Abstract

The primary motivation for developing vehicular safety applications is to provide information and assistance required to avoid collisions. Such applications depend on performance of vehicular communications which have critical requirements for various operating scenarios. However, there is still a lack of practical performance measurement data in the open literature that can be used to design robust and reliable applications for vehicle safety. This paper provides an overview of the current standards for vehicular communications and requirements for vehicular applications and analyzes ad hoc performance of commercial off-the-shelf DSRC and Wi-Fi radios in real vehicular environments. Also, it identifies important effects of messages size, message frequency, weather condition, and vehicle mobility on vehicular communications. For example, rainy weather significantly diminishes the communication range and vehicle mobility causes temporal variations in communication throughput. With a better comprehensive understanding of these effects on performance and reliability, quality of vehicular applications can be significantly improved.

Highlights

  • Dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) is designed to support a variety of applications based on vehicular communications

  • As vehicular communications rely on standards to ensure interoperability between vehicular equipments, there have been several international and regional standardization efforts, the United States and Europe

  • Our results show that performance of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) and broadcast, two most popular transport layer protocols in vehicular applications, is significantly affected by the size and rate of transmitting messages, which has an important impact on bandwidth efficiency in safety application design

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Summary

Introduction

Dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) is designed to support a variety of applications based on vehicular communications. It is already in trial use and its products are out on the market. DSRC employs a suite of IEEE 1609 standards [4,5,6]: 1609.2 (security services), 1609.3 (network services), and 1609.4 (multichannel operation) for the upper protocol layers. Most of these standards are recently published.

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