THE DVB-T2 TECHNOLOGY AND THE DVB-X2 CLASS OF STANDARDS
Abstract
The Digital Video Broadcasting – Second Generation Terrestrial (DVB-T2) standard represents a significant improvement over DVB-T, achieving up to 50% higher spectral efficiency through advanced signal processing and error correction techniques. This paper investigates the architecture and performance metrics of DVB-T2 and examines its relationship to the emerging DVB-X2 class of standards, which includes DVB-S2X, DVB-T2X, and DVB-NGH. Using simulation and field measurement data, DVB-T2 demonstrates a throughput of 40.2 Mbps within an 8 MHz channel under 256-QAM modulation and LDPC/BCH coding at a code rate of 3/4, compared to 27 Mbps in DVB-T under similar conditions. The use of Multiple-PLP (Physical Layer Pipes) and MISO (Multiple Input Single Output) configurations enhances robustness in mobile and fixed reception scenarios. Further analysis of DVB-X2 standards shows improvements of up to 15–30% efficiency over DVB-T2, supporting UHD (4K/8K) broadcasting and hybrid IP-based delivery. The results confirm that the DVB-X2 family provides a scalable framework for next-generation broadcasting, optimized for both terrestrial and satellite environments, ensuring efficient spectrum utilization, enhanced quality of service, and backward compatibility with existing DVB systems.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.