Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/5073

5G and Beyond: Smart Devices as part of the Network Fabric


Thumbnail

View/Open:
 3-5G and Beyond....pdf
358,69 kB
Adobe PDF
Share:
Title:
5G and Beyond: Smart Devices as part of the Network Fabric
Authors:
Coll Perales, Baldomero
Gozalvez, Javier  
Maestre Lorenzo, Juan Luis
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Ingeniería de Comunicaciones
Issue Date:
2019-02-15
URI:
http://hdl.handle.net/11000/5073
Abstract:
5G networks mainly rely on infrastructure‐centric cellular solutions to address data traffic and service demands. Continuously scaling infrastructure‐centric cellular networks is not exempt of challenges, and beyond 5G networks should consider the active coexistence and coordination of infrastructure‐centric and device‐centric wireless networks. Device‐centric wireless networks will build from device‐to‐device communications (D2D) and multi‐hop cellular networks (MCNs). Device‐centric wireless networks can push the limits of Edge 5G networks mainly rely on infrastructure‐centric cellular solutions to address data traffic and service demands. Continuously scaling infrastructure‐centric cellular networks is not exempt of challenges, and beyond 5G networks should consider the active coexistence and coordination of infrastructure‐centric and device‐centric wireless networks. Device‐centric wireless networks will build from device‐to‐device communications (D2D) and multi‐hop cellular networks (MCNs). Device‐centric wireless networks can push the limits of Edge computing and networking to smart devices (including smartphones, vehicles, machines and robots), and exploit their mobile computing, storage and connectivity capabilities. These capabilities can be more efficiently utilized using demand‐driven opportunistic networking that establishes the connections between devices and nodes not just based on their presence, but also on their capacity to support the requested demand and services. This paper presents results from experimental field tests that demonstrate the cellular spectral efficiency gains that can be achieved from the combined use of device‐centric wireless communications and demand‐driven opportunistic networking. The field trials demonstrate that these technologies can improve the cellular spectral efficiency of conventional cellular communications by up to a factor of 4.7 and 12 in outdoor pedestrian and vehicular scenarios, respectively, under the evaluated scenarios and conditions. These gains have been obtained using 4G and IEEE 802.11 technologies. However, the potential of device‐centric wireless networks is not constrained to any particular radio interface. The results presented in this paper provide empirical evidences that further motivate progressing towards a new paradigm where edge networking capabilities are moved to smart mobile devices that become part of the network fabric, and can opportunistically and locally integrate network management functions to ensure that sufficient resources are placed where the demand arises.
Keywords/Subjects:
Device‐centric wireless
opportunistic networking
5G
5G and beyond
Beyond 5G
6G
D2D
mobile relays
multi‐hop cellular networks
UE‐to‐Network relays
vehicular
experimental
Knowledge area:
Ingeniería mecánica en general. Tecnología nuclear. Electrotecnia. Maquinaria
Type of document:
application/pdf
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1109/MNET.2019.1800136
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Ingeniería Comunicaciones



Creative Commons ???jsp.display-item.text9???