Transmitter Noise Propagation in Millimeter-Wave and Sub-Terahertz: From Limits to Design Guidelines
Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive link budget analysis for millimeter wave (mm-Wave) and sub-Terahertz (sub-THz) communication systems with primary focus on transmitter (TX) noise propagation, an often overlooked impairment that can dominate in scenarios where path loss is insufficient to suppress TX noise below receiver thermal and atmospheric molecular noise levels. Unlike traditional thermal noise limited analyses, this work demonstrates that TX noise is amplified by component noise figures...
Description / Details
This paper presents a comprehensive link budget analysis for millimeter wave (mm-Wave) and sub-Terahertz (sub-THz) communication systems with primary focus on transmitter (TX) noise propagation, an often overlooked impairment that can dominate in scenarios where path loss is insufficient to suppress TX noise below receiver thermal and atmospheric molecular noise levels. Unlike traditional thermal noise limited analyses, this work demonstrates that TX noise is amplified by component noise figures that degrade significantly with frequency, rising from single digits to more than in the sub-THz range. In the scenarios analyzed, this propagated TX noise reduces the achievable Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) by approximately to at short distances, creating fundamental SNR ceilings at ranges below about . We develop a systematic framework quantifying TX noise dominance conditions as functions of distance, frequency, and component parameters, revealing fundamental performance constraints for short-range next generation wireless systems. Our findings indicate that the TX noise figure should be as low as possible for short-range communication, and both TX noise and atmospheric molecular noise should be considered for medium- and long-range links.
Source: arXiv:2604.16020v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.16020v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.16020v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.16020v1
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Apr 20, 2026
Chemical Engineering
Engineering
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