Impact of Latency and Jitter on TAS Scheduling in a 5G-TSN Network: An Empirical Study
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Rodríguez Martín, Pablo; Adamuz Hinojosa, Óscar Ramón; Muñoz Luengo, Pablo; Caleya Sánchez, Julia; Ameigeiras Gutiérrez, Pablo JoséEditorial
IEEE
Materia
TSN IEEE 802.1Qbv 5G
Date
2026-03Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez Martín, P.; Adamuz Hinojosa, O. R.; Muñoz Luengo, P. [et al]. (2026). Impact of Latency and Jitter on TAS Scheduling in a 5G-TSN Network: An Empirical Study. IEEE Internet of Things Journal. DOI: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2603.07309
Patrocinador
Wireless and Multimedia Networking Lab (TIC-235); Ministry for Digital Transformation and Spanish Government (TSI-063000-2021-28); NextGenerationEU; MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and ERDF/EU (PID2022-137329OBC43); Spanish Ministry of Universities (FPU 21/04225)Résumé
Deterministic communications are essential to meet
the stringent delay and jitter requirements of Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) services. IIoT increasingly demands wide-area wireless mobility to support Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMR) and dynamic workflows. Integrating Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN) with 5G private networks is emerging as a promising approach to fulfill these requirements. In this architecture, 5G provides wireless access for industrial devices, which connect to a TSN backbone that interfaces with the enterprise edge/cloud, where IIoT control and computing systems reside. TSN achieves bounded latency and low jitter using IEEE 802.1Qbv Time-Aware Shaper (TAS), which schedules the network traffic in precise time slots. However, the stochastic delay and jitter inherent in 5G disrupt TSN scheduling, requiring careful tuning of TAS parameters to maintain end-to-end determinism. This paper presents an empirical study evaluating the impact of 5G downlink delay and jitter on TAS scheduling using a testbed with TSN switches and a commercial 5G network. Results show
that guaranteeing bounded latency and jitter requires careful setting of TAS transmission window offset between TSN switches based on the measured 5G delay bounded by a high order p-th percentile. Otherwise, excessive offset may cause additional delay or even a complete loss of determinism.




