IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society (Jan 2023)
Software-Defined UAV Networks for 6G Systems: Requirements, Opportunities, Emerging Techniques, Challenges, and Research Directions
Abstract
The ever-increasing demand for wireless communication has driven the development of innovative technologies to address the issues that conventional communication networks meet. To support autonomous devices in the sixth-generation (6G) and provide seamless wireless connectivity in inaccessible and hard-to-reach areas, the combination of software-defined networking (SDN) with unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) has already shown promises. As the traditional UAV-based cellular network encompasses challenges such as lack of centralized supervision, robust decision-making ability, and dynamic network management, the SDN platform could be an excellent alternative to offer aerial networking for future 6G ecosystem. However, the SDN-assisted UAV paradigm faces a set of challenges and critical issues. For instance, the network management and orchestration, resource allocation and optimization, handover mechanism, spectrum management, energy efficiency, integration of heterogeneous networks, and reliability, thus causing the decrease of quality of services of the SDN-enables UAV networks. To effectively address all these issues and identify the trends of software-defined UAV (SDUAV) networks, more research activities are needed. Unfortunately, there are not any specific guidelines in the literature that address each of these requirements, enabling technologies, emerging techniques, and future research directions in the context of SDN-based UAV networks to enable next-generation 6G systems. Therefore, motivated by this fact, this paper offers a comprehensive evaluation of the state of the SDUAV network and architecture, highlighting its various requirements and different prospects and applications in 6G systems. Besides, this paper also addresses why the combination of SDN and UAV-enabled networks is becoming essential in the 6G networking context and how it can offer more flexibility, scalability, reliability, and efficient connectivity than the conventional approaches to provide features like intelligence, automation, programmability, and centralized controllability. This paper furthermore outlines the difficulties of implementing SDUAV networks, such as security, adaptability, interference management, interoperability, and lack of standardization. Finally, to accomplish the goals, this article provides a roadmap for future trends and research directions in SDUAV networks to support the 6G systems.
Keywords