Abstract

Background: The exponential increase in pattern of vehicles on the roads demands a need to develop a vehicular infrastructure that may not only ease congestions and provide a better experience but also pivot the levels of safety among users. The development of wireless technology has made it convenient for machines, devices and vehicles to interact with one another. The efficacy of this wireless communications relies on utilising current and available technology to enable information to be shared efficiently. In the wake of the available advancement in wireless technology, a new dynamic spectrum management (DSM) in vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication that coexists with the existing Long-Term Evolution (LTE) network to increase the throughput in V2V communication is proposed. This will provide some solutions to enable a more efficient vehicular infrastructure. Methods: This paper focuses on the utilization of DSM in V2V communications by selecting an appropriate frequency band through the selection of available licensed and unlicensed frequency bands for vehicles. Further investigations are done to identify the effect of interference in the dynamic spectrum by observing the path loss, SINR, and the throughput with various interfering users. Results: The results show that the performance of the proposed DSM augments a significant improvement in the overall throughput and the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) value is reduced by up to 60% when compared to the fixed spectrum allocation. Conclusions: Although the dynamic spectrum is still affected by the interference from the existing cellular users, the throughput of the dynamic spectrum remains sufficient to transmit the information to other vehicles.

Highlights

  • Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication allows vehicles to interact and trade data or information directly with one another without the need of accessing a base station

  • As the current wireless network technology moves from the fourth generation (4G) towards the fifth generation (5G),[3,4] there lies a promising future for V2V communication in terms of improved latency, throughput and connections[5,6] between vehicles

  • Results of this study indicate that dynamic spectrum allocation in the 5.9 GHz band improves the efficiency of the Wi-Fi network without excessively reducing the quality of the dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) system

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Summary

METHOD ARTICLE

Dynamic spectrum management using frequency selection at licensed and unlicensed bands for efficient vehicle-to-vehicle communication [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review].

Introduction
Methods
Results and discussion
Kenney BJB
Full Text
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