Experimenters at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) are working on designing antennas that can empower 6G technology, which is necessary in realising effective V2X (Vehicle to Everything) dispatches. In a recent study, the platoon, led by Debdeep Sarkar, Assistant Professor at the Department of Electrical Communication Engineering, shows how tone- hindrance in full- duplex communication antennas can be reduced, and accordingly the movement of signals across the communication network can be faster and further bandwidth-effective.
“Similar full-duplex antennas are particularly helpful for operations that bear nearly immediate relay of commands, like driverless buses”, Bengaluru-grounded IISc said in a statement on Friday.
Full-duplex antennas correspond of a transmitter and a receiver to shoot and admit radio signals.
Traditional radio transceivers are partial duplex, which means that they either use signals of different frequentness for transferring and entering or there’s a time pause between the signal transmitted and the signal entered.
This time pause is demanded to insure that there’s no hindrance–the signals going back and forth shouldn’t cross paths with each other, analogous to two people talking to each other at the same time, without breaking to hear to the other. But this also compromises the effectiveness and speed of signal transfer.

