuation and surface roughness of CCA significantly impact performance at these frequencies. Use smooth copper for mmWave.
What is PIM and why is it important for 5G?
PIM (Passive Intermodulation) is signal distortion from nonlinear components. For 5G, PIM must be below -150 dBc to prevent interference. Material quality, connector quality, and proper installation are critical for PIM performance.
What connectors are used for 5G RF cables?
Common 5G RF connectors include 7/16 DIN for high power (<3 GHz), 4.3-10 for PIM-critical applications (<6 GHz), Type N for general use (<11 GHz), and 2.2-5 for compact installations (<6 GHz).