Industry 5.0 Network Management
Sunil Gautam (),
Pooja Patel and
Heer Ramavat
Additional contact information
Sunil Gautam: Nirma University
Pooja Patel: Nirma University
Heer Ramavat: Nirma University
A chapter in Industry 5.0, 2025, pp 265-291 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Industry 4.0 concepts were improved upon in later decades, leading to Industry 5.0. “Industry 4.0” refers to a greater level of automation that links the digital and physical worlds to boost efficiency and productivity. Industry 4.0 has prioritised connection, big data, industrial automation, profit, system integration, and the Internet of Things (IoT). As a result, it raised rivalry, expertise, and scalability. It provides a range of guidelines, manuals, and technical tools to aid in building new factories or remodelling old ones. Yet, the issue of manufacturing procedure customisation must be addressed in this fourth industrial revolution. Furthermore, resource management and sustainability received little priority. Industry 5.0 additionally fosters digitisation, sustainability, and human-centric approaches combined with intelligent equipment to produce resource-effective and user-preferred production solutions. This would enable the manufacturing and delivery speeds to accelerate quickly. Industry 5.0 therefore has the capability to completely reshape society and bring it closer to the human capacity for innovative thinking, critical thought, and incredibly fast accuracy. One of the needs stated in this vision is the integration of multiple technologies, such as blockchain, 6G, Digital Twins, computers, cyber-physical systems, human-centred Artificial Intelligence (AI), hyper-converged data and storage, and more. Furthermore, Industry 5.0 seeks to advance human welfare by accomplishing societal objectives that transcend job growth and development. Therefore, the idea of network management introduces Industry 5.0’s resilience. This introduces the concept of Zero-Trust Network-based Access Control (ZTN-ACS) mechanism and discusses the convergence of next-generation wireless networks (NGWNs) with emergent computational intelligence (CI). This program expands on support for scheduling, managing, and monitoring on devices and operations. In Industry 5.0, this plan minimises controller denials, failures, and false positives by leveraging consistency and can also handle compute and connectivity needs of the Industry 5.0. Therefore, this would ultimately result in the enhancement of Human and Robots and also sustainable advancement of humanity. We have emphasised the importance of network management in Industry 5.0 in this article. We have discussed the various architectures employed in Industry 5.0. We have also emphasised the contributions made to this field of study. The many industrial revolutions, their traits, and their uses have also been discussed. We have also discussed the potential and difficulties in more detail. Eventually, we have spoken about the prospective future spectrum in this network management field of Industry 5.0.
Keywords: Network Management; Industry 5.0; Sustainability; Next-generation wireless networks; Computational intelligence; Human-centred artificial intelligence (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-031-87837-4_11
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-87837-4_11
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