WBA Report: How Wi-Fi 6/6E Enables Industry 4.0WBA Report Sets Out How Wi-Fi 6/6E Enables Industry 4.0Autonomous Mobile Robots, Automatic Guided Vehicles, Augmented & Virtual Reality Use Cases Detailed with Industrial Internet of Things Deployment GuidelinesThe Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA) published “Wi-Fi 6/6E for
Industrial IoT: Enabling Wi-Fi Determinism in an IoT World.” This paper
explores how Wi-Fi’s latest features are ideal for
meeting the unique, demanding requirements for a wide variety of existing and
emerging IIoT applications. This includes manufacturing/Industry 4.0 and
logistics, involving autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), automated ground vehicles
(AGVs), predictive maintenance and augmented/virtual/mixed reality (AR/VR/MR). For example, manufacturers are increasingly using IIoT sensors for
vibration, temperature and lubricant viscosity to catch emerging equipment
problems before they result in extensive, expensive downtime. Other IIoT
sensors provide real-time insights about production output, inventory levels
and asset locations. Wireless has become the preferred way to network these
sensors because it’s faster and cheaper to deploy than copper or fiber. “As more equipment is monitored, wiring becomes prohibitive,” the paper
says. “Industry is moving towards the inclusion of wireless technologies to
lessen the cost of obtaining more information about their processes. In one
recent case in the oil and gas industry, moving to a wireless installation
resulted in a 75% cost reduction in installation.”
Produced by the
WBA’s Wi-Fi 6/6E for IIOT work group, led by Cisco, Deutsche Telekom and
Intel the white paper provides an overview of Wi-Fi 6 and 6E capabilities that
are ideal for sensors and other IIoT applications, such as:
The 52-page report also includes RF/network deployment guidelines for factory, warehouse, logistics and other use cases. For example, it provides recommendations for leveraging 802.11ax/Wi-Fi 6 scheduling capabilities to optimize traffic patterns and manage critical QoS requirements. Another example is using high-gain directional antennas to increase channel re-use rates and work around metal racks and other signal-attenuating features commonly found in warehouses. Current Projects Over three dozen vendors, service providers and other organizations participated in developing the white paper, which describes many of their current projects. Examples include:
Tiago Rodrigues, CEO of the Wireless Broadband Alliance, said: “Wi-Fi has been a key enabler of the global IIOT market, which is on track to have a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 23% between 2017 and 2023. Wi-Fi 6 and 6E are expanding capabilties by providing the multi-Gb/s data rates, additional spectrum, deterministic performance and other advanced capabilities necessary to support demanding applications such as Industry 4.0.” Matt MacPherson, CTO, Cisco Wireless, said: “The next industrial evolution will not only depend on the ability to connect more things, but to also add greater reliability, intelligence and security. This can only be done when the world’s leading companies work together with progressive Industry 4.0 customers to explore and implement new, game-changing technologies. Cisco is proud of the work it has done with the WBA to ensure customers understand how, when and where to apply the latest innovations. It is because of advancements in wireless technology that Industrial IoT sits at the center of the forthcoming industrial revolution." Ahmed Hafez, VP of Network Convergence at Deutsche Telekom said: “Deutsche Telekom’s industrial partners are demanding ubiquitous high performance wireless connectivity to take their production processes to the next level. Converged Access combining 5G cellular and Wi-Fi6/6E Networks will play a vital role to deliver comprehensively on their application and process demands in the near future”. Eric McLaughlin VP, Client Computing Group & GM, Wireless Solutions Group, Intel Corporation, said: “The industrial IoT market is experiencing a major transformation, and Wi-Fi is an essential ingredient enabling this transition. Applications like Autonomous Mobile Robot (AMR) and Remote Human Management Interface (HMI) industrial devices require the mobility, functional safety, high reliability, low latency, robust security and determinism that Wi-Fi 6/6E can deliver particularly when combined with TSN (time sensitive networking) solutions. Intel is pleased to be leading this Wi-Fi technology evolution, and applauds the work that the WBA is doing in this space.” Source: Wireless Broadband Alliance media announcement
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