Fraunhofer launches lighthouse project to develop technologies for 6G
News from Feb. 05, 2021
At the beginning of 2021, the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft launched 6G SENTINEL, a lighthouse project to develop key technologies for the future 6G mobile communications standard. Five participating Fraunhofer Institutes are pooling their expertise in order to collectively attain a position at the technological vanguard of 6G research. The focus of their work will be on terahertz technologies and solutions for flexible networks.
5G may be garnering all the attention right now, but Fraunhofer laboratories are already busy working on the next generation of mobile communications: 6G will bring about another stride forward in the performance capability of mobile communications as regards peak throughput, user data rate, reliability, latency, energy efficiency and positioning accuracy. Overall, this increase in performance with 6G will be accompanied by much higher connection density.
The participating institutes are Fraunhofer IIS (project leadership), the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications HHI, the Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems FOKUS, the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics IAF and the Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration IZM.
Terahertz technology and flexible networks
6G will be built on the systematic further development of existing mobile communication technologies while also opening up brand new possibilities. The use of terahertz frequencies above 100 GHz is particularly promising, because they facilitate the extremely high data throughputs that are required for applications such as virtual reality, digital twins, teleoperation and autonomous driving.
So that mobile communications in the THz range can become a reality, the researchers involved in 6G SENTINEL are working on the development of radio channel models and link-level simulators for the frequency range between 100 and 300 GHz. Building on this work, they plan to develop the prototype of a highly integrated terahertz transmission module and a suitable transmission method for demonstrating mobile THz connections.
The second cornerstone of the project will be the development of software solutions that facilitate the flexible design of networks to align with the application and the current operating conditions. In turn, this requires a modular and software-based core network that will be supplemented by secure and trustworthy components for dynamic control, will allow the integration of new kinds of access and backhaul networks, and will support AI-based network automation. The goal is to develop and demonstrate an adaptable architecture for heterogeneous 6G networks in which satellites and airborne platforms will play a role alongside THz technologies.
“A software-based core network is central to flexible network architectures. In this project, we want to develop a 6G-ready core network that integrates suitable access and backhaul networks depending on the use case, in an automated way thanks to AI,” explains Prof. Dr. Thomas Magedanz, director of the Software-based Networks business unit at the Fraunhofer Institute FOKUS