Today's booming expanse of personal wireless radio communications is a
rich source of new challenges for the designer of the underlying
enabling te- nologies. Personal communication networks are designed from
a fundam- tally different perspective than broadcast service networks,
such as radio and television. While the focus of the latter is on
reliability and user comfort, the emphasis of personal communication
devices is on throughput and mobility. However, because the wireless
channel is a shared transmission medium with only very limited
resources, a trade-off has to be made between mobility and the number of
simultaneous users in a con?ned geographical area. Accord- 1 ing to
Shannon's theorem on channel capacity, the overall data throughput of a
communication channel bene?ts from either a linear increase of the tra-
mission bandwidth, or an (equivalent) exponential increase in signal
quality. Consequently, it is more bene?cial to think in terms of channel
bandwidth than it is to pursue a high transmission power. All the above
elements are embodied in the concept of spatial ef?ciency. By describing
the throughput of a system 2 in terms of bits/s/Hz/m, spatial ef?ciency
takes into account that the use of a low transmission power reduces the
operational range of a radio transmission, and as such enables a higher
reuse rate of the same frequency spectrum.