Davide Villa
Ph.D. Student
In this work, WIoT researchers apply the Digital Twin (DT) concept to large-scale wireless systems to address, obviate or minimize the impact of errors of emulation models. As a result, the precision of the emulation process, model design, and parameter settings is improved, increasing the reliability of the solutions tested on emulation platforms.
The paper also explains the use of Colosseum, the world’s largest wireless network emulator with hardware-in-the-loop, as a DT for NextG experimental wireless research at scale.
“Wireless network emulators are being increasingly used for developing and evaluating new solutions for Next Generation (NextG) wireless networks. However, the reliability of the solutions tested on emulation platforms heavily depends on the precision of the emulation process, model design, and parameter settings. To address, obviate or minimize the impact of errors of emulation models, in this work we apply the concept of Digital Twin (DT) to large-scale wireless systems. Specifically, we demonstrate the use of Colosseum, the world’s largest wireless network emulator with hardware-in-the-loop, as a DT for NextG experimental wireless research at scale. As proof of concept, we leverage the Channel emulation scenario generator and Sounder Toolchain (CaST) to create the DT of a publicly-available over-the-air indoor testbed for sub-6 GHz research, namely, Arena. Then, we validate the Colosseum DT through experimental campaigns on emulated wireless environments, including scenarios concerning cellular networks and jamming of Wi-Fi nodes, on both the real and digital systems. Our experiments show that the DT is able to provide a faithful representation of the real-world setup, obtaining an average accuracy of up to 92.5% in throughput and 80% in Signal to Interference plus Noise Ratio (SINR).”
Source: arxiv.org
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Ph.D. Student
Ph.D. Student
Ph.D. Student
Associate Research Scientist
Principal Research Scientist
Principal Research Scientist
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
William Lincoln Smith Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
WIoT Institute Director