CCDA/Wireless LAN design

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ISM and UNII frequencies

ISM

Figure 1: Industrial Scientific and medical Frequencies in the 2,4 Gbps area

ISM - Industrial, Scientific and medical - frequencies are set aside by ITU-R radio regulations 5.138 and 5.150. In the U.S., the Federal Communications Commission (15.247) specifies the ISM bands for unlicensed use. Several bands are specified in the following ranges:

  • 900 to 928 MHz
  • 2.4 to 2.5 GHz
  • 5.75 to 5.875 GHz

Of these, channels located in the 2.4-GHz range are used for 802.11b and 802.11g. As shown in Figure 1, 11 overlapping channels are available for use. Each channel is 22 MHz wide. It is common to use channels 1, 6, and 11 in the same areas, because these three channels do not overlap.

UNII

The UNII - Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure - radio bands were specified for use with 802.11a wireless. UNII operates over three ranges:

  • UNII 1—5.15 to 5.25 GHz and 5.25 to 5.35 GHz.
  • UNII 2—5.47 to 5.725 GHz. This range is used by High Performance Radio LAN (HiperLAN) in Europe.
  • UNII 3—5.725 to 5.875 GHz. This range overlaps with ISM.

UNII provides 12 nonoverlapping channels for 802.11a.

WLAN Standards summary
IEEE Protocol Release Frequency Typical Data rate Max. Data Rate
Legacy 1997 ISM 1 Mbps 2 Mbps
802.11a 1999 UNII 25 Mbps 54 Mbps
802.11b 1999 ISM 6,5 Mbps 11 Mbps
802.11g 2003 ISM 25 Mbps 54 Mbps
802.11n 2007 (Draft) ISM or UNII 200 Mbps 540 Mbps

Cisco Unified Wireless Network

UWN or Unified Wireless Network

Cisco Unified Wireless Network example

WLAN controller Cisco