Abstract

Autonomous vehicles are at the forefront of interest due to the expectations of changing transportation for the better. In order to make better decisions on the road, vehicles use information from various sources: their own sensors, messages arriving from surrounding vehicles and objects, as well as from centralized entities—including their own Digital Twin. Certain decisions require the information to arrive with low latency and some of this information (such as video) requires broadband communication. Furthermore, the vehicles can populate an area, so they can represent mass communication endpoints that still need low latency and massive broadband. The mobility of the vehicles obviously requires the complete coverage of the roads with reliable wireless communication technologies fulfilling the previously mentioned needs. The fifth generation of cellular mobile technologies, 5G, addresses these requirements. The current paper presents real-life scenarios—on the M86 highway and the ZalaZONE proving ground in Hungary—for the demonstration of vehicular communication with 5G support, where the cars exchange sensor and control information with each other, their environment, and their Digital Twins. The demonstrations were carried out through the Scenario-in-the-Loop (SciL) methodology, where some of the actionable triggers were not physically present around the vehicles, but sensed or simulated around their Digital Twin. The measurements around the demonstrations aim to reveal the feasibility of the 5G Non-Standalone Architecture for certain communication scenarios, and they mainly aim to reveal the current latency and throughput limitations under real-life conditions.

Highlights

  • Autonomous and advanced technology in cars is currently changing the automotive industry.The effects of future transport technologies are intensively researched, and the innovation is blooming in the related domains

  • The same procedure applies to autonomous vehicles, as they must comply with all sorts of laws and regulations that are usually the driver’s responsibility

  • The main parameters of the described 5G Option 3.X scenario have been defined through a series of measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Autonomous and advanced technology in cars is currently changing the automotive industry.The effects of future transport technologies are intensively researched, and the innovation is blooming in the related domains. Autonomous and advanced technology in cars is currently changing the automotive industry. Increased road safety, streamlined travel time, customized facilities, increased energy management, and parking benefits deduce key social benefits. An outstanding advantage of automation of automobiles is the improvement in safety, which comes naturally when we eliminate the root of most traffic incidents: human behavior on the road. Manufacturers have a wealth of experience with testing non-autonomous vehicles, and the procedure includes running millions of test kilometers that allow issues to be resolved and the Sensors 2020, 20, 7344; doi:10.3390/s20247344 www.mdpi.com/journal/sensors. Sensors 2020, 20, 7344 specifications are clear, the vehicle has to be technologically ready for the road in compliance with all applicable regulations. The same procedure applies to autonomous vehicles, as they must comply with all sorts of laws and regulations that are usually the driver’s responsibility. A successful approach could be to follow the rule of the Netherlands, where the vehicle itself must have a license or certificate [1]

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