Abstract

This paper aims to unlock the unlicensed band potential in realizing the Industry 4.0 communication goals of the Fifth-Generation (5G) and beyond. New Radio in the Unlicensed band (NR-U) is a new NR Release 16 mode of operation that has the capability to offer the necessary technology for cellular operators to integrate the unlicensed spectrum into 5G networks. NR-U enables both uplink and downlink operation in unlicensed bands, supporting 5G advanced features of ultra-high-speed, high bandwidth, low latency, and improvement in the reliability of wireless communications, which is essential to address massive-scale and highly-diverse future industrial networks. This paper highlights NR-U as a next-generation communication technology for smart industrial network communication and discusses the technology trends adopted by 5G in support of the Industry 4.0 revolution. However, due to operation in the shared/unlicensed spectrum, NR-U possesses several regulatory and coexistence challenges, limiting its application for operationally intensive environments such as manufacturing, supply chain, transportation systems, and energy. Thus, we discuss the significant challenges and potential solution approaches such as shared maximum channel occupancy time (MCOT), handover skipping, the self-organized network (SON), the adaptive back-off mechanism, and the multi-domain coexistence approach to overcome the unlicensed/shared band challenges and boost the realization of NR-U technology in mission-critical industrial applications. Further, we highlight the role of machine learning in providing the necessary intelligence and adaptation mechanisms for the realization of industrial 5G communication goals.

Highlights

  • The term “wireless networking” means widespread connectivity, but we have yet to see that in today’s industrial and business-critical domains such as manufacturing, supply chain, transportation systems, and energy [1,2]

  • We argue that the unlicensed spectrum plays a crucial role in realizing the industrial communication goals of 5G and beyond by offering ultra-high-speed, high capacity, low latency, and improvement in the reliability of wireless communications, which is essential to address massive-scale and highly-diverse future enterprise networks [15]

  • Licensed cellular networks are scarce and limited in flexibility, which is crucial for realizing the Industrial 4.0 5G vision

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Summary

Introduction

The term “wireless networking” means widespread connectivity, but we have yet to see that in today’s industrial and business-critical domains such as manufacturing, supply chain, transportation systems, and energy [1,2]. We believe both technologies are potential candidates for next-generation communication for a smart industry that merges the quality of performance of LTE with the deployment ease of WiFi [13]. We argue that the unlicensed spectrum plays a crucial role in realizing the industrial communication goals of 5G and beyond by offering ultra-high-speed, high capacity, low latency, and improvement in the reliability of wireless communications, which is essential to address massive-scale and highly-diverse future enterprise networks [15]. The operation in the unlicensed spectrum is subject to various limitations and restrictions [6], which are regional and band-specific, highly reducing the efficiency of LTE technology.

Background
Reliability
Latency
Device Density and QoS
Ease of Deployment
Security
Challenges and Research Directions
Challenge 1
Challenge 2
Challenge 3
Challenge 4
Challenge 5
Challenge 6
Machine Learning as a Toolbox for NR-U
Conclusions
Full Text
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