Wireless 6G Connectivity for Massive Number of Devices and Critical Services
Journal article, 2024

Compared to the generations up to 4G, whose main focus was on broadband and coverage aspects, 5G has expanded the scope of wireless cellular systems toward embracing two new types of connectivity: massive machine-type communications (mMTCs) and ultrareliable low-latency communications (URLLCs). This article discusses the possible evolution of these two types of connectivity within the umbrella of 6G wireless systems. This article consists of three parts. The first part deals with the connectivity for a massive number of devices. While mMTC research in 5G predominantly focuses on the problem of uncoordinated access in the uplink for a large number of devices, the traffic patterns in 6G may become more symmetric, leading to closed-loop massive connectivity. One of the drivers for this type of traffic pattern is distributed/decentralized learning and inference. The second part of this article discusses the evolution of wireless connectivity for critical services. While latency and reliability are tightly coupled in 5G, 6G will support a variety of safety-critical control applications with different types of timing requirements, as evidenced by the emergence of metrics related to information freshness and information value. In addition, ensuring ultrahigh reliability for safety-critical control applications requires modeling and estimation of the tail statistics of the wireless channel, queue length, and delay. The fulfillment of these stringent requirements calls for the development of novel artificial intelligence (AI)-based techniques, incorporating optimization theory, explainable AI (XAI), generative AI, and digital twins (DTs). The third part analyzes the coexistence of massive connectivity and critical services. Specifically, we consider scenarios in which a massive number of devices need to support traffic patterns of mixed criticality. This is followed by a discussion about the management of wireless resources shared by services with different criticality.

machine-type communications (MTCs)

ultrareliable low-latency communications (URLLC)

6G

Internet of Things (IoT)

massive access

massive connectivity

wireless networks

Author

Anders E. Kalør

Aalborg University

Keio University

Giuseppe Durisi

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Communication, Antennas and Optical Networks

Sinem Coleri

Koç University

Stefan Parkvall

Ericsson

Wei Yu

University of Toronto

Andreas Mueller

Bosch

Petar Popovski

Aalborg University

Proceedings of the IEEE

0018-9219 (ISSN) 15582256 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Energy-­efficient massive random access for real­-time distributed autonomous systems

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2021-04970), 2022-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.

Subject Categories

Telecommunications

Communication Systems

DOI

10.1109/JPROC.2024.3484529

More information

Latest update

11/25/2024