TY - JOUR
T1 - FR2 5G Networks for Industrial Scenarios
T2 - Experimental Characterization and Beam Management Procedures in Operational Conditions
AU - Ramírez-Arroyo, Alejandro
AU - López, Melisa
AU - Rodríguez, Ignacio
AU - Sørensen, Troels B.
AU - Barrio, Samantha Caporal del
AU - Padilla, Pablo
AU - Valenzuela-Valdés, Juan F.
AU - Mogensen, Preben
PY - 2024/9/20
Y1 - 2024/9/20
N2 - Industrial environments constitute a challenge in terms of radio propagation due to the presence of machinery and the mobility of the different agents, especially at mmWave bands. This paper presents an experimental evaluation of a FR2 5G network deployed in an operational factory scenario at 26 GHz. The experimental characterization, performed with autonomous mobile robots that self-navigate the industrial lab, leads to the analysis of the received power along the factory and the evaluation of reference path gain models. The proposed assessment deeply analyzes the physical layer of the communication network under operational conditions. Thus, two different network configurations are assessed by measuring the power received in the entire factory, providing a comparison between deployments. Additionally, beam management procedures, such as beam recovery, beam sweeping or beam switching, are analyzed since they are crucial in environments where mobile agents are involved. They aim for a zero interruption approach based on reliable communications. The results analysis shows that beam recovery procedures can perform a beam switching to an alternative serving beam with power losses of less than 1.6 dB on average. Beam sweeping analysis demonstrates the prevalence of the direct component in Line-of-Sight conditions despite the strong scattering component and large-scale fading in the environment.
AB - Industrial environments constitute a challenge in terms of radio propagation due to the presence of machinery and the mobility of the different agents, especially at mmWave bands. This paper presents an experimental evaluation of a FR2 5G network deployed in an operational factory scenario at 26 GHz. The experimental characterization, performed with autonomous mobile robots that self-navigate the industrial lab, leads to the analysis of the received power along the factory and the evaluation of reference path gain models. The proposed assessment deeply analyzes the physical layer of the communication network under operational conditions. Thus, two different network configurations are assessed by measuring the power received in the entire factory, providing a comparison between deployments. Additionally, beam management procedures, such as beam recovery, beam sweeping or beam switching, are analyzed since they are crucial in environments where mobile agents are involved. They aim for a zero interruption approach based on reliable communications. The results analysis shows that beam recovery procedures can perform a beam switching to an alternative serving beam with power losses of less than 1.6 dB on average. Beam sweeping analysis demonstrates the prevalence of the direct component in Line-of-Sight conditions despite the strong scattering component and large-scale fading in the environment.
KW - 5G mobile communication
KW - Amplitude modulation
KW - OFDM
KW - Particle measurements
KW - Production facilities
KW - Radio propagation
KW - Switches
KW - beam management
KW - industrial scenario
KW - radio propagation
KW - 5G Network
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192963530&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TVT.2024.3393533
DO - 10.1109/TVT.2024.3393533
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1939-9359
VL - 73
SP - 13513
EP - 13525
JO - IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology
JF - IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology
IS - 9
M1 - 10520933
ER -