Abstract

The implementation of ITS (Intelligent Transport Systems) services offers great potential to improve the level of safety, efficiency and comfort on our roads. Although cooperative traffic safety applications rely heavily on the support for real-time communication, the Medium Access Control (MAC) mechanism proposed for the upcoming IEEE 802.11p standard, intended for ITS applications, does not offer deterministic real-time support, that is, the access delay to the common radio channel is not upper bounded. To address this problem, we present a framework for a vehicle-to-infrastructure-based (V2I) communication solution extending IEEE 802.11p by introducing a collision-free MAC phase assigning each vehicle an individual priority based on its geographical position, its proximity to potential hazards and the overall road traffic density. Our solution is able to guarantee the timely treatment of safety-critical data, while minimizing the required length of this real-time MAC phase and freeing bandwidth for best-effort services (targeting improved driving comfort and traffic efficiency). Furthermore, we target fast connection setup, associating a passing vehicle to an RSU (Road Side Unit), and proactive handover between widely spaced RSUs. Our real-time MAC concept is evaluated analytically and by simulation based on a realistic task set from a V2I highway merge assistance scenario.

Highlights

  • Vehicular networks have been of particular interest to the communication research area for several years

  • Cooperative traffic safety applications rely heavily on the support for real-time communication, the Medium Access Control (MAC) mechanism proposed for the upcoming IEEE 802.11p standard, intended for ITS applications, does not offer deterministic real-time support, that is, the access delay to the common radio channel is not upper bounded

  • We present a framework for a vehicle-to-infrastructure-based (V2I) communication solution extending IEEE 802.11p by introducing a collision-free MAC phase assigning each vehicle an individual priority based on its geographical position, its proximity to potential hazards and the overall road traffic density

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Summary

Introduction

Vehicular networks have been of particular interest to the communication research area for several years now. As presented in [6], we enhanced our MAC scheme by introducing the concept of position-based prioritization, allocating extra bandwidth to vehicles that benefit the most from the support from the ITS safety application and thereby increasing the scalability of the vehicular network. The merge assistance case constitutes a type scenario representative of a category of applications where it is desirable to lend a certain amount of the bandwidth to safety-critical data transfer supported by deterministic channel access, while support of best effort services (enhancing comfort or providing entertainment) is desirable.

Cooperative ITS Safety Applications
The Merge Assistance Use Case Scenario
Data F
C Di Di Dinfo Dmerge Drec Ei
Fast Handover in V2I Communication
Schedule processing time
Performance Evaluation
12 Mbps 24 Mbps
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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