Abstract

In the advent of becoming reality, the era of autonomous vehicles is closer than ever, and with it, the need for faster and reliable wireless connections. The propagation channel determines the performance limits of wireless communications, and with the aid of empirical measurements, channel modeling is the best approach to predict and recreate how signal propagation conditions may perform. To this end, many different approaches and techniques have been implemented, from specific applications to general models, considering the characteristics of the environment (geometry-based or non-geometry-based) as well as seeking high performance algorithms in order to achieve good balance between accuracy and computational cost. This paper provides an updated overview of propagation channel models for vehicular communications, beginning with some specific propagation characteristics of these complex heterogeneous environments in terms of diverse communication scenarios, different combinations of link types, antenna placement/diversity, potentially high Doppler shifts, or non-stationarity, among others. The presented channel models are classified in four categories: empirical, non-geometry-based stochastic, geometry-based stochastic, and deterministic models, following the classical approach. The features and key concepts of the different vehicular communications channel models are presented, from sub 6 GHz to millimeter wave (mmWave) frequency bands. The advantages and disadvantages of the main works in the area are discussed and compared in a comprehensive way, outlining their contributions. Finally, future critical challenges and research directions for modeling reliable vehicular communications are introduced, such as the effects of vegetation, pedestrians, common scatterers, micro-mobility or spherical wavefront, which in the context of the near future are presented as research opportunities.

Highlights

  • According to data from the World Health Organization, annually 1.35 million people die in traffic-related accidents [1]

  • The work concludes that the maximum Doppler spread set a limit for the spacing between carrier frequencies used in OFDM, and channel estimation depends on the values of the coherence time, suggesting that from their studies, 90% of the coherence time is between 2 and 3 ms, implying that the packages should not be longer in time in suburban environments

  • Extensive research has been performed in the area, there are still several important obstacles that need to be addressed before V2X communication becomes a widespread technology

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

According to data from the World Health Organization, annually 1.35 million people die in traffic-related accidents [1]. Many articles focus mainly on the sub GHz frequency bands, as a current trend, there is a large number of proposals for the adoption of mmWave frequencies in vehicular communications Works such as [7], condenses extensive information on aspects such as the physical layer, access layer, and the future of mmWave bands in vehicular communications. In this regard, [8] presents a comprehensive survey dedicated to communications in mmWave frequency bands in general.

VEHICULAR CHANNEL REMARKS
Findings
CONCLUSION
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