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graph TB
subgraph Devices["IoT Devices"]
D1[Sensors]
D2[Cameras]
D3[AGVs]
D4[Wearables]
end
subgraph RAN["Radio Access Network"]
gNB[5G Base Station<br/>gNB]
RU[Radio Units]
DU[Distributed Unit]
CU[Centralized Unit]
end
subgraph Core["5G Core Network"]
AMF[AMF<br/>Access & Mobility]
SMF[SMF<br/>Session Management]
UPF[UPF<br/>User Plane]
end
subgraph Edge["Edge Computing"]
MEC[MEC Server]
Apps[IoT Applications]
end
subgraph Enterprise["Enterprise Systems"]
IT[IT Network]
OT[OT Network]
Cloud[Cloud Services]
end
D1 & D2 & D3 & D4 --> gNB
gNB --> RU --> DU --> CU
CU --> AMF
AMF --> SMF --> UPF
UPF --> MEC --> Apps
UPF --> IT
UPF --> OT
MEC --> Cloud
style Devices fill:#7F8C8D,stroke:#2C3E50
style RAN fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50
style Core fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50
style Edge fill:#2C3E50,stroke:#16A085
style Enterprise fill:#7F8C8D,stroke:#2C3E50
1166 Private 5G Networks for IoT
1166.1 Private 5G: Enterprise IoT Connectivity
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
- Design private 5G network architectures for enterprise IoT
- Compare deployment models (standalone, hybrid, network slice)
- Select appropriate spectrum options (CBRS, licensed, mmWave)
- Calculate TCO and ROI for private 5G deployments
- Integrate private 5G with existing enterprise infrastructure
- Plan migration from Wi-Fi to private 5G for industrial IoT
1166.2 Prerequisites
Before diving into this chapter, you should be familiar with:
- 5G Advanced and 6G for IoT: 5G evolution and capabilities
- Cellular IoT Fundamentals: Cellular IoT basics
- IIoT and Industry 4.0: Industrial IoT context
5G and Cellular: - 5G Advanced and 6G for IoT - 5G evolution - Cellular IoT Fundamentals - Cellular basics - NB-IoT Fundamentals - Narrowband IoT
Industrial: - Industrial Protocols Overview - OT integration - IIoT and Industry 4.0 - Context
In one sentence: Private 5G provides dedicated wireless capacity with guaranteed latency and data sovereignty by deploying your own 5G infrastructure on-premises, eliminating dependence on public carriers for mission-critical industrial IoT.
Remember this: Private 5G makes sense when you need sub-10ms latency, data must stay on-site, or you cannot tolerate capacity sharing with public users; otherwise, public 5G with network slicing is more cost-effective.
1166.3 For Beginners: Understanding Private 5G
Public 5G is like a public highway: - Shared with everyone - Operator controls the rules - Traffic congestion possible - Data travels through operator network
Private 5G is like having your own private road: - Dedicated to your organization - You control the rules - Guaranteed capacity - Data stays on-site
Why Go Private?
- Reliability: Your factory robots don’t compete with TikTok videos
- Security: Sensitive data never leaves your premises
- Latency: Local network = faster response
- Control: You decide priorities and policies
- Coverage: Optimized for YOUR building, not the neighborhood
Real-World Example: A car factory needs 1ms response for robot control. Public 5G can’t guarantee this because: - Nearest cell tower is 500m away - Core network is in another city - Other users share the capacity
Private 5G solves this: - Base station inside the factory - Core network on-site - Only factory devices use it
1166.4 Private 5G Architecture
1166.4.1 Core Components
{fig-alt=“Private 5G architecture showing IoT Devices (sensors, cameras, AGVs, wearables) connecting to RAN components (gNB, RU, DU, CU) in teal, connecting to 5G Core (AMF, SMF, UPF) in orange, connecting to Edge Computing (MEC, applications) in navy, finally connecting to Enterprise Systems (IT, OT, Cloud) in gray. Shows complete on-premises deployment.”}
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sequenceDiagram
participant D as IoT Device
participant gNB as gNB (Base Station)
participant AMF as AMF (Control)
participant SMF as SMF (Session)
participant UPF as UPF (User Plane)
participant MEC as Edge Server
participant App as Enterprise App
Note over D,App: Private 5G Data Path
D->>gNB: Radio transmission
gNB->>AMF: Registration/Attach
AMF->>SMF: Session setup request
SMF->>UPF: Create data tunnel
UPF-->>gNB: Tunnel established
rect rgb(22, 160, 133)
Note over D,MEC: Low-latency path (edge)
D->>gNB: Sensor data
gNB->>UPF: User plane data
UPF->>MEC: Local processing
MEC->>App: Real-time response
end
This sequence diagram emphasizes the data flow path, showing how control plane (AMF/SMF) sets up sessions while user plane (UPF) handles actual IoT data routing to edge servers.
1166.4.2 Deployment Models
| Model | Description | Best For | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standalone | Full private infrastructure | Large enterprises, critical apps | $\[$ | | **Hybrid** | Private RAN, shared core | Medium enterprises | \]$ |
| Network Slice | Virtual private on public | Multi-site, mobile workforce | $$ |
| Neutral Host | Shared private infrastructure | Buildings, campuses | $ |
1166.4.3 Standalone vs Hybrid vs Slice
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graph TB
subgraph Standalone["Standalone Private"]
SA_RAN[Private RAN]
SA_Core[Private Core]
SA_Spec[Dedicated Spectrum]
SA_RAN --> SA_Core
end
subgraph Hybrid["Hybrid Model"]
H_RAN[Private RAN]
H_Core[MNO Core]
H_Spec[Shared Spectrum]
H_RAN --> H_Core
end
subgraph Slice["Network Slice"]
S_RAN[MNO RAN]
S_Core[Slice in MNO Core]
S_Spec[MNO Spectrum]
S_RAN --> S_Core
end
style Standalone fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50
style Hybrid fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50
style Slice fill:#2C3E50,stroke:#16A085
{fig-alt=“Three private 5G deployment models: Standalone Private in teal (all private: RAN, Core, dedicated spectrum), Hybrid in orange (private RAN with MNO core, shared spectrum), Network Slice in navy (MNO RAN with virtual slice in MNO core, MNO spectrum).”}
1166.5 Spectrum Options
1166.5.1 Available Spectrum for Private 5G
| Spectrum | Frequency | Region | License Type | Bandwidth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBRS | 3.55-3.7 GHz | USA | Light licensing | 150 MHz |
| n78 | 3.3-3.8 GHz | Europe | Country-specific | 100-400 MHz |
| n79 | 4.4-5.0 GHz | Japan, China | Licensed | 100-400 MHz |
| mmWave | 24-28 GHz | Global | Licensed/shared | 400+ MHz |
| Unlicensed | 5-6 GHz | Global | Unlicensed | 500+ MHz |
| Shared | Varies | Various | Dynamic sharing | Varies |
1166.5.2 CBRS Deep Dive (USA)
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graph TB
subgraph CBRS["CBRS Spectrum (3.55-3.7 GHz)"]
T1[Tier 1: Incumbent<br/>Navy Radar, FSS]
T2[Tier 2: PAL<br/>Priority Access License<br/>10 MHz channels]
T3[Tier 3: GAA<br/>General Authorized Access<br/>No license needed]
end
T1 -->|Protected from| T2
T2 -->|Protected from| T3
SAS[Spectrum Access System<br/>Coordination]
SAS --> T1
SAS --> T2
SAS --> T3
style T1 fill:#c0392b,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style T2 fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style T3 fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style SAS fill:#2C3E50,stroke:#16A085,color:#fff
{fig-alt=“CBRS spectrum tiers: Tier 1 Incumbent (Navy Radar, FSS) in red with highest protection, Tier 2 PAL (Priority Access License, 10 MHz channels) in orange with licensed protection, Tier 3 GAA (General Authorized Access, no license) in teal as opportunistic use. Spectrum Access System coordinates all tiers.”}
1166.5.3 Spectrum Selection Guide
| Use Case | Recommended Spectrum | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Factory floor | CBRS (GAA/PAL), n78 | Indoor, predictable environment |
| Campus | Licensed or PAL | Outdoor, reliability needed |
| Warehouse | mmWave | High density, short range OK |
| Oil/Gas remote | Low-band licensed | Long range, fewer obstacles |
| Temporary site | GAA, unlicensed | Quick deployment, lower cost |
1166.6 Design Considerations
1166.6.1 Coverage Planning
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graph TB
subgraph Planning["Coverage Design Factors"]
Area[Coverage Area<br/>Size and shape]
Obstacles[Obstacles<br/>Walls, machinery]
Density[Device Density<br/>Devices per m²]
Throughput[Throughput Needs<br/>Total bandwidth]
Latency[Latency Requirements<br/>Edge placement]
end
Area --> Calc[Cell Count<br/>Calculation]
Obstacles --> Calc
Density --> Calc
Throughput --> Calc
Latency --> Edge[Edge Server<br/>Location]
Calc --> RUs[Radio Unit<br/>Placement]
Edge --> RUs
style Planning fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50
style Calc fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style RUs fill:#2C3E50,stroke:#16A085,color:#fff
{fig-alt=“Coverage planning factors: Coverage Area, Obstacles, Device Density, Throughput Needs feed into Cell Count Calculation, Latency Requirements inform Edge Server Location, both contribute to Radio Unit Placement decisions.”}
1166.6.2 Capacity Planning Formula
Cells Required:
Cells = max(Coverage_cells, Capacity_cells)
Coverage_cells = Area (m²) / Cell_coverage (m²)
Capacity_cells = Total_throughput / Cell_capacity
Example:
- Factory: 50,000 m²
- Cell coverage (indoor, 3.5 GHz): 5,000 m²
- Total devices: 1,000
- Average throughput: 10 Mbps
- Cell capacity: 500 Mbps
Coverage_cells = 50,000 / 5,000 = 10 cells
Capacity_cells = (1,000 × 10) / 500 = 20 cells
Required: 20 cells (capacity-limited)
1166.6.3 Latency Architecture
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graph LR
Device[IoT Device] -->|1ms| gNB[gNB]
gNB -->|0.5ms| UPF[Local UPF]
UPF -->|0.5ms| MEC[Edge Server]
subgraph OnPrem["On-Premises (<5ms)"]
gNB
UPF
MEC
end
MEC -->|20-50ms| Cloud[Cloud]
style Device fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style OnPrem fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50
style Cloud fill:#7F8C8D,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
{fig-alt=“Latency architecture showing IoT Device with 1ms to gNB, 0.5ms to local UPF, 0.5ms to Edge Server, all within On-Premises box achieving less than 5ms total. Cloud connection adds 20-50ms, showing why edge computing is critical for low latency.”}
1166.7 Cost Analysis
1166.7.1 TCO Components
| Component | Capital Cost | Annual Operating |
|---|---|---|
| Radio Units | $5K-50K each | Maintenance, power |
| Core Network | $50K-500K | Licensing, support |
| Edge Computing | $20K-100K | Power, maintenance |
| Spectrum (PAL) | $0-100K | Annual fees |
| Integration | $50K-200K | Ongoing support |
| SIM/eSIM | $1-10/device | Management |
1166.7.2 Example: Factory Deployment
Factory: 100,000 m² (10 hectares)
Devices: 5,000 (sensors, cameras, AGVs)
Capital Costs:
- 30 Radio Units @ $15K = $450,000
- Private Core (software) = $200,000
- Edge Servers (2x) = $80,000
- Integration Services = $150,000
- Contingency (15%) = $130,000
Total CapEx = $1,010,000
Annual Operating:
- Spectrum (CBRS PAL) = $25,000
- Core licensing = $50,000
- Support contracts = $80,000
- Power and facilities = $30,000
- Staff (0.5 FTE) = $60,000
Total OpEx/year = $245,000
5-Year TCO: $1,010,000 + (5 × $245,000) = $2,235,000
Per device per month: $2,235,000 / (5,000 × 60) = $7.45
1166.7.3 ROI Considerations
| Benefit | Quantifiable Value |
|---|---|
| Reduced downtime | $100K-1M/hour avoided |
| Increased productivity | 5-15% improvement |
| Reduced Wi-Fi infrastructure | 30-50% less APs needed |
| New use cases enabled | Automation, AGVs, AR |
| Security improvements | Breach risk reduction |
1166.8 Integration Patterns
1166.8.1 Wi-Fi Coexistence
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graph TB
subgraph Devices["Device Types"]
Critical[Critical IoT<br/>AGVs, Robots]
Standard[Standard IoT<br/>Sensors, Cameras]
Enterprise[Enterprise<br/>Laptops, Phones]
end
subgraph Networks["Network Options"]
P5G[Private 5G<br/>URLLC Priority]
Wi-Fi6[Wi-Fi 6E<br/>High throughput]
end
Critical -->|Always| P5G
Standard -->|Preferred| P5G
Standard -->|Fallback| Wi-Fi6
Enterprise -->|Preferred| Wi-Fi6
Enterprise -->|Backup| P5G
style Critical fill:#c0392b,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Standard fill:#E67E22,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Enterprise fill:#7F8C8D,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style P5G fill:#16A085,stroke:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Wi-Fi6 fill:#2C3E50,stroke:#16A085,color:#fff
{fig-alt=“Wi-Fi and 5G coexistence strategy: Critical IoT (AGVs, Robots) in red always use Private 5G, Standard IoT in orange prefers 5G with Wi-Fi fallback, Enterprise devices in gray prefer Wi-Fi 6E with 5G backup. Shows differentiated network assignment by device criticality.”}
1166.8.2 OT Network Integration
| Integration Point | Approach |
|---|---|
| SCADA | 5G to Ethernet gateway |
| PLCs | RedCap or LTE-M modules |
| HMIs | Wi-Fi/5G dual-mode |
| Historians | Edge to cloud sync |
| MES/ERP | 5G core to enterprise LAN |
1166.9 Worked Examples
Scenario: A semiconductor fabrication plant needs private 5G to support automated guided vehicles (AGVs), real-time machine monitoring, and augmented reality maintenance. The facility requires sub-10ms latency for AGV control and 99.999% reliability. Calculate the number of radio units, spectrum requirements, and deployment architecture.
Given: - Facility: 50,000 sqm cleanroom (250m x 200m) with 5m ceiling - Devices to support: - 50 AGVs requiring <10ms latency and 5 Mbps each - 500 machine sensors sending 1 KB every 10 seconds - 20 AR headsets requiring 50 Mbps each during maintenance sessions (max 5 concurrent) - Environmental factors: Cleanroom with metal equipment, no outdoor coverage needed - Spectrum: CBRS available (USA location) - Deployment model: Standalone private 5G (data sovereignty required)
Step 1: Calculate coverage-based radio unit count
Indoor 5G coverage (mid-band 3.5 GHz):
- Typical cell radius in industrial environment: 50-80m
- Cell coverage area: π × 65² = ~13,000 sqm (using 65m avg)
- Derating for metal equipment: 30% reduction → 9,100 sqm effective
Coverage-based cells: 50,000 / 9,100 = 5.5 → 6 cells minimum
Add overlap for handover (AGVs): 6 × 1.3 = 7.8 → 8 cells
Step 2: Calculate capacity-based radio unit count
Bandwidth requirements (simultaneous):
- AGVs: 50 × 5 Mbps = 250 Mbps (constant, safety-critical)
- Sensors: 500 × 1 KB / 10s = 50 KB/s = 0.4 Mbps (trivial)
- AR headsets: 5 × 50 Mbps = 250 Mbps (peak, maintenance windows)
Total peak: 250 + 0.4 + 250 = 500.4 Mbps
CBRS capacity per cell (40 MHz, TDD):
- Theoretical: 300 Mbps downlink
- Practical with 30% efficiency: 210 Mbps per cell
Capacity-based cells: 500.4 / 210 = 2.4 → 3 cells minimum
Limiting factor: Coverage (8 cells), not capacity
Step 3: Design spectrum allocation
CBRS spectrum plan (150 MHz available, 3.55-3.7 GHz):
- AGV traffic (URLLC): 20 MHz dedicated slice, low latency config
- Sensor traffic (mMTC): 10 MHz shared, high device density
- AR traffic (eMBB): 40 MHz when active, shared with sensors
Total required: 70 MHz (leaves 80 MHz for future expansion)
Spectrum Access System (SAS) registration:
- PAL license: 2 × 10 MHz (20 MHz total) for AGV priority
- GAA: 50 MHz for sensors and AR (best effort, but indoor = reliable)
Step 4: Architect for sub-10ms latency
Latency budget breakdown:
- Radio access (air interface): 1-2ms (5G NR)
- Fronthaul (RU to DU): 0.5ms (fiber)
- Backhaul (DU to UPF): 0.5ms (fiber)
- UPF processing: 0.5ms (local breakout)
- Edge application: 2-3ms (on-premises MEC)
- Return path: ~3ms (symmetric)
Total round-trip: 8-10ms ✓
Architecture requirements:
- Deploy UPF (User Plane Function) on-premises (not in carrier cloud)
- MEC server co-located with 5G core (same rack)
- AGV control application on MEC (not in data center)
- Direct fiber from radio units to local switch (no hops)
Step 5: Calculate 5-year cost
Capital Costs:
- 8 Radio Units @ $20,000 each = $160,000
- Private 5G Core (software license) = $150,000
- MEC Server (edge compute) = $50,000
- Network switches + fiber = $40,000
- SAS certification + setup = $10,000
- Integration and commissioning = $90,000
Total CapEx = $500,000
Annual Operating:
- CBRS PAL license (20 MHz, local) = $15,000
- Software maintenance (core) = $30,000
- Support contract = $25,000
- Power + cooling = $10,000
Total OpEx/year = $80,000
5-Year TCO: $500,000 + (5 × $80,000) = $900,000
Per device per month: $900,000 / (570 × 60) = $26.32
Result:
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Radio Units | 8 (coverage-limited) |
| Spectrum | 70 MHz CBRS (20 MHz PAL + 50 MHz GAA) |
| Latency (AGV) | <10ms round-trip |
| Capacity | 500 Mbps peak |
| Reliability | 99.999% (standalone, redundant core) |
| 5-Year TCO | $900,000 |
Key Insight: This deployment is coverage-limited (8 cells for coverage vs 3 for capacity), typical for industrial environments with metal obstructions. The critical success factor is edge architecture - placing UPF and MEC on-premises achieves sub-10ms latency that would be impossible with traffic routed through carrier networks (which add 20-50ms). The CBRS PAL license provides guaranteed capacity for safety-critical AGVs, while GAA is sufficient for indoor sensor traffic. At $26/device/month over 5 years, private 5G is more expensive than public cellular but enables use cases (URLLC for AGVs, data sovereignty) that public networks cannot guarantee.
Scenario: A 500-bed hospital is evaluating private 5G versus Wi-Fi 6E for connecting medical IoT devices including patient monitors, infusion pumps, and mobile workstations. The deployment must meet clinical-grade reliability requirements. Compare 5-year total cost of ownership and identify which technology suits each use case.
Given: - Hospital: 100,000 sqm across 3 buildings (main hospital, clinic, research) - Devices to connect: - 500 patient monitors (2 Mbps each, 99.99% uptime required) - 200 infusion pumps (100 Kbps each, life-critical alerts) - 300 mobile workstations (10 Mbps each, roaming between floors) - 1,000 asset tracking tags (10 KB/hour each) - Requirements: - Patient monitors: <100ms latency, zero interference tolerance - Infusion pumps: FDA Class II medical device compliance - Roaming: Seamless handover as clinicians move between units - Current infrastructure: Existing Wi-Fi 5 network (aging, interference issues)
Step 1: Analyze technology fit by device type
Device Requirements Analysis:
Patient Monitors (500):
- Criticality: HIGH (patient safety)
- Bandwidth: 2 Mbps (continuous vital signs)
- Latency: <100ms (alarm propagation)
- Mobility: Stationary (bedside)
- VERDICT: Either 5G or Wi-Fi works, but 5G URLLC provides guaranteed QoS
Infusion Pumps (200):
- Criticality: CRITICAL (medication delivery)
- Bandwidth: 100 Kbps (dose adjustments, alerts)
- Latency: <50ms (life-critical)
- Mobility: Occasionally moved between rooms
- Regulatory: Must avoid RF interference with other medical devices
- VERDICT: Private 5G preferred (dedicated spectrum, no interference from consumer Wi-Fi)
Mobile Workstations (300):
- Criticality: MEDIUM (clinician productivity)
- Bandwidth: 10 Mbps (EHR access, imaging)
- Mobility: Continuous roaming across floors/buildings
- VERDICT: Wi-Fi 6E preferred (ubiquitous coverage, lower cost per device)
Asset Tags (1,000):
- Criticality: LOW (inventory management)
- Bandwidth: Minimal (10 KB/hour)
- Battery: 5+ year requirement
- VERDICT: Wi-Fi HaLow or BLE preferred (lowest power, not 5G)
Step 2: Calculate coverage requirements
Wi-Fi 6E Requirements (for workstations + general coverage):
- Coverage area per AP (indoor hospital): 500 sqm
- APs needed: 100,000 / 500 = 200 APs
- Add 30% for density and reliability: 260 APs
- Cost: 260 × $1,500 (enterprise medical-grade) = $390,000
Private 5G Requirements (for monitors + pumps):
- Coverage area per cell (3.5 GHz indoor): 3,000 sqm
- Cells needed: 100,000 / 3,000 = 34 cells
- Add 20% for critical coverage overlap: 41 cells
- Cost: 41 × $15,000 (medical-certified) = $615,000
Hybrid approach:
- Deploy Wi-Fi 6E everywhere (260 APs): $390,000
- Deploy 5G only in patient care areas (25 cells for 75,000 sqm): $375,000
- Total infrastructure: $765,000
Step 3: Calculate 5-year TCO comparison
Option A: Wi-Fi 6E Only
- Infrastructure: 260 APs × $1,500 = $390,000
- Installation: 260 × $500 = $130,000
- Annual maintenance: $80,000/year
- Device adapters: Included (Wi-Fi built-in)
- 5-Year TCO: $390K + $130K + ($80K × 5) = $920,000
Option B: Private 5G Only
- Infrastructure: 41 cells × $15,000 = $615,000
- Core network: $200,000
- Installation: $150,000
- Spectrum (CBRS PAL): $30,000/year
- Annual maintenance: $100,000/year
- Device adapters: 2,000 × $50 = $100,000 (5G modules for devices)
- 5-Year TCO: $615K + $200K + $150K + ($130K × 5) + $100K = $1,715,000
Option C: Hybrid (Recommended)
- Wi-Fi 6E (general): 260 APs × $1,500 = $390,000
- Private 5G (critical care): 25 cells × $15,000 = $375,000
- 5G Core (smaller scale): $120,000
- Installation: $200,000
- Spectrum: $20,000/year
- Maintenance: $120,000/year
- 5G adapters (700 devices): 700 × $50 = $35,000
- 5-Year TCO: $390K + $375K + $120K + $200K + ($140K × 5) + $35K = $1,820,000
Step 4: Quantify benefits for ROI calculation
Benefit Analysis (Hybrid vs Wi-Fi-only):
Interference Reduction:
- Current Wi-Fi causes 12 patient monitor alarms/month to fail
- Each missed alarm: $50,000 average liability + patient risk
- 5G eliminates monitor interference: 12 × $50K × 12 = $7.2M/year avoided risk
Infusion Pump Reliability:
- FDA requires documented connectivity for networked pumps
- Private 5G provides audit trail + guaranteed QoS
- Enables 200 pumps to use dose error reduction software
- Medication errors prevented: Est. 50/year × $10K avg = $500K/year savings
Clinician Productivity:
- Wi-Fi 6E roaming reduces EHR "spinning wheel" wait by 30 sec/access
- 300 workstations × 50 accesses/day × 30 sec = 125 hours/day saved
- Nurse cost: $50/hour → $6,250/day → $1.5M/year productivity gain
5-Year Benefit: ($7.2M + $0.5M + $1.5M) × 5 = $46M
5-Year Additional Cost (Hybrid vs Wi-Fi): $1.82M - $0.92M = $900K
ROI: ($46M - $0.9M) / $0.9M = 5,011% (extremely positive)
Result:
| Metric | Wi-Fi Only | 5G Only | Hybrid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-Year TCO | $920,000 | $1,715,000 | $1,820,000 |
| Interference Risk | HIGH | NONE | LOW |
| FDA Compliance | Challenging | Full | Full |
| Roaming Quality | Excellent | Good | Excellent |
| ROI vs Wi-Fi | Baseline | Moderate | 5,011% |
Key Insight: The hybrid approach costs 2x more than Wi-Fi-only but provides 50x return through risk mitigation and productivity gains. Healthcare is one of the strongest use cases for private 5G because the cost of connectivity failures (patient safety, regulatory compliance, liability) far exceeds infrastructure investment. The key insight is deploying 5G only where it provides unique value (interference-free spectrum for life-critical devices) while using cost-effective Wi-Fi 6E for general connectivity. Pure 5G is overkill for mobile workstations; pure Wi-Fi is insufficient for medical devices that cannot tolerate interference from visitor smartphones. Hybrid architecture matches technology to clinical requirements.
1166.10 Understanding Check
Scenario: A logistics company wants private 5G for a 500,000 m² warehouse with: - 200 AGVs requiring <20ms latency - 500 handheld scanners - 100 loading dock cameras - Integration with existing WMS (Warehouse Management System)
Questions:
- Which deployment model would you recommend?
- What spectrum would you use in the USA?
- How many radio units are needed?
- What’s the rough cost estimate?
1. Deployment Model: Standalone Private - AGVs need guaranteed low latency (URLLC) - High device density requires dedicated capacity - WMS integration needs local UPF - Standalone gives maximum control
2. Spectrum: CBRS with PAL + GAA - PAL for AGV priority lanes (10-20 MHz) - GAA for general coverage (40-60 MHz) - Indoor-only = no incumbent interference concerns - Cost-effective, no major licensing
3. Radio Unit Calculation:
Coverage:
- Indoor warehouse: ~3,000 m² per cell (high-density assumption)
- 500,000 / 3,000 = ~167 cells minimum
Capacity:
- 200 AGVs × 5 Mbps = 1,000 Mbps
- 500 scanners × 1 Mbps = 500 Mbps
- 100 cameras × 15 Mbps = 1,500 Mbps
- Total: 3,000 Mbps = 3 Gbps
- Per cell (CBRS 40 MHz): ~200 Mbps
- Capacity cells: 3,000 / 200 = 15 cells
Limiting factor: Coverage (167 cells)
Add 20% margin: 200 Radio Units
4. Cost Estimate:
CapEx:
- 200 Radio Units @ $10K = $2,000,000
- Private Core = $300,000
- Edge Servers (4x) = $200,000
- Integration = $300,000
- Contingency = $400,000
Total CapEx = $3,200,000
Annual OpEx:
- CBRS PAL (5 licenses) = $50,000
- Support/Maintenance = $200,000
- Power/Facilities = $100,000
- Staff (1 FTE) = $120,000
Total OpEx = $470,000
5-Year TCO: $3.2M + (5 × $470K) = $5,550,000
Per device per month: $5.55M / (800 × 60) = $115
Comparison: Public 5G would cost ~$50/device/month but can’t guarantee AGV latency requirements.
1166.11 Visual Reference Gallery
Explore these AI-generated diagrams that visualize Private 5G network concepts:
Private 5G networks provide dedicated wireless infrastructure for industrial IoT, enabling guaranteed latency, capacity, and data sovereignty.
Choosing the right deployment model depends on requirements for control, latency, and investment, with Standalone offering full ownership and Slice providing flexibility.
CBRS enables affordable Private 5G in the USA through shared spectrum with tiered access, allowing enterprises to deploy without traditional spectrum licensing costs.
1166.12 Key Takeaways
Private 5G provides dedicated capacity, low latency, and data sovereignty
Three deployment models: Standalone (full control), Hybrid (shared core), Slice (virtual private)
CBRS spectrum (USA) enables affordable private 5G with PAL for priority and GAA for opportunistic
Coverage and capacity both drive cell count—calculate both and use the higher
Edge computing is essential for achieving sub-5ms latency
TCO includes: Radio units, core network, edge, spectrum, integration, operations
Wi-Fi coexistence is common—use 5G for critical, Wi-Fi for enterprise devices
1166.12.1 Private 5G Deployment Decision Framework (Variant View)
This decision tree guides enterprise architects through key considerations when evaluating private 5G deployment options:
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flowchart TD
START(["Private 5G<br/>Deployment Decision"])
Q1{"Data sovereignty<br/>requirement?"}
Q2{"Latency<br/>requirement?"}
Q3{"Budget<br/>range?"}
Q4{"Multi-site<br/>deployment?"}
Q5{"Control<br/>priority?"}
STANDALONE["Standalone Private<br/>Full Control Model"]
HYBRID["Hybrid Model<br/>Private RAN, Shared Core"]
SLICE["Network Slice<br/>Virtual Private"]
PUBLIC["Enhanced Public 5G<br/>With SLA"]
STANDALONE_DETAILS["Standalone:<br/>• Full data sovereignty<br/>• Sub-5ms latency<br/>• CapEx: $500K-2M<br/>• Full infrastructure control<br/>• Highest complexity"]
HYBRID_DETAILS["Hybrid:<br/>• Data on-premises option<br/>• 5-20ms latency<br/>• CapEx: $200K-500K<br/>• Reduced complexity<br/>• Operator support"]
SLICE_DETAILS["Network Slice:<br/>• Virtual isolation<br/>• 10-50ms latency<br/>• OpEx: $50K-200K/year<br/>• Multi-site coverage<br/>• Operator-managed"]
START --> Q1
Q1 -->|"Critical"| Q5
Q1 -->|"Preferred"| Q2
Q1 -->|"Not required"| Q4
Q5 -->|"Maximum"| STANDALONE
Q5 -->|"Moderate"| HYBRID
Q2 -->|"<10ms"| Q3
Q2 -->|">10ms OK"| Q4
Q3 -->|"$500K+"| STANDALONE
Q3 -->|"$200K-500K"| HYBRID
Q3 -->|"<$200K"| SLICE
Q4 -->|"Yes"| SLICE
Q4 -->|"No"| PUBLIC
STANDALONE --> STANDALONE_DETAILS
HYBRID --> HYBRID_DETAILS
SLICE --> SLICE_DETAILS
style START fill:#7F8C8D,color:#fff
style Q1 fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Q2 fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Q3 fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Q4 fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Q5 fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style STANDALONE fill:#16A085,color:#fff
style HYBRID fill:#E67E22,color:#fff
style SLICE fill:#3498db,color:#fff
style PUBLIC fill:#7F8C8D,color:#fff
style STANDALONE_DETAILS fill:#d4efdf,color:#2C3E50
style HYBRID_DETAILS fill:#fdebd0,color:#2C3E50
style SLICE_DETAILS fill:#d6eaf8,color:#2C3E50
1166.12.2 Private 5G vs Wi-Fi Comparison (Variant View)
This comparison helps enterprises evaluate when to use Private 5G versus Wi-Fi 6E for industrial IoT applications:
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graph TB
subgraph Header["Private 5G vs Wi-Fi 6E Selection"]
direction LR
H1["Use Case"]
H2["Private 5G"]
H3["Wi-Fi 6E"]
end
subgraph Critical["Mission-Critical Applications"]
C_5G["Private 5G Preferred:<br/>• URLLC: 1ms, 99.999%<br/>• Guaranteed QoS<br/>• No interference<br/>• Licensed/dedicated spectrum"]
C_USE["Applications:<br/>• Robot control<br/>• Autonomous vehicles<br/>• Safety systems<br/>• Real-time control"]
end
subgraph Balanced["Balanced Performance"]
B_BOTH["Either Works:<br/>• 5G: 5-10ms latency<br/>• Wi-Fi 6E: 2-5ms typical<br/>• Both: High throughput<br/>• Cost drives decision"]
B_USE["Applications:<br/>• Video surveillance<br/>• AR/VR headsets<br/>• Industrial sensors<br/>• Connected machinery"]
end
subgraph Enterprise["Enterprise Connectivity"]
E_WIFI["Wi-Fi 6E Preferred:<br/>• Ubiquitous devices<br/>• Lower cost<br/>• Existing infrastructure<br/>• Easier management"]
E_USE["Applications:<br/>• Laptops, tablets<br/>• Barcode scanners<br/>• Office IoT<br/>• Guest access"]
end
subgraph Decision["Hybrid Recommendation"]
D1["Deploy Both:<br/>• Private 5G for critical OT<br/>• Wi-Fi 6E for enterprise IT<br/>• Unified management<br/>• Cost optimization"]
end
Header --> Critical --> Balanced --> Enterprise --> Decision
style Header fill:#f9f9f9,stroke:#2C3E50
style Critical fill:#16A085,color:#fff
style Balanced fill:#E67E22,color:#fff
style Enterprise fill:#2C3E50,color:#fff
style Decision fill:#7F8C8D,color:#fff
style C_5G fill:#d4efdf,color:#2C3E50
style C_USE fill:#d4efdf,color:#2C3E50
style B_BOTH fill:#fdebd0,color:#2C3E50
style B_USE fill:#fdebd0,color:#2C3E50
style E_WIFI fill:#d6eaf8,color:#2C3E50
style E_USE fill:#d6eaf8,color:#2C3E50
style D1 fill:#e8e8e8,color:#2C3E50
1166.13 What’s Next
Continue exploring related topics:
- 5G Advanced and 6G for IoT - 5G evolution and capabilities
- Industrial Protocols Overview - OT network integration
- Edge-Fog Computing - Edge architecture