Wireless technology

Wireless Standards for Smart Cities: Integrating 5G, Wi-Fi 6E, and V2X

Wireless Standards for Smart Cities Integrating 5G, Wi-Fi 6E, and V2X
Image Courtesy: Pexels
Written by Samita Nayak

Think of a city that breathes in unison – where traffic streams effortlessly, power grids adjust dynamically, public security is boosted using real-time data, and people live in hyper-connected ways. This is no fantasy of the future; this is the vision of the smart city, and at its foundation is a smart network of wireless communication standards.

The intersection of 5G, Wi-Fi 6E, and Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X) technologies is not merely an upgrade; it’s a transformational leap that will reshape cities.

Let us explore how these potent wireless weapons are converging to create smart cities of the future.

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5G: The Wide-Area Backbone

Conceive of 5G as the smart city’s central nervous system. Its wide coverage, ultra-high speeds, and low latency qualify it as the perfect backbone to connect a very large number of sensors, devices, and services throughout the whole urban area.

From facilitating large-scale Internet of Things (IoT) installations for intelligent waste management and green monitoring to empowering bandwidth-hungry applications such as real-time video surveillance for improved security, 5G offers the solid and dependable connectivity required for city-wide intelligence. Its capacity to manage a tremendous number of connected devices in parallel is imperative to the sheer volume of data exchange necessary in a smart city.

Further, 5G network slicing technology provides support for virtualized dedicated networks designed specifically for certain applications so that important services such as emergency response have guaranteed bandwidth and minimal latency.

Wi-Fi 6E: Supercharging Local Connectivity

Whereas 5G offers the broad-area coverage, Wi-Fi 6E fills in to turbocharge local connectivity in targeted areas and buildings. Using the newly opened 6 GHz band, Wi-Fi 6E provides much higher bandwidth, reduced latency, and less interference than earlier Wi-Fi generations.

This makes it ideal for high-usage environments in smart cities, including busy public transportation stations, smart buildings with many connected devices, and high-density residential communities.

Picture effortless streaming of augmented reality content at a museum, incredibly rapid downloads at a smart library, or jitter-free video conferencing at an interconnected office building – all enabled by the upgraded performance of Wi-Fi 6E. It augments 5G by offloading traffic in busy environments and offering even better indoor coverage and capacity.

V2X: The Intelligent Transportation Ecosystem

The flow of people and goods is the backbone of any city, and V2X technology has the potential to transform the transportation in a city. V2X consists of several communication modes, which include Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V), Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I), Vehicle-to-Pedestrian (V2P), and Vehicle-to-Network (V2N).

By allowing vehicles to share information with one another, road infrastructure (such as traffic lights and intelligent signage), pedestrians’ equipment, and the wider network, V2X opens the door to safer, more efficient, and cleaner transport systems. Picture cars getting real-time warnings of accidents up ahead, traffic lights adapting dynamically for maximum flow, and driverless cars driving with unprecedented situational awareness.

V2X, which typically uses both cellular (C-V2X, on 4G/5G) and dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) technologies, is an essential part of smart mobility within the broader smart city ecosystem.

The Power of Integration

The real strength of smart cities is in the unifying of these three wireless standards. 5G supplies the widespread connectivity and manages the long-range, high-density communications. Wi-Fi 6E provides localized, high-bandwidth access in selected locations.

V2X builds an intelligent transportation environment that communicates with both 5G and possibly localized Wi-Fi networks. For instance, an autonomous bus could utilize 5G for its general navigation and fleet management, V2X to talk to traffic lights and other vehicles in real-time, and Wi-Fi 6E to upload large volumes of sensor data when it comes back to a depot.

About the author

Samita Nayak

Samita Nayak is a content writer working at Anteriad. She writes about business, technology, HR, marketing, cryptocurrency, and sales. When not writing, she can usually be found reading a book, watching movies, or spending far too much time with her Golden Retriever.