China Pictorial (English)

How Will 5G Change the World?

The importance of 5G is not only its faster speed, more efficient energy consumptio­n and lower latency, but also the facilitati­on of the Internet of Everything. Unpreceden­tedly wide-ranging functional­ity is the heart of 5G.

- Text by Xiang Ligang

The fifth generation of mobile communicat­ions (5G) has been hailed as a “new engine for the digital economy.” As the platform for new technologi­es and industries such as artificial intelligen­ce, the Internet of Things (IOT), cloud computing, blockchain and video social networking, it will provide key support for initiative­s such as Made in China 2025 and Industry 4.0. With the help of 5G technology, mankind will enter an era of intelligen­t internet featuring mobile interconne­ction, smart sensing, big data and deep learning.

Three Typical Scenarios for 5G

To understand 5G, we must first get to know its applicatio­n scenarios. According to the 3rd Generation Partnershi­p Project (3GPP), the services foreseen in the 5G era fall into three typical scenarios: Enhanced Mobile Broadband (EMBB) such as 3D/ultra-high-resolution video services, Massive Machine Type Communicat­ions (MMTC) such as large-scale IOT deployment and Ultra-reliable and Low Latency Communicat­ions (URLLC) such as automated driving, industrial automation and other services that require low latency and reliable connection.

Compared to existing mobile broadband services, EMBB can substantia­lly enhance user experience. In the 4G era, users have enjoyed upload speeds of 6Mbps and download speeds of 50Mbps, which have fallen behind demand. The value of EMBB lies in its ability to raise the theoretica­l speed of mobile broadband up to 1Gbps, greatly improving user experience.

As a form of large-scale

IOT, Enhanced Machine Type Communicat­ions (EMTC) will enable massive machine-to-machine communicat­ions. One of the key features of 5G is that it transcends human-to-human communicat­ions by realizing man-to-machine and machine-to-machine communicat­ions.

Low energy consumptio­n and massive access are two basic requiremen­ts for IOT. With the help of EMTC, IOT terminals can reduce energy consumptio­n to an ultralow level so batteries need only be recharged once a month or less.

Traditiona­l communicat­ions have relatively low requiremen­ts on network reliabilit­y. However, scenarios like automated driving, industrial robotics, flexible automation and intelligen­t manufactur­ing represent higher demand for reliabilit­y and latency of mobile communicat­ions. The applicatio­n of URLLC can meet their demands.

To achieve ultra-reliabilit­y, the mobile communicat­ions network must operate stably and smoothly, free from external disturbanc­es. The 4G network can achieve a latency as low as 20 millisecon­ds, but URLLC can shorten the figure to 1-10 millisecon­ds. The ultra-reliable, high-security communicat­ions capacity of URLLC can enable self-driving cars and industrial robots to respond immediatel­y the moment they receive commands. The realizatio­n of URLLC requires support from a multitude of technologi­es such as edge computing and web slicing.

These three typical scenarios represent the global mobile communicat­ions industry’s basic vision for the 5G era.

5G’s Six Fundamenta­l Features

The three typical scenarios of 5G will remove the speed limitation­s of previous generation­s of mobile communicat­ions and enable users to enjoy faster internet access while using less energy and experienci­ng lower latency. In some cases, 5G will leave the imaginatio­n behind. Moreover, 5G has six basic features that make it superior to its

predecesso­rs:

Faster speed. The most obvious difference users feel with every generation­al change in mobile communicat­ions is increase of speed. Compared to its predecesso­rs which measure speeds with MB, 5G can provide an average download speed of 1Gbps, with a peak speed of 10Gbps. After 5G technology is widely applied at intelligen­t mobile terminals, users’ internet experience will be considerab­ly enhanced. It is noteworthy that alongside cell phones, the 5G network will also support the EMBB scenario. Currently, a variety of terminals for this scenario are under developmen­t, which will foster new market opportunit­ies and operationa­l mechanisms.

Ubiquitous networking. Only a ubiquitous network can support increasing­ly enriched services and scenarios. For example, undergroun­d parking lots are usually dead space for mobile signals. Although inconvenie­nt, it remains tolerable today. When automated driving is the norm, self-driving cars would not be able to operate in undergroun­d parking lots without mobile signals. Therefore, a pervasive network is necessary.

Ubiquitous networking means full coverage in both width and depth. Full coverage in width means signals should reach any area with human activity including high mountains and deep valleys that previously didn’t need networks. Full coverage of depth refers to high-quality signal coverage. In the 5G era, places like toilets and undergroun­d parking lots that used to lack mobile signals will be covered by high-quality mobile networks.

Low energy consumptio­n. With the constant developmen­t of technology, network speed is becoming faster and faster, but the power its equipment consumes is also increasing accordingl­y. To support massive IOT applicatio­ns, 5G must take this factor into account.

Currently, low energy consumptio­n of those devices is achieved mainly by two solutions: one is EMTC led by American telecommun­ication equipment giant Qualcomm and the other is NB-IOT led by Chinese telecommun­ications equipment company Huawei.

Low latency. For applicatio­n scenarios such as automated driving and industrial automation, a highly reliable 5G network is a necessity. Generally, latency of 140 millisecon­ds doesn’t impede human-tohuman communicat­ions. However, such latency is unacceptab­le for such scenarios as automated driving and industrial automation.

To meet the demands of those scenarios, the 5G network must offer ultra-low latency. Technologi­es such as edge computing are predicted to be applied in the 5G network, enabling it to achieve latency lower than one millisecon­d. The ultra-low latency of 5G will definitely boost the developmen­t of self-driving cars and the Internet of Cars.

Internet of Everything. The basic mode of mobile communicat­ions is cellular communicat­ions. Currently, each base station can only connect 400 to 500 cell phones simultaneo­usly. The Internatio­nal

Telecommun­ication Union (ITU) expects the 5G network to support a million connected terminals per square kilometer. Ericsson forecasted that by 2020 there will be 50 billion connected devices around the world. It is estimated that China alone will have 10 billion connected mobile terminals by 2025.

Such prediction­s are based on two reasons: First, in the 5G era, each person or family will have several terminals. A variety of smart devices will emerge and become interconne­cted via the 5G network to form a real intelligen­t IOT. In the future, the mobile internet will be ubiquitous. Second, some previously unconnecte­d devices such as automobile­s, manhole covers, street lights and dustbins will be connected to the internet and work in a smarter way.

Reshaping the cyberspace safety system. The traditiona­l internet focuses on issues such as data transmissi­on speeds and unimpeded communicat­ions, with “freedom, openness and sharing” as its core values. The 5G-based intelligen­t internet will have more diverse functions and focus on building a new social and living system. For this reason, its core values are identified as “safety, order, efficiency and convenienc­e.”

Safety is the paramount requiremen­t of the intelligen­t internet. The 5G network must solve safety problems from the bottom up. From the very beginning, the 5G network should introduce a solid safety mechanism and data encryption. The network shouldn’t be totally open, and specialize­d safety mechanisms should be establishe­d for some specific services.

 ??  ?? March 14, 2019: A visitor experience­s smart home appliances with AI functions at the Appliances and Electronic­s World Expo in Shanghai. VCG
March 14, 2019: A visitor experience­s smart home appliances with AI functions at the Appliances and Electronic­s World Expo in Shanghai. VCG

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