3 Years, 20 Companies, 18 Groundbreaking experiments: 5G-Crosshaul Successfully Concludes most ambitious 5G Transport Network R&D Effort to date

Ico_CTTC

European Union H2020 5G Public-Private Partnership 5G-Crosshaul Featuring Twenty-Company Consortium Delivers 5G Transport Network Solution Cementing European Leadership in Crucial 5G Area

A consortium of twenty industry-leading companies today announced the successful completion of a nearly three-year European Union Horizon 2020 project aimed at developing a 5G integrated backhaul and fronthaul transport network. After nearly three years, the project, 5G-Crosshaul, is now the de-facto concept for the 5G integrated fronthaul/backhaul transport network.

The 5G-Crosshaul consortium was selected in 2015 to develop a 5G integrated backhaul and fronthaul transport network that enables a flexible and software-defined reconfiguration of all networking elements in a multi-tenant and service-oriented unified management environment. The transport network flexibly interconnects distributed 5G radio access and core network functions hosted on in-network cloud nodes. This is achieved through the implementation of a control infrastructure using a unified, abstract network model for control plane integration and a unified data plane encompassing innovative high-capacity transmission technologies, as well as novel deterministic-latency switch architectures.

“It has been truly an honor to oversee one of the most ambitious 5G transport network research and development efforts to date,” said Arturo Azcorra, Director of IMDEA Networks, Co-founder of 5TONIC, and Project Coordinator of 5G-Crosshaul. “The successful results of the 5G-Crosshaul project have advanced scientific knowledge and international standardization of 5G systems, and ultimately contributed to an increase in Europe’s 5G global competitiveness.”

The 5G-Crosshaul solution was demonstrated and validated through 18 experiments integrating multiple technology components from the partners. Real-world trials took place at sites in Berlin, Madrid, Barcelona and Taiwan, and delivered sub-millisecond latency, tens of Gbps throughput, and proven energy and cost savings up to 70%, depending on the deployment scenario. The trials also demonstrated fast service deployment time in the order of minutes, taking advanced of SDN and NFV concepts.

“The 5G-Crosshaul project has delivered a novel transport network that provides overall resource optimization and brings the CAPEX and OPEX investments to a reasonable ROI range,” said Xavier Costa, Head of 5G Networks R&D and Deputy General Manager of the Security & Networking R&D Division, NEC Laboratories Europe, and the Technical Manager of the project. “This project’s major innovation has set the stage to deliver on the huge increased available bandwidth and ultra-low-latency required by the fifth generation of network technologies.”

Following its final project review by independent experts appointed by the European Commission, the 5G-Crosshaul project was declared to “have fully achieved its objectives and milestones and delivered exceptional results with significant immediate or potential impact”. The EU experts report highlighted “Significant results linked to dissemination, exploitation and impact potential”, in particular:

  • 91 papers – in several prestigious journals
  • 74 presentations/panels/webinars, and 14 (Co-)organized workshops
  • 28 demonstrations including at flagship events such as MWC’16 and MWC’17
  • 35 normative contributions feeding into key standardization specifications of eCPRI, G.metro, IETF CCAMP, IETF DETNET, and ONF
  • 25 contributions for information purpose in several standardization bodies and fora such as NGMN, ITU-T, FSAN, ETSI, IEEE, BBF, ONF.

The EU experts report continued to note that “several key innovations have been identified, and some of them have been mapped to products for exploitation. The project has so far registered five patent applications. Future exploitation plans are expected to emerged by the partners, outside the project umbrella and based on these innovations.”

“Throughout its lifetime, the 5G-Crosshaul project has successfully delivered 60-plus technological and informational contributions to the advancement of 5G standards,” said Paola Iovanna, Ericsson, and the Innovation Manager of the project. “The project produced radical technology innovations, several directly mapped to products, setting this project as one of the most groundbreaking and unique projects to date.”

 “We are really delighted with the outstanding outcomes of the project and to have contributed with our EXTREME and ADRENALINE 5G testbeds to experimentally show the feasibility of end-to-end multi-technology backhaul and fronthaul integration. We believe that the project made a remarkable contribution to research in future 5G mobile transport networks,” said Josep Mangues-Bafalluy, Head of the Communication Networks Division of CTTC, and Validation and Proof-of-concept leader of the project.

For more information on the 5G-Crosshaul project, please visit http://5g-crosshaul.eu/