Sci Rep. 2025 Aug 12;15(1):29588. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-09668-7.
ABSTRACT
This study investigates the integration of electromagnetic (EM) radiation with quantum factorial networks to enhance Wi-Fi hotspot performance through a comprehensive experimental framework.A novel quantum factorial network architecture was developed, leveraging quantum superposition and entanglement principles to optimize wireless communication systems. The experimental methodology employed MATLAB/Simulink simulations with 100 network nodes operating at 2.4 GHz frequency, incorporating quantum enhancement coefficients and modified Maxwell equations for EM field propagation. Statistical analysis using ANOVA (F(2,297) = 156.7, p < 0.001, η2 = 0.51) demonstrated significant performance improvements: throughput increased from 1.2 Gbps to 3.0 Gbps (150% enhancement), latency reduced from 25 to 5 ms (80% improvement), and coverage expanded from 30 to 45 m (50% increase). Cross-validation between theoretical models and simulation results achieved correlation coefficients exceeding 0.98 across all performance metrics. The quantum enhancement factor ξq = 2.5 was validated through quantum state tomography with 95% confidence intervals. Real-world applicability was demonstrated across smart city infrastructure, industrial IoT environments, and healthcare systems. These findings establish quantum factorial networks as a viable solution for next-generation wireless communication, though scalability challenges and hardware requirements for quantum-enhanced nodes remain critical considerations for practical deployment.
PMID:40796924 | DOI:10.1038/s41598-025-09668-7