IIC Journal of Innovation 13th Edition | Page 10

Outcomes, Insights and Best Practices from IIC Testbeds: LTE for Metro Testbed To extend the usefulness of the published testbeds in the Testbed Program of the Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC), the Testbed Working Group has developed an initiative to interview the contributors of selected testbeds to showcase more insights about the testbed, including the lessons learned through the testbed development process. This initiative enables the IIC to share more insights and inspire more members to engage in the Testbed Program. This article highlights the LTE for Metro Testbed. The information and insights described in the following article were captured through an interview conducted by Mr. Howard Kradjel, Vice President of Industry Programs at IIC, with Mr. Yaling Zhou, Industrial IoT Industry Development Director at Huawei Technologies. Yaling is an active member in the IIC where he serves as a co- lead of the LTE for Metro Testbed, co-chair of the Chinese Regional Team and co-chair of the Standards Task Group. LTE FOR M ETRO T ESTBED – F ROM C ONCEPT TO R EALITY applicable to discussions around future international standardization in the metro rail industry and promote the collaboration between Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) and various parties in the metro field. Within a metro system, a wireless communication sub-system carries multiple types of services for train control and management between devices on moving trains and ground facilities. Many wireless technologies are used to support different services. To guarantee service, two separate Wi-Fi networks are set up to carry critical and non-critical services. A typical critical service is Communication Based Train Control (CBTC) while a non-critical service may include video surveillance and Passenger Information Systems (PIS). Implementing two separate wireless networks introduces vendor-specific extensions that lack standardization and interoperability. The metro rail industry is in need of a next-generation solution for wireless communication in metro systems. The testbed’s areas of experimentation include services needing support (CBTC, trunking, PIS), the performance and reliability of critical services (CBTC delay, jitter, packet loss) and the performance of non-critical services. The output of the testbed will address system specification for various key challenges and best practices for system architecture and key technology selection. Furthermore, the testbed will provide insight on the necessary architecture, features, configurations and profiles to meet service requirements under various conditions. The Long-Term Evolution (LTE) for Metro Testbed establishes and validates a profile for the use of LTE technology in metro environments for the purposes of wireless communication and quality of service (critical and non-critical) for metro control and operation. The results of this testbed are IIC Journal of Innovation The LTE for Metro Testbed addresses two key use cases. The testbed first focuses on validating the network capability in critical services to support CBTC, adjusting the profile as necessary (architecture, configuration, installation) to ensure service - 6 -