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Is 2020 the Year of Dual-Frequency GNSS Smartphones?

By Andrew Zignani | 23 Mar 2020 | IN-5747

The launch of the Xiaomi Mi 8 smartphone in 2018 marked the arrival of the first dual-frequency GNSS-capable smartphone to the market. Up until that point, most smartphones had relied upon single-frequency GNSS solutions that leveraged the E1/L1 band alone. Dual-frequency GNSS solutions are capable of receiving two individual signals (at different frequencies) from a single satellite, most commonly the E1/L1 band and L5/E5a bands. By utilizing two different frequencies, GNSS receivers can correct ionospheric errors by comparing the delay measurements from each band, which improves accuracy. In addition, by leveraging the lower frequency L5/E5a band, dual-frequency devices are less prone to multipath delays, ensuring that performance is much greater in dense urban environments with tall buildings. Signal acquisition time is also reduced, meaning faster satellite locks, while dual-frequency solutions are also more reliable as they can leverage the second band if the first fails. Unsurprisingly, then, the increased accuracy (meters to decimeter), greater reliability, and improved performance of these solutions have spurred a number of chipset vendors and device Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) to adopt the technology over the last 18 months, while the technology continues to improve.

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Written by Andrew Zignani

Senior Research Director
As Senior Research Director for ABI Research’s Strategic Technologies team, Andrew Zignani conducts research into the rapidly changing wireless connectivity market, with a particular emphasis on market forecasts and qualitative insight covering Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, 802.15.4, Near Field Communications (NFC), HaLow, WiGig, and other emerging wireless standards and protocols. Andrew also writes reports on the technological evolution and long-term prospects for wireless connectivity technologies, particularly as they increasingly target new verticals across the Internet of Things (IoT).