
The MulteFire Alliance has launched its first specification for LTE operating independently in unlicensed spectrum. MulteFire Release 1.0 comes just over a year after the alliance was first formed by industry leaders such as Qualcomm, Nokia, Ericsson and Intel.
The specification defines how LTE networks can operate in unlicensed and shared
The MulteFire Release 1.0 specification builds on elements of 3GPP Release 13 License Assisted Access (LAA) for the downlink and Release 14 enhanced LAA (eLAA) for the uplink. It includes enhancements for operation solely in unlicensed
In addition, it uses 'Listen-Before-Talk' protocols to ensure fair coexistence with technologies using the same spectrum such as Wi-Fi and LAA, as well as co-existence between different MulteFire networks. With the defined Neutral Host access mode, the same network deployment can serve multiple operators. MulteFire also enables access authentication without a SIM card, in order to provide services for subscribers from different types of service providers.
A detailed white paper on the initial specification is available on the MulteFire website. Members of the alliance will have first access to the specification, and others can download the specification by mid-2017.