IoT and 5G

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The document discusses various applications of IoT in different domains like cities, environment, water, energy etc. It also discusses the requirements of 5G networks and how 5G can address IoT.

Some examples of IoT applications discussed are smart parking, structural health monitoring, noise monitoring, traffic monitoring, smart lighting, waste management etc.

Typical 5G requirements mentioned are devices per area of 300,000, battery life of 10 years, reliability of 99.999%, coverage of 20dB of LTE, latency reduction of 1ms, higher frequency spectrum, capacity of 36TB/month/user etc.

IoT and 5G:

Opportunities and Challenges


Dr. Emilio Calvanese Strinati
Smart Devices & Telecommunications Strategy Program Director
CEA-LETI
[email protected]

3rd of September 2015, Belgrade – 10th summer school on IoT

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The Internet of Things: many definitions
• a dynamic global network infrastructure of adaptable and interoperable
devices integrated in a common information and communication network
(CERP-IoT - IERC, http://www.rfid-in-action.eu/cerp/)
• a collection of technologies that make it possible to connect things like sensors
and actuators to the Internet, thereby allowing the physical world to be
accessed through software (Contiki project, http://www.contiki-os.org)
• a layer of digital connectivity on top of existing infrastructure and things (IoT
Council, http://www.theinternetofthings.eu)
• a vision of employing the networked devices and applications in business,
information, and social processes
• The enabler for interconnecting ANYTHING, ANYTIME, ANYONE, ANY PLACE,
ANY SERVICE, ANY NETWORK
• A world where the real, digital and the virtual are converging to create smart
environments that make energy, transport, cities and many other areas more
intelligent.
• Real-World-Web

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Sernsor Devices are widely Available Today

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Sensors Everywhere:
Smart Environments & Applications

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A new connectivity Era:
Things Connecting to Things

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A new connectivity Era:
People Connecting to Things

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Connected Communities (Social IoT)

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Novel Opportunites From the Internet
of Everything

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Technology Roadmap of IoT

4G 5G

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Demand in the Mobile Market

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Classical Telelcom Market Revenues are
going Down
Traffic
Diverging
Need of a revolution: expectations for
traffic and revenue
telco network as a service growth
Costs

Data
Voice

Revenue

IoT and Real World Web as


unique revenue accelerator for 5G
Time
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Vertical Markets will be Interconnected

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THE NOVEL INTERNET OF …

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Modelling, Interactions &
Virtualisation Example
Virtual entity-based IoT System Interactions
Physical World model models relevant
VE Service Request:
aspects of Physical World
Give me the
temperature of
load carrier
1.23

VE Service Request:
Turn on
Virtual air condition
Association of IoT Services Entity for truck 2.57
to modelled Virtual Entities
Level
IoT Service Request:
sensor Give me the
Resources service value of
exposed as IoT sensor sensor Temperature
Services measure, service service Sensor 456
observe and actuator IoT Service
actuate on service
Physical World
Level IoT Service Request:
Set Actuator 867
To “on”

ARM Presentation – Helsinki – 18th June 2013 Slide 15


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IoE: The Internet of Energy
Smart Grid implemented in a kind of “Internet” in which the energy
packet is managed similarly to the data packet - across routers and
gateways which autonomously can decide the best pathway for the
packet to reach its destination

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IoV: The Internet of Vehicles

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IoW: The Internet of Water

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Deployment of ICT in smart cities: an
Excellent IoT Use Case Security and privacy management
• Security deployment for heterogeneous nodes
• Authentication / Key management
• Reliable communication
• Secure protocol /End-to-end security
• Lightweight cryptography for The IoT

Communication protocols
• Protocol design
• Compact antenna design
• Prototyping and deployment, ASIC design
• Low power, wearable technology

Traceability
• RFID (HF/UHF)
• Energy harvesting (zero power tags)
• Privacy and trust
• Supply and delivery chain management

Localization
• Indoor navigation and tracking
• Crowd collaborative localization
• Local based services

Sensors
• Sensor integration / signal processing
• Smart devices
• Low power / energy harvesting

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IoT Applications: the smart-X
The IoT application covers "smart" environments/spaces in
domains such as:
Transportation
Building
City
Lifestyle
Agriculture
Factory
Supply chain
Emergency
Health care
User interaction
Culture and tourism
Environment
Energy

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IoT: a large panel of applications

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Dr. E. Calvanese Strinati © CEA. All rights reserved
Cities: IoT Applications
Smart Parking: Monitoring of parking spaces availability in the
city.
Structural health: Monitoring of vibrations and material
conditions in buildings, bridges and historical monuments.
Noise Urban Maps: Sound monitoring in bar areas and centric
zones in real time.
Traffic Congestion: Monitoring of vehicles and pedestrian
levels to optimize driving and walking routes.
Smart Lightning: Intelligent and weather adaptive lighting in
street lights.
Waste Management: Detection of rubbish levels in containers
to optimize the trash collection routes.
Intelligent Transportation Systems: Smart Roads and
Intelligent Highways with warning messages and diversions
according to climate conditions and unexpected events like
accidents or traffic jams.
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Environnent: IoT Applications
Forest Fire Detection: Monitoring of combustion
gases and preemptive fire conditions to define alert
zones.
Air Pollution: Control of CO2 emissions of factories,
pollution emitted by cars and toxic gases generated in
farms.
Landslide and Avalanche Prevention: Monitoring of
soil moisture, vibrations and earth density to detect
dangerous patterns in land conditions.
Earthquake Early Detection: Distributed control in
specific places of tremors.
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Water: IoT Applications
Water Quality: Study of water suitability in rivers and
the sea for fauna and eligibility for drinkable use.
Water Leakages: Detection of liquid presence outside
tanks and pressure variations along pipes.
River Floods: Monitoring of water level variations in
rivers, dams and reservoirs.

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Energy Smart Grid, Smart Metering:
IoT Applications
Smart Grid: Energy consumption monitoring and
management.
Tank level: Monitoring of water, oil and gas levels in
storage tanks and cisterns.
Photovoltaic Installations: Monitoring and
optimization of performance in solar energy plants.
Water Flow: Measurement of water pressure in
water transportation systems.
Silos Stock Calculation: Measurement of emptiness
level and weight of the goods.

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Security & Emergencies:
IoT Applications
Perimeter Access Control: Access control to
restricted areas and detection of people in non-
authorized areas.
Liquid Presence: Liquid detection in data centres,
warehouses and sensitive building grounds to prevent
break downs and corrosion.
Radiation Levels: Distributed measurement of
radiation levels in nuclear power stations
surroundings to generate leakage alerts.
Explosive and Hazardous Gases: Detection of gas
levels and leakages in industrial environments,
surroundings of chemical factories and inside mines.
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Retail: IoT Applications
Supply Chain Control: Monitoring of storage conditions
along the supply chain and product tracking for
traceability purposes.
NFC Payment: Payment processing based in location or
activity duration for public transport, gyms, theme parks,
etc.
Intelligent Shopping Applications: Getting advice at the
point of sale according to customer habits, preferences,
presence of allergic components for them or expiring
dates.
Smart Product Management: Control of rotation of
products in shelves and warehouses to automate
restocking processes.
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Logistics: IoT Applications
Quality of Shipment Conditions: Monitoring of
vibrations, strokes, container openings or cold chain
maintenance for insurance purposes.
Item Location: Search of individual items in big
surfaces like warehouses or harbours.
Storage Incompatibility Detection: Warning emission
on containers storing inflammable goods closed to
others containing explosive material.
Fleet Tracking: Control of routes followed for delicate
goods like medical drugs, jewels or dangerous
merchandises.
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Industrial Control: IoT Applications
M2M Applications: Machine auto-diagnosis and assets
control.
Indoor Air Quality: Monitoring of toxic gas and oxygen
levels inside chemical plants to ensure workers and goods
safety.
Temperature Monitoring: Control of temperature inside
industrial and medical fridges with sensitive merchandise.
Ozone Presence: Monitoring of ozone levels during the
drying meat process in food factories.
Indoor Location: Asset indoor location by using active
(ZigBee, UWB) and passive tags (RFID/NFC).
Vehicle Auto-diagnosis: Information collection from CAN
Bus to send real time alarms to emergencies or provide
advice to drivers.
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Agriculture: IoT Applications
Wine Quality Enhancing: Monitoring soil moisture and
trunk diameter in vineyards to control the amount of
sugar in grapes and grapevine health.
Green Houses: Control micro-climate conditions to
maximize the production of fruits and vegetables and its
quality.
Golf Courses: Selective irrigation in dry zones to reduce
the water resources required in the green.
Meteorological Station Network: Study of weather
conditions in fields to forecast ice formation, rain,
drought, snow or wind changes.
Compost: Control of humidity and temperature levels in
alfalfa, hay, straw, etc. to prevent fungus and other
microbial contaminants.

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Animal Farming:IoT Applications
Offspring Care: Control of growing conditions of the
offspring in animal farms to ensure its survival and
health.
Animal Tracking: Location and identification of
animals grazing in open pastures or location in big
stables.
Toxic Gas Levels: Study of ventilation and air quality
in farms and detection of harmful gases from
excrements.

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Domotic & Home Automation:
IoT Applications
Energy and Water Use: Energy and water supply
consumption monitoring to obtain advice on how to
save cost and resources.
Remote Control Appliances: Switching on and off
remotely appliances to avoid accidents and save
energy.
Intrusion Detection Systems: Detection of window
and door openings and violations to prevent
intruders.
Art and Goods Preservation: Monitoring of
conditions inside museums and art warehouses.
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eHealth: IoT Applications
Fall Detection: Assistance for elderly or disabled
people living independent.
Medical Fridges: Control of conditions inside freezers
storing vaccines, medicines and organic elements.
Sportsmen Care: Vital signs monitoring in high
performance centres and fields.
Patients Surveillance: Monitoring of conditions of
patients inside hospitals and in old people's home.
Ultraviolet Radiation: Measurement of UV sun rays
to warn people not to be exposed in certain hours.

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RESEARCH CHALLENGES

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Smart Cities: Research Challenges
Creating algorithms and schemes to describe information
created by sensors in different applications to enable useful
exchange of information between different city services
Mechanisms for cost efficient deployment and even more
important maintenance of such installations, including energy
scavenging
Ensuring reliable readings from a plethora of sensors
Efficient calibration of a large number of sensors deployed
everywhere from lampposts to waste bins
Low energy protocols and algorithms & energy harvesting
Algorithms for analysis and processing of data acquired in the
city and making “sense” out of it.
IoT large scale deployment and integration
The exemple of SmartSantander
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Smart Energy & Smart Grids

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Smart Energy & Smart Grids :
Research Challenges
Reliable network: blackout free electricity generation and
distribution
Flexibility: to allow heterogeneous energy supply to or
withdrawal from the grid, and is impervious to accidental or
intentional manipulations
Evolution: The increased system complexity poses technical
challenges that must be considered as the system is operated
in ways that were not intended when the infrastructure was
originally built
Security:
to lower system vulnerability and protect stakeholder and citizens data
Communication security: Absolutely safe and secure communication with elements
at the network edge
Scalability of security functions
Privacy: Technologies for data anonymity addressing privacy
concerns
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Smart Energy & Smart Grids :
Research Challenges
Real-Time: Latencies are critical when talking about
electrical control loops
Issue of cloud based solutions and related processing and
communication delays
Standardization of communication stacks: ex LTE-M
and interoperability
Scalability
Energy Saving: combined with robust and reliable
smart sensors/actuators activity
System partitioning (local/cloud based intelligence)
Mass data processing, filtering and mining; avoid
flooding of communication network
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Smart Energy & Smart Grids :
Research Challenges
Real-time Models and design methods describing
reliable interworking of heterogeneous systems
Identifying and monitoring critical system elements.
Detecting critical overall system states in due time
Self-healing and containment of damage; strategies
for failure contingency management
Interoperability between classical and renewable
energies:
Power grids have to be able to react correctly and quickly to
fluctuations in the supply of electricity from renewable energy sources
such as wind and solar facilities

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Smart Transport and Mobility
Internet of Vehicules: connection of vehicles to the
Internet
Goal: making of transport easier, safer and sustainable
Future trends: connect the Internet of Vehicules with the
internet of Energies

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Smart Transport and Mobility:
Open Problems
Representing human behavior in the design
Ex. limited understanding of how driver behaviour will be
affected by adaptive traffic control cyber physical systems
Ex. difficult to account for the stochastic effects of the human
driver in a mixed traffic environment
development, and operation of cyber physical
systems in autonomous vehicles
Incorporating human-in-the-loop: safety,
dependability, and predictability (low latency
control
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Smart Transport and Mobility :
Application Scenarios
charging voltage of the power electronics: open
question whether the recharging processes should be
controlled by a system within the vehicle or one
installed at the charging station
IoT based vehicule management: data from on-board
sensors are collected by a smart on-board unit and
communicated via the Internet to the service centre
IoT self traffic management and control: Cars should be
able to organise themselves in order to avoid traffic jams
and to optimise drive energy usage
Done in coordination and cooperation with the infrastructure of a smart
city’s traffic control
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Smart Transport and Mobility :
Application Scenarios
Dynamic road pricing and parking tax
Mutual communications between the vehicles
and with the infrastructure (mobility and
coverage)
Multi-Modal Transport:
based on
momentary traffic situation
available and suitable transport means: individual vehicles,
vehicle sharing, railway, …

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Smart Transport and Mobility :
Research Challenges
Safe and secure communication with elements at the
network edge, inter-vehicle communication, and vehicle
to infrastructure communication
smart sensors and actuators design in vehicles and
infrastructure
Technologies for data anonymity addressing privacy
concerns
System partitioning (local/cloud based intelligence)
Detecting critical overall system states in due time
self-organisation and dynamic formation of structures /
re-structuring
Ensure an adequate level of trust and secure exchange of
data among different vertical ICT infrastructures (e.g.,
intermodal scenario)
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Food & Water Tracking and security
Food and fresh water are the most important natural
resources in the world
offering "from pasture to plate" traceability

Use of IoT to secure tracking of food or water from


the production place to the consumer

On going now: beef meat but horse scandals are on


the table!

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Food & Water Tracking and security:
Research Challenges
Design of secure and cost-efficient mechanisms for
tracking food and water from production to
consumers
Secure monitoring production processes
providing sufficient information and confidence to consumers.
Privacy: time details of the production processes which might be
considered as intellectual property
Ensure trust and secure exchange of data among
applications and infrastructures (farm, packing
industry, retailers)
to prevent the introduction of false or misleading data

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Smart metering

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Smart metering:
Challenges at Application level
• Network management – network technologies should be reliable,
intelligent, self-managed, context aware and adaptable
• Interfaces – to refine interaction between HW, SW, algorithms, devices, ...;
smart human / machine interfaces, enabling mobile SW
• Embedded smart functionality – further development of sensors,
actuators, storage, energy sources, middleware, sensor networks, etc.
• Multi-domain communications – to enhance information and signal
processing, identification technology, discovery and search engine
technologies
• Security, privacy, business safety – improvements needed by developing
novel security techniques and concepts
• Standardisation, interoperability, validation and modularization of the IoT
technologies needs enhancements
• New governance principles should be defined – free access to knowledge
for further technology and business development (while maintaining
respect for privacy, security and safety)
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Smart metering:
Challenges at Technology level
• Energy – ultra low power devices & energy Harvestin needed
• Intelligence – capabilities of self-awareness, adaptability, inter-machine
communication, knowledge discovery, etc.
• Communication – new smart antennas, protocols, APIs, together with network
management and visualization techniques need to be developed
• Integration – wireless ID technologies (RFID) should be integrated to devices
• Dependability – individual authentication of billions of heterogeneous devices
• Semantic technologies – large scale distributed ontologies, semantic discovery of
devices, semantic web services, rule engines, ...
• Real world IoT scenarios – to evaluate IoT solutions in real large-scale industrial
applications; to illustrate business-based scenarios
• Modeling and design – innovative M-D frameworks needed for large scale IoT
systems
• Interoperability, standards – ensure interoperability of devices by integrating
different standardized architectures, protocols, etc.; define open standards and
reference models
• Manufacturing – to lower costs of key technologies (e.g., RFID)

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e-Health

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IoT Related Open Challenges
Making “sense” out of it
Mass data processing, filtering and mining
analysis and processing of data acquired
Describe information created by sensors in different applications
Efficient calibration of heterogeneous sensors
Deployment
Cost efficiency
Maintenance
Scalability
Ex: IoT large scale deployment and integration
SmartSantander
Evolution & Interoperability between classical, novel and future functions
Energy
Low energy
Energy harvesting
Energy Saving
Low power communications

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IoT Related Open Challenges
System partitioning (local/cloud based intelligence)
Incorporating human-in-the-loop
Representing human behavior in the design
User awareness & Serious Gaming
Reliable Network
Reliable readings from a plethora of sensors
Self-healing
Real-Time
Security & Privacy:
System vulnerability
Communication security
Consumers and stakeholders data privacy
Data anonymity
Scalability of security functions
Standardization
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3G/4G Limitation for IoT Applications
Wireless IoT markets is limited in potential with 3G/4G
(LTE-M) networks since limitations are experienced in:
Backhaul/fronthaul connections are mostly wired and
indeed costy for ad hoc deployment
Wireless backhaul/fronthaul faces capacity and reliability limitations in
3G/4G
Reliability of wireless connection is not enough for
mission critical applications. Target reliability should be
> 99.9999
Energy consumption of devices due to today
communication networks is too large to meet battery
life duration targets

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3G/4G Limitation for IoT Applications
E2E delay is too long and not predictable for remote
controal and actuation
Delocalized computing is starting to be introduced but
requires high uplink bandwidth that 3G/4G systems
cannot ensure
Fog/edge and Centralized cloud solution are under investigation and
experimentation
Extreme density of IoT devices is not supported
Communication overhead of low rate IoT
communication breaks optimized functioning of 3G/4G
networks
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IoT Weaknesses Today:
Need of an Effective Communication Network

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Networks are Changing
We are extending the current internet to the internet
of things
Connectivity will be any time any where with any
thing

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5G NETWORKS

AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
FOR INTERCONNECTING
THE INTERNET OF THINGS

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Key Technical Challenges in 5G

Ad hoc deployment,
dynamic spectrum access,
white spaces, shared
spectrum, fragmented
spectrim

High data rate, coverage


HetNets, cooperative
Nets, ultra-densification

Expected 1 million connection / Km2


M2M, scalability,
security, privacy, WSN

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5G Challenges

Avalanche of Massive growth in Large diversity of


Traffic Volume Connected Use cases
Devices &
Further expansion of “Communicating machines”
mobile broadband Requirements
Device-to-Device
Additional traffic due to Communications
communicating machines Car-to-Car Comm.

New requirements and


“1000x in ten years” characteristics due to
“50 billion devices in 2020”
communicating machines

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5G & the IoT Verticals Applications

Smart Homes Intelligent Business Logistics and Health


transport environment retail monitoring
system environment system
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5G Scenarios

Super real-time
Best
Great Service and reliable
experience
in a crowd connections
Amazingly follows you Ubiquitous things
fast communicating

bit-rate, simple devices,


delay Accessibility,
Accessibility, delay, coverage
dense crowds
mobility reliability
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5G Technical Objectives

1000x data 50/500 B Up to


Few ms E2E 10 years
volume devices 10Gbps

1000x 10-100x 10-100x 5x 10x


higher mobile higher number of typical end-user lower latency longer battery life
data volumes connected devices data rates for low-power devices

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5G Technical Objectives

5G

4G

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Typical 5G Requirements
Data rates 1-10Gbps (resp.100s of Mbps)
Capacity 36TB/month/user (resp. 500 GB)
Spectrum Higher frequencies & flexibility Ultra-dense
networks
Energy ~10% of today’s consumption
Latency reduction ~ 1ms (e.g. tactile internet)
D2D capabilities NSPS, ITS, resilience, … Ultra Reliable
Comm.
Reliability 99.999% within time budget
Coverage >20 dB of LTE (e.g. sensors)
Massive
Battery ~10 years Machines

Devices per area 300.000 per access node


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From 1G to 5G

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How 5G Networks will Adress IoT

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5G & The IoT

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3GPP Rel 13: Cellular IoT

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Conclusions
IoT devices are available today
A new connectivity era
Things connected to things
People connected to things
Comunities connects (social IoT)
CPSs enable the internet of X
Smart grid
Smart energy
Smart water
Smart transport
Smart cities
Smart Health
Smart Manifacturing (FoF, Industry 4.0)
Telecom market is limited if only for voice and data
communication
New paradigm: network as a service
5G best market will be the real world web

19th January
3/09/2015 Emilio Calvanese 2012 | 70
Strinati
© CEA. All rights reserved
Conclusions
Making “sense” out of it
Create knowledge and make it available
Process massive data with open interfaces for simple integration into
heterogeneous applications
The IoT application space: very diverse, heterogeneous
Each application has its specific traffic (Communications)
Ad hoc infrastructure versus virtualized approach
Design flexibility through open API
Enable to include appropriate sensors and ‘things’ regardless original scope and
implementation details of each device
Dynamic Interoperability and advanced adaptation
Massive number of heterogeneous IoT solutions, protocols, semantics

19th January
3/09/2015 Emilio Calvanese 2012 | 71
Strinati
© CEA. All rights reserved
Conclusions
Industry and service provides cannot relay on today 3G/4G
wireless systems for providing the target immersive
experience
Reliability
Short delay
Device energy efficiency and EE long distance communication
Security
Privacy
X-haul Throughput
Local cloud computing and storage support
5G and IoT have a Win-Win joint future
Network as a service for real world web
An Universal solutions is the hot topic
Future 5G Networks is the best candidate today for efficient integration of
telecom infrastructure, verticals and the smart-X paradigm

19th January
3/09/2015 Emilio Calvanese 2012 | 72
Strinati
© CEA. All rights reserved
Thanks for
your attention

19th January 2012 | 73


© CEA. All rights reserved

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