Название: Shaping Future 6G Networks
Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Отраслевые издания
isbn: 9781119765530
isbn:
In 6G we will see improved solutions to support multiple connectivity in the same deployment and application to improve reliability and performance through link diversity and aggregation. While some solutions are already available in 5G such as dual connectivity and carrier aggregation, 6G will cover the need to support and aggregate multiple RATs maintaining the latency and reliability requirements of industrial applications, which will also provide additional access to local spectrum. In addition, the integration of time‐sensitive networking (TSN) and deterministic networking (DetNet) standards that started in 5G will be fully utilized to support deterministic data transmission over cellular networks. Finally, network exposure and integration with cloud capabilities are key factors to enable the expansion of 6G for industrial applications, since they will enhance the network capability management and provide support for real‐time applications while keeping sensitive operational data on cloud deployments that are kept secured.
2.3.2 Teleportation
Teleportation represents the future of communication, enabling holographic delivery of life‐sized three‐dimensional (3D) stereoscopic experiences in real‐time without head‐mounted device (HMD) technologies like augmented reality/virtual reality (AR/VR).
As the business world becomes increasingly automated and ubiquitous, teleportation will stimulate remote telework by allowing flexible virtual interaction during business events and meetings involving geographically distributed colleagues and industries, thus eliminating time and distance barriers. This technology may also decrease carbon footprint (the combustion of fuel for transport accounts for about 30% of global greenhouse gas emissions2) and save travel time and expenses, revitalizing small and medium‐sized enterprises with limited corporate travel capabilities. Furthermore, replacing in‐person business meetings with holographic events may improve labor productivity through more concise interaction and reduced stress for travel planning. Compared to video conferencing technologies, teleportation supports body language and nonverbal communication, thus guaranteeing better audience engagement and reception of information as well as enhanced productivity during professional events. Finally, even though business travel will always represent an essential resource for many company divisions, from sales to marketing, and from production to research and development, it is expected that teleportation will represent a valuable alternative for future corporate business.
Teleportation does not refer only to the digital transmission of physical quantities; it will also enable a clear and reproducible digital representation of all human senses, including smell and taste. This will allow, for example, chemical industries to speed up pharmaceutical product preparation and development via virtualization of drug tests,; healthcare companies to implement noninvasive, real‐time diagnostic tools for health monitoring; and agro‐food industries to tailor their offerings to consumer preferences while improving quality control of raw materials and increasing the overall efficiency of the food system.
Despite these benefits, remote connections via teleportation will introduce significant demands on the 6G network infrastructure, which are not supported today [2]. Specifically, 5G and previous generations have been typically designed to support audio and 2D‐like video communication, where the same data content is broadcast regardless of the viewer’s position. In turn, 3D telepresence adds parallax, meaning that the image changes depending on the viewer’s position and its interaction with the image itself. This approach will radically change the role of the user (from passive video consumer to interactive consumer of multi‐sensory experiences) and lead to a massive increase in the requirements for capturing, transmitting, and interacting with teleportation services. To fully realize an immersive remote experience, all human senses, including touch, smell, and taste, together with video and audio information, will be digitized and transferred across future networks at a data rate up to several terabits per second, which depends on the sensor’s resolution and frame rate: for example, a raw uncompressed hologram with colors, full parallax, and 30 fps would require 4.32 Tbps [1]. The latency requirement will also be very challenging to ensure interactive content provisioning and real‐time communications. While the 5G paradigm sets the round‐trip latency limit in the RAN to 1 ms, 6G technologies will hit the sub‐milliseconds to make the holographic experience smoother and more immersive. Finally, hologram‐based applications will need to process a massive number of streams originating from sensors at different angles of view, thus involving stringent synchronization requirements.
2.3.3 Digital Twin
A digital twin is a digital replica of an object, generally characterized by a very high level of fidelity that makes it possible to use the digital version as a reliable representation of the behavior and characteristics of the real object [3]. The concept of digital twins has risen to the forefront of the discussion on product life cycle management thanks to improvements in the design and capabilities of sensors (e.g. video cameras, laser scanners, and lidars) and sensor fusion algorithms, which now allow a rich and faithful representation of the real object, as well as thanks to advances in computation capabilities, which enable the real‐time manipulation and editing of the digital twin. Moreover, the concept of digital twin is often associated to VR and AR, as the digital representation can be visualized through any immersive visualization technique. Thanks to these properties, digital twins can improve the design, engineering, inspection, and maintenance of complex machines and devices. For example, a machine could be remotely inspected without the need for personnel on the ground, without any loss of realism, and with an improved (digital) access to components that would be hard to reach physically. Similarly, mechanics can monitor the performance and status of different components of a vehicle with a high‐fidelity representation without the need for the car to be in the repair center. Additionally, for product development, a digital twin would allow different teams to work on the same product, exploiting a 3D, shared visualization in various remote locations, and can enable advanced simulations of the product behavior.
In these scenarios, the role of the network is to provide a high‐throughput, low‐latency bit pipe to connect the sensors on the physical product with the computing platforms on which the digital twin is hosted. Several elements contribute to the need for ultrahigh throughput, which would not be supported by 5G technologies, as for the teleportation use case of Section 2.3.2. A digital twin will be generated by a large number of data sources, which need to be distributed around the physical device, and capture different properties, not only the visual aspect. Moreover, the twinning rate, i.e. the rate at which the physical and digital representations are synchronized, could be in the order of hundreds of Hertz, for applications that require a real‐time tracking of the evolution of the physical object. Therefore, the data rate required by digital twin use cases can be in the order of tens of gigabits per second, with the need for high‐capacity links between the different components of a digital twin system (sensors to database, and database to representation). Similarly, when real‐time interaction and control of the physical object through its digital counterpart is required, the latency should be in the sub‐millisecond range. However, if real‐time control is not of interest, or a lower level of fidelity can be accepted, digital twinning applications can tolerate higher latencies and lower throughput. Therefore, 6G networks should also focus on adaptability and openness to the applications, with open interfaces to enable cooperation between the wireless stack and the higher layers, for example, to optimize the number of sources and the twinning rate according to the capabilities СКАЧАТЬ